Schalk Chemical Co. v. Commissioner

32 T.C. 879, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 128
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1959
DocketDocket Nos. 63853, 63855, 63862
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 32 T.C. 879 (Schalk Chemical Co. 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
Schalk Chemical Co. v. Commissioner, 32 T.C. 879, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 128 (tax 1959).

Opinion

OPINION*.

Baum, Judge,:

Schalk accrued on its books and deducted in its return for 1950 the liability, which it assumed in the assignment agreement of December 29,1950, to pay $45,000 to Hazel I. Farman, Patricia Baker, Evelyn Marlow, and Horace O. Smith, Jr., and interest at 5 per cent per annum on $25,000 from January 15,1948. The respondent disallowed the claimed deduction. Petitioners now concede that $20,000 of the $45,000 is not deductible by Schalk, but contend that the remaining $25,000 plus the interest is deductible by it as an ordinary and necessary business expense.

In support of their contention, petitioners argue that the settlement agreement was not a purchase and sale agreement although cast in the form of one; that therein, for $25,000, Smith agreed to resign as supervisor of the trust and as an officer and director of Schalk (and to obtain the resignation of the officers and directors whom he had caused to be elected or maintained in office); and, for $20,000, Smith granted to Hazel I. Farman, Patricia Baker, and Evelyn Marlow (hereinafter referred to as the other beneficiaries) an option to purchase for $20,000 the stock interest in Schalk distributed to him, upon termination of the trust. Assuming this construction of the agreement to be correct, they argue that the $25,000 payment made by the other beneficiaries to Smith at the time of the execution of the agreement was justified and necessary for the preservation of the business of Schalk; that if Schalk had paid, or by resolution of its board of directors had authorized the payment of, the $25,000, this amount would have been deductible by Schalk; that, disregarding form, the substance of the transaction was that it was authorized by the “majority owners” (the other beneficiaries) on behalf of and for the benefit of Scfialk, and, therefore, by Scfialk; that Scfialk was, therefore, morally obligated to reimburse the other beneficiaries for the $25,000 payment and for interest on the money they borrowed in order to make that payment; and that when it assumed the obligation to reimburse them it became entitled to deduct $25,000 and interest in the amount of $3,697.92.

After Smith became supervisor of the trust in 1943 the other beneficiaries, led by Gerald I. Farman, Smith’s stepfather, became dissatisfied with the management and policies of Schalk. Suggestions made by them which they thought were in the best interests of Schalk were not followed by Smith and the officers and directors whom he had caused to be appointed. In April 1947, Evelyn Smith Marlow and Patricia Baker filed a suit to have Sm,ith removed as supervisor. Demurrers to the complaint were sustained, and during the period that the plaintiffs might have filed an amended complaint, representatives of Smith and the other beneficiaries entered into negotiations to settle the controversy. During these negotiations Smith offered to sell his interest in the trust and resign as supervisor of the trust and officer and director of Schalk. The other beneficiaries suggested that Schalk purchase Smith’s interest in the trust. Smith refused, and insisted that any settlement agreement had to be between Smith, as an individual, and the other beneficiaries, as individuals.

The parties to the settlement agreement were in fact the other beneficiaries and Smith. Schalk was not a party to, and did not authorize the other beneficiaries to enter into, the agreement. Petitioners’ argument that the agreement was nevertheless informally authorized by Schalk and that it was, therefore, obligated in equity and good conscience to reimburse the other beneficiaries for the $25,000 payment made by them, is without merit. Their reasoning is that the other beneficiaries beneficially owned 83y3 per cent of Schalk; that as “majority owners” they were acting on behalf of and solely for the benefit of Schalk and for the preservation of its business when they entered into the agreement; and that their action was in substance the action of Schalk. This reasoning overlooks the fact that the trust agreement, which created their beneficial interests, placed complete control of Schalk in Smith, the supervisor of the trust, and prevented them from acting for or on its behalf. 3STot having any power to act for Schalk, we fail to see how any action taken by them can be deemed to be the action of Schalk. Moreover, we think petitioners place undue stress on the benefits to Schalk from the settlement agreement and not enough on the benefits they were seeking for themselves. The other beneficiaries sought the resignation of Smith as supervisor of the trust because they were dissatisfied with the management and policies of the corporation under his regime and wanted to acquire the right, which they did not have, to participate in. its management and control. We are satisfied that they thought their participation would be beneficial to the corporation, but we are not convinced that the management of the corporation under Smith was incompetent and that their action was either necessary or desirable to preserve its business. If the anticipated benefit to the corporation materialized they would benefit personally therefrom as income beneficiaries of the trust whose principal asset was the stock of Schalk. In the circumstances we think it reasonable to assum,e that they were not overlooking that benefit and that their action in entering into the settlement agreement was motivated to some extent, if not entirely, by the benefits they thought would accrue to them personally. In any event, Schalk did not authorize them to act, formally or informally, and it was not obligated, morally or legally, to reimburse them for the $25,000 they paid pursuant to the terms of the settlement agreement. Its failure to do so distinguishes the facts here involved from those in cases, such as Catholic News Publishing Co., 10 T.C. 73, cited by petitioners.

There being no obligation on the part of Schalk to reimburse the other beneficiaries for the $25,000 payment made by them in 1948, its action approximately 3 years later in agreeing to reimburse them for that payment together with the interest they had paid on money they borrowed to make it, and for assuming their remaining obligations under the settlement agreement, did not, in our judgment, result in an ordinary or necessary business expense.

Moreover, we do not agree with petitioners that the consideration the other beneficiaries received for the $25,000 payment was the resignation of Smith as supervisor of the trust and as an officer and director of Schalk. Smith agreed to resign, if the other beneficiaries would purchase his one-sixth minority interest in the stock of Schalk at the termination of the trust. Under the terms of the settlement agreement he received no cash consideration for his resignation. Therein the other 'beneficiaries agreed to pay him $45,000 for his stock interest, $25,000 of which was to be paid at the time of the execution of the agreement and the remaining $20,000 on or before 30 days after the termination of the trust. The provision relating to the $25,000 payment reads, in part, as follows:

For and in consideration of the sum of $25,000.00 to First Party [’Smith] in hand paid by Second Parties [the other beneficiaries] * * * First Party agrees to sell * * * land 'Second Parties * * * agree to buy * * * upon the termination and distribution of that certain trust dated December 29, 1980 * * * all of the then right, title a/nd interest of the First Party in and to the corpus and a/ny accumulations thereof then, belonging or distributed to First Party.

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Bluebook (online)
32 T.C. 879, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schalk-chemical-co-v-commissioner-tax-1959.