Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Commissioner

17 T.C. 101, 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 115
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1951
DocketDocket Nos. 19828, 25082, 25083
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 T.C. 101 (Coca-Cola Bottling 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
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Commissioner, 17 T.C. 101, 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 115 (tax 1951).

Opinions

OPINION.

HaRRON, Judge:

Issue 1. The primary issue in these proceedings is whether the respondent erred in refusing to recognize the separate existence of the partnership and in including its income in the gross income of Sacramento Corporation. Sacramento Corporation, in Docket No. 19828, contends that the partnership was a separate economic entity and that its income cannot be imputed to the corporation. The respondent, however, alleges that the creation of the partnership served no business purpose and was merely a device whereby income was reallocated among the family group with resulting tax advantage. He argues, therefore, that the partnership was a sham which should be disregarded and that the income which purportedly was that of the partnership was in reality that of Sacramento Corporation. This issue relates to the tax liability of the corporation for its fiscal years ended February 29, 1944, February 28, 1945, and February 28, 1946.

It is an established rule that a taxpayer has the right to adopt the type of organization for the conduct of a business which he deems to be suitable and preferable, and he is not required to adopt the type of business organization which will yield the maximum tax upon the income earned by the business. Moline Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner, 319 U. S. 436; Chelsea, Products Corp., 16 T. C. 840; Cedar Valley Distillery, Inc., 16 T. C. 870; Estate of Julius I. Byrne, 16 T. C. 1234; Buffalo Motor Co., 10 T. C. 83; Miles-Conley Co., 10 T. C. 754, affd. 173 F. 2d 958; Seminole Flavor Co., 4 T. C. 1215; Koppers Co., 2 T. C. 152; Essex Broadcasters, Inc., 2 T. C. 523; Twin Oaks Co. v. Commissioner (C. A. 9, 1950), 183 F. 2d 385, reversing a Memorandum Opinion of this Court; and Denning v. Commissioner, 180 F. 2d 280. However, if the form of a business enterprise which a taxpayer adopts is a sham and a device to evade the burden of taxation, the law allows looking through the form to reality and disregarding the selected form of the business. Higgins v. Smith, 308 U. S. 473; Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U. S. 465.

The evidence shows that it was the intent of the parties that a. partnership should take over and conduct the bottling and distributing business which the corporation previously had conducted, and that the operation of the bottling business actually was conducted by the partnership. A partnership consisting of N. M. and Gladys Sellers was created and operated as a distinct and separate economic entity. The partnership opened and maintained separate books of account; it opened and maintained separate bank accounts; it held title to all motor vehicles; it paid its own operating expenses; it had its own social security accounts and was the withholding agent for taxes on the payroll of its employees who numbered about 110 persons. The partnership operated under a sub-bottler’s contract which w-as prepared and approved by the general counsel for the parent Coca-Cola bottling companies, wrhich was in the almost identical form as the standard ■ sub-bottler’s contract, and was in conformity with the standard contract. It was approved by Sacramento Corporation’s parent bottler, Pacific Coast Coca-Cola Bottling Company, and by the Coca-Cola Company. The entire arrangement of sublicensing the partnership would have been impossible without the approval of the above Coca-Cola companies. Under the original Articles of Partnership the term during which the partnership is to exist is of indefinite duration and is not limited to any period of years. The sub-bottling contract between Sacramento Corporation and the partnership can continue beyond the initial 5-year period, if the partnership continues to order Coca-Cola syrup for bottled Coca-Cola.

The members of the partnership are subject to the unlimited personal liability which may develop out of the operation of the business by the partnership in place of the limited liability to which they had been subject previously as stockholders of Sacramento Corporation when it conducted the bottling and distributing business. The change in personal liability is evidence of the reality in the change of the form of the entity which thereafter operated the business. There was conversion of the operation of the bottling and distributing business from operation by a corporation to operation by a partnership.

The chief stockholders of Sacramento Corporation are N. M. and Gladys Sellers, but there are also other stockholders, Pratt and Hunter, who, also, owned stock of Pacific Coast Coca-Cola Bottling Company. N. M. Sellers had attempted to purchase the stock of Sacramento Corporation which Hunter and Pratt owned, but they were unwilling to sell their stock. This explains to some extent the fact that Sacramento Corporation was not dissolved.

The fact that Sacramento Corporation continued in existence, holding title to some parcels of real estate and providing the partnership with syrup under the sub-bottling agreement does not detract from the reality of the transfer of the bottling business from the corporation to the partnership. If the corporation had been dissolved, the franchise to bottle and sell Coca-Cola in the territory might have been lost.

The price which’ the partnership paid to Sacramento Corporation for its physical assets represented the book value of the assets, and there is no evidence that the total price, $170,896.01 was not fair and reasonable. In this connection, it is noted that all of the vending machines were appraised and revalued so as to establish a fair price for them. The respondent argues that the purchase price was not adequate because no payment was made for good will. However, the ability of Sacramento Corporation to make a profit arose solely from its ownership of the Coca-Cola franchise in the Sacramento area, which it retained. The good will of the business lay in the Coca-Cola name and in the franchise, see Floyd D. Akers, 6 T. C. 693, and Sacramento Corporation was adequately compensated for the sublicense which it gave to the partnership to use the Coca-Cola name and formula, since under the terms of its sub-bottling contract with the partnership, Sacramento Corporation received the maximum return which the Coca-Cola Company allowed a first-line bottler to receive from a sub-bottler under a sub-license agreement. The contract between Sacramento Corporation and the partnership followed the pattern set up by the Coca-Cola Company for such agreements and was, in fact, drawn by the legal counsel of that company.

Upon consideration of all of the evidence, it is held that the respondent erred in refusing to recognize the partnership as a new and separate business entity and in including the income of the partnership for the taxable years in that of Sacramento Corporation and that the income of the partnership is not properly includible in the gross income of Sacramento Corporation.

It should be noted that the respondent does not rely upon the provisions of section 45 of the Code in making his determination that all of the income of the partnership should be added to the income of the corporation. We do not, therefore, consider the applicability of section 45. See, however, Cedar Valley Distillery, Inc., supra; and Miles-Conley Co., 10 T. C. 754, supra.

It follows from the holding made under this issue that in Docket Nos.

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Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Commissioner
17 T.C. 101 (U.S. Tax Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
17 T.C. 101, 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coca-cola-bottling-co-v-commissioner-tax-1951.