Christensen MacH. Co. v. United States

50 F.2d 282, 73 Ct. Cl. 149
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 1, 1931
DocketJ-370
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 F.2d 282 (Christensen MacH. Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christensen MacH. Co. v. United States, 50 F.2d 282, 73 Ct. Cl. 149 (cc 1931).

Opinion

GREEN, Judge.

Plaintiff brings this suit to recover certain sums specified in the petition paid at different times on its taxes for 1920, 1921, 1923, and 1924, alleged to have been collected by the defendant in excess of the amount legally due. The issue in the ease is whether the plaintiff is entitled to deductions from gross income for the years in controversy on account of payments made for a certain contract with one Christensen, to which reference will hereinafter be made more particularly.

There is no material conflict in the testimony, but the parties dispute as to the inferences and ultimate conclusions that may be drawn therefrom. The evidence shows that the plaintiff is a corporation, and during the time involved in the ease was engaged in manufacturing and selling book stitcher-feeding machinery. Its capital stock when organized was divided into 50 shares, of which 25 shares were issued to F. J. Greene, 24 shares to Martin Christensen, and one share to Mrs. Christensen. Some time during the year 1917, the plaintiff’s capital stock was increased from $5,000 to $25,000. Greene paid in $10,000 in cash, and Christensen $5,000 or $6?000 in cash, and released a credit due him from the corporation. Each received an additional 100 shares of the capital stock. From the first Christensen was the active figure in the corporation. He originated and perfected the inventions owned by it, directed the manufacture, and made the sales. Greene looked after the company’s finances, but was not known to the customers. In 1920 Christensen and Greene disagreed with reference to the business, and decided to sever relations. On February 21, 1920, a written contract was executed by and between Greene, Christensen, and the corporation under which Christensen sold all of his stock in the plaintiff corporation to Greene, ■made certain special covenants with reference to the inventions used by the company, and agreed for the period of 5 years not in any way, directly or indirectly, to compete With the business carried on by the corpora^ tion. The consideration for his agreement therein was $60,000, which was paid by the corporation.

In making up its returns for the years involved the plaintiff claimed to be entitled to a deduction from gross income for exhaustion of the agreement of Christensen not to compete, allocated pro rata over1 the years involved. The .Commissioner refused to make any deduction on account of the $60,000 paid under the first contract, but did make such an allowance for the amount paid on the second contract not to compete. The ease turns upon the question of'whether this ruling of the Commissioner was correct.

The defendant practically concedes that such a deduction would be proper if the evidence definitely showed the value of the agreement not to compete contained in the first contract. Specifically it is contended on behalf of the defendant:

First. That, in addition to the contract not to compete, there were other promises, covenants, and agreements made by Christensen to the corporation which had a value whieh must be ascertained before the cost of the contract not to compete can be determined, and that, as there is no evidence of such value, the court cannot find or determine the cost of the contract not to compete.

Second. That, if it be conceded that the other agreements were merely incidental or had at most merely a nominal value, the cost of the agreement not to compete would be the difference between the total amount paid under the contract and the value of Christensen’s stock and financial interests, and there is no satisfactory evidence of such value.

Considering the first contention made on behalf of defendant, it must he conceded there were other promises and agreements made by Christensen in the first contract besides the one not to compete; but we think, as said by the Board of Tax Appeals in determining the -same question between the same parties, that (Christensen Machine *287 Company v. Commissioner, 18 B. T. A. 266): “The other engagements of 'Christensen were only incidental and precautionary so far as Greene and the petitioner were concerned.” The first agreement provided that during the term thereof Christensen should not “directly or indirectly,” or “in any manner whatever, engage in the business of manufacturing or selling stitcher-feeding machinery, or machinery or improvements, devices, or attachments of any kind adapted for use in connection with book stitcher-feeding machines which will compete commercially.” The agreement not to grant any other person the patent or application on any new invention that would compete with the business of the corporation merely made the agreement before recited more specific, and defined in part the meaning of the words “directly or indirectly.” The other agreements appear to be merely precautionary devices, as by them Christensen agreed to do certain things contingent upon the happening of certain events, but there is no evidence that any of these events happened or were likely to happen. Such agreements could have only a nominal value at most. Even if it be conceded that the other agreements had some value, and that there is no evidence from which that value can be found, there is still sufficient evidence for the court to find and determine that their total value was not large enough to make any substantial difference in the way of reducing the income of the corporation when spread over a period of years. De minimis non curat lex. Courts are not powerless to act and prevented from rendering a judgment because the amount thereof can not be determined with precise mathematical accuracy.

Where stock has no established market value and no recent sales or offers to purchase or offers to sell have been made, it is always difficult to determine its value accurately. But, where the nature' of the business is shown, its operations described, its profits for several prior years fixed, the amount of its tangible assets known, and the testimony shows the surrounding circumstances which bear on the question of what its profits are likely to be in the future, the court cannot say that there is no evidence of value, but must proceed to determine the value as accurately as it can from the evidence which is before it.

Taking up now the evidence as to the value of the capital stock, we find that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined in another proceeding that the fair average value of plaintiff’s capital stock for the period of June 30, 1919, to June 301,1920, was $42,-017.67, but we have no knowledge of how the Commissioner arrived at that sum. The average earnings for the years December 31, 1912, to December 31, 1919, inclusive, were only $4,263.63, and, if the value of the stock was computed on that basis, the amount fixed by the Commissioner was, in our opinion, large enough. But from 1915 up to the last of 1918 the corporation was exposed to competition from the Dexter Folding Company, which had a superior machine, and in 1917 the corporation actually had a small deficit. Then Christensen invented a machine which was much superior to the Dexter machine, and in 1918 the profits rose to nearly $4,000, and were $18,731.49 in 1919. But the value of the stock cannot be properly computed on the earnings for 1919. As the Board of Tax Appeals states in its opinion (Christensen Machine Co. v. Commissioner, supra) :

“ * * * Christensen was leaving. Ho had been the most important person in the business. He had invented the machines, he had manufactured them and had sold them.

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50 F.2d 282, 73 Ct. Cl. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christensen-mach-co-v-united-states-cc-1931.