Mason & Hanger Co. v. Burnam

36 F.2d 330, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1929
DocketNo. 5238
StatusPublished

This text of 36 F.2d 330 (Mason & Hanger Co. v. Burnam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason & Hanger Co. v. Burnam, 36 F.2d 330, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163 (6th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

Appeal from a judgment in a suit at law, on trial by jury, in favor of appellees, who were partners in tbe practice of law at Richmond, Ky., for legal services in connection with the trying out of issues of fact and of law raised by the income tax returns of appellant corporation, which was in the general contracting business, with offices in Richmond, Ky., and New York, doing railroad, tunnel, and highway work, including subway work for the city of New York, building part of the New York aqueduct system, lock and dam construction in the Ohio liver, and apparently considerable work for the United States War Department. The preparation of the income tax returns for the years 1917, 1918, and 1919 was paid for eaeh year on rendition of bill therefor, and no claim is made in this litigation for such service. In 1922 the return for 1917 was audited by the Department at an increase of about $59,000 above the amount conceded by the taxpayer’s return for that year, and in 1923 the auditors assessed an additional tax of about $44,000 for 1918, with a deduction of $30,000 for the year 1919, thus making a net increase of about $73,000 in the assessments for the years 1917, 1918, and 1919. As the result of a re-examination, the assessment was reduced to about $44,000 for 1918, and an overassessment found for 1919 of about $30,000. A deficiency letter sent appellant September 11,1924, failed to take into account about $25,000 which plaintiffs claimed had been conceded by the income tax unit on account of what are known as the Liberty bond and Lexington plant items, and defendants in error, on September 15, 1924, accordingly wrote the Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue calling attention to this oversight, and saying: “We feel sure that it was not the intention to overlook these matters, for which reason we will ask that a reexamination and re-audit be immediately made and that a new deficiency letter be issued after these changes have been applied.” 1 On October 18, 1924, the Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue wrote appellant another deficiency letter, increasing the net deficit for 1917, 1918, and 1919 to about $565,000; and on May 25, 1925, the assessment was again increased by about $60,000, thus making the net deficiency assessment about $625,000. As a result of numerous conferences, briefs, and hearings, on October 15,1925, appellant’s net tax liability was reduced to about $108,000. The assessment was finally reduced to about $59,009, or a total reduction of about $565,000 and was finally assessed on that basis and was paid.2

Plaintiffs (appellees) sued upon a quantum meruit for the reasonable value of their services, which they asserted to be $50,000, less the sum of about $1,000 previously paid on account. Plaintiff had verdict and judgment for $30,000.

Defendant’s principal defense upon the merits was that plaintiffs’ letter of September 15, 1924, which protested the assessment of September 11, 1924 (because it included the Liberty bond and the Lexington plant items which the tax unit had disallowed), in terms called for a reopening of the entire case, and for a re-examination or reaudit of the tax accounts generally, that this alleged blunder on plaintiffs’ part resulted in the reassessment of $625,000, and that the greater part of plaintiffs’ services for which recovery was sought in the instant case were expended in attempting to get rid of the surplus of the $625,000 above the previous assessment of $73,000, and were thus due to plaintiffs’ alleged carelessness and neglect, and outside the scope of their employment. Appellant accordingly asked that the jury be instructed that, if they believed that plaintiffs’ letter of September 15,1924, caused the reopening and reassessment of defendant’s income tax returns for 1917, 1918, and 1919, they should award plaintiffs no compensation for services in connection with getting rid of the additional assessments thereafter made. This request being refused, an instruction was asked that the plaintiffs “could be awarded no compensation for services rendered in connection with items which he lost, or for saving appellant in regard thereto for the purpose of any future possible claim for refund or suit, because the) plaintiff had not sought to recover on account of such matters”; and on refusal of this request a further instruction was asked that plaintiffs were not entitled to anything for services rendered by them that were not necessary or of value to the defendant in defense of the claims made against it. This request was refused.

In submitting to the jury’s determination what the fair and reasonable compensation to plaintiffs would be for the services rendered, [332]*332the court instructed that plaintiffs’ letter of September 15,1924, did not call for or justify a reopening of the case, but could properly be considered only as asking that a new deficiency letter be made after giving credit on account of the Liberty bonds and the Lexington plant items; the court adding, however, that, while there was no room to claim that the letter in question justified such reopening, yet, if “actually and realty that letter did cause a re-opening of the case, then you should take that into consideration, as bearing in [on] the charge for the services, which in that ease, as I have said, should be more moderate.”

We entirely agree with the trial judge’s interpretation of plaintiffs’ letter of September 15, 1924, and that it did not call for or justify the reopening of the case. In addition to the language already quoted from the body of the letter, attention is called to the fact that immediately following the reference to what is termed “a very evident oversight in the preparation of your deficiency letter of September 11, 1924,” there follows the specific statement: “Your mistake or oversight lies in the fact that certain agreements arrived at in conference between the taxpayer’s representatives and conferees of the unit before the ease went before the committee on appeals and review has not been taken into consideration.” After reference to the unit’s memorandum to the Commissioner, and after stating that reference to the appeal brief shows that the taxpayer’s contentions regarding the Lexington plant item and the Liberty bond item were “agreed to by the conference with the unit, but have been overlooked in the preparation of the present deficiency letter” there follows the statement already quoted herein.3 The letter then concludes: “Particularly with reference to the deduction from 1919 income of the bond loss, the taxpayer ■will have no relief unless the matter is settled before it leaves the unit, as there is an over-assessment shown for 1919, and there is no appeal as we understand it to the Board of Tax Appeals from any action relating to an overassessment. It is equally clear that the mistake could be corrected as to the Liberty bond item because its establishment was a matter of considerable detail gone into thoroughly by the unit conferees and established to their entire satisfaction. In view of the peculiar situation an immediate answer wall be very highly appreciated.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 F.2d 330, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-hanger-co-v-burnam-ca6-1929.