Ingle Coal Corporation v. United States

127 F. Supp. 573
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 11, 1955
Docket50326
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 127 F. Supp. 573 (Ingle Coal Corporation v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingle Coal Corporation v. United States, 127 F. Supp. 573 (cc 1955).

Opinions

LITTLETON, Judge.

The plaintiff, a corporation, sues for $32,289.85, with interest thereon, which represents alleged overpayments of Federal income taxes for 1947 and 1948. The issue presented is whether certain “over-riding royalties” paid by plaintiff in 1947 and 1948 are deductible as ordinary and necessary expenses under section 23(a) (1) (A) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 23(a). The facts have been stipulated and those material may be summarized as follows: The Ingle Coal Company, plaintiff’s predecessor, (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the old corporation) was a family corporation. All its stock was held by members of the Ingle family consisting of two brothers, two sisters, and the children of the brothers. The old corporation was engaged in the business of mining bituminous coal on lands held under a lease (not acquired from the Ingle family) beginning on June 1, 1940. A royalty of five cents a ton was being paid the lessor under the lease. The business had appreciated considerably in value and in the spring of 1942, an offer of $1,000,000 was made to the old corporation for its assets. The offer was rejected. The stockholders of plaintiff’s predecessor decided to liquidate the corporation, transfer its assets and liabilities to the stockholders who would then transfer them to a new corporation to be organized in exchange for the stock of the new corporation and a contract obligating the new corporation to pay named individuals, who were then the stockholders, five cents a ton royalty, in addition to the royalty stipulated in the lease, on the coal thereafter mined under the above lease.

This plan was adopted and consummated for the purpose of reducing taxes, assuring a more definite income to Katherine I. Mitchell and Frances I. Bebb, two of the stockholders, and allowing the disposition of the stock, for a lesser price, and still retaining an interest in the coal business.

A stockholders’ meeting of the old corporation was held on June 30, 1942, and a resolution was adopted that the corporation discontinue business and that its assets and liabilities be distributed to the stockholders, or their nominee, in proportion to their respective stock holdings. The president and secretary were authorized and directed to make all necessary transfers, conveyances and assignments. The stockholders agreed to accept the proposed distribution, and individually authorized the transfer and conveyance of the assets and liabilities to the plaintiff as their nominee. On the same day the directors of the plaintiff met, and after organizing and electing officers, received and accepted a proposal by the stockholders of the old corporation to convey the assets that had been distributed to their nominee, the plaintiff, to plaintiff in consideration of the assumption by the plaintiff of the liabilities assumed by them in the liquidation of the predecessor corporation; the issuance of the plaintiff’s stock in the same proportion as they had held stock in the old corporation, and also a separate [576]*576agreement by the new corporation to pay them in proportion to their stock holdings in the old corporation a royalty of five cents a ton on the coal mined under the lease. Four of the stockholders also agreed to subscribe to 500 additional shares of the plaintiff’s stock. The necessary legal documents for carrying out the above plan were duly executed.

The plaintiff paid the named individuals in the contract, who had been the stockholders of the old corporation and were then plaintiff’s stockholders, five cents a ton royalty on the coal mined under the lease (hereinafter referred to as over-riding royalties), in addition to the five cents a ton paid to the original lessor, and claimed a deduction therefor under section 23(a) (1) (A) for the period from July 1, 1942, to December 31, 1942, and for the year 1943. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue allowed the royalties paid to the original lessor but disallowed the over-riding royalties. The Tax Court in Ingle Coal Corporation v. Commissioner, 10 T.C. 1199, held that the over-riding royalties paid to the stockholders under the agreement were not an ordinary and necessary expense and were in substance a nondeductible dividend distribution. The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in Ingle Coal Cor-portion v. Commissioner, 174 F.2d 569, affirmed the Tax Court on the same ground.

Katherine I. Mitchell, recipient of 25 percent of the over-riding royalties, died on May 5, 1943. Her stock was sold to other stockholders of the plaintiff and her rights to the over-riding royalties were distributed to her heirs and legatees. On June 28, 1944, Frances I. Bebb, recipient of 25 percent of the over-riding royalties, donated to each of her six nephews and one niece 25 shares of her stock. The gifts upset the equality of the holdings by the David Ingle and William D. Ingle branches of the family. On April 1, 1946, the remainder of her stock was sold and the equality of holdings of the two families was again attained. She retained the over-riding royalty rights.

The over-riding royalties have been paid continuously each year since July 1, 1942. In addition to such payments dividends were paid in 1947 and 1948 in the amounts of $65,000 and $115,000, respectively.

On its Federal tax returns for the years 1947 and 1948 the plaintiff claimed, inter alia, deductions for the overriding royalties in the amounts of $42,-761.10 and $34,223.70, respectively. The Commissioner disallowed the deduction and assessed an additional tax, which was paid. A timely claim for refund was filed and after six months had expired without the Commissioner’s formal rejection this action was instituted.

The defendant contends that plaintiff cannot litigate the present claim because it is estopped by the collateral estoppel branch of the rule of res judicata for the reason that the material facts and the issues of law presented in the present case are the same as those previously litigated in Ingle Coal Corporation v. Commissioner, 7 Cir., 174 F.2d 569. Plaintiff asserts that the material facts and the issues of law raised in the instant proceeding are not the same. Both parties cite and rely on Commissioner v. Sunnen, 333 U.S. 591, 68 S.Ct. 715, 720, 92 L.Ed. 898.

The taxpayer in the Sunnen case, supra, had granted to a corporation in which he owned 89 percent of the stock, a non-exclusive license to manufacture and sell' certain devices, covered by patents •that he owned, in exchange for specified royalties. At various times he assigned these royalty contracts, which were identical in all important respects, to his wife. The tax question raised by the license contracts was whether the income accruing under them should be taxed to the husband or to his wife. The Board of Tax Appeals held that the income earned on one of these contracts was not taxable to the husband. In subsequent years, after the Clifford-Horst [577]*577line of decisions1 on assignment of income, the Commissioner again taxed the income earned under the contracts to the husband. The Supreme Court, in drastically limiting the doctrine in tax cases, held that collateral estoppel did not preclude the income from the identical contract from being taxable to the husband because of a legal doctrinal change. The Court, in the Sunnen ease, supra, in holding that collateral estoppel did not preclude the income from the similar contracts from being taxed to the husband, stated:

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127 F. Supp. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingle-coal-corporation-v-united-states-cc-1955.