George L. Castner Co. v. Commissioner

30 T.C. 1061, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 106
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1958
DocketDocket Nos. 55774, 55775
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 30 T.C. 1061 (George L. Castner Co. 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
George L. Castner Co. v. Commissioner, 30 T.C. 1061, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 106 (tax 1958).

Opinion

The respondent determined deficiencies in income tax against the petitioners as follows:

Docket No. . Year Deficiency
65774 George L. Castner Company, Inc_ 1951 $341. 66
55775 George L. Castner and Lucile C. Castner_ 1952. 831. 32

The questions for decision are whether the respondent erred (1) in his determination of the 1951 gain realized by George L. Castner Company, Inc., from the sale of certain machinery and equipment, and (2) in his determination of fair market value of a note George L. Castner received in liquidation of his George L. Castner Company, Inc., stock.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found as stipulated.

George L. Castner and Lucile C. Castner are husband and wife, and are residents of Clarksville, Tennessee. They filed a joint income tax return for the calendar year 1952 with the district director of internal revenue for Tennessee.

George L. Castner Company, Inc., sometimes hereafter referred to as the Castner Company, was a Tennessee corporation organized on February 16, 1920, under the name of Castner Ice Cream Company, with its principal place of business in Clarksville. It filed its corporation income tax returns for the calendar year 1951 and for the period January 1, 1952, to October 31, 1952, with the district director of internal revenue for Tennessee.

On some undisclosed date in the 1930’s, the name of Castner Ice Cream Company was changed to the Clarksville Pure Milk Company. Its business was and continued to be the processing and selling of milk, ice cream, and other related products at wholesale and retail.

Acting for the Clarksville Pure Milk Company, George L. Castner, hereafter referred to as petitioner, on some date not shown, offered to sell the dairy equipment and machinery of the company to the Velvet Ice Cream Company of Nashville, Tennessee. Velvet sent one of its employees, Fletcher Brothers, to Clarksville to evaluate the property and determine if it was feasible for Velvet to make the purchase. After hearing Brothers’ report, Velvet indicated that it was not interested in making the purchase. Brothers later returned to Clarks-ville and offered personally to buy the property, but at a price much less than petitioner wanted Velvet to pay. After discussing the proposal with Brothers and J. W. Burklow, a friend of Brothers’, petitioner negotiated an agreement, evidenced by written contract dated May 7,1951, for sale of the property to Brothers and Burklow.

On. the date of the contract, the Clarksville Pure Milk Company-had outstanding 126 shares of stock, having a par value of $100 per share. The stock was owned, 82 shares by petitioner, 21 shares by his brother, E. J. Castner, 22.shares by his sister, Mrs. F. W. Walker, and 1 share by Clara E. Seale. On April 28, 1951, petitioner had purchased 3 shares of stock from the Clarksville Ice & Coal Company for $200.

The contract of May 7, 1951, between the Clarksville Pure Milk Company, as seller, and Fletcher Brothers and J. W. Burklow, as purchasers, was designated as a “Contract for Lease of Eeal Estate and Sale of Personal Property.” Under its terms, the seller sold its dairy machinery and equipment, a list of which was attached to the agreement, and leased the property on which it had been conducting its dairy business to the purchasers. The purchase price of the property sold was $11,000, of which the purchasers paid $3,000 as “earnest money.” The balance of $8,000 was to be paid in quarterly installments over a 10-year period, the first installment to be due on or before August 10,1951. Interest was to be paid at the rate of 5 per cent per annum. A vendor’s lien was retained by the seller. By the terms of the contract, the sale was to be completed, the note for the balance of the purchase price executed and possession given on May 7, 1951, at the office of the seller.

Under the terms of the contract, the seller agreed that upon completion of the sale, it would, on May 7,1951, lease the described real estate to the purchasers for a period of 3 years, at a rental of $75 per month, with an option in the purchasers to further lease the property for a like period, and with the right also to purchase the property for $7,500.

Added to the contract as originally written and signed, was a provision, separately signed, that the seller agreed to amend its charter changing its name so as to give “the purchaser” the right to use the name Clarksville Pure Milk Co., Inc.

On May 7,1951, the date of the contract, the Clarksville Pure Milk Company changed its corporate name to George L. Castner Company, Inc. On the same date, Fletcher Brothers and J. W. Burklow organized Clarksville Pure Milk Company, Inc., and transferred to it the property they had acquired that day from the Clarksville Pure Milk Company.

Pursuant to the contract, and also on May 7, 1951, a note was executed by the Clarksville Pure Milk Company, Inc., to the George L. Castner Company, Inc., in the amount.of $8,000. The note recited that the $8,000 was to be paid in quarterly installments of $253.08, beginning on August 10, 1951, and extending over a period of 10 years, or until the entire balance of the principal amount of $8,000 had been paid, with each quarterly installment consisting of both principal and interest.1 It was further recited that the note was “secured by a vendor’s lien on the property conveyed to Fletcher Brothers and J. W. Burklow by bill of sale, and subsequently transferred by the said Fletcher Brothers and J. W. Burklow, to the Clarksville Pure Milk Company, Inc.” There was a provision that any number of the installments or the entire balance due on the principal could be paid at any time.

Attached to the note was a chattel mortgage executed by the Clarks-ville Pure Milk Company, Inc., by Fletcher Brothers, president, in favor of George L. Castner and wife, Lucile Castner, as trustees. The property mortgaged was the dairy machinery and equipment described in the bill of sale. There were similar provisions with respect to the quarterly installments and the right of paying anjr number of the installments on or before maturity as were stated on the face of the note.

The seller’s adjusted basis for the dairy machinery and equipment on the date of sale was $9,287.19.

At or about the date of the purchase of the machinery and equipment, but in a separate transaction, the purchasers also bought the milk and ice cream and packaging material which Castner Company had oh hand, the amount thereof and the price paid not being shown.

On its corporate income tax return for 1951, the Castner Company computed and reported its profits from its operations by the use of inventories, although the return carried a check mark to the effect that it was prepared on a cash basis.

During 1951 and in addition to the $3,000 received on May 7, the contract date, the Castner Company received payment in August and November of two quarterly installments on the note. Of the quarterly payments of $253.08 each, it treated $53.08 as interest and $200 as principal.

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George L. Castner Co. v. Commissioner
30 T.C. 1061 (U.S. Tax Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 T.C. 1061, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-l-castner-co-v-commissioner-tax-1958.