Crespi v. Commissioner

44 B.T.A. 670, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1290
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1941
DocketDocket No. 103132.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 44 B.T.A. 670 (Crespi v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crespi v. Commissioner, 44 B.T.A. 670, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1290 (bta 1941).

Opinion

[671]*671OPINION.

Disney:

This proceeding involves a deficiency in income tax for the year 1938. The respondent determined a deficiency in the amount of $837.30, all of which is in issue. The only question for our determination is whether petitioner is domiciled in the State of Texas, and entitled to report his income on a community property basis. The Commissioner determined that he was not domiciled in Texas. The petitioner filed his return for the year 1938 with the collector of internal revenue for the second district of Texas.

The petitioner is the son of Pio Crespi, the president and principal stockholder of Crespi & Co. the predecessor of which was organized in 1908, and has since that time been engaged in the business of buying and selling cotton, with its principal office at Dallas, Texas. The head office has always been in Texas, which is the largest cotton-producing state. In 1938 the approximate gross volume of business done by Crespi & Co. was $15,000,000. It sells cotton for its own account, including sales to the textile mills in South Carolina, North Carolina, and Georgia, and to foreign countries, including England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and Japan. Charlotte, North Carolina, is the center of the domestic textile industry in the United States. The head office of the company and the financial end of the business originates in Dallas, Texas. It owns a warehouse in Galveston, Texas, which is the principal concentrating point for its cotton, and controls a warehouse in Greenville, South Carolina. Practically 75 percent of the textile business of the United States is conducted in the South at this time.

Petitioner was born in Waco, Texas, in 1909, and attended the public schools there. He started to work in Dallas in 1928 with Crespi & Co. Since that time he has worked for the company in Corpus Christi, Texas; Memphis, Tennessee; Atlanta, Georgia; Le Havre, France; and Bremen, Germany, and is now and was in 1938 in Charlotte, North Carolina. In all of these places, he has been buying and selling cotton. Generally when he is in the eastern states, he is trying to sell cotton; when in Texas, he generally is buying cotton. The war has caused the company’s export business to fall off a great deal, and when the war is over the company should have a large export business. If so, petitioner will probably be in Europe trying to get some of that business. •

Petitioner is the only child of 'Pio Crespi, and he and Pio Crespi control Crespi & Co. He expects eventually to succeed his father as head of the business. The idea behind his going all over the world, getting schooling in the cotton business, is so that he can take his father’s place. After the war is over, petitioner expects to run both the export and the domestic phases of the company’s business, and to take charge of Crespi & Co.

[672]*672Petitioner now resides in Charlotte, North Carolina. He went to Charlotte about September 1935, although prior to that time, while working in Dallas, he was accustomed to stopping at the office in Charlotte every year to talk to the agents and salesmen which the company had in the Carolinas. He went to the Carolinas to learn the domestic mill business, after having been on the European end of the business. About a year later he went to Atlanta, Georgia, stayed about a year, and then went back to Charlotte, North Carolina. When he first went to Charlotte, he lived in a furnished apartment. He now lives in a home which he rents, and has been renting since July 1940. He does not own any real property in North Carolina, although he has accumulated some furniture and owns most of the furniture in his home. Part of the furniture came from Dallas, from his father. He does not pay any taxes in North Carolina, and did not file a North Carolina income tax return for last year. He was married in 1935 at Corpus Christi, Texas, to a girl from Dallas, Texas. He has no family portraits or other possessions. He has no banking account at Charlotte, but has one in Dallas, Texas, and one in a bank in New York. He votes at Dallas, Texas, and pays poll tax there. He registered for the draft at Dallas, owns real estate, that is, oil property, in Texas, as a member of the partnership, and owns stocks or securities and keeps the certificates representing them at Dallas in the Crespi & Co. offices. The address in which his securities are registered and to which dividends come is Dallas, Texas. He keeps his personal books at Dallas. In market transactions on cotton futures, for instance, he uses Dallas, Texas, as his address. He is a member of the country club at Charlotte, North Carolina, for purposes of entertaining mill men, and is at that place interested in, and in 1938 realized about $8,700 from, the cotton merchant business of Crespi, Baker & Co., which he and his father control. He carries on his automobile a North Carolina license, but gives Dallas, Texas, as his address in that connection. He feels that Dallas is his home to which he will come back eventually.

Petitioner intends to reside where he can be of the greatest service to Crespi & Co., whether it be Dallas, Charlotte, Atlanta, or any other place. He went to Charlotte, North Carolina, because Charlotte and vicinity is the center of the domestic textile industry in this country. He handles the domestic end of the business and the export trade is handled through the Dallas office. The petitioner determines Crespi & Co. policies regarding domestic business, but that is not true as to export business. His job at this time is building up a domestic mill business. He has been going around calling on the cotton mills. All cotton shippers travel a great deal during their spare time. When petitioner gets to know the cotton millers, he can talk to them [673]*673over a long distance telephone from Dallas, if he desires. After a while it will not be necessary for him to remain in the vicinity of the Carolinas. He intends to stay in North Carolina so long as it is necessary to build up the good will of the officials of the textile industry to the extent that he can be able effectively to perform the duties involved in the domestic trade from the Dallas office, and then his present plans are to return to Dallas and conduct' the business from the Dallas office. He thinks he has such a good will of the mill men pretty well built up now. As soon as the export business picks up, he expects to return to Dallas.

During the past two years petitioner has been in Dallas three or four times a year. He was there three times between Christmas 1940 and the time of hearing on February 19, 1941. He usually stays from a week to ten days, and stays in his father’s home. His wife sometimes returns with him.

About July 1939 petitioner’s father wrote to him about coming back to Dallas and his letter in response, in pertinent part, stated:

* * * I know you are anxious for me to return to Dallas and kelp you in tke main office, particularly in tke event of war, as I remember your recent comment tkat you carried tke wkole burden of business through one war and would dread going it alone through the next one.
But here is tke other side of the picture, I feel that my work in the Eastern belt has not yet been completed. I feel that I am really accomplishing something in the selling end, our sales have increased tremendously since I have been here, and there have been no more “Crawley affairs.” With me over here we have given a looser rein in the selling and are well lined up for big business.

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Crespi v. Commissioner
44 B.T.A. 670 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
44 B.T.A. 670, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crespi-v-commissioner-bta-1941.