Ellis Campbell, Jr., Collector of Internal Revenue v. Ray L. Batman and Mrs. Ray L. (Edith B.) Batman
This text of 239 F.2d 283 (Ellis Campbell, Jr., Collector of Internal Revenue v. Ray L. Batman and Mrs. Ray L. (Edith B.) Batman) 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.
Opinion
The suit was for refund of income taxes overassessed for the tax years 1946 and 1947.
The claim was that the taxes, the refund of which is sued for, resulted from the erroneous action of the Commissioner in denying the existence and validity, for tax purposes for the tax years in question, of the partnership of Ray L. Batman and his son, Gerald L. Batman.
The defenses were a denial of the existence and operation of the partnership and a plea of estoppel by judgment. Based upon allegations: that the tax court in a decision, 1 on facts and circum *284 stances the same as those alleged in this case, had determined and adjudicated that the same partnership, which was claimed to have existed in. 1944 and 1945, did not then exist; that the issue so adjudicated as to those years in tihat case is . identical with the issues presented in this-case; and that it, therefore, constitutes a bar to this suit; the plea was presented as a complete bar to this suit.
The case came on for trial before the court without a jury, and the-plaintiffs having fully, developed their case, rested. Whereupon the defendant, on his plea of estoppel by judgment, offered the certified record of the tax court proceeding in the earlier case involving the years 1944 and 1945.
The district court saying, “No, it doesn’t go in evidence, you can use it in your argument”, the defendant then made his proffer of the record in the former case as Exhibits 1 and 2, and rested.
The argument concluded, the district judge announced orally findings and conclusions 2 in favor of plaintiffs, and entered judgment accordingly, and defendant is here assigning as errors that he erred (.1) in refusing to give effect to the plea of collateral estoppel, and (2) in holding that for the tax years 1946 and 1947, there was a valid partnership.
.In support of the first ground, he insists that the issues in the two proceedings are, within the controlling authorities, identical and the finding of no partnership in the first constituted an estop-pel by judgment as to the claim of partnership in the second.
In support of the second ground, he insists that, estoppel aside, upon the undisputed evidence in the case, the finding that there was a valid partnership in 1946 and 1947 is clearly erroneous, and the judgment giving effect to it was wrong and must be reversed.
We cannot agree with either of these contentions. With respect to the *285 first contention, we think it quite clear that the findings in the first case, the record in which is on file in this court and of which we take cognizance, were intended to, and did, determine 3 only whether for 1944 and 1945, the years then in question, the partnership was to be recognized for income tax purposes. They were not intended to, they do not constitute an estoppel by judgment as to the taxable years involved.
We think it equally clear, for the reasons hereafter briefly stated, that the evidence in this case amply supports the court’s findings, as to the tax years 1946 and 1947, now in question, that there was a valid partnership for income tax purposes.
The briefest consideration and comparison of the records made in the two cases will, we think, conclusively demonstrate the correctness of these views. Not only was Gerald, in the tax years in question here, two years older, much more mature than in the earlier tax years, and much better able to make valuable contributions to the partnership, but the evidence developed on this trial presented a very different picture from that presented on the tax court trial. On the former trial, Gerald, though, as shown in the former record, present in the court, did not testify. Twenty-five years old on this trial and still an active partner with his father, eleven years after the beginning of their association, he was the chief witness. His testimony, including cross-examination, occupied thirty-six pages of the record. Clear, direct, positive, and convincing, it fully supported the partnership claim for 1946 and 1947.
Taking it over all, it presents a clear picture of a true farming partnership of father and son, entered into as a part of a plan, earlier evidenced in the gifts of land and cattle to the son for making his son a successful farmer. Among the notable differences in the record made on this and on the former trial, these stand out: first, the actual continuance for eleven years in fact and in faith, as *286 well as in law, of the partnership which the tax court, lacking Gerald’s testimony and on the meager record then before it, held was not effective for tax purposes in the years 1944 and 1945; second, Gerald’s full, frank, and convincing testimony presenting a clear picture of a true farming partnership of father and son, entered into and pursued under the steady and continuing purpose of joining their resources and efforts to succeed as farmers; and, third, the con-vincingness of the father’s testimony this time, that the gifts to his son and the formation and continuance of the partnership were a part of his reasonable and commendable plan to tie his son to, and keep him in the business of farming by giving him a real stake and interest therein.
Because, in Alexander v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 224 F.2d 788, this court has correctly set forth and as correctly applied the principles governing collateral estoppel, or estoppel by judgment, with respect to different causes of action, that is suits for income taxes for different years, it will be unnecessary to relabor them here. 4 It will be sufficient to say that, upon the authorities cited and the principles there laid down, the district judge was right in rejecting the defendant's plea in bar, and that upon the undisputed evidence in the case he was amply justified in sustaining the claim of partnership for the years 1946 and 1947, and his judgment should be, and it is
Affirmed.
. Entered March 14, 1950, 9 T.C.M. 210, May 22, 1951, 5 Cir., 189 F.2d 107. appealed to and affirmed by this court; on
. The Court: “Number 5822, the father, Ray L. Batman is the Plaintiff, and Mr. Campbell, of course, the collector, is the Defendant. Number 5823, Mrs. Ray L. Batman is the Plaintiff, and Mr. Campbell is the Defendant. The Bat-mans of 5822 and 5823 are husband and wife, and the father and mother of Gerald B. Batman, who claims that he was the partner during 1946 and 1947, which income tax years are involved in these two suits, and that by reason of this, the father and mother were entitled to such deductions under the partnership statute as are thereunder permitted.
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239 F.2d 283, 50 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1146, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-campbell-jr-collector-of-internal-revenue-v-ray-l-batman-and-ca5-1956.