Palm Beach Liquors, Inc. v. Commissioner

31 T.C. 125, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 54
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1958
DocketDocket No. 54099
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 T.C. 125 (Palm Beach Liquors, Inc. 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
Palm Beach Liquors, Inc. v. Commissioner, 31 T.C. 125, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 54 (tax 1958).

Opinion

Atkins, Judge:

The respondent determined deficiencies in taxes ás follows:

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The petitioner filed claims for refund and alleges overpayments of taxes as follows:

The issues are as follows: (a) Whether there was made on behalf of the petitioner in the taxable year ended June 30, 1943, payments for whisky in the amount of $63,700 in excess of O. P. A. ceiling prices, entitling the petitioner to an increase in cost of goods sold; (b) whether the petitioner is entitled to increase equity invested capital, for excess profits credit purposes, on account of such claimed overceiling payment as representing contribution to capital by the stockholders; (c) whether expenditures made in the operation of a farm camp are deductible as ordinary and necessary expenses of the business of the petitioner; and (d) whether the petitioner is entitled to a deduction of $3,996.27 for the taxable year ended June 30, 1946, on account of food and whisky consumed by the petitioner’s representatives and business guests. The resulting effect of the decision of these issues upon the amount of net operating losses and unused excess profits credits is also involved.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The petitioner is a corporation organized in June 1941 under the laws of the State of Florida, and maintains its principal office and place of business at Palm Beach, Florida. It filed its income and declared value excess-profits tax returns and its excess profits tax returns for the years here involved with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Florida.

The petitioner was organized to engage in the retail liquor business. It operated over 30 separate establishments in Florida, including bars, restaurants, and retail package liquor stores. The capital stock of the petitioner throughout the period here involved was owned 25 per cent each by Berlin Griffin, George K. Yetter, and H. Halpine Smith (and/or their respective wives). The other 25 per cent was owned by Henry C. Eichardson for a part of the period, bnt later one Wall acquired some portion or all of Eichardson’s interest. Eich-ardson was the manager in general charge of the operations of all the establishments, each of which had its own individual manager. Griffin handled the operations having to do with liquor. Smith and Yetter were not actively engaged in the conduct of the business.

Smith, Yetter, and Griffin were engaged in other ventures together, namely, a partnership operating under the name of Palm Beach Distributors which was in the wholesale liquor business, two construction businesses, one a partnership under the name of Smith, Yetter & Griffin and the other á corporation, Smith & Yetter, Inc. Other interests included two hotel operations, other real estate holdings, and a corporation, Berlin Griffin, Inc., which operated retail stores. Smith and Yetter devoted their time to the construction business.

During World War II whisky was in short supply and the allotments by the whisky suppliers to the petitioner’s retail stores were insufficient to meet their needs, and consequently the petitioner was desirous of obtaining additional whisky. Griffin was advised that one Sam Friedman of Louisville, Kentucky, had a supply of bulk whisky for sale. About March 1948, Griffin, accompanied by Smith, made a trip to Louisville and negotiated with Friedman for the purchase of 640 barrels of bourbon whisky at a price which would include payment of an amount of $100 per barrel in excess of O. P. A. ceiling prices.

The petitioner did not have adequate cash resources to meet the purchase price of this large quantity of bulk whisky. A check for $10,000 drawn on the petitioner’s bank account in favor of Griffin was cashed on March IT, 1948, and Griffin, Yetter, and Smith raised the remainder of the required sum of money by drawing on various accounts of their other businesses and ventures, including the Smith, Yetter & Griffin construction account, and a brokerage account. Eich-ardson had no funds and therefore furnished no part of the money. A cashier’s check for $30,780.23 was then purchased on March 17, 1943, drawn in favor of Sam Friedman. Griffin went again to Louisville accompanied by Smith and purchased the 640 barrels of whisky, giving therefor the cashier’s check for $30,780.23, on the O. P. A. ceiling price, plus $63,700 in cash, representing overceiling payments. In return Friedman gave Griffin warehouse receipts for the 640 barrels of whisky. An additional payment on the original purchase price was made to Friedman by the petitioner by cashier’s check in the amount of $1,452.87, which was entered on petitioner’s books June 17,1943.

The petitioner also acquired 5 additional barrels of whisky from another source.

The petitioner did not have a wholesale whisky permit and, in order to comply with legal requirements, it engaged Standard Wine & Spirits Co., Inc., which had a wholesale permit, to clear the whisky and to arrange to have it bottled. The petitioner paid that company in April 1948 the amount of $4,357.40, to cover the cost of clearing and handling the whisky at $1 per barrel and to cover certain taxes. In April there was also paid directly to James B. Beam Company net amounts totaling $75,247.46 for bottling the whisky. Other expenditures totaling $6,585.77 were made in connection with this whisky. This was all paid by the petitioner from its bank account, except $80,000 which was paid by the individuals, Smith, Yetter, and Griffin.

The purchase of the 640 barrels of whisky from Friedman was recorded on the petitioner’s books at the ceiling price. At no time was the overceiling payment ever recorded on its books. The expenses with respect to bottling, handling charges, and taxes were recorded on its books.

Of the total of 645 barrels, only 250 barrels were bottled, and this made 4,252 cases. Of this number of cases, 1,368% were distributed among the petitioner’s bars and liquor stores, 359 were sold to Standard Wine & Spirits Co., and the remaining cases were sold through Standard Wine & Spirits Co. to two other concerns, or were exchanged for other types of whisky.

The petitioner deposited in its bank account a total of $74,515.77 received from sales of this whisky to and through Standard Wine & Spirits Co. and recorded such receipts on its books. By selling and exchanging this whisky among Standard Wine & Spirits Co. and the other two concerns, the petitioner was thereafter able to obtain increased allotments of liquor from such sources.

Upon distribution of the 1,368% cases among its retail establishments, the petitioner made memorandum entries of the sales at the retail O. P. A. sales price, aggregating $43,445.50. These sales were not reflected in actual sales until such time as the whisky was actually sold by the retail stores.

The reason the petitioner’s officers decided to cease bottling this whisky was that Griffin learned of an investigation being undertaken by the Alcohol Tax Unit of sales of this whisky by Friedman at overceiling prices. Griffin approached Friedman and sought to have him take back the warehouse receipts covering the unbottled whisky and use them elsewhere. Friedman was able to find another purchaser, Dominic A. Olivo, for the remaining 395 barrels of whisky, for a price including an overceiling payment of $26,000.

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Related

Ritchie v. Commissioner
1989 T.C. Memo. 426 (U.S. Tax Court, 1989)
Greene-Haldeman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
282 F.2d 884 (Ninth Circuit, 1960)
Palm Beach Liquors, Inc. v. Commissioner
31 T.C. 125 (U.S. Tax Court, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
31 T.C. 125, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palm-beach-liquors-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1958.