The government appeals from a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals sustaining the contention of the respondent Howard C. Hickman that the earnings of his wife did not constitute a part of his taxable income for the year 1923, in view of the agreement between them made in 1906 to the effect that the earnings of the wife should thereafter be her separate property. The Board of Tax Appeals, on sufficient evidence, found the facts to be as follows:
“The petitioner and his wife, Bessie Bar-ríscale Hickman, have been residents of California since their marriage in 1906.
“At the time of their marriage, and for some time prior thereto, both the petitioner and his wife were professional actors, earning their livelihood by appearances upon the stage. Shortly thereafter, the petitioner was engaged as an actor at the Alcazar Theatre, San Francisco, at a salary of $75 per week. The petitioner’s wife did not appear upon the stage after her marriage until some time in 1907, when she was also engaged as an actress at the same theatre at a salary of $85 per week.
“At some time in 1907, the petitioner and his wife orally agreed that the earnings of each were to be and remain the sole and separate property of the spouse earning the same, free of any community right, claim, or interest of the other, and that each would pay his or her own professional expenses, etc. Since 1907 the petitioner and his wife have adhered to their agreement and each separately received, kept and disposed of the funds derived from their respective employments, maintaining separate bank accounts, making separate investments for their separate accounts, and paying their own professional bills and expenses from their separate earnings.
“None of the earnings of the petitioner’s wife were ever turned over to or received by *986 him, nor did he ever in any way exercise or attempt to exercise any rights, dominion, or control over the same. During the taxable year 1933 Mrs. Hickman was employed as an actress by the Joe Hart Enterprises of New Fork City, under the name of Bessie Barrí-scale, and received from the latter for her professional services rendered in that taxable year the sum of $14,850, which was paid directly to her, deposited in her separate bank account, reported as income upon her separate income tax return for that year, and which was used and disposed of by her without any interference, dominion, or control on the part of the petitioner. The petitioner received no part of this sum which was earned by his wife and which was handled in accordance with their agreement as her separate property.”
Upon these facts the Board held that the husband was not taxable for the income of the wife. The opinion of the Board states that upon the authority of U. S. v. Robbins,
There is no doubt that under the law of California the earnings of the wife under such circumstances became her separate property. This has been frequently decided by the Supreme Court of California. In, Wren v. Wren,
In Kaltschmidt v. Weber,
In Earl v. Commissioner,
“ * *- * It is consequently the holding of the Supreme Court of California that an agreement between a husband and wife domiciled there, without any other consideration than their mutual consent, that the future earnings of the wife should be her separate property, is valid, and such earnings do not become community property. Wren v. Wren,100 Cal. 276 ,34 P. 775 ,38 Am. St. Rep. 287 ; Cullen v. Bisbee,168 Cal. 695 ;144 P. 968 ; Kaltschmidt v. Weber,145 Cal. 596 ,79 P. 272 . If, as thus seems to be the settled law of the state, * '■* * a husband and wife may legally agree by contract that the future earnings of the wife shall be her separate property, and by virtue of such agreement they do not become the property of the community, there is no sufficient rea *987 son why they may not make a similar agreement with reference to the earnings of the husband, or, as here, that their joint earnings shall belong to them jointly and .not otherwise.
“Under the California system there is no difference between the earnings of the wife and the eamings of the husband. They áre each community property (Martin v. Southern Pacific,130 Cal. 285 ,62 P. 515 ), and anj agreement of husband and wife that her future eamings may nevertheless be her separate property differs in no way in principle from an agreement that his eamings may be the joint property of both (Estate of Harris,169 Cal. 725 ,147 P. 967 ). We conclude, therefore, that the contract is valid and such as a husband and wife may legally make.”
The contention of the government in that ease was that there was an interval of time before the vesting of the eamings of the husband as joint property when they were community property, but this claim we held untenable. The Supreme Court reversed that decision in Lucas v. Earl,
The logic of this opinion would seem to lead to the conclusion that the eamings of the wife “from salary, wages or compensation for personal services” would be taxable to her whether or not by local law or by contract permitted by local law they were community property, and would certainly support the conclusion that where the husband and wife entered into a lawful agreement that the “salary” of the wife should be and remain her separate property such income would be taxable to the wife and not to the husband, as the Board of Tax Appeals held in the case at bar and in other cases cited by them.
The whole matter of the taxation of income by the United States in states recognizing the community property system was again considered by the Supreme Court in Poe v. Seaborn,
Whether the Earl Case is entirely consistent with the later case of Poe v. Seaborn, supra, we need not inquire, for the later decision is controlling. It is distinctly héld in the case of Poe v. Seaborn, supra, that if by law the eamings of the husband or wife are not community property thé eamings should not be taxed as such. By the law of Cali *988 fornia, as construed by her courts, the earnings of the wife never became community property if the husband and wife have agreed that they shall be and remain her separate property, hence, under the decision in Poe v. Seaborn, such earnings should not be taxed as income to the husband.
The government relies upon our decisions in Blair v. Roth,
The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is affirmed.
