Leach Corp. v. Commissioner

30 T.C. 563, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 163
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 12, 1958
DocketDocket No. 57494
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 30 T.C. 563 (Leach Corp. 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
Leach Corp. v. Commissioner, 30 T.C. 563, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 163 (tax 1958).

Opinion

The respondent determined the following deficiencies in income tax of petitioner:

Tamable year Amount
Apr. 22 1949 to Feb. 28,1950_$7,719.94
Fiscal year ended Feb. 28, 1951_ 9,666. 70
Fiscal year ended Feb. 29,1952_ 85, 634. 39

The petitioner contends that it overpaid its tax for each of the periods listed above and that it is entitled to a refund.

The parties have entered into stipulations relating to issues involving the amount of depreciation allowable for each year, and also the amount of capital gain or loss on machinery and equipment sold during the year ended February 29, 1952. These issues will be disposed of under Rule 50.

The remaining issues are (1) whether amounts accrued as interest on bonds in each of the taxable years are deductible, and (2) whether petitioner is entitled to annual deductions for amortized portions of fees and expenses incurred in connection with the issuance of the bonds. The amounts involved in these issues are as follows:

Taxable year Interest on bonds Amortization of fees and expenses
Apr. 22, 1949 to Feb. 28, 1950_$16,168. 00 $4,147. 08
Year ended Feb. 28,1951_ 18, 833.19 8,463. 96
Year ended Feb. 29,1952_ 17, 599. 92 4, 381.32

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts have been stipulated and they are incorporated herein by reference.

The petitioner is a corporation organized under Delaware law on April 22, 1949; and is the surviving corporation incident to a statutory merger, to which petitioner and Leach Relay Co., a California corporation (hereinafter sometimes called Leach of California), were the parties.

The original corporate name of petitioner was Leach Relay Co., but on February 26,1954, its name was changed to Leach Corporation.

Petitioner’s principal business office is in Los Angeles, California. It filed its tax returns, on an accrual basis, for the taxable years (the period April 22,1949, to February 28,1950, and the fiscal years ended February 28,1951, and February 29,1952) with the then collector of internal revenue for the sixth district of California at Los Angeles, California.

In February of 1946, Joseph F. Clark acquired control of Leach of California, a then dormant corporation, and this corporation acquired by purchase the inventory, fixed assets and unfilled orders of an operating electrical relay manufacturing business.

An electrical relay may be described as an electro-magnetic contact-making or contact-breaking device, operated by a variation in the condition of one electric current to affect the operation of switches or devices operating in the same, or a different, electric current. A common use for electrical relays is to operate, by remote control, switches and devices in airplanes.

Joseph F. Clark owned all of the issued and outstanding stock of Leach of California, which consisted of 2,000 shares of no-par stock with a stated value on the books of $20,000, or $10 per share.

G. L. Ohrstrom & Co., a partnership, was an investment banking firm, located in New York, which specialized in acquiring industrial companies, and the placing of the securities of such companies with its clients. It also had a staff experienced in industrial management to supervise the management of acquired companies. George L. Ohrstrom (who died in November of 1955) was the general partner in the firm, and there were several special partners.

■ Robert Benson, Lonsdale & Co. Limited, and Robert Fleming & Co. Limited (hereinafter referred to as Benson Limited and Fleming Limited respectively), are English investment banking houses located in London, England, which specialize in placing investments in American securities. The two firms have operated in financing American investments for about 70 years.

Benson Limited and Fleming Limited invest money on behalf of clients, both institutional and private, but chiefly institutional clients in the form of English and Scottish investment trusts. An investment trust is a trust company formed for investment purposes with a managing board of four or five directors. In some, but not all cases, the English and Scottish investment trusts of interest in this proceeding had a member of Benson Limited or Fleming Limited on their boards of directors to render financial advice, but the function of Benson Limited and Fleming Limited in this regard was simply to advise and recommend investments to the trusts as specialists in American securities, and the boards of directors of the investment trusts independently established their own investment policies.

Benson Limited and Fleming Limited had had business relations with George L. Ohrstrom and G. L. Ohrstrom & Co. for some 30 years, and they had bought a great number of securities through the Ohrstrom Co. The English firms had great confidence in G. L. Ohrstrom & Co. and its managerial abilities, and they were interested in any investment recommended by it, in cases where the management of the continuing operations of the subject cómpany would be supervised by Ohrstrom & Co.

G. L. Ohrstrom & Co., became interested in acquiring the relay business operated by Leach of California. It first sought to purchase the land, buildings, and operating assets of that corporation. Joseph F. Clark refused to negotiate on the basis of a sale of assets, but was agreeable to a sale of the capital stock of Leach of California for $620,000, of which $520,000 was to be paid in cash and the remainder by notes.

Sometime prior to April 11,1949, George L. Ohrstrom entered into negotiations with representatives of Benson Limited and Fleming Limited with the object of securing funds to finance the venture. He apprised them of what Leach of California had done and was doing, and showed them its balance sheet for the year ended February 28, 1949. The balance sheet disclosed that its assets, liabilities and net worth on that date were as follows:

A PtfiTiYPR
Current assets_$381, 673.06
Fixed assets (net book value):
Land_$8,515. 50
Buildings_.¿_ 31,480.32
Other fixed assets_ 31, 542. 58
Total_ 71, 538.40
Other assets (exclusive of good will)_ 17,815.71
Total assets_ 471, 027.17
Liabilities awd Net Worth
Current liabilities (including reserve for Federal income taxes
$116,464.85)_$162,042. 35
Net worth:
Capital stock — Authorized 2,500 shares of no par

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Bluebook (online)
30 T.C. 563, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1958.