Boyle v. Wells

103 F.2d 237, 15 Ohio Op. 27, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3543
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1939
DocketNo. 7708
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 103 F.2d 237 (Boyle v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. Wells, 103 F.2d 237, 15 Ohio Op. 27, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3543 (6th Cir. 1939).

Opinions

HAMILTON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the District Court denying petition to review an order of the Referee in Bankruptcy.

The bankrupt, a corporation, was for many years engaged in the business of manufacturing and repairing auto, truck and bus bodies and special tractor equipment in two plants in Cleveland, Ohio, until it went into bankruptcy in 1935.

For the years 1932, 1933, 1934 and 1935, it filed with the Auditor of Cuyahoga County returns of personal property for the assessment of taxes in which it valued its inventory, machinery and equipment at cost, as shown by its books, less an annual depreciation charge of ten per cent on the latter.'

On the basis of these returns the Tax Commission made an assessment for each of the years as follows: 1932, $2,596.61; 1933, $2,074.69; 1934, $1,774.86, and 1935, $1,735.70 which ip conceded to be the correct sum due upon the basis of the returns. The bankrupt paid on the 1932 assessment, $1,253.04.

The Treasurer of Cuyahoga County filed with the Referee claim for taxes in the foregoing amounts for each of the years and the Trustee in Bankruptcy filed his objections in the form of an application for a show cause order upon the Treasurer as to why his claim should not be rejected, expunged or reduced on the ground that the assessment and valuation for each of the years was excessive and that the bankrupt, during the taxing periods, had no taxable interest. At a hearing on the show cause order, Henry G. Schaefer, former Vice President and General [239]*239Manager of the bankrupt who signed and swore to the returns for the years 1932 and 1935 and knew the contents in the other years, testified that he was familiar with the nature, character and content of the inventory, machinery and equipment of the bankrupt for the years in question and was an expert on values of lumber and machinery.

He stated that in December, 1931, under his supervision, an actual inventory was taken of all manufacturing material and manufactured products on hand priced at cost which was used as a basis of valuation for subsequent years, with new purchases at cost added and sales deducted. He stated that hitches and parts carried in the 1931 inventory and subsequently at .$10,110.64 were- obsolete during all the time and had a true cash value of $600; that lumber inventoried at $49,395.67 had a true value not in excess of $20,000 because it was one purpose wood and sawed for car body building and the change from wood to steel bodies by car manufacturers greatly decreased its value.

In December, 1932, he sold for $8,000 to C. H. Barth from whom the bankrupt had borrowed $10,000, some of the bankrupt’s choice lumber which was inventoried at $18,000 in 1931. The same lumber was later sold by Barth in 1934 for $5,000 and until sold was carried on bankrupt’s books .at the original inventoried value of $18,-000. He valued the remaining lumber at $40 per 1,000 board feet or $10,800.

He said the hitches and scrapers in -miscellaneous stock inventoried in 1931-at $4,479 had a true value in money for all subsequent years of $500, because their design and construction were specially for Ford tractors which were discontinued, though he stated the bankrupt did some little business and made a few sales in these repair parts in 1932 and 1933. He stated that cabs bought by the bankrupt in 1930 for which it paid from $88.70 to $160 each, greatly deteriorated in value because of the adoption of steel cab bodies by the White Company, its main purchaser; that .50 of these cabs sold for $25 each and he valued the remaining 75 on hand at bankruptcy at $5 each. He stated the Majestic Car Corporation chassis which was inventoried at $2,700 in 1931 was obsolete at that time and for the subsequent years had a value of only $75. He testified the 15 winches on hand in 1931 and inventoried at cost of $6,300, which were used in seven-ton trucks, because of the two-ton truck’ State limitation, became less valuable and by 1935 were worth only $100 each..

He stated that a trailer truck built at a cost of $4,000 and so listed in the inventory sold in 1933 for $2,000 with $1,000 additional repairs and that the miscellaneous items generally were in the inventory at $9,359.90, their true value. There was taken on all these items bulk depreciation of $25,000 in the year 1932, which was deducted from the inventory.

Machinery and equipment were valued at cost and most of the former was used for a special purpose. Two-thirds of it was destroyed by fire in 1927 and some reconstructed at that time with some new purchases then and additional ones in 1930, 1933 and 1935. All the machinery was set up on the bankrupt’s books at cost, plus installation and added safety equipment and depreciation of ten per cent taken on all of it for the years 1932, 1933, 1934 and 1935. This witness stated that in 1932 twenty-five per cent in value of the machinery was obsolete, but carried at purchase price less depreciation. He gave its actual value in 1932 at $16,000 and in 1933 and 1934 at $13,000 with no definite figure in 1935. Upon inquiry as to whether he considered the original inventories as false he said he did not think so but that book values were not a true criterion.

He stated that the same figures were reported by the bankrupt in its income tax return as used in the balance sheets and tax returns filed with the County Auditor. All of the assets of the bankrupt were purchased at the bankruptcy sale in August, 1935, by this witness and his associates for $22,000 including inventory, machinery, equipment and good will.

Walter Rock, an experienced lumber man, testified that in 1932 he carefully inspected the lumber purchased by Mr. Barth from the bankrupt consisting of 123,000 feet, which was worth $40 per thousand board feet, and in his opinion this was the value of the lumber owned by the bankrupt in the years 1932, 1933 and 1934.

William J. Glor, who was an expert in woodwork and metal work machinery and one of three appraisers appointed by the Bankruptcy Court to appraise the assets, said he had thoroughly examined the machinery which was of old type and not motor-driven as used since 1925 and that two-thirds of it was purchased prior to [240]*2401929 and some second-hand put in during 1934. He said the figure of $81,000 used hy the bankrupt as original cost was a “false figure.” He stated he knew of an instance where the bankrupt had paid $100 for a piece of machinery which was charged on its books at $2,500. He valued the machinery as of January, 1935, for purposes of liquidation at $13,400, and, assuming the same machinery was there for the previous years, he said it was worth, January, 1934, $13,400; January, 1933, approximately $10,000, and January, 1932, approximately $17,000.

Neither the bankrupt nor the trustee made an attempt to invoke relief under the Ohio Tax Statutes against excessive or illegal assessments and filed no claim or complaint, nor instituted proceedings with the Tax Commission of Ohio or other taxing authorities or the courts of Ohio to protest, challenge or secure a revision of the assessments or taxes.

Counsel for the Treasurer objected to the jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court to hear and determine the validity and amount of the tax. At conclusion of the trustee’s case, counsel for the Treasurer made a motion for a finding and judgment for the Treasurer which was renewed at conclusion of the entire case.

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103 F.2d 237 (Sixth Circuit, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 F.2d 237, 15 Ohio Op. 27, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-wells-ca6-1939.