Molnar v. Commissioner
This text of 4 T.C.M. 951 (Molnar v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
KERN, Judge: Respondent has determined a deficiency in petitioner's income tax for the year 1941 in the sum of $3,684.71. The two issues presented are (1) whether petitioner is a non-resident alien, and (2) whether certain lump sum payments received by petition, who is an author, from American motion picture companies for certain world rights in and to literary production of petitioner, constituted income from sources within the United States, or were partly from sources within and partly from sources without the United States.
[The Facts]
The taxpayer is an author by profession and is a citizen of Hungary. From 1931 to 1938 inclusive*60 he was a resident of France, and in 1939 he resided in Switzerland. On January 12, 1940 he arrived in this country on a temporary visitor's visa, traveling from Geneva, SWITZERLAND VIA Genoa, Italy. He purchased a round trip steamship ticket from Genoa to the United States. This temporary visitor's visa was extended from time to time for periods of six months until October 6, 1943, when the taxpayer left this country for Canada and thereafter returned to this country on a permanent visa. On February 19, 1944, the taxpayer filed his notice of intention to become a citizen of the United States. While in this country petitioner lived at the Hotel Plaza in New York City, except for a month or two in the summers, and there carried on his business as an author as hereinafter set forth.
On April 17, 1941, taxpayer entered into a written contract in New York City with RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., wherein, for a consideration of $19,750 paid to him, the author assigned to RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. the following rights in and to a certain play as set forth in the contract between the parties:
"The Author hereby forever grants, bargains, sells, assigns, transfers and sets over unto the Purchaser*61 all and the sole and exclusive motion picture rights (including silent, sound, dialogue and musical motion picture rights) throughout the world, and all and the sale and exclusive televised motion picture rights, throughout the world, in and to the Property, and in and to each constituent part of the Property."
The Contract recites that the taxpayer is sole author of a Hungarian play and of a German adaptation of the original play of which the world motion picture rights were therein assigned, and that the English adaption of the play was first published in the United States of America by Brentano's, and was registered for copyright in the United States Copyright Office in the name of Charles Froman, Inc., formerly a New York corporation, on February 7, 1927, under entry A-967142, said English adaption having previously been registered for copyright as an unpublished dramatic composition on December 24, 1926, under Entry No. D-77,928, in the name of Charles Frohman, Inc., the German adaption likewise having been registered as an unpublished composition, in the United States Copyright Office on May 10, 1926, under Entry No. D-75,392, in the name of Charles Frohman, Inc.
The rights*62 acquired by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., were never exercised and no motion picture was ever produced or exhibited by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., and these rights are still in the possession of that corporation and may be exercised by it at any time in the future. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., in its production and leasing of motion pictures, received income from domestic and foreign sources in the following percentages for the following years:
| Within | Without | |
| Year | the U.S. | the U.S. |
| 1940 | 66% | 34% |
| 1941 | 65% | 35% |
| 1942 | 69% | 31% |
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". The consideration received was the amount of $2,550. This contract, executed by the parties in New York City, provides:
"The Author hereby grants and assigns to the purchaser all the motion picture rights, throughout the world, in and to and in connection with the said play, * * * including the right to exhibit by television or any other process of transmission now known or hereafter to be devised*63 and/or to copyright, vend, license and/or exhibit such motion picture photoplays throughout the world."
This play was published by Vanguard Press, in a volume of plays in 1929 and registered for copyright in the name of Vanguard Press, Class A No. 10368, on July 12, 1929.
The rights sold to Boris Morros were exercised by him in the production of a motion picture entitled "Tales of Manhattan", of which petitioner's play "The Marshal" was a part. The picture "Tales of Manhattan" was produced and distributed by 20th Century Fox Film Corporation in 1942. The income received by the 20th Century Fox Film Corporation in the leasing of the picture, from domestic and foreign sources for the period from the release date of August, 1942, to December 30, 1944, with the exception of the foreign field which is to November, 1944, is as follows: $1,886,741.10 in the United States, and $1,219,646.12 in foreign countries.
In 1941 petitioner was a non-resident alien who maintained his place of business in the United States.
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4 T.C.M. 951, 1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molnar-v-commissioner-tax-1945.