John D. Lincoln v. The United States

356 F.2d 145, 174 Ct. Cl. 726, 17 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 389, 1966 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 37
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 18, 1966
Docket233-63
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 356 F.2d 145 (John D. Lincoln v. The 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
John D. Lincoln v. The United States, 356 F.2d 145, 174 Ct. Cl. 726, 17 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 389, 1966 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 37 (cc 1966).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This case was referred pursuant to Rule 57(a) to Trial Commissioner Robert K. McConnaughey, with directions to make findings of fact and recommendation for conclusions of law. The commissioner has done so in an opinion and report filed on October 8,1965. Plaintiff has failed to file exceptions and brief and the time for so doing pursuant to the Rules of the court has expired. On No *147 vember 26,1965, defendant filed a motion pursuant to Rule 68 that the court dismiss plaintiff’s petition and adopt the commissioner’s report based upon plaintiff’s failure to file exceptions and brief or a statement of election authorized by Rule 62. Since the court agrees with the commissioner’s findings, his opinion, and his recommended conclusion of law, as hereinafter set forth, it hereby adopts the same as the basis for its judgment in this case. Defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted and plaintiff’s petition is dismissed.

This is a suit to recover, with interest, $40,376.38, paid by the plaintiff as income tax with respect to transactions that occurred in 1946, in the course of liquidation of a Virginia corporation, called Virginia-Lincoln Corporation.

The tax the plaintiff seeks to recover was based on an amount equal to a balance which, in 1946, appeared on the books of Virginia-Lincoln as an amount due from the plaintiff to the corporation. The defendant, in assessing the plaintiff’s income tax for 1946, treated this amount as the measure of part of a dividend received by the plaintiff upon liquidation of Virginia-Lincoln under a plan of liquidation approved November 29, 1945, and assessed a tax on it at capital gain rates which the plaintiff paid and which he now seeks to recover.

In partial answer to the petition, the defendant has asserted that the plaintiff’s recovery is barred by a closing agreement 1 allegedly executed by the plaintiff on or about November 8, 1949, signed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue on January 3, 1950, and approved by the Acting Secretary of the Treasury on February 6, 1950. 2

The trial was limited to questions pertaining to the execution of the closing agreement.

The plaintiff admits that a form of closing agreement, probably signed with his name, was submitted by Mr. Allen H. Gardner, an attorney authorized to represent the plaintiff generally in the controversy concerning taxes arising out of the plan for reorganization of Virginia-Lincoln, and that such a document was signed by the Commissioner, and approved by the Acting Secretary of the Treasury. He claims, however, that he never signed the closing agreement personally, and that, as a consequence, it is not binding upon him and' does not preclude him from maintaining the claim asserted in this case for recovery of the *148 amount paid in satisfaction of the tax thereafter determined.

No signed copy of the closing agreement bearing a handwritten signature of the plaintiff’s name is in evidence. One of the witnesses, a retired Internal Revenue agent, who, during the period 1947-50 had examined the income tax returns and other evidence relating to the tax-ability of the plaintiff, his brother, and the two corporations, testified that, in the past, in the course of his work, he had seen, among the defendant’s records, a copy of the closing agreement bearing a handwritten signature of the plaintiff’s name. Despite a thorough search of the defendant’s records in preparation for the trial, no copy of the signed agreement has been found.

The plaintiff denies ever having, or ever seeing, a copy of the agreement signed with his name, and says that, until recently, he had never been informed that any such document ever existed.

The evidence as a whole leaves no room for doubt, however, that, in the fall of 1949, the plaintiff’s name was signed to duplicate copies of a form of closing agreement by someone, that the signed, duplicate copies were sent to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, in November of that year, by an attorney authorized to represent the plaintiff generally with respect to his 1946 tax liability, and that, after official approval of the agreement, in February 1950, one of such copies was sent to Mr. Leon D. BeVille, treasurer of Virginia-Lincoln, and the other was retained among the Internal Revenue records, subject to a direction that it be attached to the original of the plaintiff’s income tax return for 1949. That return was destroyed in February 1964, in accordance with a policy of the Internal Revenue Service for destruction of aging documents. The evidence affords a basis for a reasonable inference that the signed copy of the closing agreement was destroyed at the same time, although the' record contains no positive proof of this.

The unavailability of a signed copy of the agreement precludes comparison of the signature on the document with known examples of the plaintiff’s handwriting or of the handwriting of other persons who might have signed his name to it.

The evidence does, however, show that a closing agreement, signed with the plaintiff’s name, was duly approved in February 1950, and does not wholly dispel the possibility that the plaintiff may have signed the closing agreement that was approved.

The plaintiff’s recollection of details concerning arrangements carried out in 1949 and 1950 with respect to the liquidation of Virginia-Lincoln was understandably imprecise, and his mere failure to recollect signing the closing agreement is less than positive proof that he did not.

The plaintiff’s specific denial that he signed the agreement was not based on a definite recollection of a specific, deliberate refusal of any identified opportunity to do so, but upon a reasoned conclusion that he would not have signed any such agreement because of a belief that, if he had, he would have been precluded, contrary to his wishes at the time, from continuing the manufacturing business he was then carrying on at the Lincoln Industries plant. For reasons elaborated hereafter, it is clear that, at the time the plaintiff’s name was signed to the closing agreement, discontinuance of the manufacturing operation was neither an apparently certain, nor an apparently probable consequence of his signing the agreement. On the contrary, it had been quite clear, since months before the time the agreement was signed, that continuance of the manufacturing operation was an integral part of the plan of which the closing agreement was also a part.

As events transpired, the agreement was signed with the plaintiff’s name, by •someone, and was approved, and taxes were assessed and paid in accordance with its provisions just as if he had signed, and yet, the manufacturing operation continued without any consequent impediment until it was terminated, for quite different reasons, in 1954, 5 years later, and, according to the plaintiff, he never knew there was such an agreement.

*149 In these circumstances, on the evidence in this record, the plaintiff’s denial that he signed the agreement may not properly be regarded as overcoming the presumption, established by section 3809 (b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, as amended, 3

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Bluebook (online)
356 F.2d 145, 174 Ct. Cl. 726, 17 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 389, 1966 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-d-lincoln-v-the-united-states-cc-1966.