Latchis Theatres of Keene, Inc. v. Commissioner

19 T.C. 1054, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 223
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1953
DocketDocket Nos. 28204, 28205
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 19 T.C. 1054 (Latchis Theatres of Keene, 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
Latchis Theatres of Keene, Inc. v. Commissioner, 19 T.C. 1054, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 223 (tax 1953).

Opinions

OPINION.

Murdock, Judge:

The only ground on which the Commissioner seeks to support his determination of surtax under section 102 is that the earnings or profits of each petitioner were permitted to accumulate in 1946 beyond the reasonable needs of the business. Section 102 (c). Keene accumulated and added to its surplus during 1946 earnings of $16,645.82, and Claremont accumulated and added to its surplus during 1946 earnings of $7,704.13. The petitioners attempt to justify those accumulations on three grounds: (1) “The demands for payments on mortgages on the theatres in which the petitioners operated their business”; (2) “The need to replace equipment in the theatres”; and (3) “The need to meet competition as it had arisen in the past and might arise again at any time from other and larger theatre chains and as it was developing in 1946 from drive-in theatres.”

It must be borne in mind that each petitioner can escape the Commissioner’s determination only if it shows that its accumulations for 1946 were reasonably needed in its business. The fact that they might have been needed or that they were actually used in the business of some other entity is wholly immaterial unless it is shown that such needs or use were in fact reasonably necessary to the business of the petitioner. Cf. Stanton Corporation, 44 B. T. A. 56, 80, affd. per curiam 188 F. 2d 512. The members of the Latchis family, operating as a closely knit group, developed rather extensive business interests of which the two petitioner corporations were but a part. The record indicates that the individuals used the various organizations and particularly the funds of those organizations, including the funds of the petitioners, to suit their own convenience, now to start or aid one activity, again to start or aid another. Apparently, the petitioners were on the receiving end in their early days, until they had gotten started successfully, and then idle funds of the petitioners, even in excess of accumulated earnings, were used at the will of the individuals for any purpose of any part of the various businesses which they were conducting. Those purposes, so far as this record shows, were not germane to the business of the petitioners except as they may have enabled the individuals to build up and strengthen their business domain generally. The Latchis family could have put all of their properties in one corporation and operated all of their businesses through that corporation. Then the arguments they make here that the earnings of one activity can be retained to aid or develop another phase of the business would have more force. But they chose, instead, to divide their holdings and business activities among a number of separate corporations in order to limit liabilities and perhaps to obtain other benefits. They must be judged by what they did in this respect rather than by what they might have done. Attention must be focused upon the petitioners. The accumulation of the 1946 earnings of the petitioners, on top of the earnings and capital which they already had, can not be justified by various needs and purposes of other interests of the Latchis family businesses.

The Court, during the course of the trial, repeatedly called the attention of counsel for the petitioners to the necessity of explaining specifically and adequately the business need of each petitioner for retaining all rather than distributing some or all of its 1946 accumulation of earnings. Two of the brothers testified. The explanations given in their testimony are too vague, general, inferential, and indefinite in important respects and are not reduced to amounts of money required to meet needs and reasonable prospects of either petitioner. Their explanations would relate with equal inadequacy to one-half or twice the amounts as well as they do to the actual amounts which need explanation. No effort was made to show the amounts needed by either petitioner in the normal month to month operation of their businesses and examination of the balance sheets and observation of the actual uses made of their funds, particularly loans of those funds, indicate that neither petitioner needed or used more than a few thousand dollars for that purpose.

Counsel for the petitioners states in his brief “The most pressing need in 1946, in part met in that year, was the demands for payments on mortgages on the theatres in which petitioners operated their business.” Neither petitioner acquired any real estate and it was not intended that either should ever acquire any real estate. Neither petitioner was ever liable on any mortgage. The mortgages to which counsel for the petitioners refer were mortgages which D. Latchis, Inc., had placed, on properties belonging to it, as security for funds borrowed by it. The record does not show the purpose for which any of the money was borrowed or that it was borrowed for any purpose connected with either petitioner. The properties mortgaged have not been described but there are indications in the 'record that they were not merely theatre properties but contained, in addition to the theatres, other rental space. John testified that there was pressure from the mortgagees for payments in 1946. The petitioners’ contention in this connection seems to be that a reasonable need of the business of each petitioner was to have sufficient funds to come to the aid of the mortgagor, D. Latchis, Inc., so that it would not lose the properties and thereby deprive the petitioners of theatres in which to operate their businesses. Factually, this argument would be much stronger if the theatre properties had been the only security and D. Latchis, Inc., had had to borrow the money and mortgage those properties in order to obtain them for the use of the petitioners. But no such findings can be made from this record. The actual facts may be that the theatre space was much less valuable than the rest of the mortgaged property and that D. Latchis, Inc., borrowed the money for purposes unrelated to the petitioners. Almost 45 per cent of its rental income was from other sources, indicating that it had other valuable properties in addition to those rented to the petitioners. It was lending others in its chain more than it was borrowing. Obviously, the petitioners can not justify accumulation of surpluses sufficient to make certain that D. Latchis, Inc., will be able to meet all of its varied obligations in the conduct of its business, much of which had nothing to do with these petitioners. We are unable to find that either corporation was justified in accumulating any earnings to assure payment of mortgage obligations of D. Latchis, Inc.

The petitioners’ counsel stated “Almost equally pressing, but impossible to meet in 1946, was the need to replace equipment in the theatres.” This argument needs careful scrutiny to determine just how meritorious it is. These petitioners had been buying equipment needed in the operation of the theatres such as projection and sound equipment, ticket registers, and other similar items, and some additional or replacement equipment of that character was a reasonable need. However, whatever they might have needed could easily have been obtained with a relatively small part of the excess funds which they had at the beginning of 1946. It does not appear that such needs in the case of either theatre would have gone beyond a few thousand dollars at any time material hereto. Therefore, if section 102 is not to apply because 1946 earnings would be needed to buy equipment, it must be explained by the need for such articles as chairs, light fixtures, and carpet for the theatres.

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Bluebook (online)
19 T.C. 1054, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latchis-theatres-of-keene-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1953.