John Town, Inc. v. Commissioner

46 T.C. 107, 1966 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 113
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 22, 1966
DocketDocket No. 362-63
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 46 T.C. 107 (John Town, Inc. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Town, Inc. v. Commissioner, 46 T.C. 107, 1966 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 113 (tax 1966).

Opinion

PieRce, Judge:

The respondent, in his notice of deficiency herein, determined deficiencies in the income taxes of the petitioner for its fiscal years ended September 30,1956, and September 30,1957, in the amounts of $36,546.26 and $746,381.60, respectively; and he also disallowed a claim of petitioner for a refund of $191,491.61 for the latter taxable year ended September 30,1957. The petitioner, in its petition herein, raised several issues respecting these actions of the respondent.

At the trial herein, the parties by written stipulation made various agreements and concessions respecting several of the issues raised by the pleadings — including a concession of petitioner that no refund is due to it by virtue of its above-mentioned claim for refund. All these agreements and concessions of the parties will hereafter be given effect in the computation to be made under Rule 50.

The result of the foregoing is: That as regards the taxable year ended September 30, 1956, all issues respecting that year have been eliminated from present consideration; and that as regards the taxable year ended September 30, 1957, only the two following issues remain open for decision:

(1) Is the petitioner entitled to exclude from its gross income under the nonrecognition-of-gain provision of section 337 (a) of the 1954 Code, a substantial gain which it realized from sale of its operating assets during said taxable year ended September 30,1957 ?

Decision of this issue will turn on: Whether certain purported “promissory notes” issued by petitioner at the time of its organization in 1947, and against payment of which it retained assets for more than 12 months after adoption in 1957 of a plan for its complete liquidation, evidenced a true foonu fide indebtedness of petitioner; or on the other hand, whether said “promissory notes” actually represented in substance as distinguished from their form, equity capital invested at the risk of the business — so that petitioner’s retention of assets to pay the same, for a period of more than 12 months after adoption of the plan for complete liquidation, violated the prohibition of section 1.337-2 (b) of the Income Tax Regulations against retention of assets to meet a claim of stockholders for recovery of equity capital; and thereby deprived petitioner of the benefit of the nonrecognition-of-gain provision of said section 337(a).

(2) Is petitioner entitled to deduct for said taxable year ended September 30,1957, depreciation or amortization in respect of a license agreement -which it sold during said year for an amount in excess of the adjusted basis thereof as of the beginning of said year? Separate Findings of Fact and Opinions are hereafter set forth with respect to these two issues. All facts that have been stipulated are so found; and those portions of the stipulations of facts which pertain to a particular issue are incorporated by reference in the Findings of Fact for the issue to which they relate.

Issue 1. Applicability of Nonrecognition-of-Gain Provision of Section 337(a)

FINDINGS OR FACT

The petitioner, John Town, Inc., is a corporation which was organized under the laws of the State of Illinois on October 1, 1947. Prior to July 1, 1957, its name was Dana Perfumes, Inc. The petitioner kept its books of account and filed its income tax returns in accordance with an accrual method of accounting and on the basis of fiscal years ended September 30. Its income tax return for each of the fiscal years here involved Was filed with the district director of internal revenue at Chicago.

Background Facts

For several years prior to November 7, 1940, a Spanish individual named Javier Serra, and a New York corporation named Les Par-fumes de Dana, Inc., in which Serra was a principal stockholder, were the owners of the trade name Tabu under which they marketed in various parts of the world perfumes, colognes, and cosmetics that had a distinctive scent name Dana which Serra had created. Also during this same period, an American citizen named J. L. Young-husband and an Illinois corporation named Associated Distributors, Inc., in which Younghusband was the controlling stockholder, were the owners of a similar trade name Tabu under which they marketed, in the United States and elsewhere, various cosmetics and toilet preparations which did not embody the distinctive Dana scent above mentioned. In this circumstance all the above-mentioned parties, on November 7, 1940, entered into a written license agreement (hereinafter sometimes called the Dana license), under which Serra and his New York corporation granted an exclusive license to Younghusband and his Illinois corporation, to use for a period of 20 years from the date of such agreement, both the licensors’ distinctive Dana scent and also their trade name Tabu, for use in marketing, perfumes and cosmetics throughout the- United States and in certain other designated areas. Under the terms of this license, the licensors agreed to supply the licensees with the oils for said distinctive Dana scent; and the licensees agreed, not only to pay the licensors a royalty equal to 11 percent of their net sales of Dana products, but also to expend in the advertising of said products, approximately 25 percent of their net sales. The license agreement provided that it could be assigned by the licensees to a corporation organized to take over the license; and that in such event the initial licensees would be released from further responsibility, “except insofar as this agreement relates to the active interest of J. L. Younghusband in respect to the distribution and sale of the products covered by this agreement.”

Shortly after the execution of this license agreement, the above-named initial licensees did, on November 26,1940, assign the same to an Indiana corporation named Dana Perfumes, Inc. (hereinafter called Dana (Indiana)), which had been newly organized about 3 days previously. This corporation, immediately after its organization, had 800 shares of common stock outstanding, of which 550 were owned by the above-mentioned J. L. Younghusband. Subsequently on October 21, 1946, following certain transfers of the corporation’s stock, and continuously thereafter until September 29, 1947, all the outstanding shares of said Dana (Indiana) were held as follows:

Number of Stockholder ' shares
J. L. Younghusband_ 637%
Paul Rowatt_112%
J. L. Montenier_ 50
Total_800

Paul Eowatt, above mentioned, had become associated with Young-husband in 1941 as a member of a partnership named Consolidated Cosmetics. This partnership had at about that time become the successor to Younghusband’s above-mentioned corporation named Associated Distributors, Inc.; and also it had been substituted for the above-mentioned corporation as the sole distributor of the Tabu products of Dana (Indiana). Thereafter said Consolidated Cosmetics partnership was the vehicle through which Younghusband carried on the promotion, distribution, and sale of cosmetics.

During the period from November 26,1940, through September 30, 194U, Dana (Indiana) operated under the above-mentioned Dana license agreement; and it was very successful in its operations.

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John Town, Inc. v. Commissioner
46 T.C. 107 (U.S. Tax Court, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
46 T.C. 107, 1966 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-town-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1966.