MCDERMOTT v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
No. 8876
United States Court of Appeals District of Columbia
Argued March 13, 1945. Decided June 18, 1945.
150 F.2d 585
Mr. Morton K. Rothschild, Special Assistant to the Attorney General, with whom Assistant Attorney General Samuel O. Clark, Jr., and Messrs. Sewell Key, Special Assistant to the Attornеy General, and J. P. Wenchel, Chief Counsel, Bureau of Internal Revenue, and John M. Morawski, Special Attorney, Bureau of Internal Revenue, both of Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for respondent.
Before GRONER, Chief Justice, and EDGERTON and ARNOLD, Associate Justices.
EDGERTON, Associate Justice.
The American Bar Assoсiation awarded its Ross Essay Prize for 1939, in the sum of $3000, to the petitioner. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue ruled that the prize was taxable to the petitioner as income and the Tax Court of the United States sustained the Commissioner. The petitioner brought the case here for review.
Erskine M. Ross, a retired federal judge, died at his home in California in 1928. His will contained the following clause:
“11th: I give, devise and bequeath out of my said estate to the American Bar Association the sum of $100,000 to be by it safely invested, the annual income of which to be offered and paid as a prize for the best discussion of a subject to be by it suggested for discussion at its preceding annual meeting.”
On the application of the American Bar Association the Superior Court of Los Angeles County construed this clause during the еarly part of 1939, only a few months before the Association awarded the prize for that year to the present petitioner. The Superior Court ruled in substance, among other things, that the Association as trustee had authority (1) to determine what class of persоns might compete for the Ross prize;
During the first five years after thе death of Judge Ross the Association made no award. It awarded prizes in 1934 and in later years. It has “chosen topics of timely public interest with a view to bringing about a scholarly consideration thereof and to the promoting of the public welfare thereby.” Fоr the year 1939 it announced a prize of $3000 to be awarded for the best essay on the subject “To What Extent Should Decisions of Administrative Tribunals be Reviewable by the Courts?” It is stipulated that the Association made this announcement pursuant to Clause 11 of the will as construed by the Superior Court. Clause 11 requires that the subject for discussion be “suggested” at the preceding annual meeting of the Association. Petitioner, a professor of law at Duke University, submitted the essay which the judges chosen by the Association considered the best. Accоrdingly, at the annual meeting of the Association in San Francisco on July 13, 1939, petitioner was “awarded * * * the prize“, which was a check for $3000, and a certificate, “for the best discussion of the subject selected.”
The Tax Court rightly1 undertook to follow the Superior Court‘s construction of the will, but we think it failed to do so. It found that petitioner “was the person selected to receive the income for the year 1939. Hence, he was the ascertained income beneficiary of the trust for that year and the moneys which he received wеre necessarily distributable to him as such * * *. The money paid was income from Ross’ $100,000 testamentary gift in trust * * *. Petitioner received $3,000 of the income of the trust in the year involved as a duly designated distributee thereof and accordingly we hold that he is taxable thereon. It is enough to support the taxation of the $3,000 in petitioner‘s hands that the $3,000 was trust income and was received by him as such.”
The record shows that petitioner received a prize of $3000 from the Association in 1939, in accordance with the Ross will as construed by the Superior Court. But we see no support in the record for the further findings which we have just quoted. Apparently the prize was announced in 1938. It was awarded in July 1939. Its amount was actually independent of the amount of the trust income during the intervening year, since the one was fixed before the other could be certainly known. Its amount was also legally independent of the amount of the trust income during the year, since the Ross will as construed by the Superior Court authorized the trustee to make the award out of past income or anticipated futurе income. Therefore neither the fact that $3000 was offered nor the fact that $3000 was awarded is evidence that the trust had an income of $3000, or that it had any income, either in 1938 or in 1939. The record is entirely consistent with either of the following hypotheses, among many оthers: (1) that the fund earned nothing during either 1938 or 1939, and the trustee provided the prize and the expenses of the competition from income accumulated in previous years; or (2) that the fund earned nothing during either 1938 or 1939 and had no accumulation of income from рrevious years, and the trustee provided the prize and expenses from the principal of the trust fund in anticipation of being able to make good the deficit in principal out of income to be earned in 1940. Either course would have been in accordance with the will as construed by the Superior Court. Accordingly the record does not show whether the award to petitioner was in fact made out of current income, accumulated income or other funds.
Moreover we think the record does show that it is immaterial whether the award was made out of income or other funds. In the first place, only current income of a trust is taxable to a beneficiary.2 But even if the award to petitioner were shown to have been made out
on it. If a trust instrument directs the trustee to make gifts out of income, in his discretion, to the unnamed authors of prize-winning essays, these gifts stand on the same footing. Trust income which is to be used exclusively for charitable or educational purposes is specifically exempted from taxation even to the trustee.6 To tax it to a beneficiary who receives it as a gift from the trustee would defeat the plain purpose of that exemption. It would also defeat both the purpose and the letter of
Petitioner‘s tax liability, if any, depends directly upon whether the award was part of his “gross income” within the meaning of
We think the following circumstances taken together require the conclusion that the award was a gift and not inсome within the meaning of the statute. (1) No one not talking law would be likely to say that the Association paid petitioner $3000 for writing an essay or that it paid $3000 for the essay which petitioner wrote. In plain English the Association gave petitioner the prize. The Rhode Islаnd court used words in their ordinary sense when it said
Reversed.
GRONER, C. J. (dissenting).
I regret that I am unаble to concur with the Court in its conclusion in this case. I am of opinion that the award to petitioner, properly classified, was compensation, and hence income within the meaning of the tax statutes.
