Losh v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

145 F.2d 456, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1483, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2538
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 1944
Docket2901
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 145 F.2d 456 (Losh v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Losh v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 145 F.2d 456, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1483, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2538 (10th Cir. 1944).

Opinion

HUXMAN, Circuit Judge.

Both petitioners seek a review of the (decision of the Tax Court sustaining a determination of deficiencies by the Commissioner in their income taxes for the year 1937. The decision turns upon whether a partnership arrangement effected a change in the economic status of petitioners within the decision of the Supreme Court in Helvering v. Clifford, 309 U.S. 331, 60 S.Ct. 554, 84 L.Ed. 788. For convenience’s sake, reference will be to A. R. Losh in the case of both appellants, and he will be referred to as petitioner.

Petitioner was a civil engineer of wide experience. From 1931 to 1935 he was technical adviser and salesman for a company selling road oils and asphalts. In the fall of, 1935, petitioner, who was then 52 years old, decided to go into business for himself because he wanted to establish a business which would be available for his two minor sons. After surveying the possibilities, he located in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he carried on a business known as the General Materials Company. He and his wife each contributed $1,000 thereto. By April, 1936, the business was progressing. His two minor sons, Thomas and Richard, took an active interest therein. They were told that in time they would be taken into the business. In the latter part of 1936 negotiations were opened for the purchase of a building materials business in Albuquerque. After many discussions between the four members of the family, the additional business was purchased. At about this time petitioners decided to give to each of their sons a fifteen per cent interest in the partnership. ' It was petitioners’ plan to increase this interest as the boys worked more into the business. On November 30, 1936, petitioner instructed the bookkeeper in writing to set up the partnership books as of January 1, 1937, showing a thirty-five per cent interest in each of the petitioners and a fifteen per cent interest in each of the two sons. The letter to the bookkeeper contained this statement: “This is to be confidential except to Mrs. Losh and myself.” Through *457 failure to comprehend, the bookkeeper did not set up the accounts as directed.

Petitioner’s accountant advised him that the partnership arrangement should be reduced to writing. Petitioner asked the accountant to have the agreement reduced to writing. Because the sons were minors, the attorney employed by the accountant advised and prepared a written instrument denominated “Agreement and Declaration of Trust and Partnership,” which was executed by petitioner. The first part of the instrument created the partnership and defined the interests of the parties, as outlined above.

The instrument created a trust of the fifteen per cent interest given to each of the two sons. It provided that their interest was not to be given to them directly in their own names; that it should be held in trust by petitioner as trustee. The trustee was given absolute power of control and management of the trust estate. He had power to add the profits of the trust estate ’ to the capital, or otherwise invest them as he saw fit, for the best interests of the estate. He was given power to expend from time to time income of the trust as he saw fit for the comfort, education, training, care, support and welfare of the sons. The trust was to continue until the sons respectively reached the age of 25 years. It gave petitioner the power to extend the trust period for an additional ten years and allowed him to retain all trust property in the partnership for the additional time, or invest it otherwise, as he saw fit. It provided that the sons could not sell, transfer or encumber the interest during the existence of the trust; that if either son died during the initial period of the trust, leaving no heirs of his body, then the trust estate should revert to petitioner and his wife.

In addition to the broad powers of management and discretion vested in petitioner as trustee, the instrument also gave him the absolute management and control of “all the affairs a' -1 business of said partnership . . withou. ¡estriction, interference or limitation.” It gave him power to' retain and use so much of the earnings of the partnership as in his judgment was wise as additional working capital, and to determine the time and manner of withdrawals therefrom. No one could withdraw any funds without his approval. He alone had authority to sign checks.

As is pointed out by the Supreme Court in the Clifford case, supra, technical considerations, niceties of the law of trusts or conveyances, or the legal paraphernalia which inventive genius may construct as a refuge from the payment of taxes must not obscure the basic issue, and, as stated, where the grantor is the trustee and the beneficiaries are • members of his family group, the arrangement will be specially scrutinized to be certain that a single economic unit is not multiplied in form, only into several units for the purpose of evading taxes.

When so viewed, the conclusion is inescapable that in this case there,.was no. substantial change in petitioner’s economic status. The effect of the arrangement was to leave the absolute management and control of the business in his hands to the same extent as before the execution of the trust agreement. It effected no substantial change in his previous management and control of the business. Both before and after the partnership and trust agreement, the mother and the two sons assisted Losh in the operation of the business. They were boys in school, one in high school and the other in college, and worked in the business during their spare time and during vacations. It is quite apparent that petitioner wanted the boys to own this business some day. In the case of the older boy, he could keep the business intact, by means of the power to extend the trust, for at least sixteen years, during which time he had absolute dominion and control not only over the operation of the business, but over the assets thereof. During all these years, if he chose, neither of the boys could withdraw a single cent of their earnings. And while petitioner testified that they gave this interest to their sons outright, the written instrument does not bear this out. It provides that if either son died during the initial period of the trust, without issue of the body, his interest reverted to the donors. Heirs other than issue of the body would receive nothing.

Strictly speaking, petitioners did not possess the full, naked, legal interest in the property after the execution of the trust that they had before. But when viewed in the light of the family, relationship and the object sought to be accomplished when they established this business, this change is more fancif-ul than real. Petitioner was in his fifty-third year. Pie could keep the *458 property intact for at least sixteen years, during all of which time he exercised full dominion and control over the operation of the business, as well as over the corpus of the estate and the income therefrom. At that time he would be 69 years of age. It is only natural to assume when we consider the motive which prompted him in establishing this business, -that by then he would want to turn it over to his sons, even though this instrument had not been executed.

We think there are marked differences between this case and Armstrong v. Commissioner, C.C.A.10,

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190 F. Supp. 950 (W.D. Louisiana, 1961)
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153 F.2d 408 (Ninth Circuit, 1946)
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152 F.2d 722 (Fourth Circuit, 1945)
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150 F.2d 918 (Tenth Circuit, 1945)
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150 F.2d 915 (Tenth Circuit, 1945)
Hall v. Commissioner
150 F.2d 304 (Tenth Circuit, 1945)
Doll v. Commissioner
149 F.2d 239 (Eighth Circuit, 1945)
Doll v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
149 F.2d 239 (Eighth Circuit, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
145 F.2d 456, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1483, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/losh-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca10-1944.