DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 8178-71, 1534-72
Judges: Irwin,Tannenwald,Raum
Filed Date: 3/19/1975
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*664 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of Neat Laundry, Inc., for the taxable year 1967 in the amount of $ 75,190.16, and notified petitioners that the following liabilities, constituting their liability as transferees of the assets of the corporation, would be assessed against them:
Docket No. | Transferee liability |
8178-71 | $ 75,190.16 |
1534-72 | 61,781.97 |
The issues for determination are: (1) Whether Neat Laundry, Inc., is required under the tax benefit rule to include in its 1967 income the amount received from the sale of its previously expensed rental items even though such sale was made pursuant to a plan of complete liquidation under
All of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, are found accordingly.
Petitioners Andrew M. Greenstein, Manuel D. Goldman, and Suzanne M. Cohen are the duly appointed and acting executors of the Estate of David B. Munter, who died on July 2, 1967, having been so appointed by the Surrogate's Court of Monroe County, N.Y., on July 26, 1967. At the time of the filing of the executors' petition with this Court, the office of the Estate of David B. Munter was located in Rochester, N.Y.
Petitioner Gertrude M. Demerer is an individual residing in Hallandale, Fla., at the time of the filing of her petition with this Court.
Neat Laundry, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as Neat), was a New York corporation organized under the laws of the State of *665 New York on January 12, 1948, to engage, among other things, in the business *179 of renting cleaned and laundered sheets, pillow cases, towels, table cloths, napkins, industrial and commercial uniforms and garments, wiping cloths and materials, other textiles and apparels, and in general to conduct an industrial and other laundry business.
Neat's customers consisted of restaurants, hotels and motels, various industrial users of wiping rags, walk-on mats and dust control devices, and those whose business required its employees to be appropriately clothed in industrial uniforms. A substantial amount of the rental business was handled pursuant to 1- and 2-year lease agreements with the number of linen items and garments furnished by Neat dependent solely upon the requirements of its customers. The useful life of most of the rental items was 12 to 18 months, depending on the type of item, the frequency of its cleaning, and the use to which it was put.
Neat timely filed a Federal income tax return for each of the calendar years 1965, 1966, and 1967 with the district director of internal revenue at Buffalo, N.Y., and reported gross receipts of $ 502,472.95, $ 592,436.29, and $ 497,708.20, respectively, derived from the following sources:
1965 | 1966 | 1967 | |
Rental of linen supplies | $ 327,452.51 | $ 368,095.59 | $ 278,112.35 |
Rental of commercial garments | 37,470.79 | 82,254.87 | 84,958.12 |
Towel rental | 23,511.39 | 26,312.10 | 18,528.51 |
Rental of industrial uniforms | 99,416.60 | 96,593.47 | 91,668.85 |
Dust control (wiping rags, etc.) | 8,701.60 | 19,816.40 | 24,210.11 |
College linen supply rental | 5,786.00 | 0 | 0 |
Resale of items purchased | 134.06 | 2,363.84 | 0 |
Rag sales | 0 | 0 | 230.26 |
Total gross receipts | 502,472.95 | 595,436.29 | 497,708.20 |
*180 For Federal income tax purposes, Neat charged the cost of the linen supplies and other rental items to an inventory account at the time they were purchased. When a rental item was first placed in service by delivery to the customer's place of business, the cost of such item was removed from the inventory account and charged to the applicable expense account. The inventory value reported by Neat in the balance sheets on its Federal income tax returns as of the end of each taxable year reflected the aggregate cost of the purchased rental items not yet placed in service.
*666 On its Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1965, 1966, and 1967, Neat claimed deductions for "Cost of Goods Sold" in the amounts of $ 295,288.17, $ 294,739.40, and $ 181,514.30, respectively. Such deductions included the cost of rental items placed in service during the years, computed as follows:
1965 | 1966 | 1967 | |
Beginning inventory of linen supplies | $ 2,213.00 | $ 2,398.00 | $ 646.00 |
Purchases: | |||
Linen supplies | 70,474.05 | 51,618.00 | 35,636.86 |
Garments | 19,165.84 | 7,746.68 | 0 |
Shirts | 9.38 | 0 | 0 |
Rags | 86.02 | 2,221.46 | 0 |
Industrial uniforms | 23,589.49 | 22,093.42 | 32,290.09 |
Aprons | 0 | 0 | 2,966.41 |
Dust control supplies | 0 | 1,459.14 | 1,203.26 |
Linen conservation on | |||
customer premises | 2,377.46 | 432.91 | 0 |
Linen conservation at laundry | 22.40 | 146.72 | 0 |
Industrial embroidery | 1,945.81 | 1,952.22 | 0 |
Vacumats | 0 | 1,977.85 | 0 |
Total | 119,883.50 | 92,046.40 | 72,742.62 |
Less: Ending inventory of linen | |||
supplies | 2,398.00 | 646.00 | 0 |
Total cost of rental | |||
items placed in service | 117,485.50 | 91,400.40 | 72,742.62 |
*181 Neat reported taxable income of $ 3,664.54, $ 37,324.41, and $ 2,321.34 on its Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1965, 1966, and 1967, respectively.
On September 19, 1967, Gertrude M. Demerer and the executors of the Estate of David B. Munter, being all of the shareholders of Neat, and Suzanne I. Munter, Walter E. Loebmann, Andrew M. Greenstein, and Gertrude Demerer, being all the directors of Neat, unanimously voted to sell the corporate assets and completely liquidate Neat within 12 months. Following the adoption of the liquidation resolution, Neat entered into an agreement dated September 19, 1967, with Consolidated Laundries Corp. *667 purchase price of $ 350,250 was to be applied and allocated as follows:
*182 (a) All laundry, office and plant machinery and equipment, all trucks and vehicles, all furniture and fixtures $ 100,000 (b) All used and new linens and garments, laundry supplies, office supplies and stationery, towel cabinets, bags, hampers, and all other personal property used in connection with service to the customers of the Seller $ 175,000 (c) All outstanding accounts receivable of customers presently being served by the Seller $ 55,250 (d) All customer contracts, customer lists, customer cards, route books, route lists and all other books and records pertaining to service to customers together with all right, title and interest of the Seller in and to the name "Neat Laundry" and all of the Seller's right, title and interest in and to the telephone number or numbers used by it $ 20,000
The agreement of September 19, 1967, was supplemented and amended by a letter dated November 19, 1967, from Neat to Consolidated. Pursuant to the terms of this letter, the final selling price of the accounts receivable was reduced from $ 55,250 to $ 45,898.68, thereby reducing the aggregate sale price of all of the assets to $ 340,898.68.
The sale of assets pursuant to the agreement with Consolidated was consummated on or about September 22, 1967, at which time appropriate bills of sale and instruments of transfer and assignment were delivered to Consolidated and Consolidated delivered to Neat its series of promissory notes and cash representing the purchase price.
On October 16, 1967, Suzanne I. Munter, president of Neat, submitted a Corporate Dissolution or Liquidation Information Return (Form 966) to the district director of internal revenue at Buffalo, N.Y.
On Schedule D of its Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1967 Neat reported a gain of $ 108,943.29 from the sale of its assets to Consolidated, computed as follows: *668
Depreciation | ||||
Kind of property | Sales price | allowed | Cost basis | Gain or (loss) |
Accounts receivable | $ 45,898.68 | 0 | $ 53,998.41 | ($ 8,099.76) |
Uniform and linen | ||||
supplies rented | ||||
to customers | 175,000.00 | 0 | 0 | 175,000.00 |
Machinery and | ||||
equipment | 100,000.00 | $ 181,598.58 | 284,673.08 | (61,706.95) |
Cabinets and | ||||
containers | 19,561.62 | 31,290.29 | ||
Delivery equipment | 32,954.38 | 65,890.52 | ||
Office equipment | 13,181.78 | 17,090.81 | ||
Leasehold | ||||
improvements | 11,679.87 | 21,738.48 | ||
Business records and | ||||
contracts (goodwill) | 13,000.00 | 0 | 9,250.00 | 3,750.00 |
Totals | 333,898.68 | 258,976.23 | 483,931.62 | 108,943.29 |
In *183 computing the reported gain on the sale of its business records, customer contracts, and goodwill, Neat reduced the sales price from $ 20,000 to $ 13,000 to reflect the amount ($ 7,000) of expenses incurred to effectuate the sale of all of the assets to Consolidated. On its 1967 income tax return Neat claimed nonrecognition of the entire amount of the reported gain of $ 108,943.29 pursuant to
None of the officers, shareholders, or directors of Neat were officers, shareholders, or directors of Consolidated as of September 19, 1967, or as of November 19, 1967. As of September 19, 1967, petitioners Andrew M. Greenstein, Manuel D. Goldman, and Suzanne M. Cohen, as executors of the Estate of David B. Munter, owned 80 shares of the common stock of Neat, which shares represented 80 percent of the issued and outstanding capital stock of Neat. As of such date, the remaining 20 shares of stock of Neat were owned by petitioner Gertrude M. Demerer.
Pursuant to the plan of complete liquidation, Neat's assets were distributed to its shareholders as follows:
Total value of | ||
Date of distribution | Shareholder | assets distributed |
Jan. 4, 1968 | Estate of David B. Munter | $ 88,000.00 |
Jan. 4, 1968 | Gertrude M. Demerer | 22,000.00 |
June 12, 1968 | Estate of David B. Munter | 152,000.00 |
June 12, 1968 | Gertrude M. Demerer | 38,050.00 |
From Goldstein, Goldman, Kessler, | ||
and Underberg, trust account | ||
Nov. 18, 1968 | Estate of David B. Munter | $ 5,647.88 |
Nov. 18, 1968 | Gertrude M. Demerer | 1,411.97 |
Mar. 26, 1969 | Estate of David B. Munter | 1,280.00 |
Mar. 26, 1969 | Gertrude M. Demerer | 320.00 |
*669 *184 The total value of assets received by petitioners Andrew M. Greenstein, Manuel D. Goldman, and Suzanne M. Cohen, as executors of the Estate of David B. Munter, was $ 246,927.88. Petitioner Gertrude M. Demerer received, in total, assets valued at $ 61,781.97.
On September 19, 1968, Neat caused to be filed a certificate of dissolution with the Department of State of the State of New York and its corporate existence ceased.
Andrew Greenstein, as one of the executors of the Estate of David B. Munter, and Gertrude Demerer have each executed a transferee agreement whereby they have assumed and agreed to pay the amounts of any Federal income taxes finally determined as due and payable by Neat for the taxable year 1967 to the extent of their liability at law or in equity as transferees of Neat's assets.
In the explanation of the liabilities to be assessed against petitioners, the Commissioner determined that the method of accounting employed by Neat did not clearly reflect its income and determined that no deduction is allowable to Neat for the cost of linen supplies purchased in 1967 and sold to Consolidated. The Commissioner further determined that the sum of $ 102,257.38 derived by Neat *185 from the sale of the linen supplies to Consolidated represented a recovery of amounts deducted by Neat in 1965 and 1966.
Petitioners contend that Neat is entitled to nonrecognition of the gain realized on the sale of the rental items pursuant to its liquidation and sale of assets, notwithstanding the tax benefit rule, since there was compliance with the terms and provisions of
Respondent, on the other hand, contends that the tax benefit doctrine is applicable to a liquidating corporation notwithstanding *670 its qualification under the nonrecognition of gain provisions of
We shall focus our attention first upon the issue of whether the tax benefit rule may override the nonrecognition provisions of
*671 The tax benefit rule provides that if an amount deducted from gross income is later recovered, the recovery is income in the year of recovery. However, to the extent that there is no tax benefit resulting from the deduction, the recovery is not included in income in the recovery year. While the rule is judicial in origin, it is applied to specific situations by certain Code provisions. See, for example, secs. 111, 1245, and 1250. Where not codified, the judicial rule continues. See Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation, sec. 7.34 (1969 rev.). See also O'Hare, "Statutory Nonrecognition of Income and the Overriding Principle of the Tax Benefit Rule in the Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders,"
Subsection (a) of
*673 It is evident that the purpose of
Reference to the legislative history of
Standing alone, the language of the statute does not appear to fully serve this purpose. Obvious problems arise in the context of a liquidating corporation's sale of receivables and other rights to income already earned, but not yet received, which are not expressly excluded from
*674 In
On appeal the Tenth Circuit reversed our decision and held that the tax benefit rule does override the nonrecognition provisions of
The Tenth Circuit decision in
tax benefit principles would seem to apply with even greater force in such a case as this.
* * * When costs are recovered in the taxable year in which they were incurred, the extent of deductible costs is accordingly reduced. Whether the Commissioner's ruling is regarded as disallowance of an item of expense or a restoration to income of the recovery is of *199 no consequence. In neither case may the recovery be regarded as "gain" when so to regard it would result in a tax benefit the conferring of which serves to distort income. [
The court went on to find that there was no gain present which could be protected from recognition by the provisions of
In
In
It seems clear to us that tax benefit principles should apply in this situation. The $ 175,000 of the amount realized is attributable to deductions from which Neat had received a full tax benefit. If in addition to nonrecognition Neat should be entitled to the tax benefit resulting from the deductions attributable to the expensed property, then the corporation would be the recipient of an additional benefit which in our judgment is without legislative support and is clearly inconsistent with the general intent of Congress in enacting revenue laws. The result sought by petitioners certainly does not appear to be in "harmony with the * * * [Code] as an organic whole." *202 Compare
While we agree with the Third, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits and the Court of Claims that situations such as the instant one call for the application of the tax benefit rule, we are inclined to put more stress on the primary purpose in enacting
In our judgment due consideration must be given to the unique relationship between
While recognizing that no hard and fast rule is likely to fit every case arising under
Without necessarily subscribing to the Sixth Circuit's approach, we shall look at our own precedent under
Viewing the issue from this perspective, we turn to petitioners' reliance on
Since we consider the tax benefit rule applicable to both the deductions taken in the prior years and in the year of sale, we need not consider respondent's section 446(b) argument.
Petitioners are, therefore, liable as transferees for the deficiency in income tax determined against Neat.
*678
Tannenwald,
The need to assess and collect taxes at fixed and relatively short intervals underpins the principle of taxation that transactions which may possibly be subject to further developments substantially altering their character for tax purposes should nevertheless be treated as final and closed so that their tax consequences can be determined.
When the tax benefit rule is viewed in its true character -- as a necessary counterweight to the consequences of the annual accounting principle -- much of the difficulty of this case *679 disappears. Judicial preoccupation with the questions whether items like those involved herein are "property" (
There is no indication that Congress intended
Petitioner's reliance on the application by analogy of
I now turn to the question of the correlation of the majority opinion herein with the majority opinion in
Taking the same approach herein poses a problem because there is some difficulty in seeing how a distribution in liquidation under
But even if this dichotomy between *212
One final word. As far as the 1967 taxable year is concerned, I am satisfied that, aside from any question of the *213 applicability of the tax benefit rule, it was clearly appropriate for respondent, acting under section 446(b), to make the adjustment with respect to the rental items expensed in that year. See 1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated.↩ 2. Name subsequently changed on Apr. 3, 1968, to Sears Industries, Inc.↩ 3. In making this determination we have given some consideration to views so recently espoused in "This Court has recognized its obligation to promote uniform application of the internal revenue laws, 4. 5. (a) General Rule. -- If -- (1) a corporation adopts a plan of complete liquidation on or after June 22, 1954, and (2) within the 12-month period beginning on the date of the adoption of such plan, all of the assets of the corporation are distributed in complete liquidation, less assets retained to meet claims, (b) Property Defined. -- (1) In general. -- For purposes of subsection (a), the term "property" does not include -- (A) stock in trade of the corporation, or other property of a kind which would properly be included in the inventory of the corporation if on hand at the close of the taxable year, and property held by the corporation primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of its trade or business, (B) installment obligations acquired in respect of the sale or exchange (without regard to whether such sale or exchange occurred before, on, or after the date of the adoption of the plan referred to in subsection (a)) of stock in trade or other property described in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph, and (C) installment obligations acquired in respect of property (other than property described in subparagraph (A)) sold or exchanged before the date of the adoption of such plan of liquidation. (2) Nonrecognition with respect to inventory in certain cases. -- Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of this subsection, if substantially all of the property described in subparagraph (A) of such paragraph (1) which is attributable to a trade or business of the corporation is, in accordance with this section, sold or exchanged to one person in one transaction, then for purposes of subsection (a) the term "property" includes- (A) such property so sold or exchanged, and (B) installment obligations acquired in respect of such sale or exchange.↩ 6. Like Neat, the corporate taxpayer in that case had been engaged in the business of providing a rental service of laundered apparel and other items and pursuant to 7. Petitioners have also contended that to hold tax benefit principles applicable in this instance would put the decision in conflict with 1. A fortiori, the rental linens are clearly "property."↩ 2. Compare 3. Respondent's concession that the method of accounting used by the corporation clearly reflected income in prior years does not preclude a challenge to that method for the year of liquidation. Footnotes
United States v. Skelly Oil Co. ( 1969 )
Commissioner v. Court Holding Co. ( 1945 )
family-record-plan-incorporated-dissolved-and-family-record-plan ( 1962 )
General Utilities & Operating Co. v. Helvering ( 1935 )
West Seattle National Bank of Seattle v. Commissioner of ... ( 1961 )
J. C. Williamson, Transferee of Williamson Well Service, ... ( 1961 )
United States v. Felix Benitez Rexach ( 1973 )
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. South Lake Farms, Inc., ... ( 1963 )
Hollywood Baseball Association v. Commissioner of Internal ... ( 1970 )
Mayfair Minerals, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1972 )
Frank E. Connery, in No. 19,432 v. United States of America.... ( 1972 )
Citizens' Acceptance Corporation, a Dissolved Corporation ... ( 1972 )
Midland-Ross Corporation, Transferee of Surface Combustion ... ( 1973 )
Burnet v. Sanford & Brooks Co. ( 1931 )
United States v. Cumberland Public Service Co. ( 1950 )
Waltham Netoco Theatres, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal ... ( 1968 )
Wood Harmon Corporation v. United States ( 1963 )
Abraham Winer v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1967 )
the-buckeye-union-casualty-company-and-subsidiary-v-commissioner-of ( 1971 )
Alice Phelan Sullivan Corporation, a California Corporation ... ( 1967 )