Harold G. Williams v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

285 F.2d 582, 7 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 458, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5589
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1961
Docket18159_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 285 F.2d 582 (Harold G. Williams v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold G. Williams v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 285 F.2d 582, 7 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 458, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5589 (5th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

This tax case is before us for the second time. On the first appeal, we held that a certain tankship was a capital asset and that the appellant here, Williams, realized capital gain from the sale of the tanker. Williams bought the vessel, partially completed, more than six months before the sale. The vessel was enlarged and completed less than six months before the sale. We remanded the case to the Tax Court to allocate the taxpayer’s profit between long-term and short-term capital gain. 1 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Williams, 5 Cir., 1958, 256 F. 2d 152. On remand, the Tax Court held that 20.6% of the gain was long-term capital gain, and 79.4% was short-term capital gain. The petitioner, pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7482, challenges this determination, contending that the long-term capital gain was 63.3% and the short-term capital gain was 36.7%. We affirm the decision of the Tax Court.

The essential facts may be briefly stated. March 19, 1946, Marine Industries, a partnership composed of the petitioner and others, acquired title to a partially constructed naval tankship, the YO-206. In the same month Marine Industries began negotiations with the Sinclair Refining Company to sell the YO-206 to Sinclair. At that time the tankship had a capacity of only 6,500 barrels. Sinclair required a tanker with a minimum capacity of 10,000 barrels, a vessel equipped with coils to permit the carrying of molasses, and a completed ship that could be classified and immediately transferred for use in its Cuban operations.

May 13, 1946, Marine Industries made a contract with Sinclair, reciting that it was Sinclair’s desire to purchase and Marine Industries’ desire to sell the YO-206 “after it shall have been completed as a tankship.” The contract incorporated a contemporaneous agreement with the Gibbs Corporation shipyards for a “stretch-out job” to lengthen the vessel forty-six feet and complete it as a tanker. In the contract Sinclair agreed to pay $365,000 for the completed tankship; $65,000 to Marine Industries at the time of signing the agreement, $194,000 to Gibbs shipyards (to be credited on the purchase price) and $106,000 to Marine Industries upon completion of the repairs, final acceptance by Sinclair, and delivery of the bill of sale. Marine Industries agreed to repair or replace any defective material furnished by it ap *584 pearing within ninety days after the vessel was completed.

November 13, 1946, Marine Industries registered the completed vessel as the F. C. Randall, and the same day executed a bill of sale transferring title to the registered vessel to Sinclair.

Before May 13, 1946, the six-months cut-off date for long-term capital gains computation, Marine Industries spent $57,373.77 toward the acquisition of the F. C. Randall. 2 From May 13, 1946, to November 13, 1946, Marine spent $33,-262.42 on the acquisition of the vessel. But in that same period Sinclair paid Gibbs shipyards $187,500 for construction work on the vessel. 2 3 Marine paid $6,515.43 as costs of sale of the F. C. Randall. The exact profit realized by Marine from selling the vessel was undetermined until construction was completed and the guarantee period had passed. When the case was tried on remand, the Tax Court allocated the gain on a percentage basis proportionate to the expenditures made by Marine Industries in acquiring the completed vessel before and after May 13, 1946. This worked out as follows:

Selling price........... $358,500.00

Stipulated cost of acquisition more than six months prior to sale (20.6%) .............. $ 57,373.77

Stipulated cost of acquisition within six months (79.4%) .............. 220,762.42

Total Cost of Acquisition . 278,136.19

Gross gain.............. 80.363.81

Costs of Sale .......... 6,515.13

Net Gain............... 73,848.38

Petitioner’s share (one-half) ............ 36,924.19

Petitioner’s long-term capital gain (20.6%) ... 7,606.38

Petitioner’s short-term capital gain (79.4%) ... 29.317.81

The petitioner contends that this apportionment is in error, since the $187,-500 paid by Sinclair to Gibbs to enlarge the vessel was not part of the seller’s cost of acquisition and should be excluded completely from both the partnership costs of acquisition and the selling price of the vessel. The long-term capital gain would then be 63.3% and the short-term capital gain would be 36.7%. Williams contends that Marine Industries received no more than $171,000 for the sale of the tanker, as shown by the partnership return, instead of $358,500 as found by the Tax Court. The argument runs: not only does the contract of sale provide that any increase or decrease in Gibbs’s price would be charged or credited to Sinclair, but the shipbuilding price was negotiated entirely between Sinclair and Gibbs; penalties for delay were to benefit Sinclair, not Marine Industries; the bonus *585 for early completion was to be paid by Sinclair, not by Marine Industries. If, so Williams argues, the vessel had been lost before title passed, Sinclair would have recovered from the insurance proceeds the amount of payments it had made, and Gibbs would have recovered its unpaid charges; Marine would have recovered the balance, thus being compensated only to the extent of the insured value over and above the claims of Sinclair and Gibbs. On the strength of these contentions, Williams argues that neither the payments by Sinclair to Gibbs, nor the quid pro quo for them, represented any real acquisition by Marine Industries, and consequently the Tax Court erroneously regarded the $187,500 paid by Sinclair as Marine’s cost of acquisition, reducing the long-term capital gain accordingly.

The error in appellant’s argument lies in excluding the $187,500 from consideration. This sum was part of the purchase price paid by Sinclair. It paid for improvements that were part of the subject-matter of the sale. According to the contract of sale between Marine Industries and Sinclair, this payment was to be credited on the purchase price of the vessel “with the same force and effect as if * * * paid directly to” Marine Industries. The petitioner urges that this contract provision is a pure formal fiction and that “economic realities”, not “legal abstractions”, should prevail. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Southwest Exploration Co., 1956, 350 U.S. 308, 315, 76 S.Ct. 395, 100 L.Ed. 347. Certainly, economic realities control. The economic reality here is that the payment of $187,500 represents costs incident to the conversion of the YO-206 from a partially constructed vessel to the completed tanker specified in the contract of sale. The fact that Marine Industries physically neither received nor paid the money is immaterial. The sale concerned the completed, enlarged tankship; that was the rationale of our holding in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v.

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285 F.2d 582, 7 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 458, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-g-williams-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1961.