Lead Opinion
Asidе from interest in the amount of $2,500 for the six-month period prior to October 1, 1933, which was returned as taxable income, none of the fee or interest thereon was actually received by the partnership in 1933. The respondent included the amount of the fee, plus interest in the amount of $1,250 for the period from October 1, 1933, to the сlose of the year, in gross income of the partnership on the ground that it was constructively received in 1933. He adheres to the doctrine upon brief before us.
The inclusion in the partnership’s gross income of an amount for interest accrued on the full amount of the fee for the three-month
It was announced in John A. Grander, 3 B. T. A. 231, that the doctrine of constructive receipt should be sparingly applied. See also Adolph Zukor, 33 B. T. A. 324. In Cecil Q. Adams, 20 B. T. A. 243; affd., 54 Fed. (2d) 228; we said: “But, in general, income should not be construed to have been received prior to the date of actual receipt except where a taxpayer turns his back upon income or does not choose to receive income which he could have if he chose.” The doctrine will not be applied except in a clear case. Hal E. Roach, 20 B. T. A. 919. In C. E. Gullett, 31 B. T. A. 1067, we said:
* * * that amounts due from a corporation but unpaid, are not to be included in the income of an individual reporting his income on a cash basis unless it appears that the money was available to him, that the corporation was able and ready to pay him, that his right to receive was not restriсted and that his failure to receive resulted from exercise of his own choice.
Other statements of the doctrine are to the same effect. William Parris, 20 B. T. A. 320; Helvering v. Gordon, 87 Fed. (2d) 663.
The petitioners argue that the agreement between the partnership and the Foundation was the only one entered into for payment of the fee and that we must look to it alone for the amount to be paid and the time of payment. They have overlooked the fact that by a provision of the agreement the liability of the Foundation was limited to the unpaid portion of the fee at the time of completion of the transfer of the residuary estate. This term of the agreement gave the executors the right to pay part or all of the fee to the partnership at any time prior to completion of the transfer. Thus the understanding had with the executors was not limited, as alleged, to mere approval of the reasonableness of the fee, but conferred upon the partnership no right to require payment from the executors.
The employmеnt of the petitioners as counsel rendered the executors personally liable for a reasonable fee, subject to reimbursement by way of a credit in their accounts. 24 C. J. 66; Parker v. Day,
It is stipulated that the partnership was retained “to attend to the probate of said will and to attend to all matters incident to the administration of the estate and to the distribution of the assets thereof.” For services as counsel for the administration of the estate it was agreed between the partnership and the executors, in 1933, that $250,000 was a reasonable fee, but the executors did not agree to pay such amount in 1933 or otherwise, and never paid it. The statute of New York provides that commissions of executors or administrators are not earned until the services have been rendered and the account settled. The same applies in logic to the attorneys’ fees here involved. At the time of discussion of the reasonableness of $250,000 as attorneys’ fees, and at the time of the proposition between the attorneys, executors, and residuary legatee on April 24,1933, the attorneys’ services had not been completed. Federal estatе tax proceedings were still pending, the executors’ final account had not been settled in the ordinary manner of probate, and, though the statute permitted that such final accounting be dispensed with by settlement and distribution satisfactory to the residuary legatee, that was not done until December 1933. Until that date it is obvious that the attorneys had no right to demand their fee from the executors. By and previous to that time, however, a tripartite agreement between the attorneys, executors, and residuary legatee had provided for payment of attorneys’ fees by the residuary legatee throughout a possible period of five years. The rights against the residuary legatee had their inception upon the legatee’s taking over the assets — but the attorneys’ services were not yet finished. Clearly, we think, the attorneys could not successfully have maintained an action against the executors for the $250,000 fee at the time they agreed with the executors and residuary legatee to accept it within, five years. They had not yet performed perhaps the most important part of the stipulated services, “to attend to all matters incident to * * * the distribution of the assets” of the estate. In fact, since the partnership considered the activities of the Friedsam Foundation, the residuary legatee, as a final step in the completion of the administration of the estate of the decedent and a continuation of the legal services of administering it, and will not charge further fee for services rendered it, it is apparent that the services, payment for which is here involved, were not complеted even with full transfer of the assets of the estate to the Friedsam Foundation. No principle of constructive receipt requires, we think, that the attorneys’ fees not yet fully earned, and not yet available tq
While questions of the kind involved here are controlled by the peculiar facts of the case, the facts prevailing in several decided cases suggest the answer herе. In Edwards v. Keith,
The case of William Parris, supra, is not to the contrary. There the amount owing for oil sold was standing to the credit of the taxpayer on the books of the pipe line company and was available to him upon presentation of an executed division order. Here there was no unqualified agreement on the part of the executors or the residuary legatee to pay in 1933 upon demand. The income was not subject to the command of the partnership and at no time in 1933 were the petitioners in a position to enjoy the income as in Corliss v. Bowers,
The respondent contends in a supplemental reply brief that the agreement of the Foundation to pay the fee should be treated as the equivalent of the cash received within the taxable year. He argues that the agreement to pay was an evidencе of indebtedness received in payment for services and “fully equivalent to a promissory note, or a certificate of stock” and that it “represented a payment of the claim in property by the debtor.”
Numerous cases are cited by the respondent as establishing the doctrine that income mаy be derived in the form of money’s worth. The cases relied upon involved in general the receipt in connection with sales and as compensation for services rendered, stock, bonds, notes, or tangible property. It is well settled that property of that sort may be taxed to the recipient at its fair market valuе. The respondent does not claim, aside from the constructive receipt theory already discussed, that the right reserved by the executors to pay the fee in whole or in part prior to the transfer of the residuary estate to the Foundation was equivalent to receipt by the partnership of taxable income in the amount of $250,000 or any other amount. He relies only upon the promise to pay made by the residuary legatee as resulting in taxable income to the partnership in 1933.
The agreement of the Foundation to pay the fee was evidenced by the letter of April 24, 1933, and a resolution adopted by the Foundation on Aрril 27, 1933, which the respondent characterizes as a chose in action and claims “admittedly had a value of at least $250,000.” Generally a promise to pay a specified sum of money in the future does not create more than an account receivable in the hands of the creditor, a nontaxable item of tаxpayers reporting, as here, on the cash basis. The result would have been no more if the executors, instead of reserving a right to pay prior to the happening of a certain event, had unconditionally promised to pay, for instance, on July 1, 1934. The undertaking of the Foundation created an unconditional obligаtion on its part to pay a definite sum of money sometime within five years and in its essential characteristics was no different from an ordinary promise to pay by a person primarily liable. The written promise of the Foundation was a property right and no doubt had some value to the partnership. “Such rights are sold, if at all, оnly by seeking out a purchaser and higgling with him on the basis of the particular transaction” and ordinarily do not have a fair market value. Bedell v. Commissioner, 30 Fed. (2d) 622. The respondent has never determined, and the petitioners do not admit, that the promise of the Foundation had a fair market value in 1933 of any amount.
We fail to see that the partnershiр, by agreeing to look to the Foundation for payment within five years, acquired, for income tax purpose, something unlike what it had before the promise was given.
In William J. Kyle, 15 B. T. A. 1247; affd., 43 Fed. (2d) 291; cer-tiorari denied,
Since herein the agreement among the partnership, executors, and residuary legatee provided for payment by the residuary legatee less any amounts paid by executors prior to completion of transfer of the assets of the estate, it is apparent that the promise of residuary legatee to pay was not accepted by the partnership wholly in lieu of rights against the executors; but, assuming that it was so accepted, it is obvious that, as in fact appears on the face of the agreement itself, the services of the attorneys’ partnership had not been completed and must continue further. An implied agreement for the continuation and completion of such services is plain. Therefore there was a continuation of contractual rights held by the partnership, involving personal services, the failure to perform which would affect and give rise to defense to the obligation to pay. The new agreement was not accepted as fayment, but merely as another agreement to fay, in part for services yet to be rendered. No promissory nоte was received, and no security given. It would have required evidence outside of the agreement as to whether such services had been performed, a question any prospective purchaser of the agreement would consider. C. W. Titus, 33 B. T. A. 928, and cases cited. Such a situation is not one, we think, which lends itself to the application of the principle of receipt of equivalent of cash. The line of division be
The partnership received no property from the Foundation in 1933 taxable as income for services rendered.
Decision will be entered for the petitioners.
