Court Opinion

ID: 4487437
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-01-17 22:00:45.86155+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:49:17.524378
License: Public Domain

*723OPINION.
Trussell:
The documentary evidence and oral testimony which make up the record of this appeal is confusing and, in some particulars, contradictory. The whole issue, however, revolves around a dis-allowance by the Commissioner of a deduction of $15,119.73, which includes—
Franchise rights.:_$2,000.00
Metro stock and subscriptions_13,119.73
Total-15,119.73
all of which appears to have been charged to profit and loss on April 1, 1919.
Concerning the franchise rights, it appears to be satisfactorily established that the taxpayer paid to the Metro Pictures Corporation the sum of $3,000 for whatever rights it received from the latter company. The oral testimony was directed toward proving that these franchise rights were procured under a specific contract which has since been lost or destroyed, and that the contract was for a specific term of five years, and although the letter from the Metro Pictures Corporation, which is in evidence, indicates that this arrangement was made originally only for a period of six months and was thereafter periodically renewed for succeeding six-month periods until on or about April, 1919, when the original arrangement was discontinued and a new arrangement entered into, it appears that we must accept the view that this was a five-year contract, as evidenced both by the oral testimony and the record of the treatment of this capital item as shown by the pages of books of account introduced in evidence and the statements contained in the revenue agent’s report. The record also shows that $1,000 of this capital account had been written off prior to January 1,1919, and the revenue agent’s report says that $1,100 of this account had been written off prior to January 1, 1917. It thus appears that during the years 1915 and 1916 the taxpayer wrote off $1,100 of this account, presumably $500 for 10 months of 1915 and $600 for 1916. If it had followed this course consistently throughout the following years 1917 and 1918, the account would have stood on January 1, 1919, with a balance of $700. The original arrangement or contract, whatever may have been its terms, was no doubt canceled in the spring of 1919, and so far as this account is concerned it appears that ample justice will be done to this taxpayer by allowing it to write off for the year 1919 on *724account oí this so-called franchise right the sum of $700 as a deduction from gross income. We are of the opinion that the taxpayer is entitled to, and must be allowed, the benefit of such a deduction.
Concerning the so-called preferred-stock account and the preferred-stock subscription account the record is far from clear. The documentary evidence and the oral testimony taken together seem to prove that the taxpayer paid to the Metro Pictures Corporation at various times sums amounting to $13,119.73, and that it treated the total of said sums as a capital investment in the preferred stock of the Metro Pictures Corporation. Whether this stock was ever issued or .was ever in the possession of the taxpayer is wholly uncertain, and just what disposition was made of this stock, if it ever existed, or the rights to receive it, if and when issued, is not shown. Concerning this item, the affidavit of Robert Lynch, president of the taxpayer company, submitted to the Commissioner’s office under date of February 14, 1924, said:
The stock and subscription accounts were surrendered in the purchase of a number of pictures at a lower price than scheduled and is properly a part of the cost of goods sold.
On the other hand, the oral testimony was directed toward proving that when, in the spring of 1919, the Metro Pictures Corporation notified the taxpayer of the proposed discontinuance of the business relations between the two companies, the taxpayer, finding itself in the position of being put out of business, prevailed upon its principal stockholder, one Mastbaum, who, the witness testified, owned a majority of the taxpayer company’s stock, to go to New York and intercede with the Metro Pictures Corporation and to arrange, if possible, for a continuance of such business relations as would permit the taxpayer to continüe in the business of distributing motion-picture films. That Mastbaum was successful in these negotiations and that the taxpayer turned over its Metro Pictures Corporation preferred stock, or its rights to receive the same, to Mastbaum as a form of compensation for the services he rendered to the taxpayer in procuring new arrangements with the producing company.
Although the president of the taxpayer company, in an affidavit furnished to the Commissioner, stated that this stock account and subscription were or should have been treated as having been used in payment of the purchase price of pictures, the witness at the hearing testified that it was used as compensation for the services of Mastbaum in procuring a new arrangement with the producing company. The witness also testified that he believed that the deduction for this compensation was included in the item of general operating expenses in the income-tax return originally made.
The record is thus left in a condition of uncertainty as to whether this alleged capital asset ever in fact existed and, if so, what disposition was made of it, and whether or not it has been claimed as a deduction under operating expenses or as cost of pictures purchased and again as a capital asset loss. These are matters which ought to be easily provable by competent evidence, but such evidence was not produced at the hearing and is not in the record. We are, therefore, compelled to reach the conclusion that the taxpayer has wholly failed to support its contention with respect to this alleged deduction and that it can not be allowed.