Udolpho Wolfe Co. v. Commissioner

15 B.T.A. 485, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2847
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1929
DocketDocket No. 16010.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 B.T.A. 485 (Udolpho Wolfe Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Udolpho Wolfe Co. v. Commissioner, 15 B.T.A. 485, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2847 (bta 1929).

Opinion

[489]*489OPINION.

Lansdon:

The parties agree that the amount of $29,273.38 was disbursed by the petitioner in 1920, in the circumstances set forth in our findings of fact. There is, of course, no doubt that petitioner’s income for 1920, available for surplus purposes or for the payment of dividends to its shareholders, was reduced by the amount of the payment in controversy.

The petitioner contends that the payment in question was an expense that it could not avoid, since it was incurred in an action in equity to which it was a party, and was paid in conformity with the decree of a court of equity clothed with broad discretion as to the matter of assessing costs and fees against parties litigant. The respondent disallowed the deduction in controversy as an expense of the petitioner incurred and paid in the taxable year 1920, argues that the petitioner was not a party to the suit in equity, and suggests that the court transcended its powers in assessing the costs against the petitioner and that the payment was a distribution of surplus for the benefit of all the stockholders.

There is no controversy over the facts. We must determine, therefore, as a matter of law, whether the payment is deductible from petitioner’s income for tax purposes. It is clear that the petitioner was a party to the equity proceedings. A- claim for the refund of corporate earnings alleged to have been improperly distributed can always be made a cause of action by stockholders who believe that their rights have' been violated or sacrificed. If the objecting beneficiaries under the trust created by the will of Joel B. Wolfe had prevailed in the suit the decree of the court would have resulted in the payment of more than $500,000 to this petitioner and such payment would have become a part of its surplus to be held for business purposes or distributed to all the stockholders as might be determined by appropriate corporate action. Under the laws of the State of Rhode Island the court properly admitted petitioner as a party to the suit, as shown by the following provisions:

Section 12, Chapter 339, General Laws of R. I., 1923,
Whenever any bill or proceeding in equity is pending, any person not a party thereto may, upon making it appear to the superior court that he is interested in the subject matter of the suit or proceeding, * * * be allowed to become a party to such suit or proceeding, upon such terms and conditions as the court shall prescribe.

In Burrill v. Garst, 19 R. I. 38; 31 Atl. 436, the Supreme Court of the State of Rhode Island, in construing the above statute, said:

[490]*490l'lie general rule in equity as to parties is that all persons interested in the subject-matter of the suit or in the object to be attained by it ought to be made parties either as complainants or respondents.

It also held that such parties might be brought in upon their own application, the voluntary orders of the court, or—

where the defendants already before the court have such an interest in having them made parties as to authorize them to object to proceeding without such parties.

In these circumstances and in the light of cited statutes and decisions the argument that petitioner was not a party to the suit in equity is not persuasive.

The respondent suggests that the payment in question should be regarded as a distribution of corporation surplus for the benefit of stockholders. Upon the record we are of the opinion that this theory is untenable. Only a part of the stockholders objected to the proposed settlement of the trustees. Many of the nonobjectors were not represented in the suit and incurred no expenses for counsel fees or otherwise in connection therewith. The payment of the costs of the litigation from surplus in nowise benefited them since it discharged no obligations which they had incurred or assumed and reduced their interest in the assets of the petitioner. The legal basis for this theory is not apparent but if it is sound it would seem to follow that a great body of corporate disbursements might be excluded from allowable deductions from income as it must be presumed that every payment lawfully made by a corporation is for the benefit of all the stockholders. In proper circumstances a court may require a corporation to distribute a part or all of its surplus for the benefit of shareholders, but the selection of a special group to receive the benefits of such a distribution at the expense of all the remaining stockholders can not be supported by any principle of law with which we are familiar. It is our opinion that the payment in question can not be regarded as distribution from surplus in which benefits measured by stockhold-ings were enjoyed by all the shareholders of the petitioner.

The respondent also argues that in the assessment of the costs and fees here in question against the petitioner the court of equity transcended its discretionary powers and suggests that the petitioner should have appealed against that judgment. This suggestion raises questions in which we have no concern and that in our opinion are outside the field of our limited jurisdiction. It may be that the court was moved by motives of expediency, but it is well settled that in an equity suit the assessment of costs is discretionary with the court. The rule is stated in 15 Corpus Juris 32, 34 as follows:

In equity tbe costs are not necessarily adjudged, as at law, against tbe losing party. In tbe absence of statutes providing otherwise, tbe allowance of costs is wholly within the court’s discretion, and such discretion cannot be reviewed or interfered with, unless it has been manifestly abused.

[491]*491We are not concerned with the cause or reasons for the assessment against the petitioner, only with the amount in controversy, and are satisfied that the court of equity acted within its proper authority, based upon .section 22, chapter 339, General Laws of Rhode Island, which provides:

In any bill or petition in equity wherein construction of a will or trust deed or any part thereof is asked, there may be allowed to each of the parties defendant brought in by such bill or petition, applying therefor, such reasonable sum for expenses and on account of counsel fees as the court in which such case is pending shall deem proper; such allowance shall be taxed as costs in the cause and be paid out of the estate or fund in the hands of the complainant concerning which estate or fund the construction is asked.

It is true that the payment here in controversy was not in the nature of an ordinary or recurring expense incident to the production of the petitioner’s operating income in the taxable year, but the courts and this Board have often held that regular recurrence of expenditures is not an essential characteristic of deductible expenses and that unusual, extraordinary and nonrecurring payments, including attorneys’ fees and court costs in connection with suits at law relating to the business of a corporation may be deductible from gross income for Federal tax purposes as operating expense unless it is clear that the obligation requiring such payments was incurred for the purpose of preserving or increasing capital assets, in which event they should be capitalized. The objecting beneficiaries in the suit in equity in this proceeding raised the single question that the income of the trust had been improperly distributed.

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Related

Udolpho Wolfe Co. v. Commissioner
15 B.T.A. 485 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
15 B.T.A. 485, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/udolpho-wolfe-co-v-commissioner-bta-1929.