Court Opinion

ID: 4602996
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:31:00.455982+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:59:27.401396
License: Public Domain

Dwight A. Ward, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Respondent.  Hanna P. Ward, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentWard v. CommissionerDocket Nos. 31416, 31417United States Tax Court20 T.C. 332; 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161; May 14, 1953, Promulgated 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*161 Decisions will be entered under Rule 50.  1. During the taxable year petitioners sold their interest in a partnership through a receiver for cash.  The entire sale price was paid by the buyers with no strings attached, but receipt by petitioners of $ 17,000 of the sale proceeds from the receiver was deferred until subsequent taxable year because of an attachment unrelated to the sale.  Petitioners were on the cash basis.  Held, even though receipt of a portion of sale proceeds is deferred to a subsequent taxable year by reason of an attachment by a creditor of the seller, the gain is "realized" in the taxable year within the meaning of section 111 of the Code.2. Petitioners' attorney rendered services to petitioners in connection with the partnership receivership and business matters related thereto and also in connection with the receivership sale.  Held, $ 6,000 of the $ 10,000 fee is deductible under section 23 (a) (1) (A) of the Code and $ 4,000 of the fee is allocable to the sale and is to be used as an offset against the selling price.3. Petitioners engaged the services of a broker and appraiser to assist in the sale of partnership assets and after the receivership1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*162  sale paid him a fee of $ 5,000 for his services.  Held, though the fee paid was not a selling commission, the services rendered were so tied up with the sale that the fee paid is by its nature a selling expense and must be used as an offset against the selling price.4. Petitioner paid in excess of $ 1,000 in the taxable year for the care of his secretary who was seriously ill, an employee of the partnership business who had left the business with the petitioner.  Held, this expense is deductible under section 23 (a) (1) (A), Internal Revenue Code, as an ordinary and necessary business expense.5. Petitioner expended $ 2,075 in research, engineering plans, and travel preliminary to the organization of a corporation.  The corporation was organized and commenced manufacturing concrete blocks. Held, petitioner is not entitled to a deduction under section 23 (a) (1) (A) or (a) ( 2), Internal Revenue Code, for the expenditure because the expenditure was made on behalf of the corporation.  Adam Y. Bennion, Esq., for the petitioners.Donald P. Chehock, Esq., for the respondent.  Black, Judge.  Hill, J., dissenting.  Bruce, J., agrees with this dissent.  Withey, J., dissenting.  BLACK20 T.C. 332">*333  Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' income tax for the taxable year 1946 as follows:Docket No.NameDeficiency31416Dwight A. Ward$ 11,221.4631417Hanna P. Ward1,965.95Certain of the adjustments made in the deficiency notice were not contested and, therefore, are not issues here.  Several of the deficiency notice adjustments were put in issue by the petitioners; however, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*164  all but five have been settled by stipulation.  As set forth in petitioners' assignments of error, as amended, these five issues are:1. The Commissioner erred in determining that $ 17,069.63 [sic] representing profit derived from the sale of petitioner's interest in Ward Refrigerator & Mfg. Co. [a partnership] was constructively received in the taxable year.2. The Commissioner erred in including $ 10,000.00 of legal fees as an expense in the sale of the partnership assets of Ward Refrigerator & Mfg. Co., and in disallowing said fees as ordinary and necessary business expenses and/or expenses incurred for the production of income or for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of income, and/or as losses incurred in an unsuccessful effort to purchase assets.3. The Commissioner erred in including $ 5,000.00 counselor fees as an expense of the sale of said partnership assets and in disallowing said fees as ordinary and necessary business expenses of petitioner and his wife.4. The Commissioner erred in disallowing [as an ordinary and necessary business expense] a deduction of $ 1.085.41, representing sums paid to or for the benefit of a 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*165  former employee of the Ward Refrigerator & Mfg. Co.5. The Commissioner erred in disallowing as ordinary and necessary business and/or nonbusiness expense deductions, expenditures for so-called research, engineering plans and travel in the amount of $ 2,075.00.These issues are common to both proceedings.20 T.C. 332">*334  FINDINGS OF FACT.The proceedings have been consolidated.Certain of the facts have been stipulated and are so found and the stipulation of facts is incorporated herein by this reference.Petitioners are husband and wife.  Hereinafter, for convenience when we refer to the petitioner we mean the petitioner Dwight A. Ward.  For the taxable year petitioners, residents of California, filed separate income tax returns with the collector for the sixth district of California.  Petitioners' returns were filed on a cash basis.For many years prior to November 1, 1945, petitioner was an equal partner with his two brothers (Harry Ward and D. T. Ward) in a partnership which conducted a business of manufacturing and selling refrigerators under the firm name of Ward Refrigerator & Mfg. Co.  Prior to November 1, 1945, a dispute arose between the petitioner and his two partners as to 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*166  the management of the partnership business. On November 1, 1945, petitioner's brothers filed a petition in the Superior Court of the State of California, Los Angeles County, for a dissolution of the partnership and appointment of a receiver. On the same day the court appointed R. E. Allen receiver and ordered him to operate the business and, upon proper application to the court, to sell it.  The business was eventually sold by the court at a public sale to petitioner's two brothers for the bid price of $ 820,000.  An order confirming the sale was signed by the court on February 14, 1946.The cost basis of petitioner's one-third interest in the partnership on the date of sale was $ 140,756.64.  Petitioner's one-third share of the net proceeds of sale was $ 211,111.26, without taking into account the effect thereon, if any, of the suit and attachment proceedings referred to hereinafter.  Petitioner received the proceeds from the sale on the following dates and in the following amounts:(1) Feb. 5 to Apr. 3, 1946$ 2,800.00(2) Mar. 12, 194614,500.00(3) Apr. 22, 1946173,000.00(4) Apr. 25, 19462,785.17(5) May 14, 1946956.46(6) Jan. 2, 19472,073.34(7) Jan. 2, 194714,926.66(8) Paid sometime in 194769.63Total$ 211,111.261953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*167 Facts Relating to Issue 1.The above dates represent the dates upon which petitioner actually received the payments from R. E. Allen, the partnership receiver. The sale itself was confirmed on February 14, 1946, and the purchase 20 T.C. 332">*335  price for petitioner's partnership interest was paid to the receiver in cash on or before May 14, 1946.The payment of $ 17,000 (see items (6) and (7) appearing in the above schedule of payments) was delayed because of an attachment served against Allen, the receiver. The attachment made on or about April 19, 1946, arose in connection with a suit filed by Walter Webb against the petitioner.  In this suit Webb alleged that petitioner was indebted to him in the amount of $ 17,000 for personal services rendered. Such services were rendered during the 2 years prior to April 1946.  Immediately following the attachment the receiver drew a check for $ 17,000 to himself as trustee upon the receivership funds.  The check was deposited in a separate bank account as a special trust account pending the outcome of the litigation of Webb vs. Ward.  Appropriate entries were made on the receiver's books to reflect a segregation of the $ 17,000.  The receivership1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*168  fee earned by R. E. Allen was paid to him on April 5, 1946.  Though he had carried out substantially all his duties by April 1946, R. E. Allen was not discharged as receiver until March 21, 1947.Petitioners excluded $ 17,069.63 from the reported selling price of their partnership interest, but used the total cost basis thereof as an offset in computing the amount of taxable gain reported on their returns.  After a trial of the issues in Webb vs. Ward, a "Notice of Decision" of the court awarded the plaintiff Webb $ 11,000 for personal services performed for petitioner.  The "Notice of Decision" allowed an offset of only $ 8,280 as the portion already paid to Webb by Ward.  Both sides were dissatisfied with the decision.  The attorney for Webb, on December 31, 1946, petitioned the court to reopen the case, but the court declined to disturb its prior ruling.  However, the court, pursuant to stipulation that Ward had made payments to Webb totaling $ 8,926.66, reduced the award to plaintiff Webb from $ 2,720 to $ 2,073.34 on account of the additional payments.  After a court hearing held on December 31, 1946, the attorneys for the parties conferred regarding possible settlement of the1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*169  case without further litigation.  On this date both attorneys agreed to recommend to their respective clients a settlement, followed by immediate payment, on the basis of a judgment of $ 2,073.34.  Documents reflecting the settlement were prepared on December 31, 1946, but they were not signed on that day.  On January 2, 1947, petitioner's attorney contacted petitioner and after some persuasion obtained petitioner's approval of the proposed settlement.  The court on January 2, 1947, signed the judgment awarding $ 2,073.34 to Webb.  On the same day Allen, the receiver, was notified that the attachment was released.On January 2, 1947, R. E. Allen, the receiver, issued the following checks: 20 T.C. 332">*336 Date of checkPayeeAmountJan. 2, 1947Walter Webb$ 2,073.34Jan. 2, 1947Dwight A. Ward14,926.66Total$ 17,000.00Facts Relating to Issue 2.After his two brothers had filed suit to dissolve the partnership, petitioner engaged the services of Benjamin S. Parks as his attorney.  Beginning in the early part of December 1945 and continuing through February 8, 1946, Parks devoted much of his working time to representing petitioner.  Parks continued to represent1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*170  petitioner in these matters until as late as January 1947.  During the taxable year petitioner paid sums aggregating $ 10,000 to Parks for his services.After the commencement of the action to dissolve the partnership, petitioner decided that either of two goals was the desirable result of the action.  First, he desired to purchase, either alone or with another, the two-thirds interest held by the other partners. On the other hand, failing that, petitioner desired that his interest be sold at a price somewhat commensurate with its worth.  To assure the latter alternative, a willing and able buyer would necessarily have to be present at the auction sale. Petitioner and Parks after diligent efforts were unable to secure the financial assistance necessary for petition to purchase his brothers' two-thirds interest in the partnership. Thereafter petitioner sought and, upon the suggestion of Parks, obtained an outside person who became interested in buying the partnership business. This outside person was W. C. Graham of San Francisco who, at the receiver's sale, was active in the bidding.  He offered bids until he was overbid by $ 5,000 when the petitioner's brothers offered the highest1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*171  bid of $ 820,000.  Graham, acting through his agent Roy C. Seeley, and petitioner's brothers were the only bidders.  Graham's presence at the sale was due to the efforts of petitioner's attorney and it was due to the attorney's efforts that Graham was induced to make a bid in excess of $ 800,000.A reasonable allocation of the $ 10,000 attorney's fee which petitioner paid Parks in 1946 is $ 6,000 for his general services to petitioner in the receivership proceedings and $ 4,000 for his services in procuring a bidder at the sale, thus causing the partnership assets to sell for a higher price than they otherwise would have sold for.  Petitioners each deducted one-half the $ 10,000 attorney's fee on a community property basis as a miscellaneous deduction on page 3 of their returns for the taxable year.20 T.C. 332">*337 Facts Relating to Issue 3.During the taxable year petitioner paid $ 5,000 to Roy C. Seeley Company for Seeley's services rendered in connection with the partnership. Seeley was an adviser for Graham and before Graham would consider buying the partnership business he required that an appraisal be made by Seeley.  Before Seeley would enter upon the task of appraising the 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*172  worth of the business and advising Graham, he desired to ascertain by whom he would be compensated.  As a consequence, petitioner entered into a contract with the Roy C. Seeley Company.  This contract dated January 23, 1946, as supplemented by letter dated February 1, 1946, provided in effect that petitioner would guarantee and pay a minimum fee of $ 5,000 to Seeley's firm, provided the sale price of the business exceeded $ 800,000.  This fee was to be paid only in the event the Seeley Company did not receive its "entire compensation from the Receiver on the usual brokerage basis allowed by the Receiver for the total price paid by Mr. Graham for such assets, whatever that sum may be." Pursuant to the contract the Roy C. Seeley Company made several value analyses of land, buildings, machinery, and inventory of the partnership business. As a consequence of the advice and services of Seeley and also Parks, Graham became interested in purchasing the business.  Graham agreed to bid up to $ 800,000 for the business and petitioner in turn agreed to exchange his one-third interest in the partnership for one-third of the common stock of a corporation which was to operate the business if Graham's1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*173  bid acquired it.  Petitioner also agreed to be active in the new business and to be a director of the corporation.Petitioners each deducted one-half of the aforementioned $ 5,000 as a miscellaneous deduction on page 3 of their return for the taxable year.Facts Relating to Issue 4.During the months of June and November of the taxable year petitioner made payments in behalf of Metta Hollenback totaling $ 1,085.41.  Substantially all of this sum was paid to La Vina Sanitorium.  Metta Hollenback is a former employee of Ward Refrigerator & Mfg. Co.  For a substantial period of time prior to the time the partnership business was sold Metta was the secretary of the petitioner.  Because of the conflict between petitioner on one hand and his two brothers on the other, and also because of petitioner's frequent absences from the office during the war years, Metta was under severe and continuous strain.  She stopped working for the business after petitioner sold his interest in it.  Petitioner told Metta that he would soon be in some other business and would continue to employ her as 20 T.C. 332">*338  his secretary. Shortly after leaving the business she experienced a nervous breakdown.  As a1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*174  result of her condition, Metta has been confined for several years, and until recently, in La Vina Sanitorium.  Petitioner has been prevented from taking Metta into his employ because of her impaired health.On their 1946 tax returns petitioners each deducted one-half of the $ 1,085.41 as a charitable contribution.  They now claim the deduction as an ordinary and necessary business expense.Facts Relating to Issue 5.After the sale of the Ward Refrigerator & Mfg. Co., petitioner investigated the possibility of entering the business of manufacturing and selling concrete blocks. During the period from after the sale until November 1946 (when concrete blocks began to be manufactured) petitioner expended $ 6,950 in these efforts.  To what extent he was reimbursed is not explained.  Petitioner chose to engage in his new business as a corporation.  On April 1, 1946, the Ward Concrete Products Company was incorporated.  A portion of the $ 6,950, that is $ 2,075, was expended by petitioner during the period beginning after the sale of the refrigerator business and before incorporation of the concrete block business.  This amount, $ 2,075, was expended in travel throughout the country, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*175  in research, and in employing engineers to make various required tests and plans.  Petitioner was attempting to determine the proper content of a marketable block attractive to the industry and the type machines and plants which were the most modern and efficient in their manufacture of blocks.Each petitioner in his separate return deducted one-half of the $ 2,075, describing the deduction from adjusted gross income as follows:Plans and engineering for concrete block plant$ 600.00Promotion and sales expenses -- Ward Concrete ProductsCo1,475.00Total$ 2,075.00No books or records were maintained in support of the $ 2,075.  This amount was an estimate made by petitioner and is not attributable to any specific check and is not an identifiable part of the checks totaling $ 6,950.  Petitioners claim the amount of $ 2,075 as a business deduction or, in the alternative, as a nonbusiness deduction for the taxable year.OPINION.The five issues presented for our decision are set forth in our preliminary statement.  Each issue will be taken up in its order.20 T.C. 332">*339 First Issue.The principal issue in this proceeding involves part of the proceeds from petitioners' 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*176  sale of their partnership interest. The sale took place on February 8, 1946, conducted by a court receiver who had been appointed to dissolve or sell the partnership. Petitioners realized a total sale price of $ 211,111.26.  Since the basis for their interest sold was $ 140,745.64, the gain from the sale was $ 70,365.62.  The buyers paid the full purchase price to the receiver on or before May 14, 1946.  The receiver then turned the proceeds over to petitioner during 1946, except for $ 17,000.  This $ 17,000 was retained because of an attachment made on April 19, 1946, by Webb, a creditor of petitioner for services rendered. Subsequent to a lawsuit, the dispute was finally settled in January 1947, whereupon the attachment was released and the $ 17,000 paid to petitioners and Webb.The controversy involves whether this $ 17,000 of the $ 70,365.62 gain is taxable to petitioners in 1946, the year before the Court.  Petitioners contend that since their income is reported on the cash basis the $ 17,000 is properly to be reported in 1947, the year of actual receipt, there being no actual receipt during 1946.  Respondent, on the other hand, contends that the entire gain must be reported1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*177  in 1946, the year the sale took place.  Respondent states his contention in his brief as follows:Webb filed his attachment against funds belonging to the petitioner, but then in the custody of the receiver, solely as a matter of convenience.  He could just as well have filed his attachment against other property or funds of the petitioner.  It is not reasonable to defer profit on the sale merely because the petitioner disputes the demand of a creditor on a claim which is completely foreign to the sale of the petitioner's interest.  To allow such a deferment would permit the petitioner to distort the fact that he incurred all the profit in 1946, from the completed sale of his partnership interest. The petitioner engaged in a completed business transaction which was entirely performed in one taxable year, and he is required to report the gain therefrom in that year.  This gain cannot be deferred to subsequent years by coloring the original transaction with acts and events which are not related thereto.  It is the respondent's contention that the entire gain from the sale of property for a cash consideration, with no strings attached to its payment as between the purchaser and the1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*178  seller, is derived in the year of the sale and must be included in taxable income.  The peculiar circumstance that a portion of the funds were tied up by a stranger to the transaction, with respect to a wholly unrelated claim, should have no bearing upon the determination of the profit derived.  * * *Our decision here turns upon section 111 of the Code which appears in the margin.  1 As we see it, petitioners' gain here was "realized" 20 T.C. 332">*340  during the taxable year 1946, as provided in the statute.  The fact that the receipt of a portion of the sale proceeds is deferred by an attachment unrelated to the property sold or the sale does not defer the realization of gain on the sale for tax purposes.1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*179  There can be no question but that the partnership business was sold in 1946 for a cash consideration of $ 820,000.  It has been agreed what petitioner's one-third net interest was, $ 211,111.26.  The fact that $ 17,000 of petitioner's interest was tied up in 1946 by an attachment proceeding entirely unrelated to the sale, it seems to us, makes no difference in the tax consequences of the sale.  If, for example, the entire amount of petitioner's one-third interest had been paid to him in 1946 and he had deposited it in a bank and $ 17,000 of it had been attached, no contention could be made that petitioner's gain would not be taxable in 1946.  Yet, under such latter circumstances the $ 17,000 would be just as effectually tied up as it was when attached in the receiver's hands in 1946.  In considering the issue here involved, it should be remembered that this is no case where the purchasers withheld $ 17,000 of the purchase price from the sellers because something remained to be done to complete the sale such as perfect the title or something of that kind.  If that were the situation then the cases cited and urged by petitioners would be in point and the $ 17,000 would not be taxable1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*180  to them until 1947, when they should actually receive it.  But, as we have already pointed out, that is not the situation here.  The attachment suit was entirely unrelated to the sale or in the slightest degree to the payment of the purchase price to the sellers.  For this reason we think the cases cited and urged by petitioners are not in point.Applying the general rules governing sales and exchanges as we understand them, we hold that petitioners realized the entire gain from the sale during the taxable year 1946.  The respondent did not err in his determination on this issue.Second Issue.The second issue concerns a $ 10,000 fee paid by petitioners to their attorney during the taxable year. Petitioners contend that the legal 20 T.C. 332">*341  fee is deductible under section 23 (a) (1) (A) or 23 (a) (2) or 23 (e).  Respondent in the deficiency notice disallowed the deduction claimed by petitioners on their tax returns, but in computing petitioner's capital gain the fee was allowed as an offset against the gross selling price of the partnership interest.As we have explained in our Findings of Fact, the partnership was about to be dissolved so petitioners engaged Parks as their attorney1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*181  to advise and represent them in respect to their interest in the partnership. Parks rendered these services and was paid $ 10,000 therefor.  The proper tax treatment to be accorded a payment to an attorney cannot be determined merely from the fact that the payment was for legal services rendered. We need to know the purpose for the legal services.  Occasionally the tax consequences of an expenditure, that is its deductibility or the type of deduction to be allowed, is contingent upon the outcome of a related transaction.  Such is the case here for until the dispute among the partners was settled the true nature and purpose of the expenditure could not be determined.  This dispute might well have resulted in a reconciliation, as is sometimes the case among partners, or the petitioner might have exchanged his partnership interest for shares of corporate stock.  As it so happened here, the ultimate outcome was that petitioner sold his interest in the partnership.Parks described the nature of his services to petitioner in a letter which he wrote to petitioner September 1, 1949, which was introduced in evidence by respondent.  In this letter Parks, among other things, said:The services1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*182  for which this bill was rendered commenced in November, 1945, and continued up to and including the 23rd day of May, 1946.These services consisted of legal work pertaining to the receivership for the partnership known as the Ward Refrigerator & Manufacturing Company which was then pending upon a dissolution proceeding instituted by Harry and D'Artagan Ward against Dwight A. Ward.  This receivership continued until the sale of the business through a receiver's sale on February 8, 1946, but many details of the termination of the receivership were continued on until the latter part of May.Also this billing was for services rendered by me in attending with you and on my own behalf numerous conferences with various financial institutions, banks, brokers, investment houses, etc., discussing the entire situation pertaining to the receivership and the pending sale; endeavoring to interest these various persons in bidding at the time of the sale or in effecting a purchase which would obviate the necessity of the sale; drafting numerous documents with various persons of this character outlining the basis upon which their compensation would be paid in the event that they were successful in1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*183  obtaining interested financial assistance.Parks testified at the hearing and his testimony was in substance the same as the above quotation from his letter to petitioner.  We think the $ 10,000 fee which petitioner paid Parks for his services is properly 20 T.C. 332">*342  allocable between the services which he rendered petitioner generally as his attorney in the receivership proceedings and the particular services which he rendered petitioner in securing Graham as a bidder at the sale.  On other occasions, when the facts call for it, we have allocated attorneys' fees between deductible and nondeductible purposes, see for example Agnes Pyne Coke, 17 T.C. 403, affd.  201 F.2d 742. We think that a fair and reasonable allocation of the $ 10,000 attorney's fee is on a 60-40 basis.  We hold that petitioners may deduct $ 6,000 under section 23 (a) (1) (A) of the Code and $ 4,000 is to be used as an offset against the selling price just like any other expenditure made in connection with the sale of a capital asset.Third Issue.The third issue involves a $ 5,000 fee paid for services rendered petitioner by Roy Seeley, a real estate 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*184  broker and appraiser.  The contract between petitioner and Seeley provided in respect to the fee as follows:1. If the entire assets are sold to Mr. W. C. Graham, your client, for a sum of $ 800,000, or less, you are to receive your entire compensation from the Receiver on the usual brokerage basis allowed by the Receiver for the total price paid by Mr. Graham for such assets, whatever that sum may be.2. If the assets are sold to someone other than Mr. Graham, and at a figure of more than $ 800,000 gross, then I am to pay you the sum of $ 5,000 from the cash received by me for my interest through such sale.This contract was supplemented by another agreement made subsequently.  From these agreements, considering particularly the latter agreement, we conclude that what petitioner agreed to do was to guarantee Seeley a fee for his services.  If Seeley were not otherwise compensated for his services, then petitioner was to pay Seeley.  Seeley's services consisted of appraising and advising the partnership business for Graham and bidding for Graham and petitioner at the auction sale. Seeley performed his part of the contract and bid $ 815,000 but he was outbid at the auction sale. 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*185  As the partnership interest of petitioner was sold to others, petitioner paid Seeley the $ 5,000 due him under the contract.The fee in question was contingent, not upon the eventuality of a sale, but upon the eventuality that Seeley did not otherwise earn a fee.  Though there was a contingency in respect to the fee here, that fact ipso facto does not make the fee a selling commission.  What petitioner contracted to do was in effect to guarantee Seeley a fee.  Even though not a selling commission, we think the fee must be treated like a selling commission as an offset against the selling price. In so concluding we have considered the nature of the services rendered, petitioner's purpose in contracting for the services, and the benefits received by petitioners from the services.20 T.C. 332">*343  The fee paid Seeley is accorded a tax treatment to some extent different from that given the attorney's fee in Issue 2.  The services of the attorney related also to partnership matters in general other than the sale, and an allocation of the attorney's fee to items other than the sale was proper.  But in respect to Seeley's services, those services were directly attached only to the auction 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*186  sale. Under these circumstances no allocation seems permissible.  Respondent did not err in determining that Seeley's fee was an expense of the sale and, as such, is an offset against the selling price.Fourth Issue.During the taxable year petitioner paid $ 1,085.41 for the medical care of Metta Hollenback.  Petitioners took this deduction as a charitable deduction on their returns.  They now claim this is deductible as an ordinary and necessary business expense. Metta was an employee of the partnership business until February 1946.  She had worked for the partnership for some time as the petitioner's secretary. Metta's employment by the partnership ended when petitioner sold his interest therein.Respondent's only contention is that this sum is not a business expense. We are unable to agree with respondent in this contention.  By reason of being a partner in a business petitioner was individually engaged in business within the meaning of section 23 (a) (1) (A) of the Code.  Flood v. United States, (C. A. 1, 1943) 133 F.2d 173. The fact that petitioner was no longer in business at the time the expenditure was made does not mean the deduction1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*187  is therefore to be denied.  The Flood case so holds.  We cited and followed the Flood case in Morgan S. Kaufman, 12 T.C. 1114. See also Walter F. Burrows, 38 B. T. A. 236.The Flood case, supra, is controlling here.  We hold, therefore, that petitioners are entitled to a deduction under section 23 (a) (1) (A) for the $ 1,085.41 paid during the taxable year for the care of petitioner's former secretary, Metta Hollenback.Fifth Issue.During February and March of the taxable year petitioner expended $ 2,075 in investigating the possibility of entering the business of manufacturing and selling concrete blocks. After the sale of his partnership interest petitioner devoted his working time to organizing and developing the new business. This sum was expended prior to the operation of the new business as Concrete Products Company, a corporation.  By devoting his efforts in organizing the new business, petitioner was not thereby engaging in business himself.  Not being 20 T.C. 332">*344  engaged in a business himself, petitioner is not entitled to a deduction under section 23 (a) (1) (A).Petitioners contend also 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*188  that the amount in question is deductible as a nontrade or nonbusiness expense under section 23 (a) (2).  We do not agree with their contentions.  They ignore the fact that the sum in question was incurred for the benefit of the corporation, and only indirectly for petitioner.  We think that this expenditure was by its nature organizational expense of the corporation.  The evidence indicates the petitioner has not been reimbursed for this expenditure. In such cases this expenditure would doubtless become a part of petitioner's cost basis for his shares of stock.  On this issue the respondent is sustained.Certain of the issues raised by the pleadings have been settled by the parties by stipulation and effect will be given thereto.Decisions will be entered under Rule 50.  HILL; WITHEYHill, J., dissenting: I dissent from the holding in the foregoing opinion which approves a deduction for the payment by petitioner of expenses for medical care of a former secretary of the partnership involved in this proceeding.  The deduction is claimed as a business expense.It is not claimed that the partnership had any plan, policy, or obligation to make payments to its retired or former 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*189  employees or any employee in the nature of a pension, retirement pay, or additional compensation for past services.  Nor is it claimed that petitioner was authorized to act or did act for the partnership in making the payment in question for or on behalf of the former secretary of the partnership. It is apparent that even if such payment had been made under the authority or legal obligation of the partnership only one-third of such obligation to make such payment would have devolved upon petitioner.The facts upon which the claim for such deduction are premised demonstrate unmistakenly, it appears to me, that the payment for which the deduction is claimed was a purely personal expense.  It was a mere charitable contribution and as such it is, of course, not deductible.The revenue law does not contemplate that the Federal Treasury shall forego tax revenue in order to share the effectuation of a generous impulse of a taxpayer in making charitable contributions to individual persons.  Brushing over such acts with a thin veneer of claimed "business expense" should not be permitted to thwart the revenue law in this respect.20 T.C. 332">*345  The Flood case and other cases cited to support1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*190  the holding in question are not authority for such holding.  In the Flood case there was an authorization made and an obligation assumed by the partnership to make post-service payments to the employees as compensation for former services to the partnership in addition to the regularly stipulated and paid compensation for such services.  Upon the dissolution of the partnership the partners individually assumed proportionately the obligation to pay such additional compensation in accordance with their several interests in the partnership. It was on this fundamental factual premise, totally lacking in the instant case, that the partner in the Flood case was allowed to deduct as a business expense the proportionate payment of such authorized and assumed obligation of the partnership. Petitioner concedes in the instant case that he had no legal obligation to make the payment for which he claims the deduction here in question.To me it seems obvious that whether or not the holding in the Flood case is sound on the basis of its facts it is too far a cry from the factual situation there to that of the instant case for the voice of authority to carry.The Burrows and Kaufman1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*191  cases cited in the majority opinion in this connection differ so widely from the case here in their factual structure as to eliminate even a remote parallelism with it.I can see no reasonable alternative to the conclusion that the expenditure here sought to be deducted is a personal expense for which no deduction lies.The holding here in question, aside from the unwarranted loss of tax which it entails in the instant case, is fraught with the potentiality of a spreading hazard to the revenue, presently and in the future.The Federal Treasury has no surplus waters in its stream of revenue.  It needs no spillways.  If the holding here in question is adhered to it will open an eroding outlet through the revenue dike which is not only not authorized but is specifically prohibited by section 24 (a) (1) of the Internal Revenue Code.  Accordingly I dissent.Withey, J., dissenting: In this case I must dissent upon the second issue, in other words the allocation of the attorney fee here involved upon a 60-40 per cent basis.  I do so for the reason that the opinion as written though appearing to rely upon Cohan v. Commissioner, 39 F.2d 540, does not1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161">*192  cite that case.  I believe that in order to make a proper allocation it is necessary even upon the authority of Cohan that there be some ascertainable basis for such an allocation.  None is disclosed by the findings of fact herein.  The case cited as support 20 T.C. 332">*346  for our right to allocate is Agnes Pyne Coke, 17 T.C. 403. In that case it is clear that there is an ascertainable basis for the allocations made therein.It is clear to me that this Court has the duty to make an allocation where possible, but it is equally clear that where a taxpayer has so far failed to sustain the burden of proof as to leave the record bare of any facts upon the basis of which we may reasonably make an allocation, it is our duty to uphold the respondent in his assertion of a deficiency.  To hold otherwise is to clothe ourselves with the power of an equity court which powers we do not possess.  Footnotes1. SEC. 111.  DETERMINATION OF AMOUNT OF, AND RECOGNITION OF, GAIN OR LOSS.(a) Computation of Gain or Loss.  -- The gain from the sale or other disposition of property shall be the excess of the amount realized therefrom over the adjusted basis provided in section 113 (b) for determining gain, and the loss shall be the excess of the adjusted basis provided in such section for determining loss over the amount realized.(b) Amount Realized. -- The amount realized from the sale or other disposition of property shall be the sum of any money received plus the fair market value of the property (other than money) received.(c) Recognition of Gain or Loss.  -- In the case of a sale or exchange, the extent to which the gain or loss determined under this section shall be recognized for the purposes of this chapter, shall be determined under the provisions of section 112.(d) Installment Sales.  -- Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent (in the case of property sold under contract providing for payment in installments) the taxation of that portion of any installment payment representing gain or profit in the year in which such payment is received.↩