Meyer v. United States

213 F.2d 278, 45 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1561, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4431
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 18, 1954
Docket10924_1
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 213 F.2d 278 (Meyer v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyer v. United States, 213 F.2d 278, 45 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1561, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4431 (7th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

FINNEGAN, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff taxpayer sold his interest in a partnership, conducted with two other men in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, under written articles of partnership. Taxpayer transferred that interest to the wife of one of his partners, receiving in payment thereof her cheek, equivalent to taxpayer’s original capital contribution plus his share of accumulated unwith-drawn partnership profits, credited to his capital account. On the facts, hereinafter detailed, we are asked to decide if capital gains treatment should be accorded to the entire payment received by this taxpayer.

Dismissal of plaintiff-taxpayer’s complaint to recover $8,156.10 of taxes paid, on individual income, and deficiency interest for the calendar year 1945 precipitated this appeal of the lower court’s *279 judgment. Taxpayer properly invoked the jurisdiction of the district court, under 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1), to claim a refund of income taxes which he asserts were erroneously collected under adjustments made by the Commissioner 1 to his tax return for that calendar year. The Commissioner had proposed a deficiency assessment of $7,109.12. Though this taxpayer disagreed with a part of these adjustments, he paid that deficiency plus interest of $1,158.49, on December 6, 1948, in order to toll the running of interest. Taxpayer’s subsequent claim for refund of $8,156.10 was rejected by the Commissioner, and this complaint followed. Sitting without a jury the district judge made findings of fact and conclusions of law resolving issues crys-talized by that complaint and the government’s answer.

Portions of the stipulated facts, pertinent to our opinion, follow. Taxpayer, an engineer, entered into a written partnership agreement, on December 1, 1943, with Joseph Doering and David C. Fee to operate a job machine shop business under the name of Brenner Manufacturing Company, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 2 Capital contributions made by these three partners and their respective profit and loss sharing arrangements were:

Capital Share of
Contri-Profits or
Partner bution Loss
Plaintiff-Taxpayer ...... 25%
Joseph Doering .......... 50%
David C. Fee ............. ....... $ 5,500 25%

Books of the partnership were kept and its income tax returns filed on an accrual and fiscal basis of accounting, ending June 30. Taxpayer filed his tax returns on a cash and calendar year basis. He received and reported, for calendar year 1944, his distributive share of Brenner’s net profits for the period December 1, 1943 to June 30, 1944.

A breakdown of the taxpayer’s partnership interest as of February 28, 1945, reflected in his investment account, on Brenner’s books, showed:

Original Investment: $ 5,500
Profits: July 1, 1944 to February
28, 1945 .............................$24,531.92
Less: Withdrawal made January
14, 1945 ............................. 1,885.92 22,646
Book Value: $28,146

No balance sheet was shown taxpayer, he merely accepted the word of his partner, Joseph Doering that this was the book value. But the partnership books and records were open at all times to examination by this taxpayer.

On February 28, 1945 this taxpayer told Doering and Fee that he desired to retire from their partnership, and offered to sell them his partnership interest for a sum equal to that book value. A controversy thereupon arose as to whether Doering or Fee would be the buyer of taxpayer’s partnership interest, and thus delayed the sale. But this difficulty was surmounted by an agreement, dated April 13, 1945, between taxpayer and Florence K. Doering, wife of Joseph Doering, partner of Fee and this taxpayer. Both Fee and Joseph Doering consented to that instrument under the terms of which Mrs. Doering paid taxpayer $28,146 (the aforesaid book value) for “ * * * *280 all his right, title and interest in the partnership * * * including any and all property of such partnership and the right to an accounting from all the partners thereof other than (taxpayer) * * *. ” This written agreement also contained a recital that the taxpayer “ * * * does hereby resign from any participation in the management of * * * ” the partnership. That agreement was made effective as of February 28, 1945 which was the date for which taxpayer’s partnership interest had been valued. Expenses of $750 were incurred by the taxpayer in connection with his sale thus made pursuant to the agreement with Florence Doering.

No partnership return was filed by Brenner for the period July 1, 1944 to February 28, 1945. But on September 15, 1945 a partnership income tax return for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1945, reporting ordinary net income of $145,426.19 was filed showing the following partnership net income to be distributable :

Taxpayer ....................................$ 24,531.92
Joseph Doering ............................. 73,129.75
David C. Fee ................................ 41,176.20
Florence Doering ........................... 6,588.32
Total .....................................$145,426.19

When Florence Doering filed her individual income tax return for calendar year 1945 she included $6,588.32 in gross income, as and for her distributive share of the partnership net income. Taxpayer reported, in his personal tax return for the calendar year 1945, as his distributive share of partnership net income for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1945 only so much of partnership profits for that fiscal year as were actually distributed to him by the partnership prior to the time he sold his interest therein.

However, in that same tax return, for 1945, taxpayer also reported $10,948 as a taxable long-time capital gain realized on the sale of his partnership interest in Brenner, which he detailed as follows:

Gross sales price: $28,146-
Dess :
Cost or other basis.................$5,500
Expenses of sale.................... 750 6,250-
Total ................................... $21,896-
Long term capital gain — 50%.................. $10,948-

As a result of auditing taxpayer’s income tax return for the year 1945, the Commissioner increased taxpayer’s distributed share of the net profits, of Brenner, for July 1, 1944 to February 28, 1945, from $24,531.92 (per Brenner’s-books) to $24,882.22, and treated the $24,882.22 as ordinary income, taxable in full.

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Bluebook (online)
213 F.2d 278, 45 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1561, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-united-states-ca7-1954.