Norman and Arlene Rodman, Appellants-Cross-Appellees v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Appellee-Cross-Appellant

542 F.2d 845
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 1976
Docket581, 1121, Dockets 75-4211, 75-4239
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 542 F.2d 845 (Norman and Arlene Rodman, Appellants-Cross-Appellees v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Appellee-Cross-Appellant) 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.

Bluebook
Norman and Arlene Rodman, Appellants-Cross-Appellees v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Appellee-Cross-Appellant, 542 F.2d 845 (2d Cir. 1976).

Opinion

MESKILL, Circuit Judge.

This appeal arises from several transactions of a joint business venture (“the joint venture”) involving Norman (“Norman”), Martin (“Martin”) and Robert (“Robert”) Rodman, Sydney Newman and Walter Ornstein as the joint venturers. After the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“Commissioner”) had asserted deficiencies and penalties against Norman and Arlene Rod-man, Martin and Phyllis Rodman, and the Estate of Sydney Newman and the decedent’s wife, Dorothy, for the years 1956, 1957, and 1959 through 1962, and against Robert and Gertrude Rodman for the years 1956, 1957, 1960 and 1962, the tax court, Quealy, Judge, made determinations of deficiency which Norman and Arlene Rodman appeal with respect to tax years 1956 and 1957, which Martin and Phyllis Rodman appeal with respect to years 1956, 1957 and 1959 through 1962, which the Estate of Sydney Newman and the decedent’s wife Dorothy appeal with respect to tax years 1956 and 1957, and which the Estate of Robert Rodman and the decedent’s wife Gertrude appeal with respect to tax years 1956 and 1957. The Commissioner has taken a protective cross appeal involving each of the appellants’ 1957 tax years. The tax court’s opinion, T.C.Memo. 1973-277, is reported at 32 T.C.M. 1307 (1973).

*848 As did the tax court, we shall take up first the claims which apply to the joint venture as a whole and then address the various claims raised by the appellants as individuals. Generally, the points raised on appeal are that the tax court erred when it (1) disallowed the inclusion of an allegedly unconditional $900,000 debt as part of the cost of certain shares of stock owned and traded by the joint venture, (2) characterized a payment of $250,000 received by the joint venture as ordinary income, (3) disallowed certain of the joint venture’s alleged business expense deductions, (4) characterized as a capital loss to its members the loss that apparently accrued when the joint venture terminated, (5) allocated to Martin Rodman his share of the joint venture’s income based upon the entire calendar tax year even though he joined the venture only in November, and (6) denied the joint venturers’ wives the benefits of “innocent spouse” status. We affirm the tax court’s judgment in all respects except its allocation of a full year’s share of income to Martin Rodman, which allocation we reverse. Because each of the issues raised rests upon different factual footings, the facts germane to each issue will be treated separately.

I. The $900,000 Debt

In 1955 Ornstein, Newman, Robert and Norman entered into a joint venture, the initial objective of which was to attempt to acquire control of A.M. Byers Company, Inc. (“Byers”). By 1956, however, having lost its bid to gain control of Byers, the joint venture’s primary activity became trading publicly the stock of Torbrook Iron Ore Mines, Ltd. (“Torbrook”), a Canadian company incorporated in 1956 to promote prospecting licenses issued by the Nova Scotia Minister of Mines. During 1956 the joint venture acquired 1,179,050 Torbrook shares and realized $2,574,903.34 from sales to the public of 835,055 of those shares.

The dispute in the tax court and now on appeal focuses upon the cost of 500,000 of the Torbrook shares that the joint venture, which used the accrual method of accounting, allegedly purchased from one Aurele Brisson, a Montreal attorney who died in 1970. At the time of Torbrook’s incorporation in early 1956, Brisson had subscription rights to the 500,000 shares for a stated consideration of $100,000, that is, 20 cents per share. There was no proof, competent or otherwise, that Brisson actually owned the shares introduced at the trial, however, other than a letter written by Robert in May, 1956, on behalf of the joint venture. In that letter Robert confirmed an alleged agreement between Robert and Brisson, whereby Brisson agreed to sell and Robert agreed to purchase the 500,000 shares for the joint venture for the stated consideration of 21 cents per share ($105,000) plus 20 percent of any additional shares of Tor-brook stock that the joint venture might acquire in the future.

At the trial, Norman Elliot, the joint venture’s accountant, testified that the May 1956 agreement with Brisson first came to his attention in September of that year and that he suggested that the open-ended 20 percent contingent liability be replaced by a definite liability of a fixed amount. Upon request, Elliot drafted a letter to Brisson to be signed by Robert proposing that Brisson cancel the 20 percent agreement and accept in its place a $900,000 non-interest-bearing note payable on November 15, I960. 1

*849 The next time Elliot saw this letter was in May, 1957, when he was preparing the joint venture’s 1956 information return. The letter then bore the date “November 3, 1956” and contained signatures purporting to be those of Robert Rodman and A. Brisson. 2 Together with the letter, Elliot received a photocopy of what purported to be a note also dated November 3, 1956, by which Robert promised on behalf of the joint venture to pay Brisson the sum of $900,000 on November 15, 1960. Based upon these documents, Elliot accrued on the joint venture’s return the sum of $900,000 as part of the cost to the joint venture for the Torbrook stock.

Upon this evidence, the appellants asserted at trial that an unconditional debt of $900,000 to Brisson had been proved and should be included in the cost of Torbrook stock in accordance with the principle enunciated in Crane v. Commissioner, 331 U.S. 1, 67 S.Ct. 1047, 91 L.Ed. 1301 (1947). The Commissioner, however, contended that the authenticity of the documents had never been demonstrated and further that there was significant evidence to show that the note had never been delivered to Brisson, and that it was never intended that the joint venture would incur a bona fide unconditional debt to him. It is noteworthy that the original of the November 3, 1956, note and a letter from Brisson to Robert, dated January 7, 1957, were discovered among Sydney Newman’s effects at his death. 3 The letter acknowledged receipt from Robert of 200,000 Torbrook shares in full satisfaction of the $900,000 debt. The appellants conceded, however, that the 200,-000 shares of Torbrook were never delivered to Brisson. 4 Taking the record as a whole, the tax court found that “there was at no time a definitive obligation to Brisson upon which to predicate the accrual of a liability on the part of the joint venture.” 32 T.C.M. 1318.

Although the appellants now attempt to characterize the tax court’s decision as a departure from the Crane doctrine, it is clear that the decision was no more than a factual finding by the court that the appellants had failed to sustain their burden of proving the existence, the bona fides and the unconditional nature of the $900,000 debt. As a factual finding, the tax court’s decision must, of course, be upheld on appeal unless that finding is “clearly erroneous.” Commissioner v. Duberstein, *850

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542 F.2d 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-and-arlene-rodman-appellants-cross-appellees-v-commissioner-of-ca2-1976.