Florence L. Rogers, and Joe W. Stout and Eudora Stout v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

281 F.2d 233, 6 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5187, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4013
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 1960
Docket7991_1
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 281 F.2d 233 (Florence L. Rogers, and Joe W. Stout and Eudora Stout 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
Florence L. Rogers, and Joe W. Stout and Eudora Stout v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 281 F.2d 233, 6 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5187, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4013 (4th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

I

The principal question tendered is the tax consequence of the payment by a partnership to some of its partners of salaries, out of borrowed funds, which results in an impairment of the partnership capital account. Under the particular circumstances, the Tax Court held that the salaries were taxable to the recipients except to the extent they represented a return of capital actually contributed, and that the partners could deduct as business losses only the amount of their contributed capital. 1 We agree, though we question the conclusion that the payments impaired the capital.

In November 1951, five residents of Fayetteville, North Carolina, organized a partnership for the purpose of constructing rental housing projects. They contributed nominal capital of $2,500, Florence L. Rogers, contributing 30%, Joe W. Stout, C. B. McNairy and Raymond Bryan, 20% each, and Terry A. Lyon, *235 10%'. They agreed to share profits and bear net losses in the same proportions. The agreement provided, however, that Stout, McNairy and Bryan were to have particular responsibilities for the construction work in contemplation and that for their services they should receive salaries. Stout’s salary was to be 5% of the partnership’s construction costs, while McNairy’s and Bryan’s, each, were to be 2y2 %' of such costs.

The partnership borrowed $1,075,700 from a bank, acquired a tract of land from Mrs. Rogers, one of the partners, for $5,600 and proceeded to improve the land and to construct rental housing units upon it. The first units were completed and occupied in April 1952. The entire project was completed and fully occupied on July 1, 1952.

On September 1, 1952, the day after the close of the partnership’s fiscal year on August 31, 1952, the partners conveyed the completed project to a newly organized corporation in exchange for the stock of that corporation. As a part of the exchange, the corporation assumed and agreed to pay the liabilities of the partnership attributable to the project, including the indebtedness to the bank of $1,075,700.

During the partnership’s fiscal year ended August 31, 1952, the partnership paid salaries to the partners, Stout, Mc-Nairy and Bryan, aggregating $99,349.-96. This amount was ten per cent of the construction costs incurred during the year and was paid to those three partners in accordance with the provision in the partnership agreement.

On its partnership return for fiscal 1952, the partnership reported a net loss of $15,342.57. The salaries paid were neither capitalized nor expensed, but were added to the reported operating loss in reconciling the partners’ capital accounts. That reconciliation, as reported, was as follows:

Capital Acct. At Beginning of Year Partners’ Shares of Ordinary Net Income Withdrawals Capital Acct. At End of Year

Rogers $ 750 $(34,407.75) $ (33,657.75)

Lyon 250 (11,469.25) (11,219.25)

Stout 500 26,736.47 $49,674.98 (22.438.51)

Bryan 500 1.898.98 24.837.49 (22.438.51)

McNairy 500 1.898.98 24.837.49 (22.438.51)

$2,500 $(15,342.57) $99,349.96 $(112,192.53)

On his personal return for the calendar year, 1952, the taxpayer, Stout, reported as income from the partnership only $26,736.47. Bryan and McNairy each reported only $1,898.98. In each instance, the reported amount is that shown on the partnership return in the reconciliation of the capital accounts as his share of ordinary net income. In each instance, the salary actually received was reduced by $22,938.50, being the individual’s proportionate part of the total of the reported loss and of the salary payments 2 Consistently, Mrs. Rogers, who received no partnership salary, claimed as a deduction from ordinary income a partnership loss of $34,407.75, being her proportionate part of the salary payments added to the reported operating loss.

The taxpayers take as their premise the principle, well-established *236 under the Internal Revenue Code for 1939, that partnership salaries are not deductible expenses in computing partnership distributable net income, but are treated as a device for reallocating distributable net income among the partners. As a concomitant of this principle, it was held that when distributions as salaries exceeded partnership distributable net income, the recipient was not to be taxed to the extent his receipts represented a return of his own contributed capital and that each partner could deduct, as a business loss, the diminution of his capital by reason of salary distributions to other partners. 3 The taxpayers seek to bring themselves within these premises by reasoning that the proceeds of a loan which they were obligated to repay were their contributed capital, and it was diminished by the disbursements.

The Tax Court held, however, that these established principles should not be extended to a case where the loss sought to be deducted is more technical than real. The Tax Court correctly observed that, while the partners may have had a technical liability for the debt, at least until September 1, 1952, it does not appear that it was ever intended that they should pay it. The corporation’s assumption of the debt on September 1, 1952 suggests that no part of the debt will be paid by the partnership or by the partners as individuals and that was the plan from the outset. If the obligation to repay the borrowed funds is not, in a practical sense, that of the individual partners, the proceeds of the loan need not necessarily be regarded as their contributed capital.

Moreover, we doubt the existence of any real loss. The construction work could not have been accomplished without the services and the assistance of a professional builder. The salaried partners supplied those services. The product of those services was represented by the completed project. That project was worth no less to the partnership because the builders obtained their fees in the form of partnership salaries measured by construction costs. Such a fee, similarly computed, paid to a builder who was a stranger to the partnership would have been capitalized on the partnership’s books and would have increased by that amount the book value of the completed project.

Indeed, the primary contention of the Commissioner before the Tax Court was that the salary disbursements occasioned no loss. The Tax Court felt the contention inconsistent with a stipulation that the disbursements were made as salary in accordance with the partnership agreement rather than under a separable contract of employment. Such inconsistency would exist, however, only if we accept as applicable the usual rule, prior to the Revenue Act of 1954, for the treatment of partnership salaries in excess of partnership net income. That rule has logical consistency when applied to a case in which the compensated services were rendered primarily for the production of current income. It loses that quality if applied to a case in Avhich the compensated services were rendered solely in aid of the construction of a capital asset.

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Bluebook (online)
281 F.2d 233, 6 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5187, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florence-l-rogers-and-joe-w-stout-and-eudora-stout-v-commissioner-of-ca4-1960.