C. M. Hall Lamp Co. v. United States

97 F. Supp. 481
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedApril 17, 1951
Docket6845
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 F. Supp. 481 (C. M. Hall Lamp Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. M. Hall Lamp Co. v. United States, 97 F. Supp. 481 (E.D. Mich. 1951).

Opinion

KOSCINSKI, District Judge.

Plaintiff taxpayer seeks recovery of allegedly overpaid excess profits taxes for the year 1941. In its return for that year plaintiff included in its equity invested capital an item of $646,078.07, representing good will purchased from Edmund & Jones Corporation in 1926. Disallowance of this item by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue resulted in the present suit. Claim for the good will item has now been reduced by plaintiff to $525,478.77.

For purposes of brevity plaintiff will hereinafter be referred to as Hall and the Edmund & Jones Corporation as E & J.

Plaintiff contends that it acquired assets of E & J worth $2,207,296.27 and its good will for $525,478.77 based on its agreement to turn over its own stock which then had a value of a least $11% a share and payment of cash. Defendant challenges plaintiff’s right to claim any good will credit since the purchase agreement placed no value on the E & J good will; also, that the value of Hall stock delivered for purchase of the E & J business must be determined as of the date it was actually issued, and that after a lapse of years plaintiff should not be permitted to set up an item of good will nunc pro tunc and thereby increase the valuation of its assets for excess profits tax purposes.

Defendant filed a counter-claim but concedes that the statute of limitations prevents recovery thereon unless plaintiff prevails in its claim for refund, against which judgment the counter-claim can be offset. The counter-claim arises as a result of acquisition by plaintiff of bonds for which refunding bonds were later issued. Defendant contends that acceptance by plaintiff of the refunding bonds for the original bonds was tantamount to an exchange of properties different from each other, that the cost basis for determining the gain upon the sale of the refunding bonds is the value of the new bonds when acquired, and that plaintiff failed to properly report such gain in its 1941 return. Plaintiff denies that surrender of the original for the refunding bonds con *483 stituted a new acquisition of property and argues that it represented a mere change in the evidence without any change in the substance of those securities.

The parties filed a stipulation of the facts which are not disputed. Testimony was received on other issues.

Findings of Fact.

Plaintiff’s Claim.

1. On June 26,1926 plaintiff entered into an agreement with E & J to purchase the “entire assets, business, and good will as a going concern” of E & J, as shown on the balance sheet attached to the agreement.

2. The consideration which E & J was to receive for this purchase, under the agreement, was payment of cash and delivery of Hall stock, as well as assumption by Flail of E & J obligations and liabilities. The amount of cash paid and stock delivered for such consideration, as well as the fact that the consideration paid was pursuant to the terms of the agreement, is undisputed. It is therefore deemed unnecessary to set up the full details of the agreement.

3. Other pertinent terms of the agreement covered redemption of E & J outstanding preferred stock at the earliest date permitted by its charter; deposit of sufficient funds by Hall for such purpose before notice of election to redeem contingent upon approval of E & J stockholders; payment by Hall of an extra cash dividend of $2.50 a share on its non-par common stock, at a date to be fixed and prior to consummation of the agreement, but in lieu thereof, receipt by Hall stockholders of a 20% stock dividend, at an election t0‘ be determined by the Hall board of directors; increase by Hall of its authorized non-par common stock from 200,000 to 500,000 shares to be available for general corporate purposes, including issuance of such stock for the acquisition of E & J property and business; treating the operation of the E & J business from January 1, 1926 to be for the account and benefit of Hall; consummation of the agreement as soon as practicable, but continuing payment of dividends on the stock of either company at usual rates, before consummation of the transaction, notwithstanding the agreement.

4. In view of the provision that the operations of E & J from and after January 1, 1926, shall be deemed to have been conducted and until date of transfer shall be conducted for the account and benefit of Hall, plaintiff claims losses in its 1926 income tax return for E & J losses from January 1, 1926, to June 27, 1926. However, upon a review of this return, the Internal Revenue Commissioner advised plaintiff that the affiliation status was changed to comprise the period from June 28, 1926 to December 31, 1926, within the purview of the 1926 Revenue Act. Plaintiff paid its federal 1926 income tax accordingly.

5. Pursuant to the provision for the $2.50 cash or 20% stock dividend to Hall stockholders, a stock dividend was declared and certificates therefor were issued on September 20, 1926.

6. The agreement was consummated on October 11, 1926, at which time undertakings under the agreement had been carried out except for the payment of a cash balance and delivery to E & J of the Hall stock. On that date Hall paid the balance of the cash and delivered the Hall stock to E & J, contemplated by the agreement.

7. The balance sheet of E & J, as of January 1, 1926, attached to the agreement, lists assets valued at $2,511,136.35, but shows no item of good will.

8. These assets were revalued by plaintiff as of January 1, 1926, at $2,390,931.36. Such revaluation likewise omits reference to any item of good will. According to the agreement, the value of the balance sheet assets was subject to correction for omission of the 1924 — 25 tax deficiency of E & J, subsequently determined at $4,647.81.

9. Parties hereto are in agreement, as appears by their stipulation of facts, that the balance sheet assets of E & J, as reflected on the E & J balance sheet of December 31, 1925, and as set up by plaintiff upon its own books of account, were fairly and adequately valued at the net figure of $2,390,931.36, and that this amount was subject to correction by deduction of the $4,647.81 tax deficiency and $178,987.28 E *484 & J losses during the first six-month period in 1926, leaving a balance of $2,207,296.27 as value of the E & J balance sheet assets at the time Hall acquired them.

10. It is also undisputed and is stipulated between the parties that Plaintiff turned over to E & J, in consideration for the purchase of its business, the sum of $866,108.37 in cash and 160,000 shares of Hall stock, pursuant to the agreement, as follows:

“a. Deposit with a bank on July 2, 1926 of sufficient cash and securities to redeem the E & J preferred stock. On plaintiff's instructions the bank converted the securities into cash and between July 22, 1926 and October 7, 1926 forwarded various amounts to a trust company for redemption of such preferred stock.
“b. Within the period following June 27, 1926 and on October 11, 1926 plaintiff paid additional cash up to the total amount of $866,107.37 and delivered additionally to E & J certificates for 160,000 shares of its own capital stock.”

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97 F. Supp. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-m-hall-lamp-co-v-united-states-mied-1951.