Thе record shows that the $50,-000 advanced by the taxpayer’s husband in connection with the settlement was disbursed to her personally but that all the other money, including the $400,000 placed in trust, was put up by the Erlanger brothers who furnishеd it in order to get rid of the actions brought by the taxpayer against their sister. The question is whether sums of money whiсh were not the product of the husband’s earnings or a part of his estate, but were wholly furnished by third parties, should be treated as his for income tax purposes merely because they were a means of relieving him from future payments of alimony.
The gross income of a taxpayer which, after permitted deductions, is subject to income taxes is defined (26 U.S.C.A. Int. Rev.Code, § 22) as including “gains, profits, and income derived from salаries, wages, or compensation for personal service * * * or from professions, vocations, trades, businesses, commerce, or sales, or dealings in property, * * * growing out of the ownership or usе of or interest in such property; also from interest, rent, dividends, securities, or t-he transaction of any businеss carried on for gain or profit, or gains or profits and income derived from any source whatevеr.” No part of the corpus of the trust here was derived from the earnings, property or business of the tаxpayer’s husband and because of this alone we think she must fail in her appeal.
It is argued, however, on behalf of the Commissioner that there was an actual or constructive receipt by Allison L. S. Stern of the advances made by the Erlangers and that these advances became his before they were applied to the trust, but the Tax Court found otherwise. It is true that if the Erlangers had given the moneys ■ to him and he had set up a trust out of them a different case might have been made for treating the income as his. There was, however, no gift to him. What the Erlangers wanted was to have the taxpayer drop her law suits against their sister аnd thereby to get the latter out of her trouble and to have their family spared further publicity. To accomplish this they were willing to pay, and did pay, large sums. They paid it to set up a trust for the taxpayer and not to make a gift to- Stern and Stern at no time had the funds they advanced within his control.
Douglas v. Willcuts,
The result of subjecting Allison L. S. Stern to taxes upоn the income from the trust would be not only to tax his income, which had not been diminished by any con
*46
tribution made tо the trust, but to require him to pay further taxes on income from a trust that was neither derived from his labor nor his property. Moreover, though the settlement was approved by the Court of Chancery and adjudged a bаr to future claims for alimony, the decree might still be reopened by the Court of Chancery to readjust the provisions therein for payment of alimony. Parmly v. Parmly, 125 N.J.Eq. 545,
It is further argued- that the incоme of the trust must be regarded as that of the husband because in the contract between himself and the taxpayer it was provided that he should be the grantor and he was described as such in the trust indenture. It is contеnded that, under such circumstances, the admission of evidence to show that the corpus of the trust was not derived from the husband violated the parol evidence rule. But the parol evidence rule only еxcludes proof varying a written instrument, where the issues are between the parties to it, and does not аffect the right of the Commissioner, who was not a party, to
go
behind the written contract in order to discover the true facts. Tex-Penn Oil Co. v. Commissioner, 3 Cir.,
But even if it be thought that it malees no difference that the corpus of the trust was derived from the Erlangers, and not from the property of the husband, and that the determining factor is the power retained by the New Jersey Court of Chancery to deal with further claims for alimony, yet under Pearce v. Commissioner,
Order affirmed.
