Herman B. Meiselman and Claire Meiselman, General Realty & Management, Inc., Delux Theatres, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

300 F.2d 666, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1053, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5682
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1962
Docket8463_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 300 F.2d 666 (Herman B. Meiselman and Claire Meiselman, General Realty & Management, Inc., Delux Theatres, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herman B. Meiselman and Claire Meiselman, General Realty & Management, Inc., Delux Theatres, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 300 F.2d 666, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1053, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5682 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

J. SPENCER BELL, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from decisions of the Tax Court of the United States sustaining deficiency determinations by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue under the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. The deficiencies were based upon the assertion by the Commissioner that amounts received by the taxpayers upon the disposition of certain theaters in the year 1953 represented rentals pursuant to a lease arrangement. The taxpayers had treated the transaction as a sale of capital assets held for more than six months. *667 While holding that the payments in question were to be taxed to the Appellants herein as rents, the Tax Court nevertheless sustained the taxpayers’ contentions that certain notes they received as evidence of the right to receive deferred payments were without fair market value and were not includible in income in the year of their receipt. The Commissioner did not oppose this finding by the Tax Court here. The parties have contended before us that the only question involved in this appeal is whether this .transaction was a sale or lease.

The Petitioners, Herman B. Meiselman (hereinafter caller Meiselman) and ■Claire Meiselman, are husband and wife. During the taxable year 1953, they filed a joint income tax return with the District Director of Internal Revenue, Greensboro, North Carolina. They, individually, did business in the partnership name of H. B. Meiselman Theaters.

The corporate petitioners * are North ■Carolina corporations. For the calendar year 1953, each filed a corporate income tax return with the District Director in Greensboro.

The petitioners are, and have for several years, engaged in the operation of motion picture theatres. The corporate ■petitioners are controlled by the individual petitioners, who together with other members of their family own all of the outstanding stock of each of these ■corporations.

In July 1953 the petitioners agreed to sell as a “package deal” seven separate theatres to Stellings-Gossett Theatres, Inc., as “key jobs” or going businesses. Pursuant to this agreement, Stellings-Gossett had its attorney draft a contract dated July 25, 1953, from forms in its office, which contract purported to be a lease of the realty incident to each of the theatres and a sale of the equipment then in four of the theatres. Stellings testified, and his testimony is undisputed, that Meiselman had no part in the preparation of the contract. By contract dated July 29, 1953, the consideration was reallocated among the several theatres. 1

The transferor was obligated promptly to repair or restore any damage done to any theatre by fire and to replace such theatre if it should be destroyed. The transferor also agreed to take out adequate insurance against fire and other elements on the buildings and equipment. The insurance was to be payable to the parties as their interests should appear. Liability insurance was to be provided by the transferee.

The transferee agreed to maintain the theatres and equipment in reasonably good condition except for depreciation and normal wear and tear. The transferor was given an option to be effective at the end of each term to repurchase the equipment for One Hundred Dollars ($100.00). The total amount to be paid for the sale of the going business was *668 $182,500.00. Of this amount, $109,-000.00 was to be paid in 1953, and the balance was evidenced by non-interest bearing notes. These notes, at the time of their issuance to Meiselman had no fair market value. The depreciated basis of this equipment in Meiselman’s hands at the time of the sale was $50,-441.95. Its estimated value in these operating theatres was $83,000-$98,000.

When the returns of the petitioners were filed the Commissioner assessed deficiencies against petitioners claiming that that part of the transaction dealing with the transfer of the equipment was in fact a lease and not a sale, and therefore the proceeds of the contract allocable to the equipment were includible in ordinary income as “rentals received” and were not subject to treatment as capital gains. The Commissioner further claimed that the bonds evidencing the unpaid balance of $73,500.00 were taxable as income in the year in which they were received.

The question, then, is whether this transaction, aside from its bearing on the realty, is to be considered a sale or a lease. It is conceded by both the parties and agreed by the Court below that this question is to be resolved by looking to the substance of the transaction. This is the correct law. Hamme v. Commissioner, 209 F.2d 29 (4 Cir. 1953); Cert. denied, 347 U.S. 954, 74 S.Ct. 679, 98 L.Ed. 1099 (1954).

We start with the premise that the parties are free as far as the law is concerned, either to sell or lease. They must accept the tax consequences properly attributable to the transaction which in fact took place. We are not to categorize the transaction in such a way as to milk the most taxes therefrom, nor are we to allow ourselves to be deceived by any effort to disguise its true nature in order to avoid a proper consequence. The label put on the transaction by the parties is not conclusive of its nature. This is to be determined by looking at all of the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction to determine its actual legal effect. Cf. Western Contracting Corp. v. Commissioner, 271 F.2d 694 (8 Cir. 1959). If these facts show the real intent of the parties to have been to complete a “sale” then the transaction should be so categorized for tax purposes.

We think that it is of major significance that the parties first reached an oral agreement to transfer the entire group of theatres as a “package deal” for an over-all price and then delegated toStellings’ attorney the job of drawing up-the written contract.

Both Stellings and Meiselman testified in the proceedings below that they intended'a sale of each of the theatres as a going concern when they reached their oral agreement. Stellings said he bought “turnkey jobs”, that is, theatres in operation. Meiselman said that his principal motive was to cut down the extent of his operations because his doctor had' warned him about a heart condition and because his son, who assisted in the business, was being called into the Army. This much of the evidence tends to show that the parties thought in terms of a sale of these theatres as going businesses. There is no direct evidence in the record to contradict this intent, nor do we think that the Tax Court was justified in superimposing its own hypothetical “intentions” based on an elaborate analysis of each of the separate paragraphs of the written contract.

It is not disputed that the real property involved was either leased or subleased to the transferees. The Tax Court found four provisions in the contract dealing with the transfer of the equipment which it said indicated that this also was leased.

First of all, the lease of the realty is not inconsistent in any way with a sale of the business operated thereon.

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300 F.2d 666, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1053, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herman-b-meiselman-and-claire-meiselman-general-realty-management-ca4-1962.