Seigle v. Commissioner

33 T.C. 255, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 39
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1959
DocketDocket Nos. 69050, 69051, 69052, 69053, 69054, 69055
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 33 T.C. 255 (Seigle 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
Seigle v. Commissioner, 33 T.C. 255, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 39 (tax 1959).

Opinion

Mulroney, Judge:

The respondent determined deficiencies in Federal income tax for the year 1953 as follows:

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The issue in these consolidated cases is whether Spartex & Co., a partnership, correctly computed its cost of goods sold in the taxable periods ended May 31, 1953, and October 31, 1953.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts have been stipulated and they are hereby incorporated by this reference.

Petitioners, Gordon D. Seigle and his wife, Beth Anne, Thomas E. McGovern and his wife, Deloris, Stanley T. Keller and his wife, Ajine, and Cecil G. Church and his wife, Anna, are residents of Alexandria, Virginia. Petitioners Philip J. Sweeney, Jr., and his wife, Martha, and Paul R. Armstrong and his wife, Ethel (until her death in 1954), were residents of Arlington, Virginia. Petitioners filed joint income tax returns for 1953 with their respective wives with the district director of internal revenue at Richmond, Virginia.

Gordon D. Seigle, Thomas E. McGovern, Stanley T. Keller, Philip J. Sweeney, Jr., Paul R. Armstrong, and Cecil G. Church were partners in Spartex & Co. They will hereinafter sometimes be referred to as petitioners. Spartex & Co. (hereinafter referred to as Spartex) was a partnership formed pursuant to an agreement executed on July 1, 1952. The respective interests of the partners in the partnership were as follows: Seigle, 33 per cent; McGovern, 14 per cent; Keller, 14 per cent; Armstrong, 14 per cent; Sweeney, Jr., 13 per cent and Church, 12 per cent. Seigle was the controlling and managing partner of Spartex.

On July 1, 1952, Seigle, for himself and as nominee for the remaining partners in Spartex, entered into an agreement with Aircraft Supplies, Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of New Jersey, to purchase from Aircraft Supplies, Inc., a certain bulk stock, or lot, of surplus aircraft propeller parts and assemblies consisting of over 1,500 different items, in many instances boxed and in preservatives, and in many instances the quantity of each item varied from one to many thousands. The items consisted of parts for aircraft manufactured during the years 1940 through 1944 and they ranged from complete propeller assemblies weighing several hundred pounds to small bearings, springs, and similar items. Hereafter we will sometimes refer to this bulk stock or lot of surplus aircraft propeller parts and assemblies as the assets. The said contract provided that Spartex pay $300,000 for the assets and assume an obligation of $19,020.01 in connection with certain items among the assets. The agreement provided for a payment of $50,000 upon execution of the agreement and for monthly payments of $16,500 until the balance of $250,000, with interest, was paid in full. On the date of the agreement Seigle made a cash payment of $50,000, which he borrowed from a bank in his own name, and also executed a negotiable promissory note in the amount of $250,000 as security for the balance of the purchase price. The note was guaranteed by the other partners in Spartex. The indebtedness to Aircraft Supplies, Inc., was fully paid by October 1953.

The assets had been owned by a partnership, J. P. Kurtz & Company, doing business in Alexandria, Virginia. J. P. Kurtz & Company had acquired these assets from the Aircraft Components Corporation, which, in turn, had acquired them from an agency of the Federal Government. Sometime prior to July 1, 1952, Aircraft Supplies, Inc., purchased the partnership interests of the two partners in J. P. Kurtz & Company, discontinued the business of the partnership, and discontinued the services of its key employees. At the time Aircraft Supplies, Inc., purchased the partnership interests it agreed that “if it disposed of said aircraft propeller parts and accessories in bulk, it would first offer them to said key employees for said sum of Three Hundred Thousand Dollars.” The key employees were Seigle and the other partners of Spartex. None of the partners of Spartex had any interest of any kind in Aircraft Supplies, Inc.

Seigle has been engaged in the business of buying and selling surplus aircraft parts since 1946. From 1946 to 1950 he was employed as vice president and sales manager by the Aircraft Components Corporation, and from 1950 to the time of its dissolution he was employed as sales manager by J. P. Kurtz & Company. As a result of this employment, Seigle was very familiar with the lot of surplus aircraft parts acquired by Spartex.

Spartex was formed solely to acquire the assets it did acquire from Aircraft Supplies, Inc., and to engage in the business of selling these items. Spartex made no other purchases of such items during its existence, and all of its income was derived from the sale of the assets. Spartex operated as a wholesale dealer of surplus aircraft parts. All of the sales by Spartex from its assets were made through Specialties, Inc., and Exports, Inc., both of which are retail dealers of surplus aircraft parts. During 1952 and 1953 Spartex allowed its retail dealers discounts of approximately 15 per cent for domestic sales and 20 per cent for foreign sales. Seigle owned 25 per cent of the stock in Specialties, Inc., and was its president from the time of its formation in 1948 up to the time of the trial. The other stockholders in Specialties, Inc., were McGovern, Keller, Sweeney, Jr., Armstrong, and Church, all partners in Spartex, each of whom owned a 15 per cent stock interest. Seigle was also vice president and general manager of Exports, Inc., which corporation had the same stockholders as Specialties, Inc.

During its first taxable year from July 1, 1952, to May 31, 1953, Spartex’s gross sales, exclusive of dealer discounts, were $363,380.71 and during its second taxable period from June 1, 1953, to October 31, 1953, Spartex’s gross sales, exclusive of dealer discounts, were $92,035.63. During its first taxable period Spartex granted dealer discounts to Specialties, Inc., and Exports, Inc., in tbe approximate amount of $79,000.

In September 1953 Seigle and the other partners in Spartex made a list of the items then remaining in the assets and placed a total value on these items of approximately $750,000 for the purpose of negotiating their sale to Hamilton Standard Propellers, a manufacturer. This value was based, in part, upon various manufacturers’ list price sheets, some of them going back to 1942, covering the items remaining in the Spartex assets. Seigle and his partners offered these items to Hamilton Standard Propellers for a price ranging from $650,000 to $750,000, but Hamilton did not make the purchase.

On October 31, 1953, subsequent to the unsuccessful attempt to sell the remainder of the assets, Spartex was dissolved. Each of the partners sold his partnership interest in Spartex to Specialties, Inc., and the total purchase price paid for all the partnership interests was $730,900. At the time of the sale the partners had placed a value on the remaining assets of Spartex, which was a substantial portion of the original assets, at approximately $650,000. On the partnership return of income filed by Spartex for the taxable period ending October 31,1953, the assets on hand as of that date was shown as $11,934.47.

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Connolly v. Commissioner
1975 T.C. Memo. 318 (U.S. Tax Court, 1975)
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447 F.2d 210 (Second Circuit, 1971)
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42 T.C. 1029 (U.S. Tax Court, 1964)
Seigle v. Commissioner
33 T.C. 255 (U.S. Tax Court, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
33 T.C. 255, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seigle-v-commissioner-tax-1959.