Champion Spark Plug Co. v. Commissioner

30 T.C. 295, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 193
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 15, 1958
DocketDocket No. 64489
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 30 T.C. 295 (Champion Spark Plug Co. 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
Champion Spark Plug Co. v. Commissioner, 30 T.C. 295, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 193 (tax 1958).

Opinion

Mulroney, Judge:

The respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of the petitioner for the year 1953 in the sum of $27,670.94. The only issue in the case is whether petitioner properly accrued and deducted for the year 1953 the amount of $33,750 representing a sum provided and authorized by the petitioner’s board of directors on December 16, 1953, for payment in 60 equal semimonthly installments commencing January 15, 1954, the payments to be made to a disabled employee or his widow or her estate.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts have been stipulated and they are found accordingly.

The petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Delaware and has its principal office at 900 Upton Avenue, Toledo, Ohio. The petitioner’s income and excess profits tax return for the calendar year 1953 was filed with the district director of internal revenue at Toledo, Ohio. During and for the year 1953, the petitioner kept its books and reported its income in accordance with an accrual method of accounting.

Ernest C. Badger, Jr., hereinafter referred to as Badger, was hired by the petitioner in 1945 as a traveling representative. He was approximately 35 years of age at the time and was neither a shareholder nor a relative of any shareholder of petitioner. Badger’s duties as traveling representative and later as assistant export manager, required him to travel extensively through many foreign countries while contacting important large customers in all parts of the world.

At the time Badger was hired it was the policy of petitioner to inform all employees of employee benefits for which they would become eligible. One of such benefits to which an employee became eligible was a company-financed pension plan for salaried employees. One of the features of this plan consisted of substantial life insurance protection prior to retirement for all insurable employees. The program was financed through the purchase of individual life annuity policies for each employee from an insurance company. In the event of the death of an. insurable employee prior to retirement, life insurance proceeds in an amount equal to one hundred times the employee’s monthly retirement benefit would be paid to his beneficiary. In the event of the death of an uninsurable employee, only the premiums paid in with respect to the straight annuity policy would be paid to the beneficiary.

At the time Badger was hired, he was insurable on the basis of all normal standards and petitioner expected that upon Badger’s becoming a participant in the pension plan, he would receive the full benefit of the life insurance protection afforded by the program. At the end of 1948, Badger became eligible as a pension plan participant and application for his annuity and life insurance policy was made by petitioner. The annuity policy was granted. The life insurance policy was refused by the insurance company because, in the opinion of the insurance company, Badger’s job was considered dangerous in that it involved too much foreign travel. During the next several years and continuing up through most of the year 1953, continual efforts were made by petitioner to have the insurance company reverse its prior decision, but all such efforts were unsuccessful.

In November 1953, Badger was taken severely ill while on a trip to South America. He was returned immediately to the United States and never thereafter returned to work for the petitioner. He died J anuary 16,1954.

Sometime in November or in early December of 1953, it was determined that Badger had cancer and that the disease in its then state would prove fatal. On December 16, 1953, petitioner adopted the following resolution:

Resolved : That, in recognition of the long and faithful services rendered to the Company by Ernest C. Badger, who has been completely disabled from an incurable illness and will not be able to render any further service, there be paid to him a sum equal to thirty times his present monthly salary, such sum, namely: $33,750, to be paid in sixty equal semimonthly installments, commencing January 15, 1954 as a continuation of his present salary, provided that in the event of his death before payment to him of said amount in full, the balance shall be paid in comparable installments to his wife, Doris E. Badger, if living, otherwise to her estate.

The amount of $33,750 was computed by petitioner by a computation which determined the amount of insurance he would have been entitled to had the petitioner been able to secure the policy which it tried to secure from the insurance company. The amount so determined was a little less than the $33,750 authorized by the resolution and petitioner “rounded out” the sum to make it an even 2years of payments.

During his employment Badger had received full and reasonable compensation for all services performed by him for the petitioner and in authorizing the payment of $33,750 to Badger and his widow, petitioner’s management took' into consideration that it was the company’s assignment of post of duty to Badger which prevented him from being insured at the time of his death. Had the insurance company approved the original application for life insurance, petitioner would have incurred additional total premium expense for the years of his covered employment of $1,226.93.

The authorized payment of $33,750 constituted an ordinary and necessary expense of the petitioner’s business and constituted a properly accrued liability for the year 1953.

OPINION.

Respondent, in his opening statement and throughout his brief, states the question in the case is whether petitioner can secure the deduction in 1953 when it accrued the item or in the years of payment. He concedes the deductibility of the payments when made, as business expenses under section 23 (a) (1) (A).1 And yet, respondent’s first argument on brief is that petitioner “was never obligated to pay any part of the sum. Hence, there was no legal liability which it could accrue.”

It is true that accrual of an expense as a deduction is dependent upon the existence of a fixed and definite obligation. And it may be true that here there was no underlying legal liability compelling the petitioner to make the fixed and definite obligation. But this lack of an underlying legal liability is not fatal to petitioner’s argument. There is no requirement that “there must be an underlying legal obligation to make an expenditure before it can qualify as an ‘ordinary and necessary’ business expense under section 23 (a) (1), Internal Revenue Code of 1939.” Waring Products Corporation, 27 T. C. 921, 929. It is just as true that there is no requirement that there must be an underlying legal liability before a definite and fixed obligation to make an expenditure can qualify as an accrued “ordinary and necessary” business expense under section 23 (a) (1), I. R. C. 1939. In either instance, the basic question is, as was stated in Waring Products Corporation, supra, “whether, in all the circumstances, the expenditure is ordinary and appropriate to the conduct of the taxpayer’s business.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 T.C. 295, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champion-spark-plug-co-v-commissioner-tax-1958.