DocketNumber: Docket No. 8380-78.
Filed Date: 5/19/1980
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
TANNENWALD,
Except as hereinafter indicated, petitioner's shares were at all relevant times held in equal numbers by Enrico Rosso, Vincent Scapparo, and Dante Martinelli. During the years 1970 through 1974, Rosso was petitioner's president as well as one of its directors. At all relevant times, Rosso, Scapparo and Martinelli were actively involved in the conduct of petitioner's business.
Tanger Industries (Tanger), is a California corporation incorporated on August 29, 1967, with its principal place of business at Los Angeles County, California. On April 2, 1973, Tanger officially changed its name of Verit Industries. For the sake of convenience, the name Tanger will*413 be used hereinafter to refer to the corporation both before and after April 2, 1973. Tanger maintained its books on the basis of a fiscal year ending June 30th.
On October 29, 1970, petitioner entered into an agreement with Tanger captioned "Plan of Reorganization and Agreement." The agreement provided for petitioner's shareholders to exchange all the outstanding capital stock of petitioner for Tanger stock. Petitioner's stockholders entered into employment contracts with Tanger and continued to conduct petitioner's operations.
The plan of reorganization was implemented and petitioner became a wholly owned subsidiary of Tanger.
Rosso, Scapparo, and Martinelli gradually became dissatisfied with petitioner's being part of the Tanger group, because they disapproved of various financial practices of Tanger and feared that such practices might ruin petitioner's business which they had developed since the time of its incorporation. Finally, in early January 1973, they informed Tanger that they wished to withdraw from the Tanger group. Tanger agreed to the withdrawal, and on January 15, 1973, Rosso, Scapparo, and Martinelli entered into an agreement with Tanger to transfer to*414 Tanger all of the Tanger common stock (with certain minor adjustments) which had been issued to them in connection with the October 29, 1970, agreement in exchange for all the outstanding stock of petitioner in equal shares. The agreement was drafted by petitioner's attorney. At the time of this agreement, petitioner and its shareholders (Rosso, Scapparo, and Martinelli) also executed a general release discharging Tanger from --
all claims, demands, agreements, contracts, covenants, representations, warranties, promises, undertakings, actions, suits, causes of action, obligations, ontroversies, debts, costs, expenses, accounts, damages, judgments, losses and liabilities, of whatsoever kind or nature, in law, equity or otherwise, whether or not presently known or unknown, and whether or not disclosed or concealed, which against them, or any of them, the undersigned has had, may have had or now has, or which any of their respective successors, or assigns, hereafter can, shall or amy have for or by reason of any matter, cause or thing whatsoever, specifically excluding only rights or claims arising out of the representations, warranties, or obligations of Tanger set forth in the agreement*415 signed that day.
The release further provided:
It is expressly understood that
"1542. General Release; extent
A general release does not extend to claims which the creditor does not know or suspect to exist in his favor at the time of executing the release, which, if known by him, must have materially affected his settlement with the debtor."
The undersigned, and each of them, hereby specifically and intentionally WAIVE any rights they or any of them may now or hereafter have under said
* * *
Tanger executed a similar general release in favor of petitioner, Rosso, Scapparo, and Martinelli.
*416 Petitioner's income for the period of October 29, 1970, through January 15, 1973, was included in the consolidated returns filed by Tanger for the taxable years including that period.
Prior to the reorganization, petitioner's records were kept by its accountant, Jim Clark, of Moran and Co., Oakland, California. After the reorganization, petitioner kept some records of its own, but other books were kept by Tanger's accountant and, in particular, petitioner did not do its own tax accounting. Jim Clark was not employed by petitioner during the period it was part of the Tanger group and he was ultimately dismissed by Tanger. From time to time, Tanger would orally request from petitioner amounts to be used for the payment of taxes. Petitioner paid these amounts without reviewing Tanger's books. Petitioner's shareholders did not ask to see the books maintained by Tanger.
After the withdrawal agreement, Jim Clark resumed petitioner's accounting and set up new books for petitioner. In the course of this being done, Rosso concluded that petitioner had paid to Tanger approximately $31,000 more than its allocable share of the consolidated taxes of the Tanger group during the period*417 October 29, 1970, through January 15, 1973 (see n. 8,
David Swanson joined Tanger in June 1973 as corporate comptroller, held that position until September 1973, and was thereafter secretary-treasurer of Tanger until 1976. Throughout that period and up to the time of trial, he was vice-president in charge of finance. In that capacity, he helped prepare Tanger's 1974 annual report.
The annual report of Tanger and its subsidiaries for 1974 showed: (a) net losses of $113,573 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1974, and of $848,632 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1973; (b) gross sales and other income of $27,142,061 in the 1974 fiscal year and $25,562,554 in the 1973 fiscal year; and (c) a net worth of $1,996,850 at the end of the 1974 fiscal year and $3,084,618 at the end of the 1973 fiscal year.
Tanger never filed a petition in bankruptcy or for an arrangement under the Bankruptcy Act. It was a going concern on October 11, 1979, the date of trial herein.
Tanger*418 never executed a note for the repayment of the amount petitioner claimed was owed to it nor any other written acknowledgement of any obligation in respect of any such claim.
OPINION
The sole issue for decision is whether petitioner is entitled to deduct $26,982.58 as a bad debt under
*420 Petitioner points out various factual differences which, it contends, distinguish
*421
The parties argue at length as to whether the general release signed by petitioner on January 15, 1973, upon withdrawal from the Tanger group, extinguished any claim that it might otherwise have had against Tanger. Their disagreement relates to the application of the parol evidence rule in light of
Swanson also offered an opinion, based on work sheets he had prepared as extracts or analyses of two documents (petitioner's tax return for a fiscal period ended November 7, 1970, and a financial statement prepared by an auditor for the consolidated group), that petitioner had a valid claim against Tanger. Swanson did not participate in the preparation of those documents and was not employed*424 by Tanger at the time they were prepared. Petitioner did not produce those documents at trial nor did it make them available to respondent for inspection prior to trial, although petitioner did not claim that such documents were unavailable. The individuals who prepared those documents did not testify. Upon respondent's motion, Swanson's work sheets were excluded from evidence.
The hard fact, with respect to Swanson's testimony and his work sheets (and indeed the testimony of the accountant even if he had been produced as a witness) is that we would not have been required to accept such testimony (as we are not required to accept Rosso's testimony) because the underlying documentary material -- to wit, the books and records of the Tanger group -- was not produced; nor does the record contain any evidence as to why they were not produced other than some generalized statements of difficulties in obtaining such books and records and the alleged unavailabiltiy of other witnesses. There is not the slightest indication in the record that petitioner made any attempt to subpoena such books and records or witnesses. Even if the books and records were so voluminous that they might not*425 have conveniently been introduced into evidence, they should at least have been available for inspection by the Court and respondent in order to determine the extent to which they might have been properly offered into evidence or, at the very least, utilized by respondent to conduct a meaningful cross-examination.
The only other evidence offered by petitioner to prove the existence of an indebtedness was the testimony of Rosso and Swanson as to the initiation of a lawsuit by petitioner against Tanger arising out of the alleged overpayments of more than $30,000 and to the settlement of that suit by the equal division by the parties of a check for approximately $8,000, received as a tax refund from the Internal Revenue Service, payable to Tanger and petitioner.We find it unnecessary to explore respondent's attempt to apply
Tanger never filed a petition in bankruptcy or for an arrangement under the Bankruptcy Act and, at the time of trial, was still a going concern. See
In sum, aside from the controlling effect of
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect in the taxable year at issue, unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. Several of petitioner's proposed findings of fact allegedly based on the "entire record" contain information only to be found in certain exhibits and parts of the stipulation stricken from the record at trial upon respondent's motion, to which petitioner agreed. Such information is not part of the record and cannot serve as a basis for our findings of fact.↩
3. In its petition, petitioner sought in the alternative to deduct the amount in question as a loss under section 165. Petitioner states on brief, however, that the only issue is deductibility as a bad debt under
4. Petitioner has presented no evidence, nor has it argued on brief, that the amounts claimed to have been paid to Tanger were paid for any purpose, or in fact used, other than for the payment of Federal income taxes of the consolidated group.↩
5. The applicable regulation in that case was
6. Among the differences noted by petitioner are that the payments in
7. We have thus far refused to accept the limited rule in
8. Contrary to petitioner, we do not understand respondent to have conceded that, in the absence of the release, petitioner would have had a claim against Tanger. We understand respondent to have conceded only that if petitioner had carried its burden of proving the existence of a claim, respondent would accept petitioner's assertion that the claim was in the amount of $31,378. Respondent stated at trial, "We have never had any proof that they made an overpayment of this amount, although what I'm saying is, that if you do find that there is a claim here, then the $31,000.00 is the amount of it." (Transcript at 26) Moreover, on brief, respondent objects to all evidence of the existence of a claim as hearsay and asserts that petitioner did not establish a basis for its belief that a claim existed.↩
9. We note that, as petitioner's counsel admitted at trial, Tanger's books and records were under Swanson's control. The record does not contain even the minimal foundations which might have established Swanson as an "expert" witness and perhaps brought
10. Petitioner made no effort to introduce, through the testimony of either Russo or Swanson, the documents and portions of the stipulation of facts relating to the underlying litigation which had previously been stricken from the record. See n. 2,
11. See
12. Petitioner's reliance on
Richard R. Riss, Sr. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1973 )
United States v. Hancho C. Kim ( 1979 )
R. A. Bryan and Ruby M. Bryan, C. B. McNairy and Rowena A. ... ( 1960 )
Herbert W. Dustin and Kathleen C. Dustin v. Commissioner of ... ( 1972 )
commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-transport-manufacturing-and-equipment ( 1973 )
Miriam Coward Pierson v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1958 )
I. Hal Millsap, Jr., and Frances Millsap v. Commissioner of ... ( 1968 )
peter-kiewit-sons-company-v-summit-construction-company-and-general ( 1969 )
Boehm v. Commissioner ( 1945 )
commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-carl-l-danielson-and-pauline-s ( 1967 )