Homes v. James Buckley & Co.

116 So. 218, 165 La. 874, 1928 La. LEXIS 1789
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 13, 1928
DocketNo. 26703.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 116 So. 218 (Homes v. James Buckley & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Homes v. James Buckley & Co., 116 So. 218, 165 La. 874, 1928 La. LEXIS 1789 (La. 1928).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

This is a suit for tan accounting on a written contract of employment. The contract, which became effective December 1, 1915, is in the form of a. letter dated September 3,1915, addressed by the president *877 of the defendant company to the plaintiff and accepted by him. It is couched in these words, viz.:

“ * * * I will pay you a salary of $125.00 per month plus 5 per cent, of the net profits for the year up to $8,500.00. Eor all net profits over and above $8,5QO.OO per annum 50 per cent, of the excess net profit.
“The net profits, of course, are determined by the auditor of the company, and are arrived at after usual deductions are made for all current expenses, including all salaries and the proper deductions for depreciation on machinery, fixtures and stock and for all bad accounts which are charged off yearly. This is what we have been doing in the past and what is the usual and only proper method.
“It must be understood that the salary of $125.00 per month will be paid monthly, but no advances are to be made on profits before same are determined at the end of the fiscal period. * * *
“I have made it 5 per cent, to $8,500.00 instead of $8,000.00 for the reason that from now on rent has been reduced by $300.00 a year by the landlord in return for improvements which I am now making in our store.”

There is no controversy about plaintiff’s salary, which was subsequently increased to $150 per month, and regularly paid.

Plaintiff remained in the employ of the defendant until May 31, 1919, the end of its fiscal year, when he resigned, and the contract was terminated by mutual consent.

On June 25, 1919, the defendant company notified plaintiff in writing that its books had been balanced, and there was due him $658.-53. Plaintiff refused to accept this amount, and instituted suit claiming a much larger sum as his percentage of the net profits during the period of his employment, after debiting himself with the payments he had received from time to time on account thereof.

The defendant company denied liability for any amount whatever, and alleged that its books had not been finally audited and closed when it notified plaintiff that he was entitled to a balance of $658.53; that, upon the completion of the audit of its books, it ascertained that plaintiff was overdrawn in the sum of $220.84, which it claimed by way of reconvention.

There were two hearings in the case. At the conclusion of the first hearing, the judge a quo appointed J. K. Byrne, a certified public accountant of New Orleans, to make an audit of the books of the defendant company with a view of ascertaining its net profits and the amount thereof due plaintiff under his contract.

The auditor appointed by the court duly filed his report, showing that plaintiff was credited on the books of the defendant company with $455.81 in excess of the amount to which he was entitled. Both parties filed exceptions to the report, and, after taking additional testimony, the case was submitted. The judge a quo adopted the report, except in one particular, viz. the deduction of the federal income and excess profits taxes from the gross profits in order to establish the net profits upon which the agreed percentage of plaintiff should be calculated. In accordance with this ruling, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for $3,032.13. The defendant company appealed, and plaintiff answered the appeal, praying that the amount of the judgment be increased.

There are three questions involved in this ease, viz.:

(1) Are the federal income and excess profits taxes paid by the corporation deductible before determining its net profits in which plaintiff is to share according to their contract?

(2) Does the reference in the contract to the reduction of the defendant company’s rent in consideration of certain improvements it agreed to make to the leased premises justify a credit to the plaintiff?

(3) Is a depreciation charged on machinery prior to the contract properly made on its appreciated value before ascertaining the net *879 profits, considering sound and' replacement values?

First. There is a disagreement in opinion between the witnesses for plaintiff and the witnesses for defendant as to- whether the federal income and excess profits taxes are properly deductible as expenses in determining the net profits of the business. We think, however, that the weight 'of the testimony supports the affirmative side of the question.

The tax annually exacted by the federal government on net corporate income means, simply, that every dollar of net profit earned by a corporation during the year must bear a certain charge for governmental purposes. It is immaterial whether such charge be designated as an expense or a profit sharing tax, neither the profits of a corporation, nor any one interested in its profits, is immune from its operation. The federal corporate income tax is, therefore, an expense of the corporate business. The mere fact that the tax before its deduction is computed on the basis of the corporate profits does not alter its character. According to the rules of accountancy, the expenditure of money must be considered either as an asset or as an expense. The income tax is clearly not an asset. It must necessarily, therefore, be considered and treated as an expense. Where an employee who, in addition to receiving a stipulated salary, also receives, in the nature of a salary, a percentage of the net profits of a corporation, the net profits necessarily cannot be determined until all expenses, including the income and excess profits tax, is deducted from the profits. And, inasmuch as such additional compensation is to be measured by the net profits the employee has helped to make, his percentage must also be deducted before the tax is found. This is recognized to be the correct rule by the federal revenue law, which provides that, in carrying on any trade or business, all necessary expenses, “including a reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services actually rendered,” may be deducted from the gross profits in order to arrive at the net profits on which the income tax is to be computed. Section 214 of the Revenue Law of 1918, 40 St. 1066 (U. S. Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 6336ysg, p. 1323). The effect of applying this rule is to reduce the corporate profits as well as to reduce the corporate income tax.

In the case of Dulac Cypress Co. v. Houma Cypress Co., 158 La. 804, 104 So. 722, this court held that under a contract for the division of net profits the federal income and excess profits taxes were properly deductible from the earnings in order to ascertain the profits to be divided; net profits being the gain accruing on an investment after deducting the losses and expenses of the business. We think the rule announced there is controlling of the issue involved here. It is in accord with the decision in Stevens v. U. S. Steel Corp., 68 N. J. Eq. 373, 59 A. 905, that:

“Net profits of a corporation are the net gains which have been actually realized, and which could be quickly distributed without loss by a sale of the assets.” '•

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Bluebook (online)
116 So. 218, 165 La. 874, 1928 La. LEXIS 1789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homes-v-james-buckley-co-la-1928.