Louis N. Pokress and Estate of Lucille A. Pokress, Deceased, Louis N. Pokress v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

234 F.2d 146
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 1956
Docket15608
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 234 F.2d 146 (Louis N. Pokress and Estate of Lucille A. Pokress, Deceased, Louis N. Pokress v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louis N. Pokress and Estate of Lucille A. Pokress, Deceased, Louis N. Pokress v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 234 F.2d 146 (5th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

The Tax Court held that the petitioner 1 in the taxable year 1946 sustained a non-business bad debt loss in the amount of $16,222.77 deductible under the provisions of Section 23 (k) (4) of the 1939 Internal Revenue Code. 2 The petitioner insists that the Tax Court erred: (1) in refusing to find from the overall transaction a deductible loss incurred in trade or business or in a transaction entered into for profit under § 23(e) (1) or (2); 3 (2) in holding the loss deductible under § 23 (k), footnote 2, supra, as a non-business rather than a business bad debt; and (3) in its findings of fact as to the amount of the loss.

The pertinent facts are set forth in much detail in the Tax Court’s memorandum findings of fact and opinion, and will be recounted here only so far as necessary to an understanding of our holdings. In 1946, and for some twenty years prior thereto, petitioner in Miami, Florida was engaged in business as a broker representing largely a northern clientele in the purchase and sale of busi *148 ness and investment properties, including hotels and restaurants. 4 He frequently advanced his own funds in order to secure a particular sale, and would later be reimbursed by his client and also receive his commission on the sale.

A business associate, Louis Goldman, advised the petitioner of a Philadelphia client who was interested in purchasing Pappy’s Inc., a Miami Beach restaurant, at a price of $150,000.00 for all of the corporate stock. To secure the sale, petitioner advanced $25,000.00 to Julius Kasdin, owner of all of the stock in Pappy’s Inc. A few days later the client advised that he was no longer interested. Kasdin refused to return the $25,000.00 and, rather than forfeit that amount, the petitioner and Goldman consummated the deal with Kasdin, receiving credit for a $15,000.00 commission, and purchasing the stock for $135,000.-00, of which $45,000.00 was in cash, and $90,000.00 on time. Petitioner received two-thirds and Goldman one-third of the corporate stock which they then pledged to Kasdin as security for the unpaid $90,000.00 of the purchase price.

Petitioner did not intend to go into the restaurant business any further than was necessary to find a purchaser and thus to recoup his loss. He made various attempts in 1945 and 1946 to sell the stock, but without success. The corporation continued to lose money and it became necessary for petitioner to make personal advances totalling. $43,922.86, for which he took from the corporation interest-bearing notes.

In the summer of 1946, the corporation ceased business and was liquidated, the assets being distributed pro-rata to the two stockholders who assumed the liabilities. The principal asset was a lease 5 on the premises occupied by the restaurant in the Vanderbilt Hotel, Miami, which however, was never carried as an asset on the books of the corporation. Financial statements prepared from the books as of the date of liquidation, which were recognized as factually true, disclose that petitioner had suffered a loss in liquidation as follows:

Excess of liabilities assumed

over assets received.....$ 5,633.25
Capital Stock............ 91,000.00
Loans payable to stockholders ............... 43,922.86
Total ........... $140,556.11

These were book entry losses, which did not take into account the value of the lease nor the cash loss already suffered. At the time of the liquidation on July 15, 1946, petitioner had advanced his two-thirds of the original $45,000.00 paid in cash for the stock and had advanced $43,922.86 from time to time, and he was still liable for his pro-rata share of the purchase notes due to Kasdin. On the books of the corporation, the $43,-922.86 was listed as a loan to the corporation. On his 1946 income tax return, petitioner claimed a deduction of $43,-922.86 as a “Loss resulting from advances to Pappy’s, Inc.” and claimed also a long term capital loss on “Stoek-Pappy’s Inc.” in the amount of $30,520.-15. So far as the loss on the stock of Pappy’s Inc. is concerned, there has been no amended return or effective petition for redetermination.

A few months after the liquidation, petitioner worked out an agreement for the leasing of the restaurant premises. By that agreement the existing lease was cancelled, a new 17-year lease was executed by the lessor, Vanderbilt Hotel Corporation, to The Cummings Corporation, a subsidiary of the Howard Johnson chain of restaurants, with a guaranteed minimum rental of $10,000.00 per year plus a percentage of the gross receipts. The rentals were to be paid to a trustee, who in turn was to make annual payments in the following order: (1) to Julius Kasdin in the amount of $8,-888.88, representing the installment obligation of petitioner and Goldman for the *149 original stock purchase; (2) to the Vanderbilt Hotel Corporation, as lessor, to the extent of $7,000; and (3) the balance of the payments, if any, to petitioner and Goldman. The trust agreement was to terminate at end of the first eight years of the concurrent lease or at such time as petitioner and Goldman had been paid $71,633.32. Petitioner and Goldman became guarantors for the difference between the guaranteed minimum rental of $10,000.00 and the required payments of $8,888.88 plus interest to Kasdin and $7,000.00 rent.

Operations under that lease proved successful, the total rent paid each year from 1947 to 1951, inclusive, amounting to over $22,000.00, out of which was paid the agreed annual payments of $8,888.88 plus interest to Kasdin, the $7,000.00 basic rent, and a total over the period of $12,165.00 to petitioner.

The Tax Court found that, at the time of liquidation of Pappy’s Inc., the lease assigned to petitioners and Goldman had a fair market value of not less than $50,-000.00.

While we are satisfied on the merits that, as to the $43,922.86, petitioner was not entitled to a deduction for a loss incurred in trade or business or in a transaction entered into for profit under § 23(e) (1) or (2), footnote 3, supra, we find it unnecessary to discuss such insistences because in his petition for redetermination in the Tax Court petitioner made no such contention but simply claimed a loss from business loans. 6 That remained petitioner’s consistent position throughout until the Tax Court accurately stated the question in its opinion, 7 and rendered its decision against petitioner. Then, on motion for review by the full Tax Court, petitioner for the first time urged that he was entitled to a loss deduction under § 23(e). Exercising its irrevisable discretionary power, 8 the Tax Court denied his motion for review. These issues not having been timely raised in the Tax Court should not *150

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234 F.2d 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-n-pokress-and-estate-of-lucille-a-pokress-deceased-louis-n-ca5-1956.