In Re Deutz

149 A. 257, 105 N.J. Eq. 671, 4 Backes 671, 1930 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 22
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedFebruary 21, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 149 A. 257 (In Re Deutz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Deutz, 149 A. 257, 105 N.J. Eq. 671, 4 Backes 671, 1930 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 22 (N.J. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Henry Deutz, resident of New Jersey, died intestate February 7th, 1925. In assessing the tax due from his estate under the Transfer Inheritance Tax act (P.L. 1909 ch. 228, as amended), the comptroller included an item of $1,195.32 for tax assessed on an alleged transfer from decedent to his brother Joseph, one-half the good will of a partnership between the two brothers (which one-half share of good will was appraised at $23,906.47).

Decedent and his brother entered into a partnership in 1919, in Mexico; the business was to be, and was, carried on in Mexico, by Joseph as the active partner. Decedent was an inactive partner and lived in New Jersey. The partnership agreement was (essentially) for ten years; and it continued until Henry's death. The agreement provided (inter alia) as follows:

"Ninth: * * * The company will not dissolve in case of the death of one of the partners happening within the term of the company or one of its extensions, and will continue as agreed, between the surviving partner and the legal representative of the deceased one, without doing violence to what is stipulated in the following clause; said representative will have the same rights as the deceased partner had as per this document, but the survivor alone will continue as administrating partner, he being the only one to use the company's signature; and he being the only one possessing the powers treated of in clause 7th.

"Tenth: In case of the death of one of the partners within the time of the company's existence or one of its extensions, the heirs of the deceased will be paid the capital belonging to deceased as per the next forthcoming balance in five annual installments each equaling the fifth part of said capital; said heirs will likewise enjoy the assets and suffer the losses in proportion to the capital remaining in the company in virtue of the annual payments spoken of above. Six months at the latest after the death takes place, the general balance will be made which was to be made at the end of the year, so as to fix the liquid assets belonging to each partner, so that the heirs of the deceased may have at their disposal those belonging to him."

It will be observed that by this agreement the partnership is not dissolved at the death of one partner; after such death the partnership assets are owned by the surviving partner and the legal representative of the deceased partner; the *Page 673 proportionate share or fractional interest in the partnership assets owned by the "heirs" or legal representative of the deceased partner being reduced annually by the payments to be made by the surviving partner.

The total partnership capital is to be determined by a balance to be arrived at on an account stated by the surviving partner and the legal representative of the deceased partner.

This account was stated, and the balance arrived at, between the surviving partner and the present appellant (as administrator of the deceased partner, Henry), some seven weeks after Henry's Death. This balance sheet showed the decedent's share of the capital to be $153,228.61, Mexican, or $76,614.31, United States. The assets specified on this balance sheet include only merchandise inventory, furniture and fixtures, real estate, cash and accounts receivable. No item of good will is included.

In the comptroller's computation and assessment of transfer inheritance tax with respect to the estate of Henry, he determined that the partnership did have a valuable good will, which he appraised at $47,812.94 (United States), and he therefore added this item to the assets on the balance sheet and thus increased the net assets by the same amount. He determined that by virtue of the provisions of the partnership agreement, the entire good will at decedent's death became the property of the surviving partner, without any compensation or allowance therefor to decedent's estate. Accordingly, he assessed a tax of $1,195.32, as on a transfer to the surviving partner of one-half the good will.

From this assessment the decedent's administrator appeals.

His contentions are substantially as follows:

1. Good will is not an asset.

2. The partnership had no asset of good will.

3. If there was an asset of good will, it was of no value or not of the value placed upon it by the comptroller.

4. There was no transfer of good will.

5. If there was a transfer of good will it was not taxable.

6. If there was a taxable transfer of good will, the tax should not be levied against appellant. *Page 674

Good will, of course, is an asset — In re Bottomley, 92 N.J. Eq. 202 (an asset of a corporation); In re Hall, 99 N.J. Law 1 (an asset of a partnership) — although of course not every corporation or partnership has such an asset.

That this partnership had an asset of good will is amply justified by the record. It was engaged in an established mercantile business (retail hardware) and in the year prior to decedent's death had made a profit of $24,990.52 (twenty per cent. on its capital) and for each of the two years before that had likewise made a profit of about twenty per cent. on its capital. There was no proof before the comptroller tending to show the absence of an asset of good will, except the mere fact that it was not carried on the books of the partnership as an asset.

An agreement between partners that there is no good will, or that it is of no value, may well be binding on the partners and their representatives, but it cannot preclude the state from taxing at actual value. Re Hellman, 172 N.Y. Supp. 671;affirmed, 226 N.Y. 702; In re Halle's Estate,170 N.Y. Supp. 898.

The value of the good will was appraised at $47,812.95. This valuation was arrived at by taking the yearly average net profit (after deducting six per cent. interest on the capital) for the normal years previous to decedent's death and multiplying by three. Gleason Otis, Inheritance Taxation (4th ed.) 599,600. This is a generally accepted method of determining the value of good will, and was approved by this court In re Hall,supra; and also, inferentially, in the same case on certiorari.99 N.J. Law 1 (at p. 5).

It is urged that Mexico was in a state of revolution, and that by reason thereof the value of the good will was destroyed or greatly lessened. There is no evidence in the record to show that a condition of revolution existed in Mexico at the time of decedent's death. Such evidence would therefore not be available before this court on appeal, even if produced and offered. In rePierce, 89 N.J. Eq. 171. No such evidence is in fact offered to this court, but it is contended that it is a fact of which this court will take *Page 675 judicial notice. This may at least be doubted — but assuming that it is so, it must also be assumed that the tribunal below took the same judicial notice and gave it due weight and consideration in arriving at its conclusion. There is nothing to show the contrary and the burden is upon appellant to establish error. Inre Pierce, supra. Appellant argues that the good will was valueless because decedent could not have borrowed money upon his share thereof. This argument fails not only because that which is asserted as a premise is itself not proven, but because it is

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 A. 257, 105 N.J. Eq. 671, 4 Backes 671, 1930 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-deutz-njsuperctappdiv-1930.