Sales v. Commissioner

37 T.C. 576, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1961
DocketDocket No. 85475
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 37 T.C. 576 (Sales 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
Sales v. Commissioner, 37 T.C. 576, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1 (tax 1961).

Opinions

Fat, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioners’ income tax for 1955 of $2,224.31.1 The sole question for decision is the character of a loss sustained by a partnership in 1955.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts have been stipulated and they are found accordingly.

Petitioners Stuart M. and Leona Terry Sales are husband and wife residing in Louisville, Kentucky. They filed a timely joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1955 with the district director of internal revenue for the district of Kentucky. (An amended 1955 return was filed on June 6,1956, for a reason not pertinent here.)

In November 1949 petitioners and certain other individuals, all of whom are related to petitioners by blood or marriage, formed a partnership known as Stuart Enterprises. The capital contributions of tho partners totaled $80,000. (Leona held a 2%0 o interest in the partnership profits and losses. Stuart was a member of the partnership solely as trustee for petitioners’ two children.)2 The partnership agreement stated, in part:

1. The Partnership shall be for the carrying on of the business of Real Estate, Ownership and Operation of Commercial, Industrial and Residential Buildings, and such other business and enterprises as the parties hereto may from time to time hereafter agree.

Consolidated Koyal Chemical Corporation during the years in question was engaged in manufacturing and marketing medical and cosmetic preparations in Chicago. The stockholders of Consolidated were all parents or grandparents of the partners in Stuart Enterprises.

Sometime about 1953 Consolidated undertook the distribution of a liquid hair spray which was marketed under the trade name of Liqui-net. This preparation was manufactured by Liquinet Corporation which held registered trademarks on the trade name in Canada and the United States. Although the hair spray was a successful item, Liquinet Corporation was not itself successful. Sometime after Consolidated took over the distribution of Liquinet, it or its shareholders acquired a controlling stock interest in Liquinet Corporation. When Liquinet began to sell successfully, even without extensive advertising, Consolidated decided to engage in a substantial national advertising campaign to increase sales. One of the forms this advertising took was the sponsorship of a network television program, the Arthur Murray Dance Party.

At about this time, in November 1953, the partnership, without making an investigation other than some interfamily discussions, loaned $120,000 to Liquinet Corporation and received in return Liqui-net Corporation’s collateral promissory note containing an unconditional promise to repay the $120,000 in monthly installments of $3,000 plus interest at the rate of 12 percent per year on the unpaid balance. As security for the obligation, Liquinet executed separate assignments to the partnership of its registered Canadian and United States trademarks. The security at the time did not have substantial value. The partnership obtained the money for the loan by mortgaging its Chicago industrial property. It paid interest on said loan at 4¾ percent.

Soon after undertaking the advertising program, several of Consolidated’s larger competitors entered the market with products similar to Liquinet which were advertised nationally. Liquinet’s sales declined markedly.

In 1955 Liquinet Corporation Avas in default in its monthly payments on the loan. The partnership commenced a legal action in an Illinois court and secured a judgment of foreclosure upon the assignments of Liquinet’s registered trademarks. The partnership purchased the trademarks at the ensuing judicial sale for the sum of $35,000. In the above action the partnership also secured a deficiency judgment against Liquinet in the amount of $84,325.46, plus statutory interest.

On its partnership return for 1955 the partnership reported a net operating loss in the amount of $67,059.70, of which $8,534.99 was computed as the portion thereof attributable to Leona’s interest in it. The net operating loss reported by the partnership was attributable to a deduction of $71,400 claimed as a business bad debt loss resulting from the transaction with Liquinet Corporation. The business generally carried on by the partnership was the ownership of industrial property in Chicago, and aside from the loan to Liquinet the partnership engaged in no other activities.

On Schedule H of their joint return for 1955 petitioners reported a loss of $8,014.16 from the partnership, representing Leona’s distributive share of the $67,059.70 net operating loss claimed by the partnership.

In the deficiency notice the Commissioner increased petitioners’ partnership income by $8,534.99 and explained:

[the] amount due from Liquinet Corporation, which became worthless in the year ending August SI, 1955, in the amount of $71,400.00 * ⅜ * is disallowed as a business bad debt * * * and is allowed as a non-business bad debt subject to the limitations of Section 166(d) (1) (B) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.

OPINION.

The issue here involves the correctness of respondent’s adjustment disallowing the bad debt deduction in the amount of $67,059.70 claimed by the partnership in computing its 1955 partnership income.3 The petitioners contend that the loss sustained by the partnership as a result of its loan to Liquinet is deductible either as a business bad debt under section 166(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 19544 or as a loss arising from a transaction entered into for profit under section 165 (c) (2). The deduction claimed by the petitioners here represents Leona’s distributive share of the loss reported by the partnership on its information return for 1955. The respondent’s position, stated in the disjunctive, is (a) that the loan to Liquinet was in no way proximately related to the real estate business carried on by the partnership, and (b) that the partnership was not engaged in the business of lending money for profit or of rehabilitating insolvent businesses.

In the first place, it is clear that the transaction between the partnership and Liquinet established a debtor-creditor relationship. Therefore, any deduction for the loss resulting therefrom can be had only under section 166 and not section 165, for the reason that such sections are mutually exclusive. Spring City Co. v. Commissioner, 292 U.S. 182 (1934), rehearing denied 292 U.S. 613 (1934); Langdon L. Skarda, 27 T.C. 137, affd. 250 F. 2d 429 (C.A. 10, 1957).

Since the respondent agrees that the debt became worthless to the extent claimed by the partnership in 1955, by the process of elimination the single question remaining is whether the debt is deductible under section 166(a) as a business bad debt or under section 166(d) as a nonbusiness bad debt.

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Bluebook (online)
37 T.C. 576, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sales-v-commissioner-tax-1961.