Felix v. Commissioner

21 T.C. 794, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 282
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1954
DocketDocket Nos. 20771, 31268, 31269
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 21 T.C. 794 (Felix v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Felix v. Commissioner, 21 T.C. 794, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 282 (tax 1954).

Opinions

LeMire, Jvdge:

These consolidated proceedings involve deficiencies in income taxes for the years and in the amounts as follows:

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The contested issues are:

1. Whether respondent erred in refusing to recognize Ernest Felix and his wife, Mary Felix, as bona fide partners in Brentwood Coal & Coke Company No. 1 and No. 2 and taxing their share, of the par-nership income to partners equally.

2. (a) Whether the respondent erred in disallowing as deductions to the partnership, conducted under the name of Brentwood Coal & Coke Company, the amounts of $43,480, $31,076.80, and $8,880 paid by the partnership to the Commonwealth Trust Company, as trustee, in the respective taxable years 1944, 1945, and 1946, representing rentals for the use of a bulldozer and shovel; and (b) whether the respondent erred in disallowing as a deduction to the partnership, conducted under the name of Brentwood Coal & Coke Company No. 1 and No. 2, the amount of $4,600 paid by the partnership to the Commonwealth Trust Company, as trustee, in the taxable period ended February 28,1946, as rentals for the use of a bulldozer.

3; Whether the respondent erred in including as taxable income to each of the petitioners in the taxable year 1946 one-half the amount of $32,040, representing rentals paid by the Brentwood Coal Company, Inc., a' corporation, to the Commonwealth Trust Company, as trustee, during the year 1946, for the use of a bulldozer and 10 trucks.

4. Whether the respondent erred in including as long-term capital gain to each of the petitioners in the taxable year 1946 one-half of the profit realized on the sale of the Erie 43-B shovel sold by the Commonwealth Trust Company, as trustee, on February 28,1946.

Other issues were raised by the pleadings. These issues and the disposition thereof, as stipulated or conceded by the parties on brief, will be reflected in the computations under Bule 50.

The facts as stipulated are found accordingly.

GENERAL FACTS.

The petitioners, Albert T. Felix and Mary Ann Felix, are husband and wife, residing in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Their individual tax returns for the respective periods involved were filed with the collector of internal revenue for the twenty-third district of Pennsylvania. Petitioners kept their books and filed their returns on the calendar year basis on the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting.

On September 1,1943, Albert T. Felix and his wife, Mary Ann Felix, entered into a written partnership agreement for the purpose of conducting the business of mining and selling coal under the name of Brentwood Coal & Coke Company. The agreement provided that the profits and losses of the partnership business were to be shared equally.

Brentwood Coal Company, Inc., is a Pennsylvania corporation and was organized on April 13,1946. It kept its books on a fiscal year basis beginning March 1 and ending February 28 and on the accrual method of accounting. The petitioners, throughout the periods involved, were its sole stockholders.

Issue 1.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

In 1945 the petitioners located two coal stripping sites in Ohio. Thereupon, the petitioners invited Albert’s younger brother, Ernest Felix, and his wife, Mary Felix, to join with them in carrying on coal stripping operations on the Ohio sites. The parties agreed orally to engage in such business under the name of Brentwood Coal & Coke Company No. 1 and No. 2 to distinguish it from the partnership of the petitioners then engaged in coal mining operations in Pennsylvania. It was agreed that the initial capital of the partnership was to be $4,000, each partner contributing $1,000. On July 26,1945, each partner made his contribution of $1,000, which was deposited in a bank under the name of Brentwood Coal & Coke Company No. 1 and No. 2. A set of partnership books was opened and checks bearing the partnership name were printed.

Ernest Felix, who had had some experience in the coal business, was then employed with a company engaged in the manufacture of water tanks. It was intended that he was to continue his employment but was to go out occasionally to oversee the operations of the partnérship. It was not contemplated that Mary Felix was to perform any services for the partnership and she in fact rendered none. It was expected that Albert T. Felix and his wife, Mary Ann Felix, would render more extensive services to this partnership. Therefore, it was agreed that the profits of the partnership were to be divided on a basis of 35 per cent each to Albert T. Felix and Mary Ann Felix and 15 per cent each to Ernest Felix and his wife, Mary Felix.

The operations of the partnership were conducted under the supervision of hired employees. Albert T. Felix made periodic visits to oversee the conduct of the business. Ernest visited the operations on a couple of occasions but decided he did not like that type of work. Thereupon, it was mutually agreed to dissolve the partnership as of the end of the fiscal year, February 28,1946.

A partnership return was filed which disclosed a net profit of $17,851.65 for the short period the partnership was in existence.

Upon dissolution of the partnership Ernest Felix and Mary Felix each received, in addition to' their original capital contributions, 15 per cent of the net profits of the partnership.

In determining his deficiency against the petitioners the respondent refused to recognize Ernest Felix and his wife, Mary Felix, as bona fide partners in the partnership conducted under the name of Brentwood Coal & Coke Company No. 1 and No. 2 and taxed all of the net income of the partnership to the petitioners equally.

Ernest Felix and Mary Felix and the petitioners in good faith intended to and did join together as partners in the operation of a partnership business under the name of Brentwood Coal & Coke Company No. 1 and No. 2 during the period from July 26, 1945, to February 28,1946.

Ernest Felix and Mary Felix are each taxable on 15 per cent of the net profits of such partnership.

OPINION.

The question presented involves the propriety of the respondent’s determination that Ernest Felix and his wife, Mary Felix, were not bona fide members of the partnership business conducted under the name of the Brentwood Coal & Coke Company No. 1 and No. 2.

In support of his position that Ernest and Mary Felix were not bona fide partners in the Ohio coal mining operations, the respondent contends that the alleged partnership arrangement was a device to enable the petitioners to reduce their surtax and split their income among the family group. He points out that no formal agreement was executed; that the contributions of Ernest and his wife, Mary, were inconsequential and inadequate to justify their receiving 15 per cent of the net income of the business; that Ernest contributed no substantial services and his wife, Mary, no services at all.

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Felix v. Commissioner
21 T.C. 794 (U.S. Tax Court, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
21 T.C. 794, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felix-v-commissioner-tax-1954.