M. Lloyd Freese and Dorothy M. Freese v. United States

455 F.2d 1146
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1972
Docket71-1193
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 455 F.2d 1146 (M. Lloyd Freese and Dorothy M. Freese v. United States) 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
M. Lloyd Freese and Dorothy M. Freese v. United States, 455 F.2d 1146 (10th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

WILLIAM E. DOYLE, Circuit Judge.

This cause is a tax refund suit in which Dorothy M. Freese, as executrix of the estate of M. Lloyd Freese, deceased, seeks to recover income taxes and interest in the total amount of $234,190.-27. The action revolves around a lump sum payment totaling $555,000 received by M. Lloyd Freese in 1965, pursuant to a contract of compromise and settlement. The demand of plaintiff represents the difference between ordinary income on which the tax was paid and the amount of tax payable under capital gain treatment. Freese maintains that the sum distributed was not ordinary income, and it is this issue which we must determine.

The district court, 323 F.Supp. 1194, held that M. Lloyd Freese had been an employee of Bell Oil & Gas Company throughout the period; that this payment represented accumulated commissions; and that since the relationship was one of employer-employee all of the amount paid was compensation for services rendered and, therefore, was taxable as ordinary income.

*1148 Although the final contract, as amended, between the parties which was executed in 1941 seems definitive as to the property interest which Freese had in the Bell Oil & Gas Company prior to its sale in 1965 (to L & V Company for a sum in excess of $10,000,000), it is necessary to at least summarize the background facts in order to review the question as to whether the mentioned distribution was a capital asset subject to the capital gains provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The Bell Company was organized in 1918 by Samuel L. Lubell, a New York manufacturer and investor, and Samuel Lamport, for the purpose of engaging in the production and sale of oil and gas. Lubell and Lamport invested $500,000 each in this company and owned all of the shares of stock with the exception of a few qualifying shares. Subsequently, Lubell acquired all of the stock, and during the periods here in question Lubell and members of his family, together with a charitable foundation, owned the Bell stock.

During the early period of the Bell Company Freese and one I. A. Anson were also engaged in the oil and gas business in Oklahoma. They had organized the Altitude Petroleum Corporation which had competed with Bell, but which later merged with and became in substance the marketing division of Bell. A new Altitude Corporation was formed and the stock was issued to Bell. From the very beginning Freese and Anson were regarded and treated as employees. For example, a 1928 agreement provided in part:

It is contemplated that a Corporation be organized by First Party (Bell) * * * and that second parties (An-son and taxpayer) shall be placed in charge of the said business upon profit sharing plan * * * (Appendix, p. 220).

Freese and Anson were at all times subject to the control of Bell even though they were employed to deal on behalf of Altitude. They received $700.00 per month plus 25 percent of the net profits derived from the business, but they were not allowed to make advance drawings on either salary or profits. Bell controlled the extension of credit by Altitude and also the collections by Altitude.

The 1934 employment contract provided for a reserve fund to protect Bell against losses suffered by Altitude under the management of Freese and Anson. In subsequent contracts the amount of the initial required deposit was increased somewhat and profits were credited to this account. To a limited extent Freese was allowed to draw down some of these profits, and he reported and paid income taxes annually on the amount which had been credited to his account. In 1934 Bell entered into a new contract with Freese and Anson which provided in part:

Second parties were heretofore employed by ALTITUDE PETROLEUM CORPORATION, engaged in the marketing of petroleum products. It is the intention of those interested in the ALTITUDE PETROLEUM CORPORATION to liquidate its business, pay all of its liabilities, declare liquidating dividends from time to time, and dissolve such corporation.
It is further contemplated that ALTITUDE PETROLEUM CORPORATION shall cease doing business and any unfinished profitable contracts belonging to it will be transferred and assigned to first party. Thereafter first party will employ each of the persons composing second parties for the purpose of managing its Marketing Department upon terms and considerations presently to be stated.

It continued:

1. OBJECT OF EMPLOYMENT. First party does by these presents employ severally each of the persons composing second parties and the latter hereby accept the said employment for the term and for the considerations hereinafter stated.

Money furnished by Freese and Anson to the Marketing Department of Bell thenceforth earned six percent interest. *1149 They were treated as managing agents, but the contract specifically provided for them to be subject to the control of Bell. They were given a 25 percent share of the profits of the Marketing Department or Division of Bell. At the same time, they were made individually and severally liable for 25 percent of losses incurred, and the mentioned reserve fund in the initial amount of $50,000 was continued. A contract provided for the make up of this reserve fund, but the specifics of this are not relevant to the present inquiry. Following the establishing of the $50,000 fund Freese was to be paid profits realized on a monthly basis, and also interest at the rate of six percent was credited to the reserve account.

Although both Anson and Freese were made vice-presidents of Bell, Section 21 of the contract read:

The relation of the parties hereto is principal as to first party and agent severally as to each of the persons composing second parties; and notwithstanding the provisions herein for sharing of profit and losses, nothing herein contained shall be construed as a relation of partnership or joint adventure between the parties, and second parties shall not have the right to bind first party as a partner or co-adventurer, either as between the immediate parties, or as to third persons; and all of the rights, duties and obligations of the parties hereto shall be measured and controlled by the principles applicable to the relation of principal and agent.

The length of this contract was 10 years. However, there was a right to terminate on 90 days’ notice in the event gross profits fell below the level achieved on a monthly average from June 1, 1933 to June 1, 1934 during any consecutive six-month period after February 1, 1935.

Still another agreement was entered in 1938 changing the share of profits from 25 percent of the Marketing Department to five percent of the total net profits of Bell including “income from investments, dividends and sale of assets, as well as the income from the normal business operations conducted by first party” (Bell). This 1938 agreement also contained an assignment by Freese and An-son to Bell of all right and title to property that they might have acquired in prior agreements when they were in the Marketing Department of Bell.

The final agreement and the one with which we are here concerned was entered into on July 1, 1941. Bell again “employed” Freese as a vice-president.

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Bluebook (online)
455 F.2d 1146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-lloyd-freese-and-dorothy-m-freese-v-united-states-ca10-1972.