Robinson v. Elliot

262 F.2d 383
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 1958
DocketNos. 15983-15984
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 262 F.2d 383 (Robinson v. Elliot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Elliot, 262 F.2d 383 (9th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

CHAMBERS, Circuit Judge.

The Buttrey Company, a Montana corporation, in November, 1955, received title to the Buffalo Block in Kalispell, Montana, by virtue of a warranty deed placed in escrow in February, 1946, by William G. Elliot, Thomas W. Elliot and Evelyn W. Elliot (hereafter “taxpayers”). The three were and .are citizens of Montana. The men are brothers. Thomas is the husband of Evelyn.

The basis for the deed in escrow was a “Lease Agreement and Purchase Option” dated January 14, 1946, between Buttrey and the Elliots as owners of the Buffalo Block. The “block” consisted of a basement, two stores on the first floor, office rooms upstairs and the-ground on which the building was located. The [385]*385brothers Elliot at the time they entered into the agreement were operating a general store known as the Flathead Commercial Company. The agreement respecting the building was apparently a part of a sale of the Flathead Commercial Company by the Elliots to Buttrey which operated a chain of stores in Montana.

We are here concerned only with the federal income tax consequences of the “Lease Agreement and Option to Purchase” for the years 1947 to 1953 inclusive. Aspects of the sale of the going business are not involved. The lease and option by its terms provided for ten annual payments of $19,000 each as rent with an option at the end for Buttrey to acquire the property for the sum of $75,-000. In the ten year interim Buttrey was to be responsible for all of the usual burdens of the owner such as property taxes, insurance premiums and repairs. In real estate language, if it was a lease, it was as to the lessors a “carefree” lease.

No doubt under Montana law the document would be always what it called itself : “Lease Agreement and Purchase Option.” In the terms of a value of $75,-000, one sees that the net return as “rent” each year would be 25.33 per cent.

At least from 1946 to 1951 the taxpayers (Elliots) acceded to the theory that the agreement for tax purposes was what it was denominated. They returned the annual payments as rents received.2

Eventually the taxpayers bestirred by a new accountant filed claims for refund on the theory that the transaction, ab initio, was a sale.

The claims not being allowed, eventually the taxpayers filed suit for refund on the basis of the lower tax rates applicable for a capital sale profit contrasted with the progressive rates applicable for the receipt of ordinary rent.

We deem the only question properly before the trial court and this court to be whether the taxpayers had a right to recast the transaction from its form to what they considered its substance.

The district court ruled in favor of the taxpayers. Its principal authority was Oesterreich v. Commissioner, 9 Cir., 226 F.2d 798. See also Commissioner v. Wil-shire Holding Corporation, 9 Cir., 244 F.2d 904, certiorari denied 355 U.S. 815, 78 S.Ct. 16, 2 L.Ed.2d 32, and Wilshire Holding Corporation v. Commissioner, 9 Cir., 262 F.2d 51. We affirm on the same basic authority.

Of course the facts here are not as obvious as in Oesterreich where the lessor was to transfer title at the end of a term for the sum of ten dollars. Here in Elliot the court received parol evidence as to intention, the motive in disposition, the price the taxpayers sought for an outright sale and other background matter. This evidence came in over objection, the court announcing it would later consider the merit of the objection. The evidence was not contradicted and no effort was made to impeach the Elliots who testified. Perhaps, the court would have been justified in recasting the agreement for tax purposes without receiving the evidence. But when the agreement and the evidence all point the same way, we see no reason to stop and consider whether the receipt of parol evidence was proper. Further, the receipt of such evidence is not really, per se, assigned as error on this appeal.

Of course, Buttrey is not before us, but we do express the opinion that it did convert a capital expenditure into an expense on its side. Some things which one can do to save taxes are unassailable. A desire to save taxes is ordinarily decent, but in a case like we have here the “lessee-purchaser” will just have to take a gamble that his legal format will stick. (We do not say that anyone was indecent here.)

We note one factor in this case which was overlooked and which we do not deem appropriate to import or introduce into the judgment in view of the record of the case. We refer to interest on deferred payments. In Oesterreich we were informed that, in recasting instruments from leases to installment [386]*386sales the commissioner as office practice sometimes introduces the factor of interest to the seller from the buyer when he converts “rent” to “purchase price.” The rental payments, so the statement during argument in Oesterreich went are divided between principal and interest. In the second Wilshire case we are now awaiting the views of the tax court on that subject. Parenthetically, it may be noted, after making the deal here, one of the Elliots had someone compute the “lease agreement” for him on the basis of various interest rates so for his own satisfaction he might know how much principal they were reasonably getting out of the transaction. This private computation did not bind the commissioner, but it does illustrate an economic fact cognizable by almost anyone in business.

The district court’s opinion (which preceded a later stipulation3 as to amounts refundable for various years, findings of fact with conclusions of law and a judgment) held that for tax purposes a sale with installment payments occurred in 1946, thus recasting the transactions. We think it fair to say that the computation stipulated to by the parties provided for division of the profit proceeds into installments according to years.

Doubling back into the facts, we think it should be related that in the taxpayers’ claims for refunds filed with the director for the years 1946, 19474 and 1948 the taxpayers took the position of reporting the “sale” on an installment basis. Similarly, they proceeded on their first claims for refund for the years 1949 and 1950. Subsequently, they amended these two claims and asserted that the sale was completed in 1946 and all reportable in that year. This last position was the one they took in the claims filed for the years 1951, 1952 and 1953.

Except as to the years 1951, 1952 and 1953 the amounts “claimed” in the complaints do not agree in amount with the claims filed with the director. Just exactly how the amounts in the complaint as to the years 1946 to 1950 inclusive, or all of the amounts in the second stipulation for the various years, were computed we do not know. But we are satisfied that all amounts in the complaint and in the second stipulation contemplated installment treatment all of the way from 1946 to 1955.

To reach two questions presented here we must allude to the first or pre-trial stipulation filed by the parties. Most of it covers technical details such as the filing of returns, the amounts paid and the details of the refund claims.

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262 F.2d 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-elliot-ca9-1958.