San Juan Trading Co. v. Secretary of the Treasury

86 P.R. 772
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 19, 1962
DocketNo. 12776
StatusPublished

This text of 86 P.R. 772 (San Juan Trading Co. v. Secretary of the Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Juan Trading Co. v. Secretary of the Treasury, 86 P.R. 772 (prsupreme 1962).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Belaval

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On August 7, 1946, Forrest A. Hornisher, stockholder of the San Juan Trading Company, Inc., filed in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rieo, an action against said corporation and its stockholders, alleging that because of a certain conspiracy to obtain control of the corporation, the original subscription of 100 shares made by the incorporators had been increased by defendants to 1,750 shares, without giving plaintiff an opportunity to exercise his right to acquire the proportional part of the aforesaid additional shares; that due to said additional issue, Celso Suárez and Juan A. Franco, as directors, owners, or persons with power to dispose of the shares so issued, succeeded in having the corporation distribute certain dividends per share, excluding plaintiff for the purpose of reducing his proportional part in the control of the corporation, of reducing his participation in the dividends and the value of his shares, causing him damages for $200,000; that at the same time, in violation of the rights which correspond plaintiff, as stockholder, the corporation has paid defendants Celso Suárez and Juan A. Franco a part of the net profits earned in business and commercial transactions of the corporation, which plaintiff estimates at not less than $200,000 of which no part whatsoever has been paid plaintiff, in spite of the fact that defendants Suárez and Franco knew that plaintiff had a right to a proportional part of the aforesaid profits. Plaintiff requested the payment of the amount of $400,000 for damages and the annulment of all the stock issued in which plaintiff had not participated. This complaint was an[774]*774swered substantially denying the conspiracy and the damages claimed. The only part of this litigation which interests us to decide the case at bar is the stipulation of the parties and the judgment which was rendered therein, after including Enrique León as plaintiff, another minority stockholder.

On February 27, 1948 the stipulation of the parties was filed, requesting the dismissal of the two last causes of action for damages and unreceived profits, and that the first cause of action be sustained, rendering judgment against the San Juan Trading Company only for the amount of $70,000 for whichever claims of any kind, past or present, that plaintiffs might have against defendant San Juan Trading Company, its officials, directors, or stockholders for not having recogr nized plaintiffs’ preemptive right in the understanding that the judgment would be considered satisfied upon the San Juan Trading Company paying to plaintiff Enrique León the sum of $48,300 and the sum of $21,700 to Lie. Orlando J. Antonsanti, by way of attorney’s fees. By virtue of said stipulation the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, rendered judgment on February 27, 1948 in the same terms of the stipulation.

As an additional consideration of the stipulation agreed upon, plaintiff Forrest A. Hornisher, owner of a certificate of four shares and debtor to the corporation for the sum of $5,610.01, and plaintiff Enrique León, owner of four certificates of one hundred twenty-five shares and debtor to the corporation for the amount of $10,973.66, subscribed a document endorsing and delivering said shares to the corporation in payment of their respective debts and the corporation agreed to liquidate both debts.

The form of payment agreed upon for the $70,000 in the aforesaid amounts, was the following: on February 26, 1948, Lie. Orlando J. Antonsanti was paid the sum of $7,750 and Enrique León was paid the sum of $17,250 in two checks — plaintiff’s Exhibits 4 and 5 — on that same date [775]*775a promissory note for the sum of $7,750 which expired on April 15, 1948 was delivered to Lie. Orlando J. Anton--santi, which promissory note was drawn on the Banco Popular de Puerto Rico on February 27,1948 and paid by plaintiff to the bank on April 15, 1948, and another promissory note for the sum of $6,200 which expired on June 15, 1948 drawn on the Banco Popular de Puerto Rico on February 27, .1948 and paid by plaintiff to the bank on June 15, 1948 — plaintiff’s Exhibits IV, IV A, IV B, IV C — and a promissory note for the sum of $17,250 which expired on April 15, 1948 was delivered to Enrique León and was paid by plaintiff to Enrique León himself on April 15, 1948, and another promissory note for the sum of $13,800 which expired on June 15, 1948, which because it was lost, after the corresponding legal procedure, was paid by plaintiff to the Clerk of the Superior Court of Puerto Rico, San Juan Part, on January 26, 1949 — plaintiff’s Exhibits V A, V B, V C. There is no doubt that the payment of the $70,000 was made in its totality in the above-described manner, and the San Juan Trading Co. deducted the total item of $70,000 as a necessary and ordinary business expense in its income tax return for the year 1948.

The Secretary of the Treasury disagreed with the taxpayer’s allegation that the item of $70,000 was an ordinary and necessary expense or a loss of the company because he believed that said $70,000 were capitalizable since it was the price that the corporation paid to acquire the shares of Hornisher and León, and even assuming that it was an ordinary and necessary expense, it could only deduct in the income tax return for the year 1948 the amount paid in cash — • $17,250 to León and $4,750 to Lie. Antonsanti — because these were the only amounts actually paid by the taxpayer during its taxable year which began on April 1, 1947 and ended on March 31, 1948, and because its accounting system was on the accrual basis. The case went to trial.

[776]*776The trial court, in rendering judgment in favor of the taxpayer decided: “After considering the evidence respecting the disbursement of the amount of $70,000, the deduction of which is in litigation herein, and all the circumstances which surround the same according to the case law and other authorities on that matter, we decide that said disbursement meets the requirement of an ordinary and necessary business expense of the taxpayer, and as such, it is deductible. Not only were the Hornisher and León suits a serious menace to' the corporation business and its credit by virtue of the attack made against it and its directors, but a possible judgment for the amount claimed of $400,000 with interest jeopardized the very existence of the corporation, judging from the evidence in the record, if it had to pay, or be foreclosed, for that sum ... (P) The contention of the Secretary of the Treasury to the effect that the $70,000 were capital-izable because they were given as payment for the shares of León and Hornisher, is not supported by the evidence. It is clear from the evidence that what was paid by the corporation for said shares was the amount of $16,583.57 that Hornisher and León owed...” The trial court also reached the conclusion that the taxpayer had a right to deduct the whole amount for the taxable year 1948.

In his appeal before us, the Secretary of the Treasury assigns two errors: (1) “The Superior Court erred in determining that the $70,000 owed by plaintiff to León and to Lie. Antonsanti were deductible upon computing his income tax because they were ordinary and necessary expenses of plaintiff’s business or industry; (2) the Superior Court erred in determining that the total deduction of $70,000 made by the taxpayer in the year 1948 was deductible in said year in spite of the fact that in said year only the amount of $23,000 (sic) was paid.”

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Bluebook (online)
86 P.R. 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-juan-trading-co-v-secretary-of-the-treasury-prsupreme-1962.