Clyde E. Bannister and Wife, Alwylda M. Bannister v. United States

262 F.2d 175, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 3 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 369, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5980
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1958
Docket17273
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 262 F.2d 175 (Clyde E. Bannister and Wife, Alwylda M. Bannister v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clyde E. Bannister and Wife, Alwylda M. Bannister v. United States, 262 F.2d 175, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 3 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 369, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5980 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinions

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

This appeal from a judgment and decisión1 of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, holding that amounts which the petitioners received during the taxable years 1949, 1950, and 1951, from a patent were royalty income, taxable as ordinary income and not, as petitioners had claimed, proceeds from the sale of the patent or an interest in it, taxable as long term capital gains, presents for decision a single question whether the appellants sold their patent, a capital asset, or an interest in it, or whether they merely granted a license to it. Putting it another way, the question presented for decision is whether, as was held below, “the interest which Bannister retained under the Schlumberger contract was not only substantial but was the major portion of the w^°^e •

The district judge correctly stated in his opinion:

“There is a stipulation of record covering many of the facts, and others appear without dispute in the ■evidence. The controlling question calls for the interpretation of an assignment or licensing agreement of certain patent rights, and the determination whether, under terms of 26 U-S.C.A. § 1235(a) the rights re-tamed by the assignor were ‘substantial.’ If so, the payments to the assignor-licensor constitute ordinary income (the basis on which the tax Z™ PaM) rigMs retaÍned f the assignor-hcensor were unsubstan,tiaI’ ^ transaction constituted a sale> and ^ Paymen1ts thereunder were ®ntltled to caPltal ^ams treat“ men '

It thus appears that the question decided below and to be decided here is not one °f fact but of law, and, since in the opinion the district judge states the facts with complete accuracy and sufficient fullness, it will be sufficient for us to adopt his statement of them and, without attempting a restatement of them here, to draw such attention to any particular fact as is pertinent to the argument,

Petitioners-appellants, presenting their attack upon the judgment in six specifications of error,I. 2 and bearing down heavily on the Ieading decision of Myers v. Commissioner, 6 T.C. 258 and the numer0us later cases3 which have followed its teaching urge upon us that the disti-ict judge has taken a too narrow and restrictive view of the law and too narrowly applied it to the undisputed facts, and that this is especially so as to the force [177]*177and effect given in the decision to the recent statutory enactments.

Pointing out that those enactments were declaratory of the controlling decisions and insisting that they must be liberally construed in the light of the circumstances of their enactment and the reports accompanying their passage, they argue that the district judge, instead of following the practical construction given by the courts and admonished by the statute, approached and decided the case from an unduly technical and restricted standpoint.

For the reasons hereafter briefly stated, we agree that this is so, and that the judgment must be reversed and here rendered.

For many years, indeed until the opinion in the Roe case, note 3, supra, the commissioner and the courts, in deciding the tax consequences of dealings with patents, held themselves to be strictly bound by the precise holding in Waterman v. MacKenzie, 138 U.S. 252, 11 S.Ct. 334, 34 L.Ed. 923, though the Waterman case dealt not at all with the taxation but with the infringement of patent rights and laid down a test for determining, for the purpose of the right to sue at law for infringement, whether there had been a license or an assignment thereof. United States v. Carruthers, 9 Cir., 219 F.2d 21, citing Allen v. Werner, 5 Cir., 190 F.2d 840, a pre-statute case. Cf.

It took the decision of the tax court in the Roe case and the decisions following to change this and, but for the stubbornness in purpose along with the vacillation in action of the Treasury Department, there would have been no need for the recent legislation. Because, however, the Treasury for a time accepted the later decisions and then denied them, and then accepted and then denied them, leaving in a state of complete uncertainty the tax fate and fortunes of those undertaking to deal commercially with their patents, the Congress in Sec. 1235 of the 1954 Code enacted the first legislation in adoption and support of these decisions; and because thereafter the Treasury undertook to posit its acceptance of the declaratory rule of the statute, not on the fact that it was declaratory but on the assumption that it was derogatory of the controlling case law, and confined its acceptance of the rule to payments received after the passage of the statute, Congress then in 1956 amended Sec. 117 of the 1939 Code to add a subdivision “q” which in substance established the same rule for taxable years beginning after May 31, 1950, 26 U.S.C.A. § 117(q).4

While the district judge, reciting that the realities of the situation must con[178]*178trol did cite many of the cases relied on by appellant, and did declare that the statute should receive a liberal interpretation, it seems to us that, because of the confusion brought on by the Treasury’s action, the court below fell into its error. This was that in endeavoring to find in the words of the statute alone the basis for appellants’ claim, whereas its real basis was in the case law, of which the statute was more or less declaratory, the court was led into a narrow, instead of a broad, construction, and thereby to deny to the undisputed facts in this case the results which, under the controlling decisions, followed from them.

In other words, instead of viewing the transaction from the broad standpoint of case law and the reasons that lay behind that law, that a person having patent rights or claims to sell and dispose of ought to have the same benefit of capital gains treatment that persons having rights in any other capital asset had, notwithstanding the form in which such sales were cast, the court, over-emphasizing some of the apparently limiting words of the statute and under-emphasizing the declaratory and enabling ones, reached a conclusion as to the law of the case which we think is contrary to the facts on which that conclusion was based.

Stating, “The interest which Bannister retained under the Schlumberger contract was not only substantial, but was the major portion of the whole”, the court went on to say:

“First, the so-called ‘exclusive’ interest assigned to Schlumberger was not exclusive at all, save for a thirty-day period. The option lay with Bannister, on such notice, to cancel this feature of the contract, after which time he might have assigned to any number of third persons an equal or greater interest than Schlumberger held. Additionally, one characteristic, peculiar to the Bannister device, considered to be one of its principle advantages was its utility while the drill bit and pipe were in the well. Schlumberger was denied the right to use the Bannister device under these circumstances. And finally, when the contract, and the circumstances of the parties thereto, are examined from their four corners, the transaction has none of the characteristics of a sale of a patent.

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Bluebook (online)
262 F.2d 175, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 3 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 369, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clyde-e-bannister-and-wife-alwylda-m-bannister-v-united-states-ca5-1958.