de González v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico

73 P.R. 24
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 16, 1952
DocketNo. 264
StatusPublished

This text of 73 P.R. 24 (de González v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
de González v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico, 73 P.R. 24 (prsupreme 1952).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Marrero

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Twenty-one years ago the corporation Bruno & González operated in San Juan. It was engaged in the exhibition of motion pictures produced by Paramount, Metro and Columbia, in the Rialto, Capitol and Tres Banderas theaters which it held under lease. Julio R. Bruno and Eduardo G. Gon-zález were its sole stockholders. At that time Rafael Ramos Cobián was likewise engaged in an identical business and showed Fox, R.K.O., Universal and United Artists pic[26]*26tures in the Olimpo, Fox, Liberty and Victoria theaters which he also held under lease. Due to the competition between them, both businesses were in a precarious situation.. To avoid financial disaster, they decided to associate and organized the corporation United Theaters, Inc., to which they contributed all of their assets and liabilities, their lease contracts and their respective rights to show the motion pictures of the aforesaid producers. The new corporation having been organized, 250 shares of United Theaters, Inc., were delivered both to Bruno and to González 1 and 500 to Ramos Cobián, with a par value of $100 per share.

Time passed and eight years later González and his wife sold their 250 shares of United Theaters, Inc., to Ramos Co-bián for $25,000. For that year (1939) Mr. and Mrs. Gon-zález filed separate returns and declared no income on account of that sale. Subsequently and within the statutory period the Treasurer of Puerto Rico sent them both notices of deficiencies arising out of the sale of the aforesaid shares. The Treasurer believed that said shares had cost Mr. and Mrs. González nothing and, he claimed, that in selling them for $25,000, each one obtained a net profit of $12,500. The taxpayers moved for reconsideration and for the proper administrative hearing. The Treasurer ratified his view and they resorted to the Tax Court where, after hearing oral and documentary evidence, it was decided that: the value, either at par, in the books, or any other value of the United Theaters shares upon acquiring the business of Bruno & Gon-zález in 1931, does not, nor can it represent the cost of said shares to the taxpayers; the shares cost them one half of what Bruno & González delivered to United Theaters therefor, and if in accordance with the position assumed by the respondent, Bruno & González gave in exchange for the United Theaters shares liabilities exceeding the assets by $12,241.20, obviously the shares did not cost petitioners a thing, wherefore upon selling them later for $25,000 they [27]*27made a net profit in said amount, and if this were so respondent’s position would have to be upheld.

The lower court went on saying that the evidence, never-' theless, had convinced it that besides the assets amounting to $33,464.10, consisting in furniture and fixtures, Bruno & González conveyed to United Theaters certain lease rights, to wit: of the Capitol, Tres Banderas and Rialto theaters, expiring in 8, 7 and 5 years, respectively; that it did not doubt that, being a most essential factor in the operation and business of motion-picture houses, said leases constituted a credit in favor of Bruno & González which formed part of the assets conveyed; and that if the value of said leases plus the amount of the assets did not exceed the liabilities, respondent’s determination need not be disturbed, but that if on the contrary the former exceeded the latter then the cost of the shares to Bruno & González should be an amount equal to the difference, and one half thereof to each one of the petitioners.

The lower court pointed out, moreover, that the petitioners, through their expert witness Adolfo López Capó, added the amount of $75,000 to the assets of United Theaters, at which figure they assessed all the leases held by said entity, which included those assigned to it by Bruno & González of the Rialto, Capitol and Tres Banderas theaters; that the amount of $75,000 considered by the expert to assess the shares, was the value of the leases in possession of United Theaters, as part of its own assets, said entity operating the business in a larger scale and being more powerful than the firm Bruno & González when the latter assigned those leases in the midst of a competitive situation; and that since the court rejected the system followed by the petitioners to fix the cost of their shares because it was incorrect, it found itself devoid of any basis in the record to fix the cash value of the leases, not having even proof of the rents involved in said leases which might enable it to determine the value of the leases for the unexpired period.

[28]*28The lower court considered that the problem was merely to fix the cash value of those intangible lease rights. It stated that “in our judgment it would be unfair to the plaintiff 2 if we dismissed his complaint as a whole, being certain, as we are, that those leases, with an additional value, formed part of the assets he assigned to United Theaters, because of the fact that we are unable now to reduce said value to dollars and cents.” After setting forth the foregoing the court decided the case as one for declaratory judgment and decreed:

“(a) That in order to determine the profit obtained by the plaintiff from the 1939 sale of the 250 shares he received from United Theaters in 1931, we must find out whether there was a surplus between the assets and the liabilities conveyed by the firm Bruno & González in 1931 to United Theaters, one half of the difference, if any, corresponding to said plaintiff; and
“(b) That as part of the conveyed assets of Bruno & Gon-zález there must be included the value, at that time, of the leases of the Capitol, Tres Banderas and Rialto theaters, for the still unexpired term of each lease.”

It also granted the petitioners a period of twenty days to submit in writing the cost of their shares in conformity with the foregoing, notifying the respondent thereof.

Within the term granted the petitioners appeared in writing and stated that the value of the leases of the Capitol, Tres Banderas and Rialto, theaters in possession of Bruno & González was $40,000 which sum together with the assets amounting to $33,464.10, representing furniture and fixtures, and after deducting the debts and obligations of said corporation amounting to $45,705.30, left a remainder of $27,758.80 as the surplus of the assets over the liabilities of the extinct corporation. From said amount, according to the document filed, $13,879.40 belonged to the petitioners.

The respondent objected and the court set a date to hear the parties. In the hearing finally held on November 14, [29]*291950, the parties stipulated, as appears from the minutes thereof signed by the Assistant Clerk and included in the record,3 that if Messrs. Rafael Ramos Cobián and Eduardo G. González testified they would state that the value of the leases of the Capitol and Rialto (sic) theaters was made up as follows: $35,000 belonged to Ramos Cobián and $40,000 to Bruno & González, thus submitting the case for decision on the evidence presented by the parties in the previous hearings as to the value of the shares.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P.R. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-gonzalez-v-tax-court-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1952.