LaPointe v. Commissioner
This text of 2 T.C.M. 252 (LaPointe 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
MELLOTT, Judge: The Commissioner determined a deficiency in income tax for the calendar year 1940 in the amount of $110.70. The sole question is whether the sum of $3,749.66 received by petitioner in 1940 from the Rutland Railroad Company constituted taxable income in that year.
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The petitioner is an individual residing at Chatham, New York. The return for the period here involved was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the fourteenth district of New York.
In 1932 petitioner was in the employ of the Rutland Railroad Company as agenttelegrapher at Chatham, New York. On or about July 31, 1932, he was separated from this position and the work, which he had been doing, was thereafter performed by employees of another railroad at the same station at a lower cost. Until 1940 petitioner was without employment except for short periods of time, usually less than one day.
Upon separation from his employment petitioner filed a protest, in writing, with the Rutland Railroad Company, claiming that his discharge had been in violation of an *256 agreement between the railroad company and the labor union of which he was a member. Petitioner and the representatives of the labor union claimed that petitioner should be restored to his position as of July 28, 1932, and that he should be imbursed for the monetary loss sustained by reason of his discharge, the total of which would have amounted to approximately $21,000.
In 1940 petitioner's claim was compromised and he received in settlement thereof $3,749.66. This amount was reported in his income tax return for that year as non-taxable income. In determining the deficiency respondent included the entire amount in his gross income.
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The petitioner contends that during the period from 1932 to 1940 he performed no work, labor or service for the railroad company; that the amount he received was not the fruit of capital or of labor or of both combined; and that he was not in receipt of income within the rationale of
Respondent determined the deficiency upon the theory and now contends that the amount constituted gross income as such term is defined in
*258 The payment in compromise must be considered in the light of the claim from which it was realized.
When considered in the light of the origin of the claim the payment here in issue was obviously income to petitioner. It was essentially a substitute for wages earned. We think that the respondent correctly included it in gross income. It is therefore *259
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2 T.C.M. 252, 1943 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lapointe-v-commissioner-tax-1943.