Estate of G. R. Gowdey, Deceased, and Verna E. Gowdey, and Surviving Spouse v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

307 F.2d 816
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 1962
Docket8495_1
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 307 F.2d 816 (Estate of G. R. Gowdey, Deceased, and Verna E. Gowdey, and Surviving Spouse v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of G. R. Gowdey, Deceased, and Verna E. Gowdey, and Surviving Spouse v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 307 F.2d 816 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

*817 ALBERT V. BRYAN, Circuit Judge:

Capital gain or ordinary income * is the question arising here in classifying for taxation moneys received by the petitioner-taxpayers in these circumstances:

After a machine for freezing and dispensing a dairy product was patented, the “exclusive right and license to the use, manufacture, sale and distribution of all machines built under [the] patent” were acquired by one McCullough. The grant was limited to named States, including Virginia. The privilege was also given of awarding sublicenses “for territorial rights”. Grantee McCullough was to supply the secret-formula “mix” used in the machines in the making of the product. He would also make and own the machines, and provide them to his sublicensees. McCullough agreed to pay the patent owner 4 cents per gallon on all mix put through the machines, which obligation was to continue so long as the machines were used despite earlier expiration of the patent. “Dairy Queen”, the name McCullough gave to the frozen product, was registered by him as a trade name in Virginia under 1919 Code oif Virginia §§ 1455 et seq., as amended.

Thereafter taxpayer G. R. Gowdey in a written agreement obtained from McCullough in perpetuity and exclusively “the l’ights to the use of [such] machines” as should be needed by Gowdey for a distributorship in Virginia, together with the privilege of using the trademark Dairy Queen” in connection with the machines. All machines had to be ordered through McCullough, though at manufacturer’s cost, and Gowdey was pledged not to move any machine beyond Virginia for the purpose of operating it.

While Gowdey could not assign this agreement, the express right to subcontract the machines to other persons within Virginia was granted him. Each such subcontractor, however, was to be bound by the McCullough-Gowdey agreement. Neither Gowdey nor his subcontractor could sell any other frozen dairy product, use any other type of machine, or sell any of the machines without the consent of McCullough first obtained.

For these rights Gowdey paid McCullough $40,000. Additionally, Gow-dey promised to pay the patent owner 4 cents for each gallon of mix used or sold in Virginia, irrespective of the expiration of the patent.

Gowdey, vested with this agreement, entered into 14 “Dairy Queen Franchise Agreements”, each specifying a definite, exclusive and separate territory within Virginia. All of them stipulated that Gowdey should furnish to the designated “Licensee” one or more machines— “Dairy Queen Freezers” — which would be used by the Licensee but remain the property of Gowdey. The agreement imposed certain restrictions upon the use of the privileges transferred. Every Licensee was obliged to purchase mix only from a source named and approved by Gowdey.

*818 Each Licensee paid Gowdey an immediate sum upon the execution of the agreement and thereafter 35 cents per gallon on all mix used or sold within his territory. Under these Franchises Gowdey received in 1949 $12,000 in immediate payments and $5588.10 in gal-lonage. In 1950 these items amounted to $44,000 and $30,693.90 respectively. For both years the taxpayer reported the gallonage as ordinary income but treated the immediate receipts as capital gain subject to reduction for the original cost of the Virginia Franchise. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue approved the gallonage treatment, but determined that the initial payments were also ordinary income and assessed a deficiency accordingly. In the judgment before us, entered on the petition of Gowdey’s personal representatives for redetermination, the Tax Court agreed with the Commissioner.

The transactions between Gowdey and his Licensees, the petitioners here allege, were sales. The subject of each sale, they continue, was a single composite group of rights exercisable in perpetuity in a specified Virginia territory, and composed of three ingredients: (1) the exclusive right to the use of the machine or machines; (2) the exclusive right to the use of the name Dairy Queen; and (3) the exclusive right to prepare, sell and distribute the secret-mix frozen product, Dairy Queen. The profits under these arrangements, they conclude, were capital gains.

Contra, the Tax Court found, as the Commissioner contended, the agreements not to constitute sales but mere licenses. All moneys received under the Franchise Agreements were, therefore, royalties, taxable as ordinary income rather than capital gain. For this position the Commissioner argued that the absolute ownership of Gowdey in the rights he held from McCullough — whatever their nature — was so constricted and circumscribed in his subcontracts, that what he conveyed therein to his Licensees amounted to no more than a license.

There is a scarcity of precedent upon the point of the legal stature of such franchises. For assistance in the resolution of the issues here we must first go to resemblant instruments. The principles governing transfers of rights of use have been generally enunciated in litigation of patents, copyrights, secret processes and insurance agency contracts. While the privileges in suit are neither patent rights nor one of the other classes, all involve intangibles and have additional common qualities. While far from perfect analogues and not completely controlling, the other instances are helpful in our determination of the status of the Franchise Agreement, and the efficacy of its purport of sale. Merck & Co. v. Smith, 261 F.2d 162, 165 (3 Cir. 1958).

Upon consideration of these parallels and the few direct decisions, we think the Tax Court erred in confirming the Commissioner. The transaction, in our opinion, had every essential characteristic of a sale. It does not pretend to be a sale of the machine, the trademark or the mix-product, but rather a sale of their use. In truth the patent is a very remote and insignificant part of the subject of the transfer. Such “privileges” (as they are described in the Franchise Agreement) are property susceptible of sale. The contract conferring them would have substantial value since its owner could employ it to produce income; it was enforceable at law and carried the power perpetually to exclude the grantor and all others from the same rights within the designated territory. Jones v. Corbyn, 186 F.2d 450, 452 (10 Cir. 1950). See E. I. Dupont De Nemours & Co. v. United States, 288 F.2d 904, 911 and 912 (Ct.Cl. 1961). Moreover, no statutory limitation, such as is impressed upon a patent, is put upon the duration of the use granted in the machines, the secret mix or the trademark.

The principle determinative here- is that to be a sale the transaction must vest the transferee with “all of the substantial rights” in the personalty (here the privileges). See Merck & Co. v. *819 Smith, supra, 261 F.2d 162, 164. It must vest the transferee with a title that might be fairly comparable, in degree, to what would be a fee in an easement in land. Wilson Bros. v. Branham, 131 Va. 364, 109 S.E.

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307 F.2d 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-g-r-gowdey-deceased-and-verna-e-gowdey-and-surviving-spouse-ca4-1962.