On June 11, 1934, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Turner to a seat on the United States Board of Tax Appeals (later the Tax Court). In a noted 1935 case, Turner ruled that former
United States Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon was permitted to take
tax deductions for the donation of paintings to museums. Turner was reappointed for two succeeding terms, on June 2, 1946, and June 2, 1958, serving as chief judge from 1945 to 1949. In 1950, Turner married Essie Lee Pearson Tusler of
Gaithersburg, Maryland. Although his last term was set to expire on June 1, 1970, Turner took
senior status in 1962, and thereafter served as national president of
Sigma Chi fraternity from 1963 to 1967. Turner developed
Alzheimer's disease and died in an
Annandale, Virginia, nursing home, at the age of 90. ==References==