Molnar v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
This text of 156 F.2d 924 (Molnar v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The question presented by the petition to review the order of the Tax Court determining a deficiency of $3,684.71 in the income tax of the taxpayer Molnar for the year 1941 is whether the latter has established that any part of the lump-sum payments he received from American motion pictures producers for his world .motion picture rights constituted income from sources outside of the United States within the meaning of Sections 119 and 212 of the Internal Revenue Code.1
On April 17, 1941 the taxpayer, a citizen [925]*925of Hungary, entered into a written contract in New York City with R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc., whereby for a consideration of $19,750, he assigned to R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc., the sole and exclusive motion picture rights throughout the world in a play, of which he was the author, entitled “The Play’s The Thing.” The contract recited that the play was registered for copyright in the United States Copyright Office in 1926 and 1927. The rights acquired by R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc., were never exercised and no motion picture was ever produced from them but evidence was introduced that the corporation in its production of motion pictures for the year 1940 received 66 per cent of its income from domestic sources and 34 per cent from sources without the United States; in its production of motion pictures for the year 1941 it received 65 per cent of its income from domestic sources and 35 per cent from sources without the United States, and in its production of motion pictures for the year 1942 it received 69 per cent of its income from domestic sources and 31 per cent from sources without the United States.
On August 26, 1941, the taxpayer assigned to one Boris Morros, a domestic motion picture producer residing in the United States, motion picture rights throughout the world to a short story, of which the taxpayer was the author, entitled “the Marshal,” for the consideration of $2,550. “The Marshal” had been registered for copyright in the year 1929. The motion picture rights sold to Boris Morros were exercised by him in the production of a motion picture called “Tales of Manhattan,” of which “The Marshal” was a part. The picture “Tales of Manhattan” was distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation in 1942. From August 1942 Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation received $1,-886,741.10 as gross income for exhibiting the picture “Tales of Manhattan” in the United States up to December 30, 1944, and $1,219,646 for exhibiting it throughout the foreign field up to the end of November 1944. The receipts from foreign sources of Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation for “Tales of Manhattan” during the year 1941 were therefore in the neighborhood of 39 per cent of the aggregate receipts from that picture from both domestic and foreign sources. The percentage attributable to “The Marshal” was not shown.
The taxpayer, in computing his income tax for 1941, deducted from his gross income — as the portion properly attributable to sources without the United States' — 40 per cent of the lump-sum payments received for licensing the above motion picture rights in the two works we have mentioned. The Commissioner disallowed the deductions and found that the entire income received by the taxpayer during the year 1941 should have been reported as income from sources within the United States. He accordingly determined the deficiency of $3,684.71, which the Tax Court affirmed. In reaching its determination the Tax Court followed its own decision in Estate of Alexander Marton, 47 B.T.A. 184, where proof was introduced by the taxpayer of receipts by the licensee in the United States and foreign countries from the production and exhibition of pictures other than the one there in question. But the Tax Court said: “We think that a segregation of the purchase price upon the basis of income derived by the corporation from its production and exhibition of other pictures in this and foreign countries would be wholly unjustified. It would have been a simple matter for the parties to have segregated the purchase of the domestic from the foreign rights. This they did not do and we cannot supply that omission by surmise. For all we know, the foreign [926]*926rights to this picture were considered of little or no value. * * *” We recently affirmed the Tax Court in Rohmer v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 153 F.2d 61, cert. den. 66 S.Ct. 1367, upon a record closely similar to the one now before us where the court reached the same result as here.
The taxpayer argues that the statistics of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer appearing in the opinion in Estate of Alexander Marton, and those of R. K. O. and Twentieth Century-Fox set forth in the present case have indicated an average proportion between foreign and domestic receipts from the exhibition of moving pictures that is sufficiently reliable to have required the Commissioner and the Tax Court to allow a deduction of 33% per cent from the lump-sum payments for the two pictures as representing income from sources outside of the United States that .was under the terms of the Revenue Act not subject to income taxes. In weighing the taxpayer’s argument we are not unmindful of our decision in Cohan v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 39 F.2d 540, but do not think that it is controlling upon the present case. There we only held that some deduction should have been allowed by the Commissioner and the Board of Tax Appeals for business expenses because of credible testimony that there had been such expenses as well as a general estimate by the witness of the amounts expended during the taxable year.
Certainly if the decisions of the Tax Court are to be regarded as conclusive as to all questions of fact, as the Supreme Court has indicated, we cannot say that the determination in this case was without any warrant. The question before the Commissioner was not what the licensed picture yielded to the licensees but what portions of the lump sums paid as advance royalties for the moving picture rights were a consideration for the privilege of using the copyrights “without the United States.” It is easy enough to see the difficulty the taxpayer has in establishing the deduction he seeks when the contracts with his licensees have made no segregation, but it is impossible to require the Tax Court to make an allowance for consideration received by the taxpayer for the privilege of using his copyrights abroad when the statistics from the business receipts of R. K. O. offered as a guide reflected experience based on all kinds of pictures which were not shown to have been similar to taxpayer’s plays in plot, character or scenery. The statistics relating to the license of “The Marshal” to Morros were even more inconclusive. It is impossible even to surmise what portion of the earnings of “Tales of Manhattan” was derived from the incorporation of “The Marshal” in the latter, still less to determine what portion of the lump sum paid by Morros to the taxpayer was paid for the privilege of showing the play outside of the United States. Such statistics afforded no basis for any fact-finding tribunal to make an estimate of what was paid for the privilege of using the rights in foreign countries.
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156 F.2d 924, 71 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 135, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 54, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molnar-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1946.