Ticket Office Equipment Co. v. Commissioner

20 T.C. 272, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 30, 1953
DocketDocket No. 31072
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 20 T.C. 272 (Ticket Office Equipment 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
Ticket Office Equipment Co. v. Commissioner, 20 T.C. 272, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174 (tax 1953).

Opinion

OPINION.

Opper, Judge:

The first issue depends upon the amount to be determined as petitioner’s invested capital for excess profits tax purposes. The sole controversy involves the amount to be attributed to the so-called Sunvent patent. The record is silent as to any value attributable to it at the time petitioner was organized and indeed the indications are that it was worth considerably less than the figure allowed by respondent, if not entirely worthless. Since the patent was transferred to petitioner in exchange for the issuance of its stock, the value of the stock and hence of the patent would be determinable from the fair market value of the patent at that time, there being no other evidence of the value of the stock. Estate of Isadore L. Myers, 1 T. C. 100, 111.

The only other possibility would be the assumption that under Internal Revenue Code, section 113, petitioner would carry over the basis of its transferor. This would be permissible under section 113 (a) (8) only if petitioner’s organization constituted a transaction in which gain or loss was nonrecognizable within section 112 (b) (5) or if the property was paid in as surplus.1 The former is impossible since Ruscher .who was the transferor received less than half of petitioner’s stock and hence under section 112 (h) was not “in control of the corporation” immediately after the exchange. Fahs v. Florida Machine & Foundry Co., (C. A. 5) 168 F. 2d 957; see Muskegon Motor Specialties Co., 45 B. T. A. 551, affd. (C. A. 6) 134 F. 2d 904, certiorari denied 320 U. S. 741. And the latter brings us back to the proposition that without valuing the patent above the figure determined by respondent, the total assets received were worth less than the par value of the total stock,2 and accordingly left no room for any contribution to surplus since there was no surplus.3 We must accordingly conclude that whatever the transferor’s basis may have been, petitioner has failed to show that respondent’s determination on the first issue is erroneous.

The second and third questions are disposed of by our findings. On the second we have found as a fact that the salaries paid by petitioner during the years in controversy were reasonable under all the circumstances. It is of course impossible to measure precisely the value of services of corporate officers, especially where the sums involved are blanketed under one undivided disallowance.4 But we think enough has been shown to carry petitioner’s burden that in the light of all the facts the total salaries paid were not unreasonable. H. V. Greene Co., 5 B. T. A. 442.

We have also found as a fact that petitioner did not abandon prior to the end of the tax year a piece of machinery, the cost of which was claimed as a deduction in full. The property admittedly had a value at least for salvage and perhaps something in excess of that amount,5 and for that reason its disposal was evidently postponed beyond the instant years. Respondent has permitted the deduction of depreciation and this in our view is the limit to which petitioner is entitled.

A group of issues arises by reason of damage and partial destruction to petitioner’s plant by fire. As to the first assertion of error there seems now to be no disagreement between the parties, petitioner conceding that it is liable for a taxable gain on the insurance paid for the building in the amount of $2,524.27 represented by the difference between the insurance received by it and the cost of replacement of the property. And notwithstanding respondent’s suggestions to the contrary this gain, as petitioner agrees, is wholly recognizable under section 112(f).

A second subissue involves amounts expended for cleaning up and removing debris, for temporary electrical installation, and other emergency activities to place the plant in temporary running order, undertaken by petitioner without regard to the repair and permanent replacement of its facilities. As to these items, we conclude that they were ordinary and necessary expenses and not capital items of a permanent nature. Illinois Merchants Trust Co., 4 B. T. A. 103; Brier Hill Collieries v. Commissioner, (C. A. 6) 50 F. 2d 777; cf. Hubinger v. Commissioner (C. A. 2), 36 F. 2d 724, certiorari denied 281 U. S. 741.

A third set of expenditures was disallowed as a deduction because respondent considered them to be capital items. We have found as a fact that they were of a temporary nature consisting as they did of painting, filling cracks, and the making good of similar recurrent damage, and they are accordingly deductible as ordinary and necessary business expense. Salo Auerbach, 2 B. T. A. 67, acq. IV-2 C. B. 1.

Kespondent’s proposed addition to income because the insurance collected for fire damage to the contents of the building was compensation for an inventory loss taken in the course of petitioner’s customary inventory accounting lacks persuasiveness. Petitioner suffered a loss of personal property by fire covering a number of miscellaneous items including inventory. It is apparently conceded that although it received some insurance, the entire compensation so represented was expended in replacement of other damaged and destroyed articles. And no income was realized on the unreplaced inventory. Petitioner had a loss of property including inventory which was not compensated for because the insurance fund was inadequate to cover all of the damage. It is not essential that insurance be allocated in any specific manner to individual items destroyed. Massillon-Cleveland-Akron Sign Co., 15 T. C. 79. We conclude that petitioner suffered a total loss in the amount claimed by it which was in excess of the insurance received, hence was not compensated for by insurance or otherwise, and hence was wholly deductible, without regard to the insurance fund exhausted for other purposes.

Finally, an item claimed by petitioner as the cost of hiring attorneys and adjusters to collect its insurance claim has been disallowed as not an ordinary and necessary business expense. We disagree. The purpose of the expenditure was to collect a sum of money, and the requirement arose in the ordinary course of petitioner’s business. The item involved was a claim for money damages; the dispute did not concern title to a capital asset nor an additional expenditure undertaken to improve or increase the value of any capital item then owned by petitioner. Alexander Sprunt & Son, Inc. v. Commissioner, (C. A. 4) 64 F. 2d 424, 428. Even in condemnation proceedings, comparable perhaps to a forced sale, expenses of successful defense are deductible as ordinary and necessary. L. B. Reakirt, 29 B. T. A. 1296, affirmed per curiam (C. A. 6) 84 F. 2d 996. Much stronger is a case like the present where the loss if it occurred would be due to a casualty 6 and have no resemblance to a sale, voluntary or otherwise. Nor, although the occurrence of a fire may be an extraordinary event, is the payment of such amounts other than ordinary when a fire has occurred. See Kornhauser v. United States, 276 U. S. 145. We regard the items in question as deductible in full as ordinary and necessary business expense.

Beviewed by the Court.

Decision will be entered under Rule 50.

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Bluebook (online)
20 T.C. 272, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ticket-office-equipment-co-v-commissioner-tax-1953.