Succession of Cooke

30 So. 2d 184, 211 La. 404, 1947 La. LEXIS 769
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 17, 1947
DocketNo. 38276.
StatusPublished

This text of 30 So. 2d 184 (Succession of Cooke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Cooke, 30 So. 2d 184, 211 La. 404, 1947 La. LEXIS 769 (La. 1947).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

R. L. Gay has appealed from a judgment dismissing his opposition to the final account of the executors of the Succession of Walter Evans Cooke. He claims that the succession is indebted to him in the sum of $25,312, representing additional income taxes assessed against him for the year 1930, for which Cooke had agreed to indemnify and hold him harmless by written contract. The facts pertinent to a discussion of the questions involved in the case are as follows:

Prior to 1928, Walter Evans Cooke, a resident of Patterson, New Jersey, was engaged in the development of mineral leases in Sabine Parish, having invested with one L. M. Emlet over $300,000 in attempts to discover oil in paying quantities. During that period, R. L. Gay was employed as Field Foreman for Emlet. Failure of Emlet to obtain results dissatisfied Cooke and, early in 1928, he acquired from Emlet a large acreage of mineral leases and undertook the completion of drilling operations for his own account. When Cooke obtained the mineral leases in February 1928, Gay was engaged by him as Field Foreman. Two wells were completed by Gay and, in August 1928, Cooke and Gay entered into a verbal contract whereby it was agreed that, in consideration of the services performed and to be performed by Gay in the oil field, Cooke would give him, in addition to his salary, a one-third interest in the proceeds of all oil and gas produced from the properties. However, the amount which Gay was to receive, as the result of any production or from profits derived through the sale of oil or gas wells, was to be payable only after Cooke had been fully reimbursed for the $300,000 he had previously invested with Emlet and also for all the expenditures made by him in obtaining production.

*408 Drilling operations were conducted under the above stated oral agreement and in 1929 a large production was obtained. On January 25, 1930, the holdings of Cooke and Gay were sold to Benedum-Trees Oil Company for a consideration of over $1,000,000, out of which Gay received $211,000 as his share of the profits.

Income tax returns for the years 1928, 1929 and 1930 were prepared and made for the alleged partnership of Cooke and Gay under the firm name of “R. L. Gay, Trustee”. In the partnership return for 1930, wherein the $1,000,000 sale to BenedumTrees Oil Company is accounted for, the sum of $300,000 (the amount for which Cooke was entitled to reimbursement for prior expenditures with Emlet) was deducted as part of the cost of the mineral leases before computation of the distributive shares of the partners. This deduction was subsequently questioned by the Internal Revenue Department of the United States for the reason that Cooke had charged off a like sum as a deductible loss from his personal income tax return in 1928. An investigation of the affairs of Gay and Cooke ensued which culminated in the return of an indictment against them, together with the public accountants who had prepared their tax returns, for conspiracy to defraud the United States of income taxes. This indictment was later dismissed as to all parties charged thereunder. However, the Department of Internal Revenue levied deficiencies in income taxes for 1930 against Gay and Cooke.

On November 2, 1934, Cooke and Gay entered into a written agreement of dissolution of their partnership which contained the following provision: “It is further understood and agreed that said First Party (Cooke) shall save, hold harmless, warrant and defend said second party (Gay) from and against the payment to the United States Government of any additional income tax assessed against him as a member of said partnership by reason of the deduction by said partnership of the sum of $300,000.00 in its income tax return for the year 1930.” (Words in parenthesis ours.)

This covenant is the foundation of the opposition of Gay. He asserts that, had it not been for the disallowance by the Department of Internal Revenue of the $300,-000 deduction, he would not have been assessed with a deficiency in income taxes for 1930 and that, therefore, Cooke’s succession is liable to him by virtue of the warranty provision quoted above.

On the other hand, the executors of the succession contend, in the main, that the assessment of the deficiency against Gay was not founded upon the disallowance of. the $300,000 deduction but that the assessment was due solely to the fact that he returned the sum of $111,938.18 as his share of the income received from the transfer to Benedum-Trees Oil Company when, in. *410 truth and in fact, he received the sum of $211,000 net profit on the sale.

The executors make other contentions respecting an estoppel by Gay because of a stipulation he made with the government as to the correctness of the deficiency levied against him. However, we do not find it necessary to consider these points as it is manifest to us that the main contention of the executors is well founded.

It appears from the record that the Internal Revenue Department, in its investigation of the affairs of “R. L. Gay, Trustee”, took the position that the original agreement between Gay and Cooke in 1928 did not effect the formation of a copartnership. This original agreement, as above stated, was that Cooke would employ Gay as Field Foreman in the development of the leases Cooke had acquired from Emlet and that, in case the enterprise was successful, Gay would receive one-third of the profits remaining after reimbursement to Cooke for the expenses of the operations plus $300,000 which he had previously expended with Emlet. Since Gay was to participate only in the profits and was not bound to share in any losses, the attorneys for the government evidently based their contention that a valid copartnership did not come into being until after the sale to Benedum-Trees Oil Company, on the provisions of Article 2814 of the Civil Code. But we need not here decide if the government was correct in its position respecting the formation of the copartnership as we find the matter to be of no importance in determining whether the disallowance of the $300,000 deduction produced the effect claimed by Gay.

In 1930, when Gay and Cooke sold their interests to Benedum-Trees Oil Company, Gay actually received $211,000 from the sale. In the partnership return of 1930, it is reported _ that the distributive share of Gay from the sale of the mineral holdings amounted to only $111,938.18. This figure is finally reached after first deducting from the gross amount of the sale to BenedumTrees Oil Company the sum of $676,549.60 consisting of claims, depreciation, obsolescence, depletion and other deductions, including the $300,000 reimbursement to Cooke in accordance with the original agreement of the parties. In the recomputation of the income of “R. L. Gay, Trustee”, prepared by the Internal Revenue Department and set forth in its letter to Gay of August 31, 1940, the-government disallows practically all of the $676,549.60 claimed as costs, depletion, obsolescence, etc. This recomputation of the distributive interest of Gay, resulting from the sale to Benedum-Trees Oil Company, shows that the gross receipts of the sale were $1,156,791.65. The cost of the various leases allowed by the government as a deduction amount 'to $45,733.97, thus showing a net profit of $1,111,057.68. Of this, amount, the sum of $900,057.68 is asserted as taxable income of Cooke. This ■ figure includes the $300,000 which was payable to

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30 So. 2d 184, 211 La. 404, 1947 La. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-cooke-la-1947.