Golden State Towel and Linen Service, Ltd. (1) and Oakland California Towel Company (2) v. The United States

373 F.2d 938, 179 Ct. Cl. 300, 19 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 950, 1967 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 17, 1967
Docket64-63
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 373 F.2d 938 (Golden State Towel and Linen Service, Ltd. (1) and Oakland California Towel Company (2) v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golden State Towel and Linen Service, Ltd. (1) and Oakland California Towel Company (2) v. The United States, 373 F.2d 938, 179 Ct. Cl. 300, 19 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 950, 1967 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34 (cc 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM:

This case was referred to Trial Commissioner C. Murray Bernhardt with directions to make findings of fact and recommendation for conclusions of law. The commissioner has done so in a report and opinion filed on March 28, 1966. Exceptions to the commissioner’s report, opinion and findings were filed by plaintiff, briefs were filed by the parties and the case was submitted to the court on oral argument of counsel. Since the court is in agreement with the opinion, findings and recommendation of the commissioner, with slight modifications, it hereby adopts the same, as modified, as the basis for its judgment in this case, as hereinafter set forth. The commissioner’s opinion and conclusion are wholly consistent with Parmelee Transportation Co. v. United States, 351 F.2d 619, 173 Ct.Cl. 139 (1965), which involved the loss of a separate and identifiable line of business which became completely worthless. Plaintiff is therefore not entitled to recover and the petition is dismissed.

OPINION OF COMMISSIONER *

BERNHARDT, Commissioner:

The plaintiff linen service corporations purchased two competitiors and in the sales agreements allocated specified portions of the purchase prices to the acquisition of customer lists and other enumerated assets both tangible and intangible. They claim the right, under section 165(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (26 U.S.C. § 165), to deduct as a loss the cost of acquisition of a purchased customer in the year in which that customer ceased doing business with plaintiffs. The customer lists were capitalized on plaintiffs’ books. The issues are whether a customer list is an indivisible asset for tax purposes and, if not, whether plaintiffs have satisfactorily es *940 tablished the cost basis of the lost customers.

Section 165(a) provides:

There shall be allowed as a deduction any loss sustained during the taxable year and not compensated for by insurance or otherwise.

Sections 1.165-1(b) and 1.165-2(a) (26 C.F.R., Sections 1.165-1 and 1.165-2 (1961)) of the Treasury Regulations on Income Taxes (1954 Code) are relevant. The former provides:

To be allowable as a deduction under section 165(a), a loss must be evidenced by closed and completed transactions, fixed by identifiable events, and actually sustained during the taxable year. Only a bona fide loss is allowable. Substance and not mere form shall govern in determining a deductible loss.

Section 1.165-2(a) provides:

A loss incurred in a business or in a transaction entered into for profit and arising from the sudden termination of the usefulness in such business or transaction of any nondepreciable property, in a case where such business or transaction is discontinued or where such property is permanently discarded from use therein, shall be allowed as a deduction under section 165(a) for the taxable year in which the loss is actually sustained. * * *

In Metropolitan Laundry Co. v. United States, 100 F.Supp. 803 (N.D.Cal.1951), the taxpayer lost all of its San Francisco customers in 1943 when the United States seized its laundry plant for military use, causing Metropolitan to sell its delivery equipment and thus lose not only its customers but the ability to serve them, retaining, however, its Oakland customers. Under section 23(f) of the 1939 Code, the predecessor to section 165(a) of the 1954 Code, Metropolitan deducted the cost basis of its San Francisco routes purchased in 1903. The Commissioner disallowed the deduction for the reasons that the claimed loss was not a “closed and completed transaction” since the taxpayer still conducted its Oakland routes, and that the loss of its San Francisco routes represented merely a temporary fluctuation in the value of its total customer list. The court sustained the deduction on the ground that Metropolitan’s loss of its San Francisco routes was a permanent closed and completed transaction bearing no economic relation to the taxpayer’s retained but separate Oakland routes, but endorsed the general rule in these words at page 805:

* * * in a tax sense, a capital asset in the form of a list of customers regularly subscribing for goods or services is not to be regarded as an aggregation of disconnected individual subscribers. Such lists have been treated as unitary structures irrespective of incidental fluctuations and alterations. [citations]. The gradual replacement of old patrons with new ones is not to be regarded as the exchange of old capital assets for new and different ones, but rather as the process of keeping a continually existing capital asset intact.

The court excepted Metropolitan from the general rule that business goodwill cannot be depreciated nor can it be entirely destroyed while the business continues, because the taxpayer’s San Francisco goodwill had a “distinct transferable value” separate from its Oakland business and its loss was a closed transaction for tax purposes. The permanency of the loss was graphically demonstrated by the taxpayer’s inability to recapture its San Francisco business when it regained its facilities in 1946 but closed down three years later after an unsuccessful effort to reestablish itself in San Francisco.

One cannot say that the plaintiffs’ annual crop of terminated customers had a “distinct transferable value” as did the entire body of San Francisco routes in the Metropolitan Laundry instance, for whereas the one might well have constituted the subject matter for a sale had Metropolitan so wished, it cannot be imagined that the plaintiffs would have been able or desirous of selling to another their right to serve the periodically de *941 parting customers. There was no market for a piecemeal sale of customers.

The general rule described in the Metropolitan Laundry case, supra, has had wide application in cases where depreciation deductions on customer lists or their equivalents have been unsuccessfully taken. Thrifticheck Service Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 287 F.2d 1 (C.A.2 1961), and cases cited, including The Danville Press, Inc., 1 B.T.A. 1171 (1925), the latter involving attempted depreciation of a subscription list which was among the assets of a newspaper publishing company purchased by the taxpayer, possibly the earliest application of the so-called “indivisible asset” rule.

The “indivisible asset” rule has also been applied to defeat loss deductions. Boe v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 307 F.2d 339 (C.A.9, 1962; loss of purchased medical contracts); Hillside Dairy Co., 3 T.C.M. 174 (1944; dairy customer lists); Anchor Cleaning Service, Inc., 22 T.C. 1029 (1954; customer list for window and general cleaning service). There have been distinguishable exceptions. Seaboard Finance Co., 23 T.C.M.

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Bluebook (online)
373 F.2d 938, 179 Ct. Cl. 300, 19 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 950, 1967 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-state-towel-and-linen-service-ltd-1-and-oakland-california-towel-cc-1967.