George W. Drysdale and Jeannette Drysdale v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

277 F.2d 413, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1287, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4791
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 1960
Docket13983_1
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 277 F.2d 413 (George W. Drysdale and Jeannette Drysdale v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George W. Drysdale and Jeannette Drysdale v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 277 F.2d 413, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1287, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4791 (6th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

SIMONS, Senior Judge.

This is a petition to review a redetermination by the Tax Court of deficien-

cies in income tax for the years 1954 and 1955 asserted by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The facts involved follow.

The petitioners were cash basis taxpayers and filed joint income tax returns for the years in question. Drysdale, a practical engineer, had been in the employ of Briggs Manufacturing Company since 1926, in charge of production, and subsequently became a director and vice president. Though for a long time in the employ of Briggs, he, on October 1, 1952, for the first time, entered into a formal written employment contract with Briggs. Under it, Briggs was to pay him $1500.00 a month for ten years following termination of his full time activities, or upon reaching the age of sixty five (65). During that period Drysdale obligated himself to serve Briggs in an advisory and consulting capacity and to refrain from accepting employment with, or acquiring an interest in, any activity which was inconsistent with or adverse to the activities of Briggs. Upon the breach of any condition, Drysdale was to forfeit all rights to further compensation under the contract. In the fall of 1953, Briggs negotiated a sale of its automotive and aircraft division to the Chrysler Corporation and a sale was consummated to be effective December 29, 1953. In this situation, Briggs desired to amend petitioner’s employment contract and on December 28, 1953 the original contract was amended. Pertinent clauses are printed in the margin. *

*415 Under its terms, the Briggs’ liability was reduced from $180,000 over a ten year period to $90,000 over a five year period, Briggs was to make payment of $1500.00 *416 a month to a trustee who would hold the money and pay Drysdale $1500.00 a month upon his reaching age sixty five, or upon the termination of full time employment, or to his wife or estate, if he died before reaching sixty five. In addition, petitioner was permitted to work for Chrysler. Except for these amendments, the 1953 contract was to continue in full force and effect. Drys-dale became a full time Chrysler employee immediately following the sale to Chrysler and retired in 1957. Briggs turned over to a trustee $16,500 in the tax year 1954 and $18,000 in the tax year of 1955. While Drysdale received nothing from the trustee in those years, the Commissioner contended, and the Tax Court agreed, that these amounts were income to Drysdale during the tax years under the doctrine of constructive receipt.

Drysdale contends that the Tax Court misapplied the constructive receipt doctrine, that there is no evidentiary basis for the Tax Court’s finding that Drysdale suggested this amendment solely to defer receipt of income. The Commissioner insists that the constructive receipt doctrine was properly applied and alternatively asserts the economic benefit theory.

Following the sale to Chrysler, Drys-dale became its employee, doing the same kind of work he had done for Briggs, and received approximately the same salary. The Tax Court reasoned that Briggs’ original thought, as expressed by its officers, was to enter into an amended employment contract with Drysdale providing for monthly payments directly to him. It will be observed, however, that neither in the 1952 contract nor in the 1953 amendments thereto, was there any thought expressed that such payments were to be made pri- or to Drysdale’s reaching sixty five years, his death, or his retirement from full time activity. Not one of these contingencies had occurred when the 1954 or 1955 payments were made to the trustee. Drysdale was not sixty five, he was still alive, and his cessation of full time activity came in 1957 when he retired. That date, and no earlier date, brought into existence the obligation of Briggs to pay Drysdale $1500.00 a month. The only change made by the amendment was the reduction of the period during which such payments were to be made. His 1957 cessation of full time activities then, and then only, matured the Briggs’ contractual promise. It is agreed that retirement from full time activity meant just that and not merely retirement from full time activity for Briggs.

So far as this record shows, there was no obligation on the part of Briggs to pay any sum, however able and willing Briggs might be, to Drys-dale until one of the contractual contingencies arose. However, the Tax Court reasoned that because payments were made to a trustee for the benefit of Drys-dale in the tax years, this, and of itself, requires a holding that it was Drys-dale’s purpose to defer his taxes until some future year when his substantial *417 salary ceased because of his retirement. We disagree.

The amended contract was the result of negotiation. There is no record of its content and no evidence of its purpose other than the reduction of Briggs’ obligation from $180,000 over a ten year period to the obligation to pay $90,000 over a period of five years instead of ten. Blackwood, president of Briggs, had testified categorically, upon cross examination, that Briggs was willing to pay under the terms of the contract. When asked the question, whether Briggs had any further need of Drysdale’s services, after the sale took place, that Briggs was perfectly willing to pay the money to Drysdale, his response was: “I would say yes, provided we could control his services.” Such services could only mean services under the amended contract, after retirement, or reaching the age of sixty five. Such control could effectively be exercised by a trustee under its obligation as signatory to the ’53 amendment.

The Tax Court relies for its conclusion that payments to the trustee constituted constructive receipt of income largely upon Williams v. United States, 5 Cir., 219 F.2d 523. The facts in the Williams case essentially differ from those here found. In the Williams case, the taxpayer had accepted a bid for the sale of land from a purchaser who desired and offered to pay the full purchase price. The taxpayer was then in constructive receipt of income because the purchaser was ready to pay the entire purchase price in cash. The undisputed facts were that after the bid for the land was accepted Williams, of his own volition, devised an escrow agreement and by it imposed upon himself limitations binding him as to stated amounts and for stated periods not to take within his control and disposition and make fully available to himself the full purchase price which, except for the self imposed limitation, would have been fully and completely his to do with as he pleased.

Rather does the present case fall within the ambit of Commissioner v. Oates, 7 Cir., 207 F.2d 711. In that case the taxpayers, who were general insurance agents, modified their contract with the insurance company shortly before they retired. Instead of receiving renewal premiums during their retirement when received by the company, they were to receive them in equal installments over a fifteen year period, so as to prevent the premiums from “bunching together” during the early retirement years.

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Bluebook (online)
277 F.2d 413, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1287, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-w-drysdale-and-jeannette-drysdale-v-commissioner-of-internal-ca6-1960.