Colonial Fabrics, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

202 F.2d 105, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 266, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4432
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1953
Docket22352_1
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 202 F.2d 105 (Colonial Fabrics, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colonial Fabrics, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 202 F.2d 105, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 266, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4432 (2d Cir. 1953).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

The sole issue presented to us on this petition contesting a deficiency assessment of excess profits taxes arises by reason of a difference in valuation of property received by taxpayer in payment for 200 shares of its non-par value stock and constituting '“equity invested capital” for tax assessment purposes. I.R.C. § 718, 26 U.S. C. The value set by the taxpayer and supported throughout by it was $100,000; this figure was reduced by respondent to $30,000 and the Tax Court has sustained this reduction. Because of this and certain other adjustments, the decision below found deficiencies in 1943 of $2,857.43 in the taxpayer’s declared value excess profits tax and $63,096.50 in its excess profits tax. Other adjustments made were ultimately not contested below and are not here. The taxpayer’s motion for review by the full Tax Court was denied and this petition for review followed.

The taxpayer was incorporated under the laws of the State of New York on April 9, 1943; the tax period here involved is from that date until the end of the year. Since its stock was not dealt in on any market, and since issued stock had been paid for in property as well as cash, it seems agreed that the value of the property received for the stock determines the issue. This property-drapery materials — had been owned by'the Mount Hope Finishing Co. in its Dighton-Cólonial Department, for which another corporation, Colonial Drapery & Curtain Corp., acted as selling agent. Mount Hope had been engaged in the same business for which the taxpayer was organized, namely, buying and converting drapery material and upholstery fabrics and selling these to retailers, jobbers, and manufacturers ,of drapery and furniture. Mount Hope had determined to close its Dighton-Colonial Department and hence to dispense with the services of the Curtain Corporation. On April 1, 1943, an inventory was prepared by the staff of the Curtain Corporation under the direction of Frank J. Mann, its secretary-treasurer and general manager. This, showed three classes of merchandise, vis.,. eight items of “grey goods” (fabrics in an unfinished condition) at a total cost of $13,946.43; eleven items of “goods in process” at a total of $53,182.07; and fifty-seven items of “finished goods,” at $33,645 — or an over-all total of $100,773.50. The record shows that this was in large part a broken lot inventory purposely reduced by *106 Mount Hope, with some discontinued styles (it being a practice in the trade to introduce styles every week). 0'n May 7, 1943, Mount Hope sold the goods to Abbott Merchandising and Finance Co. for $30,000 cash.

Meanwhile Mann became incorporator, stockholder, director, and vice-president of the new company — the taxpayer here— which employed his Curtain Corporation as its selling agent. At the time of the hearing below he was the taxpayer’s secretary; asserting familiarity with values of this type of merchandise, he testified that the fair market value of the odd lots in question was “at least $100,000, probably a little more,” and further that the property had particular value to the taxpayer. His testimony was entirely consistent with a long letter he wrote Abbott on May 28, 1943, making an offer for the goods, which is in many ways a complete résumé of the taxpayer’s case. It is quoted extensively in Judge Opper’s full opinion below. It contains, among other details, the self-serving opinion that “this close-out inventory” would have “quite substantially greater” value to petitioner than to other converters or dealers— since no one else is in as good a position “to handle and merchandise this inventory to the best advantage” — which has been quoted by commentators in criticism of the decision below. Vernon, Jr., and Molloy, Blockage and the Invested Capital Credit, 8 Tax L.Rev. 131, 146, 147. But it also contains, repeated in details too extensive to- set forth here, his not unreasonable grounds for this belief. In short, these were that, since he “was largely instrumental in the selection, styling and merchandising of the inventory” in the first place as treasurer of the Curtain Corporation and since he had been “making efforts to have a corporation organized to take the place which Mount Hope recently held in relation to” Curtain, “the new corporation could handle the inventory with peculiar advantage 'by reason of its opportunities to match and fill in shades, patterns and styles for retailers and jobbers with whom the Dighton-Colonial Department dealt and whom we know well” and it would “benefit by reason of the good-will which it would thus be able to' establish with those'customers.” After continuing in this vein in justification of the offer he was making for the purchase of the goods he counsels haste in its acceptance in order that the Dighton-Colonial customers might be promptly approached “if the great though intangible value of the good-will, established with those customers at immense expense and cost over a period of nearly half a century, is to be preserved. Delay will afford competitors opportunities which may, as you can readily imagine, result in loss of this -valuable good-will with those customers.”

The offer which he actually made is also of interest. Stating that “the new corporation is not in a position to purchase the inventory from you for cash,” he goes on to urge the advantage to Abbott of a sale paid for in taxpayer’s 'stock, which will yield much more when the new corporation prospers, etc. So, after explaining taxpayer’s corporate setup, and the payments in cash and property for stock already issued, he eventually offers for the merchandise a total of 150 shares at $500 per share, or a face value of $75,000. While the taxpayer now asserts that the letter was “merely ‘trade talk’ ” and written on behalf of the Curtain Corporation, it is of course an actual offer by an active officer of the taxpayer — an offer which, when substantially increased, led to a purchase approved by the diréctors on the very same lines set forth in this trade talk.

For this letter did not entirely soften Abbott’s heart; the deal, when finally completed on June 28, called for a payment of 200 shares at a face value of $100,000. In a resolution of taxpayer’s directors adopted on June 14, 1943, approving this purchase for 200 shares of the common stock and finding “that said merchandise is worth one hundred thousand ($100,000.00) dollars,” there is also set forth the connection of its vice-president (Mann) with the merchandise and with the customers therefor. The final Whereas clause before the conclusion as to value is as follows:

“Whereas the board of directors is of opinion that by supplementing and filling in the assortments and lots of *107 said merchandise, this corporation will be able to dispose thereof, over a period of time, at a profit and will, in addition, benefit from the good-will resulting from being enabled, through the purchase of said inventory, to furnish supplies of the kinds of goods comprised therein to the retailers, jobbers and manufacturers who have been and are now carrying goods of that kind in their inventory.”

Judge Opper set forth meticulously in his findings all the facts bearing upon the issue in much more detail and completeness than we have attempted.

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Bluebook (online)
202 F.2d 105, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 266, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonial-fabrics-inc-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1953.