UNITED STATES of America, Appellant, v. Elmire L. LE BLANC et al., Appellees.
No. 18053.
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.
May 17, 1960.
278 F.2d 571
Amos L. Ponder, Jr., Edw. J. Boyle, Clem H. Sehrt, Ponder & Ponder, New Orleans, La., Aubert D. Talbot, Napoleonville, La., for appellees.
Before CAMERON, JONES and BROWN, Circuit Judges.
JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.
Fifteen years ago the Supreme Court momentarily considered that it should, and would, determine whether “home” was really home, or whether it was the taxpayer‘s regular place of business employment insofar as income tax deductions for travel expense were concerned. Decision of that question in that case was avoided by placing decision on another ground. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Flowers, 1945, 326 U.S. 465, 66 S.Ct. 250, 90 L.Ed. 203.1 Thirteen
In reaching this conclusion, which we affirm, the District Court dealt with virtually undisputed facts.3
The Taxpayer was Justice Samuel LeBlanc, since deceased. The case concerns two tax years (1950 and 1951) during his tenure as Associate Justice from December 1949 down to the date of his retirement in December 1954. The precise question is whether he was entitled to deduct as traveling expenses while away from “home” under
For our purposes, the facts may be severely compressed. Napoleonville is a small Louisiana community located in the Parish of Assumption approximately 75 miles from New Orleans. Samuel LeBlanc was born there and it was there where nearly every significant event of his life occurred. In 1912 he was married to Mrs. LeBlanc who survives him and is a party to this cause. There they raised a family of four surviving children. Mr. LeBlanc engaged in the active practice of the law and there maintained an office and well equipped library. In addition to his professional practice, he owned considerable personal property and real estate, including his family home. He was financially interested and active in a plantation operation and had other local business interests. He was engaged actively in and identified as a member of his local church parish, civic organizations and social clubs. There he maintained his sole bank accounts, and all of his banking was done in Napoleonville. The family traded for some things with the small merchants of that community, but the LeBlanc family had long looked to mercantile and similar establishments located in New Orleans for their principal needs. He was thus, until 1949 at least, a lifelong actual resident and citizen and a qualified elector in the Parish of Assumption. In every respect, actual and legal, this was his home.
Came then 1949. Did Mister LeBlanc‘s home become something less for Judge LeBlanc? Certainly not in fact. He and his wife continued to maintain the family home in Napoleonville. It was kept open, was equipped with all facilities, and all utilities were kept connected. Except for unusual and infrequent circumstances, Judge and Mrs. LeBlanc left New Orleans and spent every week end during the court term at the residence in Napoleonville. During the summer months of July, August and September when the court was not in active session, life went on at Napoleonville exactly as it had before his accession to the bench.
Nor was there anything about the existence in New Orleans which made Napoleonville any less his home. True, the Judge and Mrs. LeBlanc lived in an apartment. But this was only occupied when the Judge had to be in New Orleans in attendance upon the court during its sessions. When court work requiring attendance in New Orleans was finished each week, back to Napoleonville they went. So, too, did they when court recessed during the summer months. The apartment served merely as a place for the Judge to stay as would a hotel.6 And the meals prepared or eaten there were, to the Judge‘s good fortune, a happy substitute for that obtained by itinerant judges in public restaurants.
No question is, nor on this record may be raised, on the reasonableness of the expenditures. The Commissioner, to be sure, in determining reasonableness of the infinite variety of things now having a tax incidence, has an awesome review
The apartment was but a place to stay. It was, of course, a place where the Judge spent a lot of time.8 And it may even have been a comfortable place to stay. But it was not home and nothing about it or their life in New Orleans compelled, or even permitted, the conclusion that this was home. The question is, then: did the tax law make it one? Or, in any event, were these expenditures sufficiently related to the business of judging9 as to be deductible?
The Government‘s theory—which in a scatter gun approach finally contends that the expenses are not deductible without precisely defining the reasons—seems to be that since Judge LeBlanc‘s work required that he spend three-fourths of the year in New Orleans, this was where he really lived, the apartment was his home, and the maintenance of the dual residence at Napoleonville was one merely from his own personal choice unrelated to his business as a Judge. This latter was essentially the holding in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Flowers, 326 U.S. 465, 66 S.Ct. 250, 90 L.Ed. 203, and it has found colorful, but helpful, voice in handy apothegms which we and others have uttered or echoed. “The job, not the taxpayer‘s pattern of living, must require the travel.” Carragan v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 1952, 197 F.2d 246, 249. Traveling expenses which “arise from the taxpayer‘s choice not to bring his home close to his place of work” are not deductible. O‘Toole v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 1957, 243 F.2d 302, 303. The “Supreme Court has steadfastly refused to say that traveling expenses are incurred in the pursuit of business when they stem from the [taxpayer‘s] refusal to bring his home close to his job.” Carragan v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 197 F.2d 246, 249, quoted by us in Hammond v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 1954, 213 F.2d 43, 44.
But the fact—and here we mean the Louisiana legal-fact—is that Judge LeBlanc had no choice about Napoleonville. He was required to maintain a home there. Neither did he have any choice about New Orleans. Louisiana did not compel him to live there, but he was commanded to work there. The Commissioner does not, nor could he, contend that
What did Louisiana require of its Supreme Court Justices? First, it required that “the Supreme Court shall be composed of the Chief Justice and six Associate Justices.”
The Government cannot escape the geographical residential requirement of residence within the district for eligibility
Once continued actual residence in Napoleonville is recognized as indispensable to carrying on the business of Justice of the Supreme Court from the Sixth District, we encounter no difficulty at all about the place of work. The same Louisiana Constitution is equally emphatic in its requirement that the Court be in annual session from October through June in the City of New Orleans.19 There the Court, with its Clerk and all of its records, is maintained. The State provides suitable courtroom, chambers for the Justices, the court officers, clerical staff, and all other needs. There
Judge LeBlanc must have loved Napoleonville. Like Flowers—also called by the venerable title Judge—he might never have been willing to give up all that it held so dear to him and his family. But what he did not want to give up, Louisiana forbade him to abandon so long as he remained her faithful Justice. His office tied him to Napoleonville and to New Orleans. So long as he filled the office he was committed to both places. His office required that he make his home in Napoleonville and do his work in New Orleans. He could not do either without maintaining a home in the one and traveling to the other. All of this flowed directly from his “business,” the high calling of a Justice.
That makes it precisely within Flowers since it is there held that “the exigencies of business rather than the personal conveniences and necessities of the traveler must be the motivating factors.” 326 U.S. 465, at page 474, 66 S.Ct. 250, 254, 90 L.Ed. 203, at page 209. In this light both Emmert v. United States, D.C.S.D.Ind.1955, 146 F.Supp. 322, and Moss v. United States, D.C.W.D.S.C.1956, 145 F.Supp. 10, are entirely consistent with Flowers. Similarly, although the result we reach—allowing deductibility—is contrary to Barnhill, supra, the reasoning is not since in Barnhill whether the North Carolina justice kept his old home place was purely personal as a matter of tradition, not a constitutional obligation. Barnhill v. Commissioner, supra, 148 F.2d 913.
Affirmed.
JONES, Circuit Judge (dissenting).
The question usually presented in cases such as this is whether the statutory home of the taxpayer was where he lived or where he worked. Notwithstanding all that has been written for the majority, I cannot escape the conclusion that Judge LeBlanc both lived and worked in New Orleans. I am of the opinion that the majority has commenced another spin of the wheel by departing from the doctrine set forth in Claunch v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 1959, 264 F.2d 309. This case, I think, should be followed both upon precept and principle. I dissent.
