Lark Sales Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

437 F.2d 1067
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1971
Docket17981
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 437 F.2d 1067 (Lark Sales Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lark Sales Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 437 F.2d 1067 (7th Cir. 1971).

Opinions

PELL, Circuit Judge.

Taxpayer, Lark Sales Company, an Illinois corporation, appeals from the decision of the Tax Court which sustained, in part, the determination of deficiencies against Lark by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue in the amounts of $109,791.04, $93,635.42, $69,875.71 and $52,118.70 for the respective years of 1955, 1956, 1957 and 1958.1 The Tax Court redetermined the deficiencies in the amounts of $106,425.24, $57,410.80, $41,355.22 and $10,771.78. The decision of the Tax Court is reported at 27 T.C. M. 1224.

The issues on this appeal are almost purely factual. The record before us consists of 1148 pages of oral testimony, a voluminous number of exhibits, 2280 pages of briefs and appendices and a Tax Court opinion of 211 pages. The factual situation resulting in the determination of the deficiencies is a conglomerate mass of confusing and often inconsistent contractual arrangements between various individuals and corporations. Inasmuch as these instruments are fully referred to in the reported decision of the Tax Court, little purpose would be served by setting them forth in this decision. It seems unlikely that the precise factual morass involved in this [1070]*1070case will again present itself. Accordingly, we are in this decision confining ourselves simply to the basic facts necessary for the purpose of the decision.

One Harry Oltz patented a soft ice cream freezer, which became the basis of the Dairy Queen ice cream business eventually established through the efforts of one H. A. McCullough, Oltz and his family primarily operated through Ar-Tik Systems, Inc., a corporation. McCullough, his family and his accountant, L. S. Murchie, operated through various corporations as well as individually. Oltz’s patent expired in 1954 and apparently much of the machination arose from an effort to preserve royalty rights subsequent to the patent expiration.

20 EAST ROYALTY INCOME

Royalty payments under the so-called Eastern Agreement were to be collected and of this 20, known as “20 East,” was to be paid by Ar-Tik to McCulloughs Dairy Queen.

The first issue presented for our review concerns the ownership of, and thus the tax liability for, the 20 East income for the years 1956, 1957 and 1958. Both the Commissioner and the Tax Court found that Lark was the owner of the 20 East royalty right during these years.

In 1947 certain of the McCulloughs purported to assign 20 East to Ilco-Mac Venture which in turn, by a bill of sale dated December 30, 1950, transferred its rights to the Micro Manufacturing Company. Both of these entities were dominated by Murchie.

By an agreement dated April 2, 1954 the McCulloughs, in apparent disregard of the earlier assignment, transferred the ownership of 20 East to Lark. This transfer purported to be complete and absolute on its face.

The April 2, 1954 agreement was attached as an exhibit to yet another agreement, the so-called “Lark/Ar-Tik Agreement” dated December 31, 1954 but executed February 25, 1955. So far as here relevant, this agreement gave Lark the right to collect money due Ar-Tik under the Eastern Agreement and provided that Lark should remit such collections, after certain deductions, to Ar-Tik on a monthly basis.

Lark contends that the Tax Court erred in three respects in finding that it was the owner of 20 East.

Lark’s first contention was that Micro was the owner of this royalty by virtue of the 1950 bill of sale. While we do not agree with the Tax Court’s finding that it could not identify the 20 royalty referred to in the 1950 bill of sale with 20 East, we do not find persuasive evidence of Micro’s ownership. Micro paid no consideration for the alleged transfer to it of 20 East. All the collections of 20 East made by Ar-Tik prior to the Lark/Ar-Tik Agreement were remitted directly to the McCulloughs and never to Ilco-Mac or Micro. In 1953, the Mc-Culloughs, not Micro, signed a supplement to the Eastern Agreement. During the negotiations leading to the Lark/Ar-Tik Agreement, Murchie, who was conducting the negotiations and who owned and controlled Micro, never gave any indication that Micro, rather than the McCulloughs, was the owner of 20 East.

Lark next contends that the negotiations leading to the execution of the Lark/Ar-Tik Agreement show that 20 East was transferred to Lark only to provide Ar-Tik with security under that agreement. While it is true that an absolute transfer on the face of a document may under some circumstances be shown actually to be a security device, it does not necessarily follow that because Ar-Tik, for purposes of its own security, wished Lark to have “some substance” that Lark acquired only a security interest in 20 East.

It would seem more consistent with Ar-Tik’s purposes that Lark be given absolute ownership of the asset rather than a mere security interest subject to the claims of the true owner. The record supports this as being the intent [1071]*1071of the parties. At the time the negotiations were taking place between Lark and Ar-Tik, Ar-Tik’s attorney prepared a memorandum letter to his co-counsel and his principal noting that “the substance in Lark is now to be created by the assignment of the 20 due on the Eastern Contract to Lark which would become Lark’s property. * * * ” In the Tax Court, he testified that the agreement reached was for the vesting of the ownership of 20 East in Lark and that this was “vital” to Ar-Tik.

Finally, Lark contends that the conduct of the various parties supports its interpretation of the above agreements. It is true that in years prior to the Lark/Ar-Tik Agreement, amounts remitted to the McCulloughs as 20 East income were reported as income on the returns of Ilco-Mac and Micro. However, the record also shows that the claimed income was never in fact paid over to Micro. Further, despite Lark’s assertion that it was merely an agent to collect for both Micro and Ar-Tik, collections of 20 East were credited on its books to “Lark Accommodation Credits” and were retained by Lark as income. In contrast, Lark’s collections of royalties due Ar-Tik were credited to “Ar-Tik Accommodation Credits” and were eventually remitted to Ar-Tik in one form or another. Thus, Lark’s own conduct as revealed by the record indicates that it claimed greater rights to 20 East collections than it did to other royalty collections.

The question of the ownership of 20 East under the array of agreements and assignments which we have attempted to outline briefly is a purely factual one. Our review of the decision of the Tax Court is limited accordingly. It is well settled that factual findings of the Tax Court must stand unless shown to be clearly erroneous within the meaning of Rule 52(a), Fed.R.Civ.Proc. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Duberstein, 363 U.S. 278, 291, 80 S.Ct. 1190, 4 L.Ed.2d 1218 (1960); Tripp v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 337 F.2d 432, 434 (7th Cir. 1964). This standard is also applicable to factual inferences drawn from undisputed basic facts. Duberstein, supra. Where the evidence would support either of two permissible conclusions, the choice of the Tax Court between them is not clearly erroneous. United States v.

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Lark Sales Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
437 F.2d 1067 (Seventh Circuit, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
437 F.2d 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lark-sales-company-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca7-1971.