DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 80005-80010, 80042
Citation Numbers: 35 T.C. 326, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16
Judges: Tietjens
Filed Date: 11/25/1960
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*16
Petitioners received certain sums as distributions from a trust, which sums arose from the settlement of litigation under the anti-trust laws.
35 T.C. 326">*327 The Commissioner determined the following deficiencies in income tax:
Docket | Name of petitioner | Year | Income tax |
No. | |||
80005 | Estate of Mabel K. Carter, Deceased, Gilbert Carter, | ||
Executor | 1955 | $ 4,550.77 | |
80006 | Estate of Emma M. Vollrath, Deceased, Gilbert Carter, | ||
Executor | 1955 | 1,626.05 | |
1955 | 667.83 | ||
80007 | Gilbert Carter and Virginia Carter | 1956 | 2,389.34 |
1955 | 531.22 | ||
80008 | Patricia Carter | 1956 | 700.88 |
1955 | 539.05 | ||
80009 | Howard Carter | 1956 | 691.30 |
1955 | 526.64 | ||
80010 | Susan Carter | 1956 | 693.43 |
1955 | 1,200.43 | ||
80042 | David C. Carter and Frances M. Carter | 1956 | 7,339.29 |
For the year 1955 in Docket Nos. 80005 and 80006 and for the year 1956 in Docket Nos. 80007 and 80042, petitioners claim overpayments in unspecified amounts.
There are two issues to be decided. The first is whether certain sums received by petitioners as distributions from a trust, which sums arose from the settlement of litigation under the antitrust laws, were taxable as ordinary income or long-term capital gains.
The second issue is whether certain of the petitioners are entitled1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*18 to deduct from gross income included in their returns, the adjusted basis of their beneficial interests in the trust to which interests they succeeded by bequest.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The stipulated facts are so found and are included herein by reference.
Mabel K. Carter, who resided at Nevada, Missouri, died on May 18, 1954. Emma M. Vollrath, a resident of Nevada, Missouri, died on June 20, 1953. On July 7, 1954, the Probate Court for Vernon County, Missouri, granted letters testamentary in the Estate of Mabel K. Carter, Deceased, and the Estate of Emma M. Vollrath, Deceased, to Gilbert Carter. Fiduciary income tax returns for the taxable year 1955 were filed for these estates with the district director of internal revenue at Kansas City, Missouri.
Gilbert Carter and Virginia Carter, the petitioners in Docket No. 80007, are husband and wife residing at Radio Springs Park, Nevada, Missouri. They filed joint income tax returns for the taxable years 1955 and 1956 with the district director at Kansas City, Missouri.
Patricia Carter, Howard Carter, and Susan Carter, the petitioners in Docket Nos. 80008, 80009, and 80010, respectively, are individuals residing in Radio Springs Park, Nevada, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*19 Missouri. They each filed individual income tax returns for the taxable years 1955 and 1956 with the district director at Kansas City, Missouri.
35 T.C. 326">*328 David C. Carter and Frances M. Carter, the petitioners in Docket No. 80042, are husband and wife residing in Radio Springs Park, Nevada, Missouri. They filed joint income tax returns for the taxable years 1955 and 1956. Their return for 1955 was filed with the district director at St. Louis, Missouri, and their return for 1956 with the district director at Kansas City, Missouri.
On September 15, 1940, Mabel K. Carter, the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the Liberty and Sedalia Theatres in Sedalia, Missouri, in partnership with Charles T. and Olga Sears, who owned the other one-half interest in the theaters, commenced the business of exhibiting motion pictures at the Liberty Theatre. On November 7, 1940, the partnership was dissolved, and Charles T. Sears and his wife, Olga, transferred their interest in the two theaters to Mabel K. Carter, who, as sole owner, continued to operate the Liberty Theatre until May 14, 1941. On that date she ceased operation because the business was suffering losses, and leased the Liberty1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*20 Theatre along with the Sedalia Theatre to Fox Ozark Theatre Corporation.
In a declaration of trust executed on October 21, 1952, Mabel K. Carter irrevocably assigned to herself as trustee the following property:
All my claims and all my rights and causes of action against --
20th Century-Fox Film Corporation,
Paramount Pictures, Inc.,
Loew's Incorporated,
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.,
Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.,
Warner Brothers Picture Distributing Corporation,
Columbia Pictures Corporation,
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.,
United Artists Corporation,
and any other persons, corporations or entities whatsoever, or against any one or more of them, that are based upon or relate to or have arisen or resulted from any combination or combinations, conspiracy or conspiracies, or act or acts unlawful under, prohibited by or in violation of any provision or provisions of the Anti-Trust laws of the United States or of the State of Missouri or of any other state; including, but not limited to, every claim and every right or cause of action that I have under Chapter 1 of Title 15 United States Code. This trust shall embrace also such funds and other property as I, by deed or act hereafter, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*21 shall add to the corpus hereof; likewise such funds and property as any other person or persons hereafter shall give, transfer or convey to the trustee (or any substitute or successor trustee) hereunder for addition to the said trust corpus.
Article VII of the declaration of trust provided as follows:
Under the declaration of trust Mabel K. Carter, Emma M. Vollrath, and the petitioners in Docket Nos. 80007 to 80010, inclusive, and 80042 acquired vested beneficial interests in the property, corpus and income of the Mabel K. Carter Trust, as follows:
Name of beneficiary | Percentage of interest |
Mabel K. Carter | 20 |
Emma M. Vollrath | 10 |
Gilbert Carter | 2 |
Virginia Carter | 3 |
Patricia Carter | 5 |
Howard Carter | 5 |
Susan Carter | 5 |
David Carter | 10 |
On December 9, 1952, Mabel K. Carter, trustee, filed a complaint (Civil Action No. 7940) entitled "Complaint for Treble Damages Under the Anti-Trust Laws of the United States" against Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, Wesco Theatres Corporation, Loew's Incorporated, Paramount Film Distributing Corporation, United Paramount Theatres, Inc., RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*23 Warner Bros. Pictures Distributing Corporation, United Artists Corporation, Columbia Pictures Corporation, and Universal Film Exchanges, Inc. This complaint was filed in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri, Western Division.
The complaint which is included herein by this reference, was "filed under Section 4 of the Act of Congress of October 15, 1914, commonly known as the Clayton Act (
The complaint alleged many acts of the defendants in violation of the antitrust acts and sought to recover damages suffered by Mabel K. Carter as owner and operator of the Sedalia and Liberty Theatres, which said property had been injured and damaged by reason of things done by the defendants and their coconspirators forbidden in the antitrust laws of the United States.
35 T.C. 326">*330 Among other things, the complaint alleged that because --
the continued and growing operating losses resulting from the unlawful conduct and activities of defendants and their co-conspirators threatened1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*24 ultimate loss of her entire property, business and investment and being, on account of such unlawful activities and conduct of defendants and their co-conspirators, unable to sell said properties at a fair and reasonable price and unable to lease same at a fair and reasonable rental, she was compelled to capitulate to Fox and to surrender, abandon and give up her right to operate said business and property in a free, open and competitive market and to thus earn the reward and profits which said business and properties were capable of earning and producing and which, except for such unlawful conduct of defendants and their co-conspirators would have been earned and received by her. * * *
* * * *
37. By reason of the aforesaid things done by defendants and their co-conspirators in violation of said Sherman Anti-Trust Act, the business and property consisting of said Liberty Theatre and Sedalia Theatre, in Sedalia, Missouri, has been greatly injured and damaged by reason of which plaintiff has lost income, profits, business, property and investments in at least the sum of $ 500,000.00
* * * *
Wherefore, plaintiff prays judgment against the defendants, and each of them, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*25 for $ 1,500,000.00, together with a reasonable attorneys' fee and the costs and expenses reasonably and necessarily incurred in the prosecution of this action.
Gilbert Carter succeeded Mabel K. Carter as trustee of the Mabel K. Carter Trust upon her death, and was substituted as plaintiff in Civil Action No. 7940.
The antitrust action was not tried on the merits, but was settled by the parties.
On March 31, 1955, Gilbert Carter, trustee, executed an agreement and release which, after other appropriate recitations, stated among other things:
Whereas, party of the first part contends that Columbia Pictures Corporation, a New York corporation incorporated in 1924, Loew's Incorporated, a Delaware corporation incorporated in 1919, Paramount Pictures Corporation, a New York corporation incorporated in 1949, RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., a Delaware corporation incorporated in 1921, Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, a Delaware corporation incorporated in 1952, Universal Pictures Co., Inc., a Delaware corporation incorporated in 1936, United Artists Corporation, a Delaware corporation incorporated in 1919, Fox Midwest Theatres, Inc., a Delaware corporation incorporated in 1933, and Warner1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*26 Bros. Pictures, Inc., a Delaware corporation incorporated in 1953, and their respective predecessor, affiliated and subsidiary corporations, hereinafter referred to as parties of the second part, have injured him in his business and property constituting the Liberty and Sedalia Theatres by reason of things forbidden in the antitrust laws of the United States and more particularly by such acts and practices as are described and referred to in the case of
Whereas, party of the first part contends that by reason of the matters referred to in the next preceding paragraph he has suffered damage as a result of injury to his business and property constituting the Liberty Theatre and the Sedalia Theatre in the sum of Six Hundred Thousand Dollars ($ 600,000.00), and
Whereas, second parties by letter dated February 28, 1955, addressed to William G. Boatright, attorney for first party, offered to pay for full settlement of all claims and litigation1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*27 of first party and other clients of William G. Boatright therein named and identified, an aggregate amount of $ 2,300,000.00, to be allocated among said clients as therein described, $ 600,000.00 being allocated to first party, and to do other things all expressly set forth in said offer, which is by reference incorporated and made a part hereof, and
Whereas, acceptance of said offer to be binding upon second parties was conditioned upon all of those to whom it was made joining in the acceptance of same and of all terms and conditions thereof applicable to their respective claims, and
Whereas, said offer provided that because of the amount involved it was necessary for the convenience of second parties that payment of same be partly in cash and the remainder spread over a number of years according to the schedule therein contained, and
Whereas, said offer provided that liability for payment of the sums set forth therein should be several as between second parties but that each of second parties would in event of acceptance be and become liable and responsible for payment of a designated part of the cash payment and of each annual deferred payment to each of said clients as set forth1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*28 on Exhibit C, which is a part of said offer and is by reference incorporated and made a part hereof, and
* * * *
13. Party of the first part [Carter] agrees that simultaneously with the execution of this contract he will give to each of the parties of the second part, their respective predecessors, subsidiaries, affiliated corporations, officers, directors, agents, employees, successors and assigns a full and complete general release releasing all claims known or unknown of whatsoever nature and will join with parties of the second part in taking all necessary steps to dismiss with prejudice at the cost of the defendants the suit entitled
In the release Gilbert Carter as trustee agreed:
1. That he individually, as trustee or assignee, and in any other capacity or any other name or style whatsoever, hereby compromises, settles and forever discharges his above described claims and demands against parties of the second part and remises, releases, acquits and forever discharges all of the above named parties1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*29 of the second part and each and all of their successors, predecessors, subsidiaries, parents, affiliates and assigns, including but not limited to any corporation, partnership, association or other business enterprise in which any one or more of them may have any interest whatsoever and the respective stockholders, directors, officers, agents, employees, representatives and servants of each and every one of them from any and all liability, all manner of actions, cause and causes of action, suits, debts, dues, sums of money, accounts, reckonings, bills, specialties, convenants, contracts, agreements, promises, damages, claims and demands whatsoever whether in law or in equity, whether now known 35 T.C. 326">*332 or not, which he individually or otherwise now has or ever had to and including the date of these presents, including but not limited to claims arising out of, pertaining to or by reason of damages, attorneys' fees, costs and expenses suffered by him individually, as trustee or assignee or in any other capacity in connection with the ownership, operation or leasing of any theatre, including but not limited to the Liberty Theatre and the Sedalia Theatre in Sedalia, Missouri, including1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*30 but not limited to claims and damages of every kind, nature or description whether or not by reason of violations or claimed violations of the antitrust laws of the United States, but excluding all rights accruing to party of the first part by reason of the separate contract of settlement entered into contemporaneously herewith.
In accordance with the provisions of the "Agreement" and the "Release," Gilbert Carter, as trustee of the Mabel K. Carter Trust, received and distributed to beneficiaries of the trust in shares reported in the Form 1041 returns, the net amounts of $ 105,272.56 and $ 127,925.20 during the taxable years 1955 and 1956, respectively.
In the year 1956, prior to any distribution by the trustee in respect of the interests of those deceased beneficiaries in that year, David Carter, petitioner in Docket No. 80042, succeeded to all of the Emma M. Vollrath interest and to one-fourth of the Mabel K. Carter interest, under and in accordance with their respective wills and in the distributions of their estates, which interests, added to a 10 per cent interest he already owned, gave him a total interest of 25 per cent in the said trust. In the year 1956 he received from1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*31 the trustee the following distributions: $ 12,792.52 in respect of the interest he acquired from Emma M. Vollrath, deceased; $ 6,396.26 in respect of the interest he acquired from Mabel K. Carter, deceased; and $ 12,792.52 in respect of the 10 per cent interest he already owned, making a total of $ 31,981.30.
In the year 1956, prior to any distribution by the trustee in respect of the interest of Mabel K. Carter, deceased, in that year, Gilbert Carter, petitioner in Docket No. 80007, succeeded to one-fourth of the Mabel K. Carter interest, which, added to the 2 per cent interest he already owned, gave him a total interest of 7 per cent in the said trust. In the year 1956 he received from the trustee the following distributions: $ 6,396.26 in respect of the interest he acquired from Mabel K. Carter, deceased, and $ 2,558.50 in respect of the interest he already owned, making a total of $ 8,954.76.
OPINION.
The starting point in cases involving the taxability of amounts received as the result of litigation or the settlement thereof is, in general, the answer to the question, "In lieu of what were the amounts paid under the settlement received?"
The amounts in question arose from the settlement before trial of antitrust litigation for treble damages in which the plaintiff alleged that the defendant by many acts in violation of the antitrust laws injured and damaged the plaintiff by reason of "lost income, profits, business, property and investments." The settlement was paid by the defendants in a lump sum, the petitioners sharing in the proceeds through the trust described in our Findings of Fact. There was no allocation of the amount paid to any of the individual elements of damage claimed, i.e. "lost income, profits, business, property or investments." The Commissioner determined that the amounts received under the settlement were taxable as ordinary income, contending that they represented in the main, lost profits, taxable as ordinary income,
The Commissioner's position is substantiated by an examination of the pretrial proceedings held in the antitrust case. There the following colloquies took place:
Mr. Boatright: [Attorney for plaintiffs]
We are entitled to
* * * *
[Plaintiff] * * * to choose the most favorable measure of damages to him. He might show it by rentals, he might show it by market value, he might show it by profits, loss of profits. Here we propose to show it by
1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*35 The Court: Well, as I understand your claim -- * * * you are merely making a claim because Mabel Carter undertook the operation of the theatre and she was forced out of business by the conspiracy and that is all the damages that you are claiming. You are not claiming any damages in depreciation of realty or in the production of revenue from realty.
Mr. Boatright: No, not in the nature of rent.
Mr. Hardy: [Of defense counsel] Claiming
Mr. Boatright: Claiming
The Court: Now, as I understand, you are
Mr. Boatright: Yes.
The Court: -- from the operation?
Mr. Boatright: That
Petitioners concede that the amounts in question are taxable to them, but only as capital gains from which they are entitled to deduct basis in ascertaining the amount of gain. The petitioners do not predicate their claim of capital1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*36 gains treatment upon the previously discussed goodwill situation but rather advocate an approach from a little different angle. They argue that the moneys recovered represent "damages for destruction of the business of Mabel K. Carter as an independent theatre operator" and constituted "the compulsory or involuntary conversion of a capital asset held for more than six months under
In explanation of the fact that lost profits were the criteria upon which they predicated their recovery in the antitrust case, they argue that it was not a recovery of lost profits per se that was sought by the action, but simply that the profits were to be used as a measure of damages for the destruction or partial destruction of the theater business.
In order for the petitioners to prevail under the theory they advance for capital gains treatment it is obvious that the property which petitioners claim was "involuntarily converted" into money must be a capital asset within the purview of the revenue laws. Even though under some circumstances1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*37 the right to operate a theater business 35 T.C. 326">*335 might be classified as a "property right," this is not enough, as it still must qualify under the tax laws as a capital asset.
The "right to use its transportation facilities" was the basis of an involuntary conversion claim dealt with by the Supreme Court in
In
"In short," the Supreme Court went on to say, "the right to use is not a capital asset, but is simply an incident of the underlying physical property * * *." It held that there was no involuntary conversion of a capital asset and that the amounts paid for the use of the facilities were taxable as ordinary income.
Here, the petitioners had not before been in the theater business, except as lessors. They, or their predecessors, owned premises on which a theater was located which they had rented to others. There is evidence1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*39 from which we could find this was profitable to the lessees based on operation of the theater and to the lessors based on rentals. But petitioners decided to go into the theater business themselves in 1940 when the lease terminated. They ceased operating in 1941 because the operation was not profitable. From the record here, it is a reasonable inference that the "movie" people (the defendants in the antitrust action) did not destroy a going business. However, what did occur was such an interference from the time the theater 35 T.C. 326">*336 business was begun by the petitioners that they were never able to navigate freely in the ordinary flow of business. If the suppression of such a right to do business is included within the protection of the antitrust laws, the basis of a judgment arising out of litigation involving such interference would be to place the injured parties in the same profit position they would have been in had there been no interference and to punish by additional damages the ones responsible for the interference. Certainly there has been no proof here of a sale or exchange or involuntary conversion of a capital asset which would entitle the amounts received under1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*40 the settlement agreement to be considered as capital gains. It follows that the lump sum received in settlement before trial perhaps differs in degree but not in kind from any judgment that might have been rendered had the case gone to trial. If a judgment had been received it would have been entirely taxable as ordinary income being a substitute for lost profits,
Having found that the petitioners' argument of involuntary conversion has no foundation we are unable to find any other proof introduced by the petitioners that would be sufficient to carry the burden the petitioners must bear in refuting the presumption of correctness that attaches to the Commissioner's determination. The Commissioner points to the fact that none of the participants in the settlement proceedings in the antitrust case testified in this case. This reference is probably to the attorneys who conducted the negotiations. Petitioners answer this 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*41 by showing that the main protagonist of the petitioners was deceased at the time of trial of this case and that the film companies' lawyers were more "available" to the Commissioner than they were to the petitioners. We can only guess whether the testimony of these uncalled witnesses would have helped either party; but the burden of proof was on petitioners and their failure to call or the impossibility of calling the witnesses and thus carrying their burden of proof cannot be ascribed by petitioners to the Commissioner. In the circumstances a presumption that these witnesses, if called, would have testified adversely to petitioners could properly be raised.
Our holding that the amounts received under the settlement agreement constituted ordinary income and that there was no involuntary conversion of a capital asset disposes of petitioners' contention1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16">*42 that they are entitled to deduct "basis" in determining the amount of their 35 T.C. 326">*337 gain. We point out that some of the petitioners received a beneficial interest in the trust by devise or bequest. Even so, we think the amounts received by such petitioners must be included in their gross income as "income in respect of a decedent" under
1. Proceedings of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: Estate of Emma M. Vollrath, Deceased, Gilbert Carter, Executor, Docket No. 80006; Gilbert Carter and Virginia Carter, Docket No. 80007; Patricia Carter, Docket No. 80008; Howard Carter, Docket No. 80009; Susan Carter, Docket No. 80010; David C. Carter and Frances M. Carter, Docket No. 80042.↩
Commissioner v. Gillette Motor Transport, Inc. , 80 S. Ct. 1497 ( 1960 )
Raytheon Production Corp. v. Commissioner of Int. Rev. , 144 F.2d 110 ( 1944 )
Wichita Term. El. Co. v. Commissioner of Int. R. , 162 F.2d 513 ( 1947 )
Durkee v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 162 F.2d 184 ( 1947 )