Nassau Suffolk Lumber & Supply Corp. v. Commissioner

53 T.C. 280, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 20
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1969
DocketDocket Nos. 3680-67, 3727-67, 1878-68, 3961-68
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 T.C. 280 (Nassau Suffolk Lumber & Supply Corp. 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.

Bluebook
Nassau Suffolk Lumber & Supply Corp. v. Commissioner, 53 T.C. 280, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 20 (tax 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

Raum, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioners’ income tax as follows:

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The cases have been consolidated for trial and involve the tax treatment of annual payments made to petitioner Nassau Suffolk Lumber & Supply Corp. (Supply) by the Nassau Suffolk Fuel Corp. (Fuel), a subchapter S corporation, the stock of which was owned by petitioners George J. Koopmann (Koopmann) and his wife, Annette C. Koopmann. The positions of Supply and the Koopmanns are antagonistic to one another, and the real controversy herein is between them. The Government’s position is similar to that of a stakeholder and it took inconsistent positions initially merely to protect the revenues. The payments herein were made subsequent to Koopmann’s purchase of Supply’s fuel business. The question presented is whether such payments represented part of the sale price and therefore constituted long-term capital gain to Supply and nondeductible capital expenses to Fuel, or whether they simply represented proceeds from Supply’s retained interest in the earnings of the fuel business and were thus taxable to Supply as ordinary income and deductible by Fuel as ordinary and necessary business expenses. The facts have been stipulated.

Supply has its principal place of business and principal office in Huntington Station, N.Y. Until 1954, in conjunction with its lumber business and other activities, it operated a fuel business in Huntington, N.Y., which distributed coal and oil. It filed its Federal corporate income tax returns for the years 1961 through 1965 with the district director of internal revenue, Brooklyn, New York.

The Koopmanns are husband and wife. They filed joint Federal income tax returns for the calendar years 1960 through 1966 with the district director of internal revenue, Brooklyn, New York, and were legal residents of Huntington Station, N.Y., at the time the petitions were filed in this case.

On October 26, 1954, Koopmann entered into an agreement with Supply for the purchase of Supply’s fuel business in Huntington. Under the terms of the sale instrument, Supply agreed to sell certain customer lists, coal inventory, rolling equipment, and yard equipment to Koopmann. It also promised to provide Koopmann with an extension to its telephone whereby it would transmit incoming calls to him or his assigns. Moreover, Supply covenanted not to engage in the coal or oil business within the town of Huntington as long as the contract remained in effect. In addition, Supply made representations with respect to the volume of its sales of coal and fuel during 1953 and 1954 on which it was understood that Koopmann relied.

In return, Koopmann promised to pay $5,000 to Supply at the signing of the agreement, $4,787.50 on November 1, 1954, when title would pass, and $14,000 in promissory notes from either Koopmann or his assigns. The notes were to be in the amount of $350 each and payable monthly, seriatim, commencing on December 10, 1954. The sale agreement further provided that the notes would be payable with interest computed at 6 percent per annum and would include an acceleration clause which would take effect in the event of default. The notes were to be secured by a mortgage on equipment and rolling stock. The agreement also declared that “The total sales price of $23,787.50 is based upon an estimated coal inventory of $10,000.00,” and provision was made for adjustment in the purchase price to reflect the actual amount of coal inventory as of the closing date.

In addition, Koopmann agreed to pay “As further consideration for this sale” an annual “license royalty” for the next 99 years. The royalty was set at $0,005 per gallon of fuel oil sold and $0.50 per ton of coal sold. In no event, however, would the annual royalty be less than $7,500. Moreover, if the annual royalty exceeded $9,100, then such excess was payable at 50 percent of the above “royalty” rate.

The sale agreement also provided that Koopmann or his assigns would “carry such insurance for the protection of [Supply] * * * as from time to time may be necessary in the discretion of the officers of [Supply] * * Moreover, the agreement declared that it was the understanding of the parties that “so long as is practicable [Koop-mann] * * * or his assigns shall be permitted to insure under the blanket policies of [Supply] * *

The agreement further provided that in the event that Koopmann ever desired to resell the fuel business, it first had to be offered to Supply for repurchase. If Supply declined to exercise its option within 30 days, Koopmann would then have 6 months to sell the business. In addition, it was agreed that Koopmann could be relieved of all liability under the contract by securing Supply’s approval of the subsequent purchaser, and that such approval would not be be unreasonably withheld.

The sale agreement also declared that under a separate agreement with the Lumber Realty Corp. (Realty) Koopmann had already arranged to lease the premises on which the fuel business was located. The lease was not introduced and the only information about Realty in the record is contained in Supply’s Federal corporate income tax returns for the years 1961 through 1965, which reveal that during those years Supply owned a certain fixed amount of stock in Realty and that Realty held between 76.92 percent and 79.5 percent of Supply’s voting stock. Four of the returns stated that the latter stock was acquired at “various” times, and the return for 1961 declared that such acquisitions were made during “1960 and prior” years. In addition, Supply’s returns also reveal that between 1961 and 1965 Supply and Realty used the same address: 4 Broadway Plaza West, Huntington Station, N.Y.

On October 26,1954, the date on which the sale agreement was signed, Koopmann assigned the agreement to Fuel. During each of the years from 1960 through 1966 Fuel paid Supply $7,500 as a “royalty.” On its Federal income tax Forms 1120-S for 1960 through 1966, Fuel deducted the $7,500 as “Royalties,” as part of “Costs of Goods Sold.” In his statutory notices of deficiency to the Koopmanns, the Commissioner, in addition to other uncontested adjustments, determined that their shares of the undistributed taxable income of Fuel for 1960 through 1966 should be increased on the ground that the payments were nondeductible capital expenditures.

On its corporate income tax returns for 1961 through 1965, Supply reported the receipt of the $7,500 payments as long-term capital gains from the “Sale of coal department, Huntington, N. Y.” In his deficiency notices to Supply, the Commissioner, in addition to other uncontested adjustments, determined that the payments received were ordinary income rather than gain from the sale of a capital asset.

The Commissioner does not contend that we should sustain both deficiencies. Bather he asks only that we adopt one position or the other so that Supply and the Koopmanns are treated consistently. However, in response to a request by the Court that he advise the Court as to which of the two positions he favors, the Commissioner now argues on brief that the annual payments were “in the nature of receipts from a retained interest in the earnings of the business, being in effect a license or franchise payment taxable as ordinary income.” We agree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 T.C. 280, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nassau-suffolk-lumber-supply-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1969.