Golding & Hahn Co. v. Commissioner

15 B.T.A. 499, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2849
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1929
DocketDocket No. 16006.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 B.T.A. 499 (Golding & Hahn Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golding & Hahn Co. v. Commissioner, 15 B.T.A. 499, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2849 (bta 1929).

Opinion

[500]*500OPINION.

LaNsdon:

In this proceeding the petitioner asks for a redeter-mination of a deficiency in income and profits tax which the Commissioner has asserted for the year 1920 in the amount of $14,077.44. The single issue is whether the petitioner is entitled to deduct $36,000 from its gross income in the taxable year as ordinary and necessary expenses incurred or paid in the conduct of its trade or business. The Commissioner has allowed a part of the deduction claimed in the amount of $3,593.90, disallowed the remainder, and determined the deficiency here in controversy.

The petitioner was a New York corporation, with its principal office in the City of New York. Its business has since been taken over by Golding Brothers, Inc. In the taxable year it was engaged in buying gray cotton fabrics for conversion into cretonne and other prints and in the sale of the finished product to customers throughout the United States and Canada. It operated no plants or factories but utilized the services of various fabric printing mills in Massachusetts and Bhode Island for the conversion of plain goods into the printed material which it sold to its customers. It had three stockholders who were also its directors. Alfred Hahn, the president, owned 50 per cent of the common and all the preferred stock. Joseph Golding and Samuel Golding, also directors, each owned 25 per cent of the common stock. Hahn was the office and financial manager and the Goldings traveled the country and sold the petitioner’s products to the retail and wholesale trade, principally to the manufacturers of mattresses and other beddings.

On December 15, 1820, a special meeting of the stockholders and directors of the petitioner, held at the office in New York, considered the expenditures incurred by each of the stockholders on behalf of the company in that year and authorized the payment to each of the amount of $12,000 as reimbursement for disbursements made in the interest of the petitioner. In certain schedules submitted to the Board and received in evidence the petitioner sets out the actual amounts claimed to have been so expended by the three directors.

The statement of amounts alleged to have been expended by Alfred Hahn in the interest of the petitioner in 1920 includes three items: Chicago convention, $2,750; 32 trips tó mills, $6,400; bonuses to mill help, $3,300; or a total of $12,450.

The statement of the expenses alleged to have been incurred by Joseph Golding in the year 1920 in the interest of the petitioner includes eight items: Chicago convention, $2,800; New York and New England trip, January 23 to February 14, $1,144.68; coast trip, February 15 to April 27, $2,624.01; middle western trip, May 2 to June 30, $4,617.44; second coast trip, July 5 to August 30, $2,852.01; Cana[501]*501dian trip, September 8 to September 22, $1,104.96; second middle western trip, October 3 to November 25, $3,914.44; second New England trip, November 27 to December 17, $853.68; or a total of $19,911.22.

The statement of the expenses alleged to have been incurred and paid by Samuel Golding in the taxable year in the interest of the petitioner includes four items: Chicago convention, $3,150; coast trip February 15 to April 27, $6,543.01; middle western trip, May 10 to June 23, $3,680.16; second coast trip, August 28 to December 21, $5,311.01; or a total of $18,684.18.

The complete schedule of the Canadian trip made by Joseph Golding is as follows:

Sept. 8 Chicago, Ills. Sept. 14 Red Dier (Red Deer).
9 Calgary, Can. 15 St. Johns.
10 Botbwell, Ont. 16 Stratford, Ont.
Chesley, Ont. 17 Toronto, Ont.
Hamilton, Ont. 18 Van Couver, B. C.
Kitchner, Ont. 19 Waterloo, Ont.
London, Ont. Windsor, Ont.
11-12 Montreal, P. Q. 20 Halifax, N. S:
New Glasgow, P. Q. 21 Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Ottawa, Ont. 22 Chicago, Ills.
13 Quebec, P. Q. $1,104.96

The copy of the corporate minutes of the meeting of December 15, 1920, of stockholders and directors, in which payments to Alfred Hahn, Joseph Golding, and Samuel Golding in reimbursement of expenses were authorized, recites that “ all the directors and stockholders were present in person,” and is signed by Sam Golding, secretary, and A. Hahn, president. The schedules of travel introduced in evidence show that on the day of such meeting Sam Golding and Joe Golding were in Chicago, and Springfield, Mass., respectively.

In the income and profits-tax return of the petitioner for 1920 it is set forth and sworn to by the president of the petitioner that Alfred Hahn, Sam Golding and Joe Golding each devoted his entire time to the affairs of the petitioner in that taxable year and that each received a salary of $5,500. In the income and profits-tax return for the same year of Golding Brothers, a corporation owned by the same parties and engaged in similar business and later the successor of this petitioner, it is set forth that Sam Golding and Joe Golding each devoted his entire time to the business of such Golding Brothers, and that each received a salary in the amount of $24,000 for his services.

The theory upon which the petitioner bases its claim of right to take the deduction in controversy is that the year 1920 was an extraordinarily hazardous period in the cotton-converting trade and that without heroic measures of some sort its business was likely to be [502]*502destroyed. Large purchases of gray goods had been, made in advance at prices that prevailed when raw cotton sold for something like 40 cents per pound, and products to be developed from such purchases had been sold in advance at correspondingly high prices. Early in the year cotton prices began to decline and some of the customers of the petitioner sought to cancel their contracts and some refused to accept merchandise after it had been shipped and invoiced to them. In these conditions the petitioner sought to save its business by having its officers personally call on its customers for the purpose of persuading them to accept shipments and make payments on contracts previously entered into. It was also necessary to speed up production at the printing mills in order that a large volume of deliveries might be made before customers could realize the situation and take measures for evading their contractual obligations. Petitioner admits that the greater part of the amount of $50,000 which it claims was spent by its officers in the taxable year was used for the entertainment of its customers and as largesses, tips or bonuses to encourage mill employees to speed up the delivery of its finished product.

Supporting its claim by the facts and allegations set forth above, the petitioner asks this Board to determine that it is entitled to deduct from its gross income in the taxable year the amount of $36,000 alleged to have been authorized or incurred by proper corporate action on December 15 of such year as ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in its trade or business.

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Related

National Cottonseed Products Corp. v. Commissioner
28 B.T.A. 67 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1933)
Golding & Hahn Co. v. Commissioner
15 B.T.A. 499 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 B.T.A. 499, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golding-hahn-co-v-commissioner-bta-1929.