Once again we have the problem of federal income tax liability on a transfer of appreciated property pursuant to a court approved divorce settlement. The husband-taxpayer paid the tax and brought this suit for refund, The district court held for taxpayer,
Imel v. United States,
D.Colo.,
On the suit of the wife, a divorce was granted on July 31, 1964, by a Colorado state court. Jurisdiction was retained to settle questions of alimony and property division. On February 9, 1965, the court
The lead case on this recurring problem is
United States v. Davis,
We applied
Davis
in
Pulliam v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
10 Cir.,
Then we have the
Collins
cases.
Collins #
1 was
Collins v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
10 Cir.,
A few months after our decision the Supreme Court of Oklahoma decided
Collins v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
Okl.,
Next is
Collins v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
The instant case came to the federal district court with the mentioned decisional background. The court noted a change in Colorado statutory law after
Pulliam,
Appellate Rule 21.1 of the Colorado Supreme Court permits the certification
The Colorado Supreme Court accepted the certified questions.
In re Questions submitted by United States District Court for District of Colorado,
Colo.,
The federal court then considered the answers of the Colorado Supreme Court to the certified questions and said,
“Even with Pulliam v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue in mind, I think that Davis and Collins # 4, when coupled with the Colorado Supreme Court’s answers to the certified questions, mandate that judgment here enter in favor of plaintiff, and it shall so enter.”
The basic argument of the government is that a state court cannot determine what is a taxable event under the federal income tax laws. The occurrence of a taxable event in the situation presented depends on whether the transaction was a nontaxable division of property by co-owners or was a sale or exchange resulting in a capital gain taxable under §§ 1001(c) and 1002 of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. §§ 1001(c) and 1002. Ownership is determined by the law of Colorado. The field of domestic relations “belongs exclusively to the laws of the states.”
McCarty v. Hollis,
10 Cir.,
The government argues that the Colorado Supreme Court decision on the certified questions runs contrary to
Davis.
We do not agree.
Davis
was decided on Delaware law. The Court said,
“Regardless of the tags, Delaware seems only to place a burden on the husband’s property rather than to make the wife a part owner thereof.”
The highest court of Colorado has said that the wife had a species of common ownership which vests upon the filing of the divorce action.
“Having the benefit of an interpretation of state law on this very point, we must conclude that the stock transfer operated merely to finalize the extent of the wife’s vested interest in property she and her husband held under ‘a species of common ownership.’ ”
In
Collins # 1
we said, in discussing the effect of
Pulliam,
“It is difficult for us to see any distinction between Oklahoma and Colorado law sufficient to justify a different characterization of the property division.”
The government argues that the Colorado decision does not control the taxability of the transfer because (1) the recognized interest of the wife “is not within the concept of common ownership for federal tax purposes,” and (2) under
Davis
taxability “is based on the scope of the rights of the wife during the marriage and not when the marriage is pulling apart.” As we read
Davis
it did not establish a federal standard as to the nature of the pre-transfer right in the transferred property. See
Wiles v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
10 Cir.,
The suit for dissolution of the marriage was filed May 7, 1963, and the divorce decree was entered July 31, 1964. The property settlement stipulation is dated February 5, 1965, and the divorce court’s order of approval was made four days later. Under the Colorado decision the wife’s rights as a co-owner vested in the spring of 1963. Later, the co-owners agreed on division of their respective interests and in the winter of 1965 transfers were made pursuant to the agreement. We find nothing in Davis which requires that the wife’s interest vest before the bringing of the divorce action.
The government argues that our decision in
Wiles
holds that ownership is a question for the federal courts. We do not agree.
Wiles
holds expressly that under
Davis,
state law is controlling to determine the wife’s rights,
This brings us to
Hayutin v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
10 Cir.,
The case at bar is distinguishable from
Hayutin
on the facts and relates to different provisions of the Code. See
United States v. Lewis,
“It [certification proceeding] does, of course, in the long run save time, energy, and resources and helps build a cooperative judicial federalism. Its use in a given case rests in the sound discretion of the federal court.”
The certification of the federal court is set out below. 1 It presents two questions, (1) is the transfer a taxable event for purposes of federal income taxation, and (2) is the transfer a recognition of common ownership resembling a division between co-owners. We disapprove of (1). The federal court should not have asked whether the transaction was a taxable event. In certifying questions under permissive state procedures, federal courts should use care to frame the questions so that they only request determination of state law. A federal court may not impose on a state court the responsibility for determining a federal question.
The federal court properly exercised its discretion in certifying the question of ownership under Colorado law. Both taxpayer counsel and government counsel participated in an adversary proceeding before the highest court of the state. It defined the rights and interests of the parties under state law in the property with which we are concerned. The Supreme Court has said that “state courts are the ultimate expositors of state law.”
Mullaney v. Wilbur,
We accept the Colorado decision as establishing the state law as to ownership of the property here transferred. Under the findings of both the state and federal courts the wife materially aided the accumulation of the family wealth and the settlement agreement was a fair division of the property. The Colorado court has found as a matter of state law that the rights of the wife vested at the time of the filing of the divorce suit and before the transfer. Accordingly, the transaction in issue was a division by co-owners of jointly owned property and resulted in no capital gain taxable to the husband.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The question reads,
“QUESTION
“When, under 1963 C.R.S. 46-1-5 [or under 1963 C.R.S. 46 — 1—13 as amended in 1971]
“(a) a property settlement agreement is entered into providing for a transfer of property from husband to wife in acknowledgment of the wife’s contribution to the accumulation of the marital estate, or,
“(b) a decree of the divorce court requires such transfer because of the wife’s contributions to the accumulation of the family estate, and,
“(c) the transfer is not made in satisfaction of the husband’s obligation for support, is the transfer a taxable event for purposes of federal income taxation?
“Paraphrasing the language of controlling cases, the same question may be stated:
“Under Colorado law, is such a transfer a recognition of a ‘species of common ownership’ of the marital estate by the wife resembling a division of property between co-owners, or does the transfer more closely resemble a conveyance by the husband for the release of an independent obligation owed by him to the wife?
[See,
United States v. Davis
(1962)
