Towers v. Commissioner

24 T.C. 199, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 187
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 18, 1955
DocketDocket Nos. 28753, 28754, 28778, 28779, 28816
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 24 T.C. 199 (Towers 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
Towers v. Commissioner, 24 T.C. 199, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 187 (tax 1955).

Opinions

FisheR, Judge:

The respondent determined deficiencies in the Federal income taxes of petitioners as follows:

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The issues presented for our consideration are:

(1) Whether certain unpaid loans made by several of petitioners in 1947 to Rumsey Products, Inc., with which they were variously associated as stockholders, employees, officers, and directors were business bad debts arising from a business of promoting, organizing, managing, and financing business enterprises, or were nonbusiness bad debts.

(2) Whether losses sustained by several of the petitioners from advances to a so-called “motor pool” organized to finance motor purchases of Rumsey Products, Inc., were losses incurred in a trade or business, or a transaction entered into for profit, under section 23 (e) of the 1939 Code, or were business bad debts under section 23 (k) (1) or nonbusiness bad debts under section 23 (k) (4).

(3) Whether losses sustained by several of the petitioners, when as a consequence of involuntary bankruptcy proceedings Rumsey Products, Inc., failed to deliver certain finished lawn mowers purchased by these petitioners for resale, were incurred in a trade or business or a transaction entered into for profit under section 23 (e) (1) or (2), or were nonbusiness bad debts.

(4) Whether a distribution in 1945 by Rumsey Manufacturing Co., the stock of which was owned by several of petitioners, represented a distribution of profits or the repayment of the proceeds of certain claims, and if the latter, (a) whether petitioners have established a basis for said claims, and (b) whether or not the proceeds are to be treated as capital gains.

(5) Whether a cash distribution made by Rumsey Manufacturing Co. in 1945 in connection with the retirement of its preferred stock was made in partial liquidation or was a distribution essentially equivalent to a taxable dividend.

(6) Whether a distribution made by Eumsey Manufacturing Co. in 1945 in satisfaction of certain claims against the company, previously purchased by several of petitioners, was taxable in full as ordinary income.

(7) Whether certain amounts, or any part thereof, paid by petitioner Albert Towers in discharge of his liability as endorser of certain notes are to be treated as business losses, losses incurred in transactions entered into for profit, business bad debts, or nonbusiness bad debts.

(8) Whether or not certain expenses, or any part thereof, incurred by several of petitioners in an unsuccessful attempt to reorganize Eumsey Products, Inc., in connection with proceedings in bankruptcy in 1947, are deductible as either business losses or business bad debts.

(9) Whether petitioners are entitled to net operating loss carry-backs from 1947 to 1945 and 1946.

(10) Whether the amount realized by petitioner Theodore C. Bon-ney on the sale of a note given petitioner by Eumsey Manufacturing Co. for accrued salary and director’s fees is to be treated as capital gain or ordinary income.

(11) Whether petitioner Theodore C. Bonney realized additional income in 1946 and 1947, based on the fair rental value of certain premises owned by Eumsey Manufacturing Co. and occupied by Bon-ney who was an officer, director, and stockholder of Eumsey Mfg.

(12) To what extent, if any, petitioner Bonney suffered a casualty loss, within the meaning of section 23 (e) (3), as a result of amounts spent for repairs for storm damage to the premises rented by Bonney from Eumsey Mfg. when Bonney was under no obligation to make any such repairs.

(13) Whether, in the particular circumstances of this case, monies which petitioner Bonney gave to Edna for clothing and spending money during the period that they lived together as man and wife may be deducted as a loss from theft under section 23 (e) (3), when their marriage was, in fact, a nullity and was allegedly induced by fraudulent misrepresentation.

(14) Whether certain monies and property which Bonney transferred to Edna to deter her from further spreading allegedly false and malicious statements concerning Bonney’s personal character and professional and business integrity are deductible either as theft losses or business expenses.

Of the remaining issues raised in the petitions, some have been settled by stipulation of the parties. Others have not been urged in petitioners’ briefs and are deemed to have been abandoned.

GENERAL FINDINGS OF FACT.

The facts are partly stipulated and, to the extent so stipulated, are incorporated herein by reference.

All of the petitioners filed timely Federal income tax returns for the years involved with the then collector of internal revenue for the twenty-first district of New York.

Petitioners Albert Averbach, Theodore C. Bonney, and David M. Hayman are attorneys at law who have actively engaged in the practice of law for many years.

It is stipulated in respect to each of petitioners, inter alia, that,

During the years 1936 to 1947, inclusive, petitioner was engaged in a number of promotional business ventures. He made loans, advances and gave other financial assistance to said ventures in varying amounts. He also spent [sic'] a great deal of time and effort to [sic] the various enterprises. * * *

Petitioners’ various promotional activities until 1939, as they appear from the record, were as follows.

Albert Averbach. — In 1934 Averbach investigated the possibility of promoting a door-to-door sale of Eugenie Products cosmetics. In 1935 he organized the Music Users Protective Ass’n to combat abuses of ASCAP, and had an interest in the operation of a burlesque theater and a nightclub. In 1936 he investigated the possibility of acquiring a razor blade company,1 and of promoting Sam Chiodo’s hair dye preparation; he also had an interest in the promotion of a single motion picture called “A Clouded Name,” and in the operation of a nightclub. In 1931 he investigated the possibility of promoting or marketing numerous formulas, patents, devices, products, and business ideas, such as suntan oil, mosquito repellent, a self-expelling can, “bladeaway,” a liquid dentifrice, fireproof cloths and fabrics, the sale of perfume through vending machines, the Hunt Club line of men’s toiletries, Ponaris Tooth Ache Poultice, Syroco Dog Banks, a new type electric razor, the Mary Scott Powland line of cosmetics, Tiny San, a display package case for 10 cent items, a woman’s magazine,2 the establishment of a chain of milk bars, Chill-Chest icebox, sale of an automobile hinge, Consention Can Opener, sale of advertising space on electric clocks, acquisition of closed motion picture theaters, Kan-foush Insecticides, Mochatelle (a South American drink), a display case for the sale of low-priced drug items, an educational film, patents of Miss Beulah Louise Henry (Lady Edison), construction of radio cabinets, and the organization of the textile industry on the employer level.3

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Bluebook (online)
24 T.C. 199, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towers-v-commissioner-tax-1955.