Ansorge v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
This text of 147 F.2d 459 (Ansorge v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The commissioner determined that sums the taxpayer had received in the tax year for services as an attorney were taxable as ordinary income and not as capital gains. The Tax Court, in a reported opinion,1 fully setting out the facts2 as they were [460]*460stipulated, affirmed that determination. Petitioner, here, insisting that the decision was wrong, urges upon us that the substance of what occurred is this: that P>eLuca, owning a capital asset, a claim for just compensation, so contracted with petitioner as to make him co-proprietor, to the extent of forty percent of the amount to be received upon the claim, and as a result of such contracting, petitioner became entitled to return as capital gains the amount he received for his services. We do not think that this is what in fact occurred. We cannot agree that what petitioner received for his services can be treated as capital gains.
The most cursory examination of, the briefs and record makes it entirely clear that this is another of those cases in which “as long as the matter to be considered is debated in artificial terms there is danger of being led by a technical definition to apply a certain name, and then to deduce consequences which have no relation-to the grounds on which the name was applied.”3 A more complete study shows that the effort to so debate it here has but darkened counsel. Obligated, if he would prevail, to succeed in investing with the attributes of capital gains what on its face appears to be merely ordinary income, compensation for services rendered as an attorney, and with the attributes of an assignment, a contract for fees contingent upon the successful prosecution of a claim against the United States, petitioner finds himself hard put to it in the exigencies of his situation to hold his course. To [461]*461bring his compensation for services as a lawyer within the definition of capital gains, he must somehow, though he received it as a fee, and the fee was not earned and he was not entitled to receive anything until his efforts had been crowned with success, make it appear that what he got was not payment to him for personal services, but the proceeds of a sale or exchange of an interest in the claim which he had become the owner of many years before. While to bring his contract within the definition of an assignment he must somehow, in face of the fact that it deals with a claim against the government and of the affidavit he caused to be filed in the Court of Claims, that his client was sole owner, make it appear that its effect was from and after its execution to vest petitioner with ownership of a part of the claim. In his first brief, petitioner boldly asserted that the claim was not against the United States hut against the Emergency Fleet Corporation, and that the assignment of the claim was therefore not within the prohibition of Revised Statutes, Sec. 3477, 31 U.S.C.A. § Z03. Citing Hawaiian Gas Products v. Commissioner, 9 Cir., 126 F. 2d 4, in support of his position that the claim to just compensation was a capital asset in DeLuca’s hands, and Commissioner v. Hopkinson, 2 Cir., 126 F.2d 406, to the effect .that the assignment to him made the proceeds when collected capital gains in his hands, he bore down heavily on the contract as an assignment of part of the claim. In his reply brief, however, confronted with the inconsistency between the affidavit in the Court of Claims
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147 F.2d 459, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 698, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ansorge-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1945.