Pierce v. Commissioner

24 T.C. 95, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 194
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 29, 1955
DocketDocket No. 34006
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 24 T.C. 95 (Pierce 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
Pierce v. Commissioner, 24 T.C. 95, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 194 (tax 1955).

Opinion

OPINION.

HaRRon, Judge:

In order to obtain the benefit of section 107 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, as amended, the petitioner must show that the sum of $20,000 received by Pierce in 1945 represented “at least 80 per centum of the total compensation for personal services covering a period of thirty-six calendar months or more (from, the beginning to the completion of such services) * * (Italics supplied.) Neither party advances a contention which puts in question the meaning of the provisions of section 107 (a). The questions to be decided, therefore, are fact questions, and the dispute between the parties involves disagreement about the facts to be found from all of the evidence.

Whether or not Pierce was entitled to receive application of the provisions of section 107 (a) in computing tax upon the sum of $20,000 which he received in 1945 depends upon the facts relating to the nature of the services rendered and the period of time which marks the beginning and the completion of services. Under the broad issue there are two questions.

Pierce was employed to act as attorney for M. P. R. in matters relating to reorganization proceedings under the Bankruptcy Act. He was also employed as the general counsel of M. P. R. The first question to be decided is whether the work done by Pierce as general counsel of M. P. R. was separate, distinct, and apart from his duties as attorney for M. P. R. in the reorganization proceedings.

In his petition for compensation for services rendered, dated November 22, 1944, Pierce made a separate request for compensation for services rendered as M. P. R.’s general counsel, and the I. C. C., under its report and order of July 2,1946, allowed Pierce $3,800 for his services as general counsel. It is very clear that in its consideration of Pierce’s petition for compensation for services as general counsel, the I. C. C. concluded that such services were distinct and separate from Pierce’s services in reorganization proceedings matters. The I. C. C, regarded Pierce’s petition as presenting a question of whether his fee for his services as general counsel could be paid out of the debtor’s estate as could his fee for services as attorney for the debtor (M. P. If.) in reorganization. If Pierce’s services had been general, comprising both functions, no question would have existed. The I. C. C. took the view that Pierce acted in two distinct capacities. At first, the I. C. C. considered the cost of Pierce’s services as general counsel one which was outside of the classes of expenses which could be paid by the trustee of M. P. R., a debtor, and did not allow Pierce anything for such services. It was only upon further hearing and a determination by the I. C. C. that there was some precedent for allowing payment out of the debtor’s estate of compensation for such services that the I. C. C. allowed Pierce $8,800 in its supplemental report of July 2, 1946.

Furthermore, the I. C. C., in its supplemental report, made findings as to the nature of the work done by Pierce as general counsel. Briefly, his tasks related to the maintenance of the corporate entity, or organization, of M. P. R. during the period of its reorganization. The evidence shows that the duties of Pierce as general counsel were entirely different and separate from his duties as attorney representing the debtor in the reorganization proceedings. Such separate and distinct duties could have been performed, it appears, by another lawyer. They certainly required additional time and effort. The I. C. C. treated the allowance of compensation for services rendered as general counsel as separate and distinct from the allowance for compensation for services as attorney in the reorganization proceedings. Upon consideration of all of the evidence, we take the same view, and hold that the services of Pierce as general counsel were sufficiently distinct and separate from his other services as attorney in the bankruptcy proceedings to regard them separately for the purpose of section 107 (a). See E. A. Terrell, 14 T. C. 572; Leon R. Jillson, 22 T. C. 1101, Issue 2. The situation under this question is like that in the case of Leon R. Jillson, supra (Issue 2), where (in connection with the Cochran estate) it was considered immaterial that Jillson, who rendered services as attorney to trustees, was also a trustee, because there was sufficient distinction between the services rendered in each capacity “so that the legal services can be considered as entirely severable.”

Our holding under the first question clears the way for consideration of the second question.1

The second question is whether the sum of $20,000 which was awarded to Pierce by the District Court and paid to him in 1945 can be taxed in accordance with the provisions of section 107 (a) of the 1939 code,2 as amended by section 139 of the Revenue Act of 1942.

The pertinent facts are these: Pierce was appointed by the District Court in July 1941, at the request of M. P. R., to represent it as an attorney in the reorganization proceedings which were pending in the court and before the I. C. C. He represented the railroad in connection with the I. C. C. hearings on a new and second plan for reorganization, the first plan, the 1940 plan, having failed to receive final approval. After protracted hearings by the I. C. C., a second plan, the Commission’s plan, or the 1944 plan, or the compromise plan, as it is variously called, was approved by the I. C. C. in the latter part of 1944 and was certified by the I. C. C. to the District Court which then set a date for the presentation of objections to the court. Pierce rendered services in connection with the second plan over a period of more than 36 months. The District Court, after the plan approved by the I. C. C. had been certified to the court, issued its order for the filing of petitions, by all persons having claims, for fees and compensation. Pierce duly filed his petition, and the court in 1945 awarded him, on the basis of the maximum allowance fixed by the I. C. C., $20,000 for his services in connection with the 1944 plan. The court in 1946 increased the award to $25,000, on the basis of further allowance by the I. C. C., and Pierce was paid the additional $5,000 in 1946. Pierce was paid $20,000 in 1945.

It at once is observed that the sum of $20,000, received by Pierce in 1945, the taxable year, is 80 per cent of $25,000, the total sum which the court awarded Piercé upon the petition for compensation which he filed on November 22, 1944, pursuant to the court’s order; and that the services, compensation for which he petitioned, covered a period of 36 months and more, i. e., from July 1941 to October 1944. Thus, the requirements of section 107 (a), as amended, are met unless there was not “completion” of the services for which $25,000 was awarded and paid, of which $20,000 was received in one taxable year.

The narrow question to be decided is whether the court’s award of $25,000 was for completed services.

The petitioner contends that the approval by the I. C. C. in 1944 of a plan for reorganization, the 1944 plan, and the court’s 1944 order to all concerned to file petitions for compensation for services, marked the completion of services of Pierce, and that the award of $25,000 was the total compensation for Pierce’s services in connection with that plan.

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Pierce v. Commissioner
24 T.C. 95 (U.S. Tax Court, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
24 T.C. 95, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-commissioner-tax-1955.