Brown v. Commissioner

10 B.T.A. 1036, 1928 BTA LEXIS 3974
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1928
DocketDocket Nos. 11161-11165, 11224, 15610.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 10 B.T.A. 1036 (Brown v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Commissioner, 10 B.T.A. 1036, 1928 BTA LEXIS 3974 (bta 1928).

Opinion

[1046]*1046OPINION.

Littleton:

The principal issue in these proceedings and the one common to all of them is the amount of taxable income realized by the petitioners from the partnership of Brown Brothers & Co. At the beginning of 1920, the partnership was composed of eight partners, six of whom are petitioners in these proceedings. On April 2, 1920, one partner, Eugene Delano, died and the legal representatives of. his estate are likewise petitioners. Another partner, George H. Frazier, retired on December 31, 1920, but no petition on his behalf is involved in the present proceedings. The partnership income determined for ordinary business purposes under the articles of copartnership was greater than the taxable distributive income determined under the revenue acts and regulations then in force. The principal reason for the difference in the two incomes is that business income was determined by inventorying securities at the end of the year on the basis of market values, whereas taxable income, for the purposes of the partnership return to determine the distributive shares of the partners, was determined by inventorying securities on the basis of cost or market, whichever was lower. Settlement was made with the partner- who retired and the estate of the partner who died on the basis of business income, and the petitioners who continued as partners contend that the entire amount paid to the estate of the decedent and to the retiring partner should be deducted from partnership taxable income in determining the taxable income distributable to each of the continuing partners. On the other hand, the respondent contends that the retirement of the one partner had no effect upon the taxable income of the petitioners and that the amounts paid to the estate of the decedent were for his interest in the business and nothing should be deducted from the income distributable to the petitioner's and to the partner who retired at the end of the year.

[1047]*1047lirst, we will dispose of the question raised as a result of the retirement of George H. Frazier from the partnership. Under the articles of copartnership, any partner was permitted to fetire ojj December 31, of any year on giving proper notice at least six months prior to such date. On or before June 30, 1920, Frazier gave such notice and his retirement was effective December 31, 1920. The articles further provided that such' retiring partner would receive the same share of partnership profits and the same salary for this last year’s connection with the business that he would otherwise have been entitled to receive, and that upon retirement his interest in the good will or name of the partnership would forthwith terminate and that his share of the capital which he had invested in the firm and his share of the profits would be paid to him. We construe the articles of copartnership to mean with respect to a retiring partner, that to all intents and purposes he shall be a partner until the date of his retirement on December 31, when he will be dealt with by the continuing partners, with respect to the amount of salary and partnership income for the preceding twelve months, as if he had never contemplated retirement. At the end of the year the retiring partner was entitled to receive payment for his share of capital in the business and also his share of the partnership earnings for the year in which the retirement became effective.

Under such circumstances, we fail to see why the taxable distributive share of the partners should be affected because of the retirement of Frazier. The situation of Frazier in 1920 with respect to partnership income is the same as that of the continuing partners. The mere fact that the earnings of the partnership to which Frazier was entitled on retirement were determined on a basis different from that provided for the determination of taxable income distributable to the various partners, is not material. Under the articles of copartnership, a partner, upon retirement was entitled to his share of the business income for the preceding twelve months, and also was entitled to be paid for the capital which he had invested in the partnership. That at the end of the year in which Frazier retired the continuing partners or continuing partnership was liable to make payment to him for the capital which he had in the business and also for his share of the partnership profits, as determined pursuant to the said articles of copartnership, does not affect the taxable income for the year of retirement. Under the revenue act in force for the year of retirement here in question, the manner of determining the net income of a partnership distributable to the partners and taxed in their individual returns is clearly defined (section 218, Revenue Act of 1918) and we fail to find anything therein which would permit a deduction of the character here claimed. In order for the continuing partners to have a [1048]*1048partnership after December 31, 1920, in which no interest of the retiring partner would remain, not only must the retiring partner be paid for the capital which he had invested in the business, but also such retiring partner must be paid his share of the partnership profits as determined under the articles of copartnership. In other words, there was a realization by the retiring partner on whatever interest he had in the partnership. This was a capital transaction in which the retiring partner was the seller and the continuing partners through the partnership were the purchasers. This has no effect upon the taxable income of the partnership for 1920, the distributive shares of which are to be taxed to the retiring and continuing partners. The action of the Commissioner on this point is accordingly sustained.

The first question raised by the petitioners, who continued as partners after the death of Eugene Delano, with respect to the payment to the Delano estate is whether the profits of the partnership credited to this estate and determined on the basis of the articles of copartnership should be deducted from the distributive taxable income of the partnership before making an allocation to each of the continuing-partners of their respective shares of the partnership profits determined in accordance with the revenue act then in force.

In the determination as made by the Commissioner, the Delano estate was treated as a partner, but at the hearing and in his brief filed after the hearing, the Commissioner conceded that this action was erroneous and that the petitioners’ contentions to the effect that the estate was not a partner was correct. While from the mere fact that this is an estate with which we are concerned it does not necessarily follow that the estate could not, under any circumstances, be a member of a partnership (Rowley, Modern Law of Partnerships, vol. 1, p. 182; Dudley, Partnership (8 ed.), p. 86), but since the evidence is insufficient to make a finding in the matter, we shall proceed upon the basis of this agreement between the parties. The Commissioner also concedes the correctness of the petitioners’ position that the death of Eugene Delano brought about a dissolution of the then existing partnership. This is in accordance with the laws of New York in effect for the year involved (ch. 408, sec. 62, Laws of 1919, New York). We are also of the opinion that while a dissolution of the partnership as it existed on April 2, 1920, was effected, immediately thereafter there came into existence a new partnership of which the continuing partners were members and in which, under the articles of copartnership, the continuing partners adopted the partnership agreement as it previously existed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 B.T.A. 1036, 1928 BTA LEXIS 3974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-commissioner-bta-1928.