Tygart Valley Glass Co. v. Commissioner

16 T.C. 941, 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 208
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 2, 1951
DocketDocket No. 25258
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 16 T.C. 941 (Tygart Valley Glass 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
Tygart Valley Glass Co. v. Commissioner, 16 T.C. 941, 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 208 (tax 1951).

Opinion

■OPINION.

Disney, Judge:

The only question for our determination is whether the amount of $241,973.34 received by petitioner on or about November 23, 1945, under a settlement agreement is taxable as ordinary income or as a long term capital gain. The petitioner alleges that the sole claim that it asserted against Hartford in 1945 was a claim based upon the fraudulent taking of its cash and assets by Hartford in 1936 (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the fraud claim), and that the amount of $241,973.34 received in the settlement with Hartford constituted a return of capital and consideration for the sale of capital assets and not, as contended by the respondent, a return of rents and royalties. The claim for the return of rents and royalties by the licensees of Hartford will hereinafter sometimes be referred to as the refund claim. In short, the petitioner argues that it had no refund claim, while the respondent urges that the fraud claim was abandoned. In the alternative, the petitioner contends that if the fraud claim was not the only claim settled, that both the fraud claim and refund claim were settled, and that the $241,973.34 should be allocated between them.

Though both parties have argued at some length as to the validity of each claim, we consider it unnecessary to decide upon such validity, as to either, for our question is not their validity, but the nature, for tax purposes, of an amount received in settlement, which rests not upon the validity but upon the nature of the matter settled. Helvering v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore, 316 U. S. 56; Raytheon Production Corp., 1 T. C. 952, affd., 144 F. 2d 110, certiorari denied, 323 U. S. 779. Moreover, we do not find in the record before us sufficient facts from which we could decide upon the validity of either claim. We proceed to determine the nature of the matter settled in consideration of the moneys paid and here involved.

By order of the District Court, the amount of rental and royalty payments made to the receiver by the various licensees of Hartford -was to be set aside and specially earmarked as coming from each licensee, and

* * * upon confirmation by the Supreme Court of the decree to he entered herein, such receipts so collected and set aside are to be returned, without interest, to the various licensees.

It is clear from the language of the District Court’s opinion, United States v. Hartford-Empire Co., 46 F. Supp. 541, that the payments made by the licensees of Hartford (including petitioner), after the .court’s order, were made with the expectation under the order that at least some of the amount would be returned. The opinion gave that right. The matter was not fully disposed of by the Supreme Court until April 2, 1945, the date of the rendering of the second Supreme Court opinion on the matter.

The first Supreme Court opinion, dated January 8, 1945, Hartford-Empire Co. v. United States, 323 U. S. 386, 411, stated that the royalties that had been paid to the receiver by Hartford’s licensees may, in the absence of certain conditions, none of which apparently apply .here, be paid over to Hartford. The second Supreme Court opinion, dated April 2, 1945, Harfford-Empire Co. et al. v. United States, 324 U. S. 570, 572, pointed out that the licensees ought not to be put into the position of recovering from Hartford royalties paid to the receiver. After further explanation of the situation in regard to the payment of royalties the Court said:

In view of the modifications required-by the opinion of this court, such licensees ■must pay reasonable rental and service charges on a quantum meruit basis (leaving out of consideration any amount otherwise payable for the privilege of practicing the patented inventions involved) in respect of the machines used in the interim. Unless Hartford, since the entry of the decree by the District Court, has been guilty of some added violation of the anti-trust laws, licensees must elect (a) to remain licensees on-such reasonable rental and royalty basis for the future as the District Court may fix, or (b) repudiate the leases and litigate their rights as against Hartford to retain any portion of the rents and royalties paid. Depending upon such election of each of the lessees, the District Court may, on the application of each, make an appropriate order for the disposition of the fund in the light of the licensees’ election and the principles stated in the opinion of this Court.

The petitioner, on brief, points out that a dissent filed in the second Supreme Court opinion states that the opinion as written by the majority of the Court is not clear in regard to the disposition of the royalties paid by the licensees to the receiver. Notwithstanding the dissent, Hartford through its representatives worked with a committee representing the non-defendant licensees of Hartford, i. e., the licensees that had paid the fund into the hands of the receiver, to negotiate a program in conformity with the Court’s opinion which could be recommended to the Court as a reasonable and equitable basis of relationship for the future between Hartford and its licensees. The negotiations were not restricted to discussing the future relationship between Hartford and the licensees but also considered the question of a cash refund of a portion of the amount paid by the licensees to the receiver.

For the petitioner, its general counsel testified that the only claim asserted by the petitioner against Hartford was its fraud claim3.and that petitioner made no claim for a return of royalties. Such testimony is not conclusive. We may not rely on it alone to decide the point, but must consider the payment of the amount here in question in the light of all the circumstances and determine the motive behind the payment. Petitioner cites Inaja Land Co., Ltd., 9 T. C. 727, as “seemingly” authority for the principle that if a taxpayer asserts but one claim, although he might have several, the amount received in settlement is taxable according to the claim asserted. As we read the Inaja case, such an interpretation is too broad. The Court there held that the petitioner had “satisfactorily established” that the consideration paid was for the property right (the one claim) alleged by the petitioner. Our question here is whether the petitioner has so established, contrary to the Commissioners determination that royalty refunds were received.

In this connection, petitioner, on brief, also argues that Hartford was negotiating with its own money, to which the petitioner had no legal claim whatsoever. We can not see reason in such a view. The final opinion of the-Supreme Court, even if we assume that it was not altogether definite as to disposition of the impounded royalties, did not award the fund outright to Hartford nor deprive the licensees of all claims to it. Again the petitioner suggests that the licensees, including petitioner, acquired no right to a return of the royalties as such, so that in receiving the $241,973.34 it was .not receiving a return of royalties. As authority, Buck Glass Co. v. Hofferbert, 176 F. 2d 250, is cited, but we find it of no assistance to the petitioner.

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Tygart Valley Glass Co. v. Commissioner
16 T.C. 941 (U.S. Tax Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
16 T.C. 941, 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tygart-valley-glass-co-v-commissioner-tax-1951.