Herbert Goldsworthy and Nellie L. Goldsworthy v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
This text of 262 F.2d 435 (Herbert Goldsworthy and Nellie L. Goldsworthy v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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On this review from a tax court decision we are primarily concerned with the income taxes of Herbert Goldsworthy and Nellie L. Goldsworthy, his wife, for the years 1946, 1947 and 1948 and with a loss carry-back from 1952 to 1951. All conclusions of the tax court were adverse to the taxpayer.
The James I. Barnes Construction Company (hereafter Barnes) was an Indiana partnership apparently engaged in heavy construction. Prior to 1944, Barnes had established a Western branch in Santa Monica, California. This branch was under the management of the taxpayer, Herbert Goldsworthy. The agreement of Barnes with taxpayer for his compensation was not reduced to writing until October 28, 1944. The agreement provided:
1. Goldsworthy was to receive one-third of the net profits on contracts completed 2 in each year.
2. Goldsworthy was responsible for no losses directly. But out of the next ensuing profits he first had to suffer a deduction to compensate for one-third of the past losses under his aegis.
3. All equipment was to be bought out of the Santa Monica net earnings. Goldsworthy was to leave in his account “a sum equal to one-third of the amount invested in said assets” (hereafter the equipment) .3
[437]*4374. Either party could terminate the arrangement at will but the agreement would continue as to incompleted contracts until they were fully performed.
5. At termination, provision was made for liquidating the equipment.4
Generally, after the signing of the contract with Goldsworthy, the business prospered, some years handsomely. However, it was terminated at the end of 1949, concluded in 1951, and in 1952 Goldsworthy settled for $55,000 claims of Barnes asserted against him for about $90,000. This sum of $55,000 gave rise to the loss carry-back issue.
The profits of the Santa Monica branch would indicate Goldsworthy was a good construction man, but both Barnes and Goldsworthy were extremely careless and cavalier about their basic agreement. Seemingly the system used (perhaps we abbreviate too much) was that when Goldsworthy “felt” the company was making a profit, by guess as to how much, he took out a dollar and sent Barnes two. Then each year Golds-worthy, dividing his income with his wife as he was entitled to do on a community basis, filed separate returns showing as income only that which had been withdrawn, otherwise ignoring the company books. He seems to have been perfectly honest about it.
Eventually Barnes raised the issue with Goldsworthy that he was not leaving enough in the partnership to take care of his required contribution to equipment. He would have to stop withdrawals until he caught up. Thus came the beginning of the end of a successful business friendship.
In the end, before the commissioner and the tax court the taxpayer contended that his salary was equal to his share of the profits less whatever was deductible therefrom as his “contribution” to equipment purchases.5 As proof, he cited the [438]*438fact that he got nothing from liquidation of the equipment and even had to contribute to this equipment account in his settlement; that necessarily a large portion of the $55,000 went for that purpose.
One of the issues in the case is whether taxpayer was an employee or a partner or a joint venturer. The tax court thought he was not an employee but felt the result would be the same if he were.
The tax court found the facts here a quagmire. We agree. They were utterly confused by Barnes and Goldsworthy during the life of the agreement. Apparently, they had not yet been the tragic victims of ruinous tax consequences flowing from not making their agreement clear cut and from careless observance of its terms.
In the ordinary case, we usually believe we owe the litigants and the bar our reasons for our decision. Here we think not.
Our conclusions are as follows:
1. Goldsworthy was an employee at all times.
2. While he was employed, he nonetheless acquired in kind an interest of one-third in the fixed assets as they were purchased. (This concept of pro tanto interest was suggested by the tax court as a possibility.)
3. When assets were sold at a loss below their depreciated value in any year, Goldsworthy was entitled to take as a deduction one-third of the loss. If a profit on the sale was made, it was his too.
4. Goldsworthy’s taxable income in any year was not less than that which he took.6
5. Out of the $55,000 settlement made in 1952 Goldsworthy was entitled to have $26,666 treated as a loss he sustained in the business of selling his services and which he had to pay back because of previous overcolleetion of compensation. We think this amount can be clearly identified as an item to which he had no defense and that it is unreasonable to say the taxpayer failed to show an earmarking of this much money. As to the rest, $28,334, we can only call it a. loss, a very real loss, but nothing we cam classify as a loss for loss carryback.
6. The tax court must be sustained im its refusal to accede as to Goldsworthy to-the accountant’s shifting of completion-dates on two contracts. Maybe the accountant was correct. The tax court could have accepted his testimony, but also it could have thought he didn’t put. enough base under his opinion to require its acceptance. It was permissible for the tax court to think the original completion dates contemporaneously selected, by Barnes and Goldsworthy were more reliable.
We believe under the foregoing rulings that the taxes should be computable. At least we hope so. The taxpayer must accept the sore consequences of the failure-to keep his relations with Barnes in a. well defined form.
Reversed for proceedings consistent, herewith.
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