Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. De Leuw

95 F.2d 647, 20 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1153, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4100
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 1937
DocketNos. 6150, 6151
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 F.2d 647 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. De Leuw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. De Leuw, 95 F.2d 647, 20 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1153, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4100 (7th Cir. 1937).

Opinion

BALTZELL, District Judge.

This is a review of the decision of the United States Board of Tax Appeals which held that there was no deficiency in the income tax of respondent for the years 1929, 1930, and 1931, as had previously been determined by petitioner. There is also a companion case, Commissioner v. R. F. Kelker, Jr., cause No. 6151, in which the same issue is involved, and to which the same facts apply. We entered an order that the transcript of record in cause No. 6151 need not be printed; that the appeals be heard together; and that a like judgment be entered in each case.

On May 20, 1901, there was passed by the city council of Chicago an ordinance creating a special committee to be known as the “Committee on Local Transportation,” hereinafter referred to as “the committee.” It consists of nine members of the city .council, to be'appointed by the mayor. Thus, it will be seen that the personnel of the committee is subject to change in accordance with the views of the mayor. It is the duty of the committee, as outlined in the ordinance, to consider such ordinances, resolutions, orders, or matters as may be referred to it by the city council, to carry on work of investigation as may have been left uncompleted by the Street Railway Commission, to consider and devise plans for meeting situations that may arise when the street railway renewal ordinances' come up for action, to make a special study of the kind, quality, and sufficiency of the local transportation service and facilities of Chicago, and to make recommendations to the city council from time to time, looking to the improvement of such local transportation, etc. The ordinance, also, gave to the committee authority to employ a secretary and such other clerical and expert assistants as it may deem necessary; provided, of course, that the total expenditure for such purposes shall not exceed the amount appropriated by the city council for that purpose.

On December 1, 1922, the chairman of the committee created an engineering staff to assist the committee in its studies, consisting of a chief engineer, a principal as[648]*648sistant engineer, assistant engineers, etc. There was in existence at that time, and at all times with which we are here concerned, a civil service commission of Chicago (hereinafter referred to as “the commission”), of which the chairman of the committee asked approval of a temporary appointment to fill this engineering staff. Such approval was granted, and on December 7, 1922, the chairman reported to the commission that respondent had been by him appointed, as of December 1, assistant engineer to be paid the sum of $35 per day for his services, and that R. F. Kelker, Jr., had been by him appointed chief engineer, as of December 5, for which he was to receive the sum of $100 per day for his services. An appropriation was made by the city council each year in an amount sufficient to meet the expenses of the committee, including its payment to respondent and Kelker, Jr., for their services. Respondent was engaged by the committee from December 1, 1922, to January 10, 1933, with the exception of a leave of absence period from April 29, 1925, to April 1, 1926. For his services, he received the following compensation for the time actually engaged: From December 1, 1922, to April 20, 1925, the sum of $35 per day; from April 1, 1926, to September 15, 1926, the sum of $50 per day;- from September 16, 1926, to May 1, 1932, the sum of $75 per day; and from that date to January 10, 1933, the sum of $1,250 per month. The total compensation received by respondent for his services was as follows: For the year 1929, $7,450, for the year 1930, $4,725, and for the year 1931, $17,550, or a total of $29,725 for the three years in question. His compensation was paid by the city of Chicago in the form of city employees’ pay checks drawn upon the city treasurer, in accordance with the semimonthly pay rolls prepared under the direction of, and signed by, Kelker, Jr., as chief engineer, and approved by the chairman of the committee and by the city comptroller as to appropriation authority. These pay rolls contained the certificate of the civil service commission of Chicago, to the effect that each person whose name appeared thereon had entered the service of the city in accordance with civil service requirements.

The committee outlined the duties of R. F. Kelker, Jr., as chief engineer, as follows: To attend all meetings of the committee and subcommittees, to make such studies and investigations, with the aid and assistance of other persons in the service of the committee, as ordered by the committee, subcommittees, or chairman, to prepare and submit reports, to supervise the activities of the engineering staff, to prepare and certify to the semimonthly city pay rolls of persons in the service of the committee on its engineering staff, and to make employment reports to the civil service commission in connection with such staff. The duties of respondent were such as were assigned to him from time to time by the chief engineer. For such services he received the amount per diem as fixed by the committee for the time actually expended in the performance thereof, and his services were terminable by the committee at any time and without cause. His duties were not prescribed by statute or ordinance. He was neither required to take an oath nor provide a bond, and neither an oath was taken nor a bond provided.

Respondent performed a large part of his work for the committee in the field. The conference work and attendance upon the committee meetings, however, were held in the rooms of the committee in the city hall and the offices of the corporation counsel. A large portion of the drafting and clerical work was done in the private office of respondent, prior to August, 1930. Since that time, space for this work has been provided by the committee in buildings other than the city hall.

Respondent and Kelker, Jr., formed a partnership in the year 1923 under the firm name of Kelker-DeLeuw & Co. and engaged in the practice of their profession, that of consulting engineers, which continued until October 15, 1929, at which time the partnership was dissolved. During the existence of this partnership, it did engineering work for between ten and twenty-five cities and villages in, Illinois, and did work as consulting engineers for the cities of Los Angeles, Cal., Baltimore, Md., St. Louis, Mo., New York City, and many other cities throughout the United States. This firm received compensation for its services •rendered these various cities and villages during its existence, in addition to the compensation received by its individual members for the services rendered the committee. Each individual member included in the total income of the partnership the amount received by him for the services rendered the committee, but each claimed deduction in his individual income tax return for the amount so received by him. [649]*649In other words, and to he specific, the income received by respondent from the partnership during the year 1929, as shown by his income tax return, was $23,013.16 (being .one-half the total income of the partnership), from which he took a deduction of $7,450, the amount received that year for his services to the committee. There were, also, other deductions claimed, with which we are not here concerned. Kelker, Jr., the other member of the partnership, filed a similar report for that year, in which he charged himself with $23,013.16, from which he took a deduction of $13,700, the amount which he received for his services to the committee during that year.

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Related

La Rochelle v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
115 F.2d 878 (Seventh Circuit, 1940)
Commissioner v. Kelker
102 F.2d 980 (Seventh Circuit, 1938)
Ewart v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
98 F.2d 649 (Third Circuit, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
95 F.2d 647, 20 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1153, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-de-leuw-ca7-1937.