Commissioner v. Smith

285 F.2d 91
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 1960
DocketNo. 18243
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 285 F.2d 91 (Commissioner v. Smith) 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
Commissioner v. Smith, 285 F.2d 91 (5th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This petition for review of a decision of the Tax Court attacks the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the findings of fact and conclusions of law imposing income tax deficiencies and penalties for the years 1943 and 1944.

Principally involved here is the question whether the Tax Court’s finding that overceiling payments totalling $185,-782.88 and $90,000, respectively, were paid to the individual taxpayer Griffin was based upon substantial evidence, first, that the payments were received by Griffin and, if so, second, that such payments became the income of Griffin himself rather than of the partnership of which he was a member and the sale of whose liquor produced such overeeiling payments.

The background essential to an understanding of the case can be briefly stated.. It is undisputed the Griffin was a member of two partnerships, Wathen Bros. Distillers and Palm Beach Distributors,, in Palm Beach, Florida, during parts of the years 1943 and 1944. Each of these partnerships became the owner of a very large quantity of bottled whiskies. Under existing OPA regulations these partnerships were permitted to sell these whiskies for a reasonable markup. This they did during the years in question and received payments during these years amounting to very substantial gross income. The books and records of the partnerships reflected sales of all of the liquor known to have been disposed of by the partnerships and such records reflected the receipt by them of the OPA price. [93]*93Federal income tax returns were filed by the respective partnerships and individual tax returns were filed by the individuals reflecting the profits as disclosed by the books.

After investigation by internal revenue agents, deficiencies in income taxes for the years 1943 and 1944 were asserted against Griffin. The explanation of the deficiencies was that Griffin had received substantial overceiling payments from persons to whom he arranged sales of the partnerships’ whiskey. The explanation as stated in the deficiency notice for 1943 was:

“It is determined that you received an aggregate of $185,782.88 in excess of ceiling prices for whiskey sold in 1943 and that no part of these overceiling receipts was reported in your 1943 income.”

In his petition filed in the Tax Court Griffin attacked these deficiencies, and it was upon this attack and the denials contained in the answer that the burden was assumed by the taxpayer to prove the incorrectness of the commissioner’s determinations.

The Tax Court made findings that Griffin did receive total overceiling payments in the amounts of $185,782.88 and $90,000 in the years 1943 and 1944 respectively.

Approaching the first question, that is whether there is evidence to support the finding that payments in such amounts were made to Griffin, we find that as to the sum of $152,175 in 1943 and $90,000 in 1944, there was express categorical testimony given by the persons who made the payments that they had arranged with Griffin to pay such amounts in excess of OPA ceiling prices in return for his selling them the whiskey, and that they had either actually paid him the amounts in cash in person or had paid them to someone authorized by Griffin to receive it. There can thus be no doubt as to the substantiality of the evidence supporting the findings of the Tax Court as to the fact of payment to Griffin to the extent indicated. These amounts represented transactions with two named purchasers, Best and McDonough. The sums also proved out mathematically by multiplying the rate per case of overceiling payment testified to by the number of cases shown on the books of the partnerships to have been sold to these two purchasers.

Two other transactions were involved in the proof and in the findings of the Tax Court. One of them related to a transaction between Colin L. Britt and Griffin, which was reduced to writing during the year 1943.1

It is not disputed that Griffin received this sum of $85,000 on September 23, 1943, nor is it disputed that Griffin caused delivery to Britt of approximately 21,000 cases of bourbon whiskey from the stocks of the two partnerships. Britt was inducted into the Army in the early part of 1944 at a time when he had been unable to deliver the items for which he had obligated himself under the written memorandum. Thereupon they arrived at a settlement agreement.2 After Britt [94]*94had made some further deliveries, an agreement was entered into between him and Griffin on November 24, 1944, concurred in by the other two partners of the Palm Beach Distributors, under which $10,000 was returned to Britt and the remaining $75,000 was divided equally among the three partners. The partners made this settlement by calculating that the $75,000 retained represented the profit which the partnership would have made on all the whiskey if Britt had delivered it as agreed. Griffin reported his $25,000 as income on his 1944 return. The Commissioner contended that this $85,000 was also an overeeiling payment to Griffin in 1943. Upon receipt of proof establishing the circumstances just recited, the Tax Court decided that it was not an overceiling payment but that it represented a legal profit actually received by the partnership in 1944 when the contract was liquidated.

The remaining transaction as to which proof was offered in support of the Commissioner’s claim of overceiling payments ■of an additional $33,607.88 in 1943 was testified to by one Burg. Mr. Burg’s testimony was very short and to the point. He testified that in 1943, “Mr. Griffin had some whiskey and I wanted to get some and he came into Columbia [South Carolina] and he told me that he would sell me some.” The following was then testified to:

“Q. What price did Mr. Griffin quote you? A. It was my understanding that it was $7.50 over the OPA ceiling price.
“Q. How was that $7.50 to be paid? A. In cash.
“Q. Did you place an order for whiskey? A. Yes, I did.
“Q. Did you subsequently receive that whiskey ? A. I did.
“Q. Do you recall the brand of the whiskey? A. I don’t recall the name of the brand. I think it was two brands, but I think one of them was ‘Plainsman.’ ”

Evidence in the form of entries in the books of the partnerships showed that over the period September 1 to September 23 one of the partnerships shipped to Burg’s company in Columbia 10,1211:[Í2 cases of whiskey, which were billed to Burg and paid for by him at the OPA ceiling prices.

On cross examination counsel for the taxpayer asked Mr. Burg, “Did you ever give Mr. Griffin any money?” and the witness answered, “No, I didn’t.” Further, on cross examination, the following testimony was elicited:

“Q. Who got that money that you were talking about, this $7.50 a case ? Whom did you give that to, if you gave it?
“A. Well, Ben Yaffee came up. We had discontinued buying any whiskey, and we had some money left. And then Yaffee came up, and I gave him the money, and he took it, or is supposed to have taken it, to Berlin Griffin. I do not know whether he did or not.”

Ben Yaffee was a partner of taxpayer Griffin. No objection was made to this question or answer, which, as will be noted, was elicited by the taxpayer’s counsel on cross examination.

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285 F.2d 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-v-smith-ca5-1960.