Stern & Stern Textiles, Inc. v. Commissioner

26 T.C. 1000, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 96
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1956
DocketDocket Nos. 31362, 33978, 33979, 53104
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 26 T.C. 1000 (Stern & Stern Textiles, Inc. 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
Stern & Stern Textiles, Inc. v. Commissioner, 26 T.C. 1000, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 96 (tax 1956).

Opinion

OPINION.

MulROnet, Judge:

Petitioner corporation is successor in interest to Huguet Fabrics Corporation, the petitioner in Docket No. 7292, Huguet Fabrics Corporation, 19 T. C. 535. That case involved petitioner’s claims for relief from excess profits taxes for its fiscal year ending September 30,1941. The petitions filed in the four cases now before the Court allege error in the respondent’s disallowance of applications for relief under section 722 (b) (1), (2), (3) (A), (3) (B), (4), and (5), Internal Revenue Code of 1939, for the taxable years ending September 30,1942,1943,1944,1945, and 1946. The four cases were consolidated.

One of the issues raised by respondent’s answer in each of the four cases was whether petitioner was barred from a hearing on the merits under the doctrine of collateral estoppel by virtue of this Court’s determination in the previous case in 19 T. C. 535. We granted respondent’s motion for severance of this latter issue and the collateral estoppel issue was submitted and is the only issue to be decided at this time. At the hearing certain facts were stipulated into the record and the entire record and proceedings in Docket No. 7292 were introduced by respondent, together with the Form 991 claims for the years here involved. Petitioner’s evidence was designed to show that there was a mistake in the stipulation of facts in prior Docket No. 7292.

The doctrine of collateral estoppel, or, as it is sometimes called, estoppel by judgment, is that a decision on the merits in one suit precludes further litigation between the same parties of issues which were presented, litigated, and decided when the controlling facts and applicable legal rules remained unchanged. Fairmont Aluminum Co., 22 T. C. 1377, and cases there cited. It is applicable to tax cases, and we have held a prior determination denying relief under portions of section 722 for one year precludes consideration of claims for relief under identical portions of section 722 for later years. Jacob's Fork Pocahontas Coal Co., 24 T. C. 60; George Kemp Real Estate Co., 17 T. C. 755, affd. 205 F. 2d 236, certiorari denied 346 U. S. 876. Three things must be present before the principles of collateral estoppel are applicable. First, there must be identity of the parties, second, there must be identity of the issues, and third, the controlling facts and applicable legal rules must remain unchanged.

Here it was stipulated that the parties in both proceedings are identical. Petitioner makes no argument that there is not substantial identity of issues. We have examined the entire record in both proceedings and compared the Form 991 claims and pleadings in the prior casé and in the instant cases and we find the identical matters and issues decided in the prior proceeding were also raised in the instant cases. Petitioner did not allege, and does not argue, that any change has occurred in the applicable legal principles. In Jacob's Fork Pocahontas Coal Co., supra, we pointed out there has been no change in the legal rules applicable in section 722 cases.

Petitioner on brief narrowed his defense to the estoppel by judgment plea to the “controlling facts” requirement. His argument is that the facts of the prior case and those of the present case are different. And this is so, petitioner argues, “due to a mutual mistake of fact made by the respondent and the petitioner in a stipulation in the prior trial.” Petitioner adds another argument to the effect that the collateral estoppel plea should be denied for it will result in injustice to the taxpayer.

The facts found in our prior case in 19 T. C. 535 can be incorporated here by. reference but we feel it would be helpful to give a short summary by way of background for the discussion of the issues now before us.

Petitioner, a silk manufacturing company, sought relief from excess profits tax for its fiscal year ending September 30, 1941, under the provisions of section 722 (b) of the 1939 Internal Revenue Code. Respondent denied relief and in Docket No. 7292 petitioner sought to prove the denial was error on the general ground that its average base period net income is an inadequate standard of normal earnings. Its main reliance was on the allegation that it changed the character of its business during its base period by going into a new and different market with a new and different product. In Docket No. 7292 we found as a fact that petitioner commenced the manufacture and sale of fabrics manufactured from nylon in the last quarter of its last fiscal year of its base period ended September 30, 1940. We there held this was a change from its silk and combination silk and rayon manufacturing business but the differences in the products were insufficient to satisfy the requirements of the statute. That is, the evidence of some differences which its nylon fabric possessed which distinguished it from silk or combination of silk and rayon fabrics was insufficient to establish a change in the character of taxpayer’s business when it started manufacturing nylon fabric.

Our Opinion in Docket No. 7292 next takes up the “further argument” advanced by petitioner that it went into a new business. This argument was that all of the nylon fabrics were in fact sold to the manufacturers of ladies’ brassieres and girdles, whereas prior to the time the petitioner manufactured and sold nylon fabrics all of its sales of all of its fabrics were made through jobbers. We examined and discussed the evidence relied on to establish this point saying:

Relevant evidence with respect to this point is contained in (1) several pages of a somewhat general and incomplete stipulation and (2) a very general statement of an interested witness, a person who was the general manager, vice president and a director of the petitioner during the taxable periods involved. * * *

We quoted much of the testimony of the witness referred to above and then summarized it stating it was “to the effect that during the base period petitioner sold all its nylon fabrics directly to the manufacturers of ladies’ brassieres and girdles.” We pointed out the witness’s testimony did not identify such sales and we quoted another portion of his testimony that was confusing and cast some doubt on the accuracy of his statement that all base period sales of nylon were made to the undergarment industry.

We next looked at the stipulation which showed that in the month of September 1940 the sales to 5 jobbers (including sales to Wm. Cohen Fabrics, $8,579.25) totaled $81,719.84, and the total sales that month were $90,939.50, of which $10,346.45 were sales of nylon. This allowed the inference that at least $1,126.79 nylon sales were made to jobbers in September 1939, none of whom were manufacturers of undergarments.

Here is where petitioner centers his argument in the instant cases. His evidence is designed to show that the portion of the stipulation showing sales to jobber Wm. Cohen Fabrics of $8,579.25 in September 1940 was wrong; that in fact there were no sales to Wm. Cohen Fabrics in September 1940 at all; that this was a mutual mistake of fact in the stipulation, and the true fact is the sales to jobbers in the month of September 1940 were $73,140.59. Petitioner’s argument is that in Docket No.

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Stern & Stern Textiles, Inc. v. Commissioner
26 T.C. 1000 (U.S. Tax Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 T.C. 1000, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stern-stern-textiles-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1956.