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27 Mo. L. Rev. 354 (1962)
Puzzling Problems in Property Settlements-The Tax Anatomy of Divorce

handle is hein.journals/molr27 and id is 368 raw text is: PUZZLING PROBLEMS IN PROPERTY
SETTLEMENTS-
THE TAX ANATOMY OF DIVORCE
Wm. DOUGLAS KILBOUax, JR.e
I. THE PROBLEMS
A. Divorce Settlements
A husband, in order to rid himself of a nagging wife, agrees to transfer
to her 1,000 shares of stock worth 101,000 dollars, for which he originally
paid 1,000 dollars. A month later, the couple are divorced, and immediately
thereafter the ex-husband transfers the stock pursuant to the agreement.1
How should this transaction be treated for federal gift tax and income
tax purposes?
It seems obvious in any normal sense that H has not made a gift. The
transaction should not be subject to the gift tax. Whether it is free from
gift tax will be discussed hereafter.
What about the federal income tax? It also seems obvious that H has
secured the benefit of the increment in value of 100,000 dollars by using it
to acquire his freedom and that this disposition of property results in a
realization of 100,000 dollars of income which should be subject to the fed-
eral income tax. Whether this disposition does result in a realization of in-
come, and whether the realized income, if any, is recognized and can be cal-
culated for federal income tax purposes, will also be discussed hereafter.
Does the receipt by the ex-wife of 101,000 dollars worth of stock result
in income to her?
In determining whether W realized income when she received the
stock, is it relevant that she was twenty-three years old when she married
H, that he was eighty at the time, that she was an extremely attractive
100-dollar-a-night call girl prior to the marriage, that the marriage lasted
about two months, and that W boasts to all her young and relatively poor
new clients that she married the old goat for his money? Is it relevant
*Professor of Law and Director, Graduate Tax Program, School of Law,
Boston University; member of the bar, Massachusetts and Oregon; B.A., Yale
University, 1949; LL.B., Columbia University, 1953.
1. The ex-wife and ex-husband will sometimes hereafter be referred to, re-
spectively, as W and H.
(354)

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