Reffett v. Commissioner

39 T.C. 869, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 184
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1963
DocketDocket Nos. 83124, 83395
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 39 T.C. 869 (Reffett 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
Reffett v. Commissioner, 39 T.C. 869, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 184 (tax 1963).

Opinions

Drennen, Judge:

Respondent determined deficiencies in income tax and additions to tax for 1954 as follows:

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Petitioner H. C. Bolling, an attorney (hereinafter referred to as Bolling), represented petitioner Sanford Reffett (hereinafter referred to as Reffett) in an action for damages brought by Reffett against the United Mine Workers of America (hereinafter referred to as UMWA) for destruction of Reffett’s coal mine and mining equipment. Reffett obtained a verdict for damages, and the judgment was settled about the middle of 1954 by the UMWA paying to Bolling, as trustee, the sum of $47,750, which Bolling deposited in his trustee account. Distribution of this amount was made as follows:

Litigation costs_ $155.21
Attorney fees to Bolling (% of recovery less costs)- 15,864.93
Payment to insurance company on subrogation claim- 11, 590. 00
Check to Reffett, endorsed to Slaughter, a material witness in the case
(10% of recovery less certain advances)- 3, 959.47
Check to Reffett, endorsed to Toney, a material witness in the case
(10% of recovery less certain advances)_ 3,459.47
Check to Reffett, for balance_12, 810. 90
Unaccounted for_ . 02
Total recovery- 47, 750. 00

On his income tax return for 1954 Reffett reported $46,750 (the $47,750 paid by the UMWA less $1,000 apparently allocated to interest) as his recovery from the UMWA on destruction of coal mine and equipment, deducted therefrom as expenses the $11,500 paid to the insurance company, certain court costs totaling $392.38, and attorney fees in the amount of $22,664.10,1 and reported the net amount of $12,193.52 as gain on involuntary conversion. In his notice of deficiency, respondent added to Reffett’s net recovery the sum of $9,111.44 as “Payments to witnesses disallowed.”2 In his petition to this Court Reffett alleged as error respondent’s disallowance of the deduction for witness fees and, in the alternative, respondent’s error in treating the sum of $7,418.94 paid to the two witnesses as part of the net recovery to petitioner. Petitioner also claimed, in the alternative, an additional deduction of $2,100 paid to the two witnesses for travel and living expenses.

On his income tax return for 1954 Bolling reported as income legal fees and commissions in the amount of $26,613.26, rents collected in the amount of $26,915.15, and interest and miscellaneous income totaling $1,519.13. In his notice of deficiency issued to Bolling, respondent added to Bolling’s income $9,111.44 with the explanation that amounts paid to witnesses for testifying in behalf of Reffett in his suit against the UMWA may not be excluded from Bolling’s income.

The cases were consolidated for trial. On brief respondent concedes that in the Reffett case only the amount of $6,799.17 is disallow-able for witness fees paid, that being the only amount of such fees included in the deduction claimed by Reffett on his return for attorney fees. Also on brief respondent concedes the witness fee issue in the Bolling case and agrees that the amount of $9,111.44 should not be included in Bolling’s income as witness fees paid. As a result of the above and other concessions and agreements of the parties the only issues remaining for decision are:

In the Bejfett ease, Docket No. 83121:
(1) Whether the amounts paid to Slaughter and Toney out of the proceeds of settlement of the UMWA suit are excludable from the gross income of Reffett.3
(2) If not, whether these amounts are deductible by Reffett.
(3) Whether the amounts of $800 and $1,300 paid by Reffett to Slaughter and Toney, respectively, for living expenses during the pendency of the litigation are either excludable from Reffett’s income or, alternatively, deductible by Reffett in 1954.
In the Bolling ease, Docket No. 83395:
(1) Whether Bolling is liable for an addition to tax under section 294(d) (1) (A), I.R.C. 1939, for failure to file a declaration of estimated tax.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The stipulated facts are incorporated herein by this reference.

Petitioners in Docket No. 83124 are Sanford and Mae Reffett, husband and wife, who presently reside in Hueysville, Ky. During the taxable year 1954 they were residents of Norton, Va., and filed a joint income tax return on the cash basis for that year with the district director of internal revenue, Richmond, Va.

Petitioners in Docket No. 83395 are H. C. and Nelle M. Bolling, husband and wife, who resided in Norton, Va., during the taxable year 1954 and who filed a joint income tax return on the cash basis for that year with the district director of internal revenue, Richmond, Va.

From about April 1950 through September 18, 1951, Reffett, as sole proprietor, operated a coal mine in the vicinity of Wise, Va. The mining operation was conducted with nonunion labor. On September 16, 1951, certain of Reffett’s mining equipment, machinery, supplies, and buildings were destroyed by fire, forcing Reffett to close the mine and go out of business.

Sometime in January 1953 Reffett was informed by an unidentified individual that Bolling, an attorney in Norton, Va., had two individuals in his office who knew something about the fire at Reffett’s mine. He went to Bolling’s office and met for the first time Bolling, James Toney, and Tony Clarence Slaughter. Slaughter and Toney informed Reffett that they, acting at the behest of the UMWA, had caused the fire at his mine but indicated they would not testify in any legal action Reffett might bring unless he retained Bolling to represent him in the matter. Reffett was also informed that Bolling had Slaughter’s and Toney’s depositions concerning the fire in his office safe. Reffett then retained Bolling on a contingent fee basis to prosecute a legal suit for damages on his behalf against the UMWA. The contingent fee arrangement was 25 percent of the recovery if settled out of court, 33% percent if tried in the circuit court and settled there, and 50 percent if the case went to the appellate court.

At the same meeting, or shortly thereafter, Reffett agreed to give Toney and Slaughter a percentage of any judgment he might recover. His primary reason for so doing was to insure that they would be available and would testify in his behalf in his suit against the UMWA. In a letter addressed to Toney and Slaughter and dated May 15, 1953, Reffett signed the following statement:

Gentlemen:

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39 T.C. 869, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reffett-v-commissioner-tax-1963.