Columbian Nat. Fire Ins. Co. v. United States

9 F. Supp. 688, 80 Ct. Cl. 622
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 4, 1935
Docket42123
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 F. Supp. 688 (Columbian Nat. Fire Ins. 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
Columbian Nat. Fire Ins. Co. v. United States, 9 F. Supp. 688, 80 Ct. Cl. 622 (cc 1935).

Opinion

GREEN, Judge.

Plaintiff seeks to recover $33,429.07, with interest, on account of income taxes alleged to have been overpaid by it for the year 1929 under the Revenue Act of 1928. A timely and proper claim for refund was filed and rejected.

It appears that the plaintiff is a fire insurance company organized under the laws of Michigan in 1911, began business in March, 1913, and its first policy was issued in that month. On November 1, 1922, the plaintiff took over the Columbian Fire Insurance Company of Indiana, and the assets and liabilities of that company were transferred to plaintiff’s books as of the last day .of that year. On August 19, 1929, a group of Cleveland bankers organized the Monarch Fire Insurance Company for the specific purpose of acquiring the business and assets of the plaintiff as the nucleus in a new company. The Monarch Company, acting through its brokers, in September and October, 1929, purchased 18,488 41/60 shares (out of a total of 26,000) of plaintiff’s stock at the rate of $43 per share, paying therefor a total of $795,013.40. Having thus acquired the ownership of over 70 per cent, of plaintiff’s stock, the Monarch Company obtained control of the plaintiff corporation, the same individual serving as president of both companies, and an agreement was made on behalf of plaintiff to sell all of its “property and assets, of whatsoever kind,” to the Monarch Company in consideration of the payment to plaintiff of $1,118,000 and the assumption by the Monarch Company of all of plaintiff’s liabilities. The plaintiff received this sum and caused it to be distributed to its stockholders, and all outstanding stock of the plaintiff corporation was retired and canceled, having been redeemed at $43 per share.

The plaintiff filed its income tax return for 1929 which disclosed a taxable net income of $310,941.27 and a tax liability of $34,203.54, which was duly paid. Included in its gross income was an item of $379,-252.78 shown as “profit from sales of assets.” The return set out the sale of its assets and business, as above stated, charged plaintiff with the $1,118,000 received in cash, and offset against the same the cost of the assets less the liabilities assumed. The amount of the net assets was stated in the return at $738,747.22, and this deducted from the price paid by the Monarch Company made the profit from the sale $379,252.78. The cost of the assets as shown in the return and used by the Commissioner in computing the tax did not include any amount for the value of good will on March 1, 1913.

The plaintiff filed a claim for refund of the entire tax for 1929 and interest thereon. This claim was based on several grounds as shown in finding 3. The first ground mentioned may be summarized by saying that it claimed that the return for the year 1929 in place of showing a profit of $379,252.78 should have set out a total loss of $589,601.34 composed of certain items to which we shall hereinafter refer. Amendments were filed to this claim alleging alternatively that in 1929 plaintiff sold its entire capital stock to the Monarch Fire Insurance Company of Cleveland, Ohio, for the sum of $1,118,000, and that as of that date the cost of the capital stock so sold was $1,640,640.09; and as a further alternative the plaintiff claimed that good will was sold at the same time to the Monarch Fire Insurance Company, which had a market value as of March 1, 1913, of not less than $500,000, for which the plaintiff was. entitled to a credit as an asset.

Subsequently, a further amendment was filed to the original claim stating alternatively that the Monarch Fire Insurance Company in 1929 purchased from the stockholders of the plaintiff all of its capital stock for the sum of $1,118,000, that by reason thereof there was no sale of assets by the taxpayer, and no profit which should have been reported in its income tax return.

In addition to the matters stated above, the plaintiff included in its refund claim as a part of its net loss an item of “Consolidated expense 1922; $15,101.98.” In the con *694 sideration of the claim for refund this last item will, be first taken up..

The evidence shows that in 1922 plaintiff acquired all the assets and liabilities of the Columbian. Fire Insurance Company of Indiana including its obligations on fire insurance policies.which it had issued. After the plaintiff 'had taken over the business of the Indiana company, it was considered advisable, for. certain .reasons, not necessary to mention here, to reinsure a portion of the risks upon which the Indiana company had issued policies, and an insurance broker was paid $10,000 for effecting the reinsurance thereof with other companies. Plaintiff claims thatiin-addition to this brokerage other expenses-were, incurred and paid during 1922 in connection with the so-called merger amounting to $5,101.98. The testimony in the case shows that this .amount was made up of a,number of smaller items some of which-in the first instance may have been paid by the Indiana company. The evidence is not as clear as it might have been made with reference to this matter, but on the whole we aré satisfied that plaintiff incurred expense in .acquiring the assets of the Indiana company in the amount of $5,101.98 in addition to the brokerage fee which was incurred. The two items of expense, however, were of a very different nature. Without going into details, we may say that the items which made up thé $5,101.98 were somewhat in the nature of organization expenses. They were costs which plaintiff was obliged to pay in order to carry out the transactions by which it acq’uired the assets of the Indiana company. The brokerage fee was paid for effecting the reinsurance of a portion of the insurance contracts acquired from the Indiana company evidenced by policies issued; it being considered that they belonged, to a class which it was not desirable for the plaintiff to carry. The brokerage fee, being paid in ordér to get plaintiff’s business in more satisfactory condition, was either an ordinary and'necessary expense or it was a capital expenditure. We are inclined to think it was a capital expenditure, as the benefits obtained through it were permanent; but in either event we do not think it was part of the cost of the assets of plaintiff. If it was an ordinary expense, it should have been déducted in 1922. If it was a capital expenditure,' no deduction can be allowed therefor. We aré satisfied that the brokerage fee was not deductible as a loss on the sale of plaintiff’s assets. On the- other hand, if we are right in concluding that the item of $5,101.98 was a part of the cost of the assets acquired from the Indiana company it becomes properly deductible, as a loss at the time the plaintiff finally sold all of its assets to the Monarch Company.

Of the other items of plaintiff’s claim for refund only two are presented in argument. One relates to good will, and the other to commissions on the sale of stock.

It is urged on the part of plaintiff, that the evidence shows that when plaintiff’s assets were sold there was included a good will which on March 1, 1913, was worth not less than $250,000,. and that the amount of this good will should have been included by the Commissioner in plaintiff’s assets and considered in determining the gain or loss on the final sale thereof to the Indiana company.

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Related

Jones v. Commissioner
40 T.C. 249 (U.S. Tax Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Supp. 688, 80 Ct. Cl. 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbian-nat-fire-ins-co-v-united-states-cc-1935.