Brown v. Commissioner

1 T.C. 760, 1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 209
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1943
DocketDocket No. 107266
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 T.C. 760 (Brown v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Commissioner, 1 T.C. 760, 1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 209 (tax 1943).

Opinion

OPINION.

Black, Judge:

The question in this proceeding is to determine how much of the $228,068.44 fee paid in 1937 to petitioner by the Alper Chemical Corporation is taxable to petitioner in that year. Petitioner in his return for that year reported $182,016.19 as taxable. This amount represented the difference between the full amount of the fee and $46,052.25 claimed by the Burroughs estate in the letter of its executor dated March 10, 1938, just five days before petitioner filed his return for 1937. Although the respondent has added $39,602.80 to the amount reported by petitioner in his return, we understand from bis brief that he does not now contend that any more than $221,252.29 of the entire fee is taxable to petitioner in the taxable year 1937. He arrives at this amount in the following manner. First, he treats the total period of joint interest in the fee as extending from the date of the agreement with Alper Chemical Corporation to six months after the death of Burroughs or from January 25, 1929, to December 19, 1929, a period of approximately eleven months. He then allocates five-elevenths of the $14,995.50 actually paid to the Burroughs estate, or $6,816.15, to the period of joint interest prior to Burroughs’ death and six-elevenths thereof, or $8,179.35, to the period of joint interest after Burroughs’ death. This latter amount the respondent determined was a payment by petitioner “for the good will of the deceased partner in the practice” and was income to petitioner upon the authority of City Bank Farmers Trust Co., Executor, supra. In other words, the respondent determined and contends that the entire fee, less the $6,816.15 he allocated to the period of joint interest prior to Burroughs’ death, or $221,252.29, is taxable income to petitioner in 1937.

Petitioner primarily contends that he erred in reporting $182,016.19 of the fee. as taxable income in his 1937 return; that he should have reported only one-half of the fee or $114,034.22 as taxable income in 1937; that he held the other one-half of the fee in trust for himself and the estate of his deceased partner until the ownership thereof could be determined which determination did not occur until 1938. Petitioner in making this contention relies principally upon Sara R. Preston, 35 B. T. A. 312, and E. P. Madigan, 43 B. T. A. 549. The latter case, says petitioner, “is squarely in point, even as to all of the material facts.” We think both cases are distinguishable upon their facts.

In the Preston case, two lawyers received a check payable jointly to them. They could not agree as to the amount to which each was entitled; so the check was deposited in a bank to the joint account of both, and there was drawn from the joint account during the taxable year such amount as each conceded the other entitled to, the balance to be drawn only upon final settlement of the differences between them. We held in that case that each attorney in the taxable year was taxable only on the amount withdrawn from the joint account for his respective use and that the balance was not taxable until there was a final settlement. There neither could draw on the joint account without the consent of the other. That situation is not present in the instant proceeding. All the money received by petitioner in the collection of the fee in 1937 was entirely under his control except the $7,982.40 which he paid to the Burroughs estate in October 1937.

In the Madigan case, petitioner was the coach and athletic director of St. Mary’s College. His compensation was $7,000 a year plus 10 percent of St. Mary’s share of the football receipts. He reported his income on the cash basis. His share of the receipts of 1934 and 1935 amounted to $21,690.62, but prior to November 1936 he had not been paid. In November 1936 St. Mary’s received a check for $38,324.15, as the result of a game played with Fordham University, which the president of St. Mary’s endorsed to petitioner “with the stated understanding that petitioner was to take the $21,690.62 due him for 1934 and 1935 and was to hold the balance in trust until the accounting could be completed for the 1936 season.” In March 1937 the accounting was completed and Madigan was permitted to keep all except $1,339.71, which he turned over to St. Mary’s. The Commissioner determined that Madigan must return as income in 1936 the entire check for $38,324.15. We held Madigan taxable on only $21,690.62 and that the Commissioner was in error in adding any additional amount of the Fordham check. This case is clearly distinguishable from the instant proceeding. There the petitioner was to hold $16,-633.53 “in trust until the accounting could be completed for the 1936 season.” In the instant proceeding petitioner deposited the check which he received for the fee in question in the bank account which he used for his law business. He wrote a letter to the executor of the Burroughs estate in which he enclosed his check for $7,982.40 and gave it as his judgment that this amount represented the division of the fee to which the Burroughs estate was entitled and that he was entitled to keep the balance. In this connection petitioner stated in his letter of October 28, 1937, to the Burroughs estate, as follows:

I have been over the record rather carefully and, after taking all the elements into consideration, have reached the conclusion that the estate of Mr. Burroughs is fairly entitled to about 3%% of the fee, and I am enclosing herewith a check made out on that basis, as per computation enclosed.

In the face of these circumstances it seems altogether unreasonable for petitioner to contend that under the doctrine of the Preston case and the Madigan case, both sufra, that petitioner is taxable on only one-half of the fee in 1937 and that his part of the balance of the fee should be deferred for taxation until 1938. Moreover, the facts which are in evidence, oral and documentary, show that the bulk of the fee belonged to petitioner. It is perfectly clear that the greater part of the work for which the fee was paid was done after Burroughs’ death. Just how much of the fee the Burroughs estate was entitled to receive was not easy to determine, but by no stretch of the imagination, we think, could anyone contend that the Burroughs estate was entitled to-one-half of the fee. The legal representatives of the Burroughs estate made no such contention at any time. Therefore, it is clear that petitioner’s contention that he is taxable on only one-half of the fee in 1937 under the doctrine of the Preston case and Madigan case can not be sustained.

If petitioner’s contention in this respect is to be denied, then what is the amount of the fee upon which petitioner is taxable in 1937? We think there is some plausibility for the argument that he is taxable on all of it, except the $7,982.40 check which he sent to the executor of the Burroughs estate October 28, 1937. The balance of the fee was either transferred to the joint account of petitioner and his wife or left in petitioner’s law firm account of which he was the sole proprietor and upon which he could check at will.

Respondent contends that under North American Oil Consolidated v. Burnet, 286 U. S. 417, petitioner was taxable on the entire amount except $6,816.15, the amount ultimately paid to the estate of Burroughs under the partnership agreement for the period prior to Burroughs’ death.

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Related

Little Carnegie Realty Corp. v. Commissioner
1970 T.C. Memo. 150 (U.S. Tax Court, 1970)
Sohio Corp. v. Commissioner
7 T.C. 435 (U.S. Tax Court, 1946)
Brown v. Commissioner
1 T.C. 760 (U.S. Tax Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 T.C. 760, 1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-commissioner-tax-1943.