This appeal from a decision of the Tax Court,
This court, in Flowers v. Commissioner, 5 Cir.,
Now, fourteen years after Flowers, the wheel has turned full circle round, and into the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, like Agag, stepping delicately and saying, “Surely the bitterness of death is past.”, come taxpayers seeking, as Flowers did, the reversal of a decision in the Tax Court against him. Arguing that Peurifoy’s ease was not well decided, they implicitly, if not expressly, invite us to make a conflict with it or at least with its reasoning. We cannot do so.
While I am the sole survivor of the court which decided the Flowers case and, convinced against my will, am of the same opinion still, it seems perfectly clear to me, as it does to my brothers, *311 that, in the absence of congressional action or a redecision in the Supreme Court, the law has been, is now, and must continue to be declared as the Court of Appeals declared it in the Peurifoy case. Therefore, though, as the Fourth Circuit in the Barnhill case was confronted with our prior decision in the Flowers case, we are confronted with the Fourth Circuit’s prior decision in Peurifoy’s case, we decline to take issue, and announce our agreement, with its decision. In addition, appellants argue that the facts in this case are different from those in Peurifoy’s and the Tax Court misconceived and misapplied the law to them. We agree with the taxpayers that, as the Tax Court pointed out in its opinion, the facts in this case are to some extent different from those in Peurifoy’s. We agree with the Tax Court, however, that they make an even stronger case against the taxpayers than the facts in that case did.
The decision of the Tax Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Harry Schurer,
.
Cf. Carragan v. Commissioner, 2 Cir.,
