Mente v. Commissioner

76 F.2d 965, 15 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1302, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2741
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1935
DocketNo. 7593
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 F.2d 965 (Mente v. Commissioner) 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
Mente v. Commissioner, 76 F.2d 965, 15 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1302, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2741 (5th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

Each of the petitioners sought a rede-termination of a deficiency of income tax for the year 1928 determined by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, which determination was based upon the receipt by the taxpayer of part of a sum, with interest thereon, paid by the government in refund of income taxes overpaid by Mente & Co., Inc., a Louisiana corporation, for years prior to April 1, 1925. The proceedings under the several petitions were consolidated and the cases were heard and decided together by the Board of Tax Appeals. In that hearing the petitioners, who were stockholders of that corporation prior to the hereinafter mentioned reorganization, contended that the distributions made to them of said tax refund and interest must be regarded as returns of capital, and therefore not a part of their taxable incomes. The Board of Tax Appeals sustained the above-mentioned action of the Commissioner, deciding that the amounts so paid to the petitioners should be treated as belated dividends to stockholders of said corporation made in liquidation of a residue of the assets of the corporation, and that, because of the absence of proof that at the time said distribution was made the peti[966]*966tioners had any unreturned part of their' investment in said corporation’s stock, the petitioners failed to prove that such payments made to them, represented returns of capital. That decision is before us. on a petition for review.

Oh June 2, 1925, • the stockholders and directors of Mente & Co., Inc., which was incorporated in March, 1919 (hereinafter referred to as,the old Mente & Co.), authorized the -president of the corporation, Isaac T. Rhea (one of the petitioners), to arrange and close a contract for the reorganization and refinancing of the corporation. Pursuant to that authority, Rhea, acting for himself and other stockholders, entered into a contract dated July 1, 1925, with two firms for the reorganization and refinancing of the corporation, that contract being in the form of a letter addressed by Rhea to the two firms, which was signed by Rhea and was approved and accepted by the two firms. The reorganization provided- for involved the acquisition of additional capital by sale of securities. Pursuant .to that contract the name of old Mente & Co. was changed to Burlap Manufacturing Company, Inc., and on August 6, 1925, the stockholders of Burlap Manufacturing Company, Inc., exchanged their stock for common and preferred stock and gold debenture bonds- of a rtew corporation which was then organized under the name of Mente & Co., Inc., which is hereinafter referred to as-the new Mente & Co. The contract provided for the new Mente & Co. issuing described shares of common and preferred stock and debenture bonds, and for said two firms purchasing some of the securities provided for. The contract in the fifteenth paragraph thereof, provided for Rhea, in consideration -for such- purchase, entering into a contract with the hew Mente & Co. to indemnify and save harmless the old Mente & Co. and/or the new Mente & Có. from "any claim or claims, liability or liabilities, cause or causes of action arising out of, caused by or in any way connected with any claim or claims for Federal taxes accruing or which may have accrued against” the old Mente & Co. and/or the new Mente & Co.' prior to April 1, 1925, in excess of the amounts heretofore set up on the books of the old Mente & Co. as a reserve to provide for such taxes. In consideration of this indemnity agreement, the contract, in the fifteenth paragraph thereof, provided that Rhea -should be "entitled to receive, when and as paid by the - federal government; any and all sums which may be refunded and which the old Mente & Co. and/or the new Mente & Co. otherwise would be entitled to receive on account of federal taxes for any period or periods prior to April 1, 1925. A stipulation of facts was entered into by the parties. The following was paragraph IV of that stipulation: “On the same date, August 6, 1925, the new Mente & Co., Inc., took over as of April 1,. 1925, (unless under the language of the Fifteenth paragraph of the agreement of July 1, 1925, set forth in paragraph VII of this stipulation and/or the agreement of October 25, 1927, set forth in paragraph X of this stipulation, it be that some part of the assets did not pass to the new Mente & Co., Inc.), all of the property,' and assets, real, personal and mixed including real estate, buildings, improvements, machinery, supplies, merchandise, cash on hand and in bank, accounts and bills receivable, business, good-will, and everything whatsoever of every nature, sort and kind wheresoever situated belonging to the Burlap Company, Inc., whether specially enumerated or not, in consideration of the assumption by the new Mente & Co., Inc., of all debts and obligations of the said Burlap -Manufacturing Company, Inc., and/or its liquidators and" the cancellation of the issued and outstanding capital stock of the said Burlap Manufacturing Company, Inc.” It appears from that stipulation as it is set out in the record that the part of paragraph IV which is in parenthesis was by a footnote directed to be-inserted. Paragraph X of that stipulation sets out an agreement entered into between I. T. Rhea and the new Mente & Co. on October 25, 1927, which, after reciting that, through inadvertence, the agreement provided for in paragraph fifteenth of the above-mentioned contract had' not been executed as therein provided, and that the parties had agreed upon the proper interpretation of said paragraph fifteenth, provided:

“1. Rhea agrees that he will, on demand, indemnify and save harmless said former. Mente & Co. Inc. and/or the Company from any claim or claims, liability or liabilities, cause or causes of action, arising out of, caused by, or in any way connected with any claim or claims for Federal taxes accruing or which may have accrued, against said former Mente & Co., Inc., and/or the Company prior to April 1, 1925, in excess of the amounts set up on the books of said former Mente & Co., Inc., prior to. July 1, 1925, as a reserve to provide for such taxes.
[967]*967“2. In consideration of such agreement, the Company agrees that said Rhea shall be entitled to receive, when and as paid by the Federal Government any and all sums which have been or may be refunded, and which said former Mente & Co., Inc., and/or the Company otherwise would be entitled to hold or receive on account of Federal taxes for any period or periods prior to April 1, 1925, together with the amount by which said reserve on the books of said former Mente & Co., Inc., exceeds all taxes finally found to be due for all periods prior to April 1, 1925.”

On September 12, 1927, the Treasury Department of the United States issued checks, payable to “Mente & Co. Inc.,” for a total sum of $154,349.99, which checks represented a refund of federal income and profits taxes in the amount of $109,174.91 paid by the old Mente & Co., in prior years, and interest thereon of $45,210.08. The new Mente & Co. received those checks, indorsed them, collected the amounts thereof, and credited the proceeds to an account opened on its books under the caption “I. T. Rhea, Trustee, stockholders old corporation.” In the early part of the year 1928, the new Mente & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
76 F.2d 965, 15 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1302, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mente-v-commissioner-ca5-1935.