Henry David and Wife, Grace David v. Robert L. Phinney, District Director of Internal Revenue

350 F.2d 371
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 26, 1965
Docket20941_1
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 350 F.2d 371 (Henry David and Wife, Grace David v. Robert L. Phinney, District Director 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
Henry David and Wife, Grace David v. Robert L. Phinney, District Director of Internal Revenue, 350 F.2d 371 (5th Cir. 1965).

Opinions

RIVES, Circuit Judge:

The District Director of Internal Revenue made a deficiency assessment against the taxpayers1 for income taxes for the year 1956 in the sum of $49,566.99 plus interest. The taxpayers paid the amount of said assessment and, their claim for refund having been denied, filed this suit. The complaint alleged that “in February 1956, Mississippi River Fuel Corporation paid Henry David $629,226.75 for the 1,000 shares of Milwhite Mud Sales Corn-[373]*373pany stock, which he had owned since 1952. That the sale thereof constituted a long-term capital gain and as such was taxable only as a long-term capital gain.” The complaint further alleged that the taxpayers’ claim for refund was “based upon refusal of the Commissioner to allow 100% of the amount received from Mississippi River Fuel Corporation for the sale of 1,000 shares of Milwhite Mud Sales Company stock to Mississippi River Fuel Corporation.” In a pretrial order signed by the attorneys for both sides, as well as by the district judge, the issues to be tried were agreed upon and stipulated. After a full trial and the consideration of briefs, the district court entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law, followed by judgment for the defendant. The plaintiffs’ motions for new trial and for amended findings and conclusions were denied, and this appeal followed :

In entering its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the district court further refined the issue as follows:

“The question presented is whether money received by the plaintiffs from Mississippi Fuel Corporation in 1956 included payment for an option to purchase stock and a covenant not to compete in addition to the actual purchase price of the stock.”

Milwhite Company, Inc., hereinafter called Milwhite, was a miner, manufacturer, and supplier of nonmetallic minerals used as drilling mud in the sinking of oil and gas wells. The taxpayer, hereinafter referred to as David, worked as a salesman employee of Milwhite in 1938 and 1939. From 1940 to 1952 David acted on a commission basis as exclusive sales representative of Milwhite’s drilling mud.2 In 1952, at David’s suggestion and with Milwhite’s financial support, a separate company was organized to handle the sales of Milwhite’s drilling mud, known as Milwhite Mud Sales Company and hereinafter referred to as Mud.3 David had already built a sales organization of some thirty-odd men, and after the incorporation of Mud, that organization was greatly expanded but continued to be based primarily on David’s personal contacts and reputation in the industry. David was one of the most outstanding salesmen of drilling mud, and was the dominant personality and key man in Mud’s sales organization. By 1955 Mud needed new capital for its expanding business for reasons well explained in David’s testimony:

“A. Well, we were greatly un-dercapitalized and we were expanding and doing more business than our capital justified and any little accounts receivable that was delayed in payment was a great strain on us. We were in jeopardy with the bank we were doing business with in that we had short term money which was an insufficient amount to expand the business and meet with the new amount of sales that were increasing daily. It got to the point to where we either had to do less business or sell the company.”

David and a vice-president of Milwhite went to New York and negotiated with W. R. Grace and Company. Mud then had outstanding 6000 shares of stock, of which Milwhite owned 3000, David individually 2000, and David as guardian for his minor children 1000. A contract was entered into giving the Grace Company a ninety-day option to buy Milwhite’s 3000 shares for $1,000,000 plus accrued net worth during the fiscal year, and also to buy the 3000 shares owned or controlled by David for the same price. The Grace Company made an exhaustive study and report of Mud, which emphasized David’s leadership in the mud sales [374]*374business, but Grace Company elected not to purchase.

David was then advised that any prospective purchaser of Mud would probably want 100 per cent of its stock. Accordingly, David secured from Milwhite a ninety-day option to purchase its 3000 shares for one million dollars plus accrued net worth. The option also contained a provision that the purchaser should take Mud’s notes held by Milwhite at face value plus accrued interest. (Mud was amply solvent and there is nothing to indicate that its notes were worthless.) Those notes which aggregated some $594,000 had been subordinated to loans of $750,000 made by Texas National Bank to Mud.

Mississippi River Fuel Corporation, hereinafter called Mississippi, was familiar with the negotiations of the Grace Company for the purchase of Mud. After Grace Company declined to purchase, Mississippi contacted David and arranged a meeting in Palm Beach, Florida, in January 1956. There an agreement to sell control of Mud to Mississippi was reached on a “hand shake” basis.

As to David’s option to purchase Mil-white’s stock, Mr. Bolinger, who represented Mississippi in the negotiations, testified:

“Certainly we weren’t interested in 50 per cent of the company and we would never have gone as far in our discussion with Mr. David had we not assumed that he could turn over all of the stock if we wanted all of the stock. I don’t recall any mention particularly was made, or any examination was made of any such option agreement. We just assumed he could control all of the stock. He said he could — or represented all of it. We were dealing with one person as if he owned all of the stock.”

Mr. Bolinger further testified that he did not recall any money being specifically ascribed to the option. Nor did Mr. Bolinger recall any mention of a covenant by David not to compete, but “at the initial negotiations at which I was present it was just assumed that that was part of the deal.” Mr. Bolinger further testified:

* * * He [David] was the key man in the company, the very dominant factor in this company, and in our opinion he was one of the most if not the most outstanding guy in this business. Certainly he was part of the price. I’m sure we wouldn’t consider buying this company without his organization of the service company.”

David also testified that there was no conversation about the covenant not to compete, that the entire amount he was to receive was for the purchase of 1000 shares of his Mud stock, and that absolutely nothing was paid for the option or for the covenant not to compete.

Upon David’s return to Houston, he gave his attorney, Mr. Robinson, a memorandum of the negotiations, including the following:

“David has arranged to purchase Milwhite, Inc. stock totaling 50% in Milwhite Mud Sales Company to be purchased by Mississippi River Fuel on a price based according to the Grace formula, which was one million dollars as of April 30, 1955, plus the net worth increase of the sales company until the time of this sale. David agrees to sell % of his stock in the same company to Mississippi River Fuel, but on the basis of $1,500,000. as of April 30, 1955, plus the net worth increase from that date until the time of sale. This will give Mississippi River Fuel 66%% of the mud sales and David Ys of same.

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350 F.2d 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-david-and-wife-grace-david-v-robert-l-phinney-district-director-ca5-1965.