Great Island Holding Corp. v. Commissioner

5 T.C. 150, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 153
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 31, 1945
DocketDocket Nos. 3334, 3449
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 5 T.C. 150 (Great Island Holding Corp. 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
Great Island Holding Corp. v. Commissioner, 5 T.C. 150, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 153 (tax 1945).

Opinions

Aettndell, Judge:

The respondent has determined deficiencies in income tax and personal holding company surtax against petitioners, as follows:

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The cases were consolidated for trial.

The issues presented in the case of the Great Island Holding Corporation are (1) whether a reasonable allowance for salaries of officers and employees exceeds $5,000; (2) (a) whether New York franchise tax accrued on November 1, 1937, so that the amount thereof is deductible in the taxable year; and (b) whether a deduction is allowable for interest paid for the taxable year on the New York franchise taxes.

The issue presented in Docket No. 3449 is whether Ziegler is entitled to a deduction under section 23 of the Revenue Act of 1938 for a payment in the amount of $160,000 made by him for the purpose of settling by compromise a threatened suit against Mm for mismanagement of a corporation of which he was president and executive head. A second question is to he settled by agreement of the parties.

Great Island Holding Corporation.

Issue I. — Allowance of SalaRy Deductions.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Petitioner in Docket No. 3334 is the Great Island Holding Corporation, a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in New York City. William Ziegler, Jr., owns 80 percent of its capital stock and the balance is owned by his wife Helen. During the taxable year it was primarily an investment and management company. It maintained a staff of people, specialists and clerical, whose duty it was to follow closely the operations and affairs of various corporations and enterprises whose capital stock was owned entirely by the petitioner and of other companies in wMch petitioner had an investment, for the purpose of ascertaining whether the particular investment would be a paying or a losing proposition and whether and how an investment could be made profitable if the given company was then in financial straits. It was their duty to recommend the sale, disposition, or liquidation of assets or securities owned by petitioner. In addition, they would investigate various business projects which represented potential investment fields for the petitioner and would turn up data and recommendations upon which a determination to invest or not to invest could be predicated.

Petitioner’s books were kept on an accrual basis. Its income and excess profits tax return and its personal holding company surtax return were filed with the collector for the third New York district.

Petitioner’s assets consisted principally of securities having an aggregate approximate value of $13,479,429.40. Its liabilities amounted to approximately $306,055.02. The gross income for the taxable year amounted to about $382,390, of which $73,129.61 was interest and $309,596 represented dividends received. A substantial portion of its dividends was received from the following five companies: American-Maize Products Co., Kennecott Copper, Standard Brands, Huttig Manufacturing Co., and Chesapeake Corporation.

During the taxable year the petitioner took the following approximate deductions:

Officers’ salaries_$94,000 Interest_$ 6,300
Directors’ fees_ 400 Taxes_ 5,000
Rent_ 12, 500 Lawyers’ fees_ 21, 800
Office expenses_ 6, 700 -
Worthless stock and bad debts. 60, 500 Total_ 207, 200

Petitioner owned all of the stock of the 31 West 51st Street Corporation, whose sole asset was a house on 51st Street. It owned all of the stock of One East 46th Street, Inc., which held title to a leasehold on certain property. The records for both of the above corporations were maintained by the petitioner without charge. These corporations had been established by petitioner for the sole purpose of holding title or leasehold title to the respective properties. They had no business activity and very little time, if any, was required for their direction and operation. All of the stock of Huttig Manufacturing Co., which operated a sash and door plant at Muscatine, Iowa, where all of its officers except its president were located, was owned by the petitioner corporation. The operations of this corporation were entirely independent of petitioner and were completely at its own expense.

The petitioner and its stockholders held voting control in the American-Maize Products Co., which operated its business independent of petitioner.

The Park Avenue Operating Co., hereinafter referred to as Park Avenue, owned some real estate, held leaseholds on some real estate, and owned some few securities. Its accrued gross income during the taxable year totaled approximately $302,000, of which $284,000 represented rents collected for the use of property owned or held by it under leasehold. During the taxable year it operated at a loss of approximately $133,000. It collected rents and dividends, paid rents and interest, and liquidated some of its assets. Eighty percent of the common stock of Park Avenue was owned by petitioner. Its offices were located in the same building with petitioner. It kept its books of account on an accrual basis.

The Southworth Management Corporation was a subsidiary of the Park Avenue Corporation and managed a hotel at 31 West 51st Street which was owned by Park Avenue. This company had its own staff and conducted its operations entirely apart from the petitioner and at its own expense.

William Ziegler, Jr., was president of the petitioner and also Park Avenue. During the taxable year he devoted a substantial amount of his time to the direction and management of Park Avenue. He received no salary from that company, nor did he receive any salary during the taxable year from petitioner. Ziegler was also engaged in the business of breeding racing horses. He maintained his office in those of the petitioner and some of his personal affairs were attended to there. The elected and appointed officers of petitioner and Park Avenue were as follows:

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The members of the board of directors of petitioner and Park Avenue were the same. They were Ziegler, David, Sander, Cunningham, Donham, and Biddle.

The salaries paid by petitioner during the taxable year amounted to a total of $94,091.34. There was a total of 27 employees, consisting of executives, consultants, minor officials, and a clerical staff. Petitioner deducted the above amount in computing its income tax return. The respondent disallowed all of the deduction in excess of $5,000. The salaries or compensation which petitioner claimed as deductions and the salaries paid by Park Avenue are as follows:

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The respondent did not allocate among the 27 employees the $5,000 which he had allowed as a deduction, nor did he allocate to the several associated companies as deductions any part of the salaries disallowed by him.

Donald K. David is the vice president of the petitioner and also of Park Avenue, and he was president of the American-Maize Products Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 T.C. 150, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-island-holding-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1945.