Court Opinion

ID: 4594366
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:12:48.248569+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:51:14.340356
License: Public Domain

Glenshaw Glass Company, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentGlenshaw Glass Co. v. CommissionerDocket No. 30821United States Tax Court18 T.C. 860; 1952 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 124; August 13, 1952, Promulgated *124 Decision will be entered under Rule 50.  1. Where a lump sum of money is received in settlement of various claims, an allocation of specific amounts to each of the several claims is necessary and proper.2. Sums received in settlement of punitive damages do not constitute taxable income.3. Sums received in settlement of claims for anticipated profits are taxable as ordinary income.  Sidney B. Gambill, Esq., for the petitioner.Albert J. O'Connor, Esq., for the respondent.  Arundell, Judge.  ARUNDELL*860  The respondent has determined deficiencies of $ 31.82 and $ 126,361.06 in the petitioner's income tax liability*125  for the taxable years ending September 30, 1947, and September 30, 1948, respectively.The petitioner contests the deficiency determined for the taxable year 1948 which results from the inclusion as ordinary income of the proceeds received in a compromise settlement of various claims.All stipulated facts are found as stipulated.FINDINGS OF FACT.The petitioner is a Pennsylvania corporation organized in 1900 as a successor to a limited association formed in 1895.  Its principal office and place of business is in Glenshaw, Pennsylvania.  From the date of its incorporation to the present time, the petitioner has been continuously engaged in the manufacture of glass bottles and glass containers.  For the taxable year 1948 the petitioner's income tax return was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the twenty-third district of Pennsylvania.For some years prior to 1923, the petitioner was licensed by Howard Automatic Glass Feeder Company to use royalty-free Howard feeder machines in its manufacturing operations.  Except with respect to the manufacture of milk bottles, the Howard license agreements were without restrictions as to the type of glass containers that could be manufactured*126  by the petitioner.Early in 1923, Hartford-Empire Company (hereinafter referred to as Hartford) representing that it had acquired control of the Howard patents, induced the petitioner to cancel its royalty-free license agreements and to enter into new license agreements with Hartford covering the use of both Howard and Hartford feeder machines.  The Hartford license agreements imposed upon the petitioner the obligation to pay royalties computed upon ware production, and also prohibited the petitioner from using the feeders to manufacture a wide variety of *861  glassware and containers, including fruit jars, prescription and proprietary medicine ware, milk bottles, and certain other items.  Each Hartford license agreement contained a provision permitting its termination by petitioner upon the payment of a prescribed lump sum minimum royalty. From 1923 until 1931, petitioner used and operated only glass feeding machines under the Hartford license agreements, and pursuant to such agreements petitioner paid royalties to Hartford from 1923 through the fiscal year ended September 30, 1931.The royalty payments and the restrictions upon its manufacturing operations led the petitioner*127  to endeavor to free itself from the Hartford license agreements.  In 1931, the license agreements covering the Howard feeders expired, and the petitioner took the position that those feeders, having been originally purchased by the petitioner, remained its property and could be retained and freely used upon the expiration of the license agreements.  Accordingly, the petitioner embarked upon the manufacture of fruit jars through the use of those feeders in July 1931, and a 5-year exclusive distribution contract for the sale of its entire fruit jar output was executed with a distributor in September of that year.  In December 1932 the royalty-free, unrestricted use of the Howard feeders by the petitioner was terminated as the result of litigation instituted by Hartford for that purpose.In 1931 and in the forepart of 1932, the petitioner, the McKee Glass Co., George R. Haub, and others formed a corporation, the Shawkee Manufacturing Company, for the purpose of building and selling a new glass feeder. During that period, Haub developed and built in petitioner's plant a new feeder known as the Shawkee feeder. Petitioner received a nonexclusive license to use the Shawkee feeder free *128  from the payment of any royalties. By October 19, 1934, the date of the permanent injunction hereinafter referred to, petitioner had seven royalty-free Shawkee feeders in operation in its plant and was manufacturing 65 per cent of its total production on these machines.  It had by then replaced five Howard (Hartford licensed) feeders. The Shawkee feeder proved to be an efficient, workable feeder, equal to those covered by the Hartford licenses.On May 31, 1933, Hartford filed suit against the petitioner, Shawkee, and others, in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, entitled Hartford-Empire Co. v. Shawkee Manufacturing Co., et al., Docket No. 2791.  On the basis of an earlier decision, in Hartford-Empire Co. v. Hazel-Atlas Glass Co., 59 F. 2d 399, the complaint charged that the Shawkee feeder infringed the patent owned by Hartford.  Relying on the Hazel-Atlas decision, the District Court, on June 27, 1933, entered a preliminary injunction which restrained the defendants from selling Shawkee feeders, but did not apply to the continued use of Shawkee feeders by the petitioner.*862  Relying upon *129  its earlier decision in the Hazel-Atlas case, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed the order for the preliminary injunction, with an opinion reported at 68 F. 2d 726. Pursuant to the mandate of the Circuit Court, the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania entered an order for a permanent injunction on October 19, 1934.  The permanent injunction enjoined the use of Shawkee feeders by petitioner for the manufacture of any and all glassware, and ordered an accounting. Upon the entry of the permanent injunction, the royalty-free Shawkee feeders were dismantled by petitioner.  In order to do business and comply with the injunction, it was necessary for the petitioner to reinstall, and it did reinstall, the Hartford licensed feeders and to pay royalties. Were it not for the permanent injunction, the petitioner would have continued to install royalty-free Shawkee feeders to replace the Hartford licensed feeders.The accounting directed by the permanent injunction was finally concluded by a settlement between the parties in 1939, whereby petitioner paid Hartford the sum of $ 11,167.85.  A final decree in*130  Docket No. 2791 was thereupon entered in 1939.In 1939, the United States instituted a civil action in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, in which Hartford was ultimately held to have violated the Federal antitrust laws. United States v. Hartford-Empire Co., 46 F. Supp. 541">46 F. Supp. 541. The judgment of the District Court finding and holding that Hartford had violated the antitrust laws was affirmed by the United States Supreme Court.  Hartford-Empire Co. v. United States, 323 U.S. 386">323 U.S. 386; 324 U.S. 570">324 U.S. 570.After December 1940, petitioner decided to discontinue all further payments of feeder royalties to Hartford.  This decision resulted from information disclosed in the antitrust proceedings prosecuted against Hartford by the United States.  Hartford thereupon filed an action for royalties against petitioner in 1941 in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, entitled Hartford-Empire Co. v. Glenshaw Glass Co., Civil Action No. 1650.  Following the disclosures made in the Government's antitrust case, the petitioner filed an answer*131  and counterclaim asking for a return of certain royalties and treble damages for destruction of certain lines of its business in violation of the antitrust laws. Hartford's motion to strike the petitioner's counterclaim on the ground that it stated no cause of action was denied in 1942.  No further proceedings were had in Civil Action No. 1650 prior to the settlement hereinafter referred to.Also, following the disclosures in the Government's antitrust case, petitioner instituted proceedings to reopen and set aside the permanent *863  injunction entered against it in 1934 in Docket No. 2791.  Petitioner charged that the judgment which Hartford had obtained against Hazel-Atlas Glass Company had been secured through fraud, and that the Hazel-Atlas judgment was fraudulently employed to secure the permanent injunction against petitioner in 1934.  Simultaneously, Hazel-Atlas Glass Company filed its petition making the same charges of fraud in the procurement of the judgment against it.  The proceedings were consolidated for hearing, and the applications to vacate the judgments were denied by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, by a divided court.  On appeal, the Supreme*132  Court of the United States in 1944 ordered both the judgment against Hazel-Atlas and the judgment against the petitioner set aside upon the ground of fraud.  The Supreme Court ordered that the fraudulently obtained injunction entered against the petitioner in 1934 be annulled and set aside, that Hartford's complaint be dismissed, and that the petitioner be permitted to bring appropriate proceedings for restitution and damages.Pursuant to the decision of the United States Supreme Court, the petitioner filed a counterclaim in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, in the original Hartford injunction proceedings, Docket No. 2791, seeking compensatory damages in the amount of $ 1,500,000, and exemplary damages in a like amount, based upon the findings of fraud made by the Supreme Court.  The District Court denied all of the petitioner's claims for damages except the claim for $ 11,167.85 paid by petitioner to Hartford in 1939, in settlement of the accounting order above referred to.The District Court found as a fact that on or about June 6, 1939, the petitioner paid $ 11,167.85 to Hartford in settlement of the accounting ordered by the District Court*133  in 1934; that royalties paid by the petitioner to Hartford between January 1, 1934, and October 1944 aggregated $ 397,199.42; that subsequent to the beginning of suit, the petitioner expended $ 21,850.47 in litigation and travel expenses; that the expenses incurred by the petitioner in dismantling the Shawkee feeders totaled $ 11,920.15.  The District Court made no specific finding of fact with respect to the amount of the loss on the fruit jar business.The evidence relative to the damage claimed for destruction of the fruit jar business was directed toward a showing of lost profits.  Testimony and exhibits were introduced to support an estimate of the profits lost during the period beginning 1934 and ending in 1940, the year in which Hartford's license restrictions on the manufacture of glass jars were removed.Both petitioner and Hartford appealed to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit from the judgment entered *864  by the District Court.  In the Circuit Court, petitioner pressed its demands for the following items and amounts of damages, all of which claims were opposed by Hartford:Interest at 6 per centItemAmountto Jan. 1, 1947Settlement of accounting order$ 11,167.85$ 5,074.22Reimbursement of royalties paidto Hartford after Jan. 1, 1934  ($ 397,199.42-$ 26,283.33) *  370,916.09189,085.55Litigation and travel expenses21,850.472,872.50Loss on dismantling Shawkeefeeders  11,920.158,727.50Loss on destruction of fruit jarbusiness  292,500.00162,373.54Total$ 708,354.56$ 368,133.31Punitive damages (in an amountequal to the total amount of  restitution and compensatory  damages).  *134 ItemTotalSettlement of accounting order$ 16,242.07Reimbursement of royalties paidto Hartford after Jan. 1, 1934  ($ 397,199.42-$ 26,283.33) *  560,001.64Litigation and travel expenses24,722.25Loss on dismantling Shawkeefeeders  20,647.65Loss on destruction of fruit jarbusiness  454,873.54Total$ 1,076,487.15Punitive damages (in an amountequal to the total amount of  restitution and compensatory  damages).  In the brief submitted on its appeal from the District Court's judgment entered in 1946, the petitioner stated that "Recovery was sought in the counterclaim for the loss of the fruit jar business and reasonably anticipated profits." In a memorandum to the petitioner dated October 1, 1948, counsel for the petitioner in both suits against Hartford stated that in Civil Action No. 1650, "The principal items of damage were (i) injury to business by limitations and exclusions from various fields (ii) loss of profits, *135  and (iii) royalty and other expenses."The Circuit Court of Appeals, on August 14, 1947, filed its opinion and held as follows:(a) Settlement of accounting order.  The judgment of the District Court allowing petitioner's claim in the amount of $ 11,167.85, with interest at 6 per cent, was affirmed.(b) Royalties. Petitioner's claim for royalties, plus interest, was upheld.  However, the court stated that "There may be elements which might possibly affect the amounts of royalties to be refunded and we express no opinion as to this." The case was remanded for the taking of additional testimony, and a determination by the District Court of the specific amounts of royalties to be refunded.(c) Litigation and travel expenses.  Petitioner's claim was upheld.(d) Dismantling Shawkee feeders. Petitioner's claim was upheld.(e) Destruction of fruit jar business.  The finding of the District Court that the evidence as to this loss was too speculative was affirmed as having "substantial justification" in the record.(f) Punitive damages.  The Court said that "This case calls for such damages although it is for the District Court, as the trier of *865  fact, to assess them, taking into*136  consideration the whole wretched scheme as ascertained and etched in unmistakable terms by the Supreme Court." The Court further stated that the trial court could be governed by "the enormity of [the] offense rather than the measure of compensation."Hartford had earned large profits as a result of its fraudulent practices.Both Hartford and the petitioner filed petitions for rehearing with the Circuit Court of Appeals, and Hartford filed "comments" upon the petitioner's petition for rehearing.  Hartford's petition for rehearing argued for complete freedom from liability under all of petitioner's claims.  The petition filed by petitioner sought to persuade the Court to direct the entry of a judgment for the full amount of the royalties it had paid, plus interest.  Petitioner also asserted that the Court's ruling denying recovery for the destruction of the fruit jar business rested on errors of law, as well as fact, and disregarded controlling decisions of the United States Supreme Court.  In reply, Hartford continued to assert its position that it was entitled to substantial credits against the royalties to be refunded to petitioner.  The petitions for rehearing were denied by the*137  Circuit Court of Appeals on October 1, 1947.While the petitions for rehearing were pending, settlement discussions between petitioner and Hartford were commenced.  Petitioner's executive officers and counsel had agreed among themselves to ask for $ 1,530,000, consisting of the following items:Accounting settlement; litigation and travelexpenses; dismantling Shawkee feeders  $ 45,000Reimbursement of royalties paid to Hartford370,000Loss on destruction of fruit jar business250,000Punitive damages in Docket No. 2791500,000Civil Action No. 1650 (antitrust suit):Loss on destruction of lines of glassware     business other than fruit jar business       $ 55,000Punitive damages     110,000165,000Interest on refund of royalties and otherreimbursement items  200,000$ 1,530,000Petitioner's counsel, in Civil Action No. 1650 and Docket No. 2791, was convinced and so advised the petitioner's president at the time negotiations for settlement began and at the time Hartford's final offer in settlement was received that upon remand of Docket No. 2791 to the District Court, the petitioner would probably receive punitive damages of approximately*138  $ 500,000 to $ 750,000 and possibly $ 1,000,000 or $ 1,500,000; and, further, that if the District Court awarded as punitive damages a sum of $ 250,000 or less, it would very likely be *866  reversed upon appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals.  Counsel was of the view that such a large award would be made in view of such factors as the Circuit Court of Appeals' scathing denunciation of the fraud practiced by Hartford, the large profits it earned during the years the fraud was practiced, and the Circuit Court of Appeals' statement that the District Court, in assessing the punitive damages, could be governed by the enormity of the offense rather than the measure of compensation.  The claims for punitive damages under Civil Action No. 1650 and Docket No. 2791 were serious claims, and figured prominently in the final settlement.The $ 250,000 claim for loss on the fruit jar business was included in the total sum of $ 1,530,000 asked by the petitioner in settlement, mainly for bargaining purposes.  Since the claim was disallowed by the District Court and the disallowance was affirmed on appeal, the petitioner was prepared to abandon it immediately.  Throughout the negotiation proceedings, *139  the representatives of Hartford took the position that the question of the allowance of that claim had been resolved by litigation and they would, therefore, pay no attention to it.The claim for compensatory and punitive damages under Civil Action No. 1650 (antitrust suit) in the amount of $ 165,000 consisted of $ 55,000 as the value placed on the claims for destruction of lines of glassware business other than the fruit jar line, and $ 110,000 as the value assigned to the punitive damages claim.  The claims for destruction of the fruit jar line and for return of royalties had also been alleged in Civil Action No. 1650.The itemized proposal was communicated to representatives of Hartford at a meeting in September 1947.  Hartford expressed a willingness to pay a sum in the area of $ 200,000 but any discussion of settlement in that range was declined.  Thereafter, in October 1947, Hartford made a lump sum settlement offer of $ 600,000 to petitioner, which was rejected.  In November 1947 Hartford offered the lump sum of $ 813,358.24.  This offer was accepted by petitioner, and the settlement agreement was executed on December 15, 1947, prior to the expiration of the period for the *140  filing of a petition for certiorari in the United States Supreme Court.The settlement terminated the litigation in Civil Action No. 1650 and Docket No. 2791, referred to above, and was evidenced by a settlement agreement and two mutual releases.  Pursuant to the settlement agreement, Hartford paid petitioner the sum of $ 813,358.24 on December 23, 1947.  No agreement was made by the parties to the settlement as to the allocation of that amount among the various claims involved in the litigation and settlement negotiations.In the fiscal year ended September 30, 1948, petitioner paid legal fees in connection with the Hartford litigation and settlement in the total amount of $ 225,000.*867  In its income tax return for the taxable year 1948, the petitioner reported the total proceeds of $ 813,358.24 from which it deducted $ 225,000 for attorney fees, leaving a balance of $ 588,358.24 as the net proceeds.  This balance was allocated to the various claims by according to each claim that proportion of the net settlement proceeds ($ 588,358.24) which the value given to such claim (under the breakdown given to Hartford in the original settlement offer of $ 1,530,000) bears to the total*141  value of $ 1,530,000 assigned to all claims.  The computation was as follows:PercentageValue underof total$ 1,530,000value ofoffer$ 1,530,000assigned toall claimsSettlement of accounting order; litigation andtravel expenses, dismantling Shawkee feeders  $ 45,0001 2.9Reimbursement of royalties paid to Hartford370,0001 24.2Loss on destruction of fruit jar business250,0002 16.3Punitive damages in Docket No. 2791500,0002 32.7Civil Action No. 1650 (antitrust suit):Loss on destruction of lines of glassware    business other than fruit jar business      55,0002 3.6Punitive damages    110,0002 7.2Interest200,0001 13.1$ 1,530,000100.0Allocatednet proceedsof $ 588,358.24Settlement of accounting order; litigation andtravel expenses, dismantling Shawkee feeders  $ 17,062.39Reimbursement of royalties paid to Hartford142,382.69Loss on destruction of fruit jar business95,902.40Punitive damages in Docket No. 2791192,393.14Civil Action No. 1650 (antitrust suit):Loss of destruction of lines of glassware    business other than fruit jar business      21,180.90Punitive damages    42,361.79Interest77,074.93$ 588,358.24*142 The net effect of the computation was to allocate to each claim an amount equal to approximately 38.45 per cent ($ 588,358.24 / $ 1,530,000) of the amount assigned to it in the breakdown of the original settlement offered to Hartford.The sum of $ 813,358.24 received as a lump sum settlement of all claims that petitioner had against Hartford should be apportioned among the several claims in the ratio that this sum bears to the total sum of $ 1,530,000 claimed in the petitioner's original settlement offer.The $ 225,000 in legal fees incurred by the petitioner in the litigation and settlement of the claims against Hartford should be allocated between the claims in *143  the same proportion as the $ 813,358.24 received in settlement is allocated to the several claims.  The fees allocated to the claims that give rise to taxable income constitute an ordinary and necessary business expense.In its claims for loss due to destruction of the fruit jar and other lines of glassware business, asserted in the lawsuits and in the settlement negotiations that followed, the petitioner sought recovery for loss of anticipated profits and not for lost capital.*868  OPINION.The basic issue before us is the taxability of a sum of money received by the petitioner in 1947 in compromise settlement of several claims asserted against Hartford-Empire Company (hereinafter referred to as Hartford) in two suits and in subsequent settlement negotiations. The claims were for: (1) reimbursement of the sum paid in settlement of the accounting order; (2) reimbursement of litigation and travel expenses; (3) reimbursement of loss incurred in dismantling Shawkee feeders; (4) reimbursement of royalties paid to Hartford; (5) interest on refund of royalties and other reimbursement items; (6) loss due to destruction of fruit jar business; (7) loss due to destruction of various lines*144  of glassware business other than the fruit jar business; (8) punitive damages under section 4 of the Clayton Act (15 U. S. C. A., Title 15, section 15) for violation of Federal antitrust laws resulting in destruction of various lines of glassware business other than the fruit jar business, and (9) punitive damages for loss caused by Hartford's fraudulent practices.The taxable nature of the sum received in settlement of each of those claims is dependent upon the nature of the claim.  That is, a sum received in settlement of a claim for a nontaxable item is nontaxable whereas it would be taxable as ordinary income if the item claimed was an ordinary income item, or taxable as a return of capital if the claim was for recovery of lost capital.  Raytheon Production Corporation v. Commissioner, 144 F. 2d 110, certiorari denied 322 U.S. 777">322 U.S. 777; Durkee v. Commissioner, 162 F. 2d 184, and cases cited therein.The parties seem to be in agreement that the sums received in settlement of the first five claims are taxable as ordinary income.  The respondent has determined that they constitute ordinary*145  income, and petitioner has offered no evidence or argument to the contrary.The first issue is whether the sums received in settlement of the punitive damages claims constitute taxable income. It has long been established that punitive damages do not meet the test of taxable income set forth in Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.S. 189">252 U.S. 189, 193, as "'* * * the gain derived from capital, from labor, or from both combined', provided it be understood to include profit gained through a sale or conversion of capital assets * * *." Central R. Co. v. Commissioner, 79 F. 2d 697; Highland Farms Corporation, 42 B. T. A. 1314. This basic definition has been recently cited with complete approval in Commissioner v. Culbertson, 337 U.S. 733">337 U.S. 733, 740, and has been adhered to by the respondent in his Regulations 111, section 29.22(a)-1.  Therefore, on the authority of those cases, we follow this rule of long standing that has never been questioned in any court and hold that the sums received in settlement of the punitive damages claims do not constitute taxable income.*869 *146 The taxability of the sums received in settlement of the claims for loss due to destruction of the fruit jar and other lines of glassware business is in issue because the parties disagree as to what the taxpayer sought to recover.  The petitioner contends it sought recovery of lost capital only, and the respondent contends that recovery for the loss of anticipated profits was sought.  Whether or not the sums received in settlement of those claims are taxable as a return of capital or as ordinary income is dependent upon the resolution of this question of fact.  Raytheon Production Corporation v. Commissioner, supra;Durkee v. Commissioner, supra;Jones v. Corbyn, 186 F. 2d 450; Mathey v. Commissioner, 177 F. 2d 259, affirming 10 T.C. 1099">10 T. C. 1099.The petitioner, in support of its contention that it sought to recover only lost capital, relies on the fact that in these claims the destruction of the business was alleged.  However, destruction of a business is a factual premise that might support a claim based on the loss of anticipated*147  profits as well as the loss of capital.  We must, therefore, look further to determine what the petitioner sought to recover.The pleadings in both suits Nos. 2791 and 1650 fail to refer to any asset, either tangible or intangible, that was damaged or destroyed.  There is no allegation that any physical assets became idle or useless because of the prohibition against the manufacture of certain lines of glassware but, on the contrary, we know that the same machinery used to manufacture the prohibited glassware was also used to manufacture other unprohibited lines of glassware. Intangibles such as "good will" or "reputation" are nowhere mentioned and there is no contention that with reference to the prohibited lines of glassware business the petitioner had acquired "good will" or that sums had been expended and capitalized in the development of those lines.  Martin Brothers Box Co. v. Commissioner, 142 F.2d 457">142 F. 2d 457.No evidence was introduced in the litigated suit or in this proceeding to establish at least that there had been in existence an asset, later destroyed, that could conceivably have been the basis of a claim for lost capital.  The petitioner*148  offered no evidence of customers' lists, schedule of valuable established merchandise outlets for those wares, testimony of preference given to those wares by consumers, or similar evidence likely to be introduced where loss of good will or a similar asset is in issue.  In fact, the evidence establishes that the petitioner's fruit jar business was not begun until July 1931 and, further, that in September of that year the petitioner gave to a distributor a 5-year exclusive distribution contract for the sale of its entire fruit jar output.The evidence in the litigated suit consisted mainly of a showing of loss of anticipated profits. Testimony and exhibits were introduced to support an estimate of the profits that would have been earned during the period beginning 1934 and ending with the removal in *870  1940 of the prohibitions against the manufacture of fruit jars. The significance of the petitioner's reliance on such evidence is not lessened because evidence of past profits actually earned is sometimes introduced to value good will.  See Raytheon Production Corporation v. Commissioner, supra.It is very unlikely that the petitioner attempted*149  to prove the value of good will by estimating anticipated profits. In any event, such a purpose cannot be inferred when there is no reference to good will or any similar asset that might need to be valued.  Finally, we must note that the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit characterized that claim as a "claim for loss of profits." Hartford-Empire Co. v. Shawkee Mfg. Co., 163 F.2d 474">163 F. 2d 474, 479.After carefully studying this and all other evidence, especially the exhibits and testimony pertinent to suits Nos. 2791 and 1650, and subsequent discussions between Hartford and the petitioner, we find the posture of the litigation and settlement negotiations to be such that on the record before us we cannot find that the recovery sought was for lost capital but, on the contrary, find that recovery was sought for the loss of anticipated profits. Therefore, the sums received in settlement of those claims represent recovery for the loss of anticipated profits and are taxable as ordinary income.  Raytheon Production Corporation v. Commissioner, supra;Durkee v. Commissioner, supra;Jones v. Corbyn, supra;*150 Mathey v. Commissioner, supra.However, even if the evidence established that the petitioner sought recovery only in part for loss of anticipated profits, the entire proceeds would represent a recovery for the loss of anticipated profits. The respondent has in effect determined that none of the settlement proceeds represented a return of capital, and the petitioner has relied entirely on the proposition that recovery was solely for lost capital and that the proceeds received in settlement represent a return of capital. The petitioner therefore made no attempt to, and the record does not contain any evidence on the basis of which we could, apportion the settlement proceeds between recovery of lost capital and recovery for loss of anticipated profits. Under such circumstances, the entire sum received in settlement of those claims represents a recovery for loss of anticipated profits and is taxable as ordinary income.  Armstrong Knitting Mills, 19 B. T. A. 318; Arcadia Refining Co. v. Commissioner, 118 F. 2d 1010; H. Liebes & Co. v. Commissioner, 90 F. 2d 932;*151 Martin Brothers Box Co. v. Commissioner, supra.Finally, we must determine what portion of the $ 813,358.24 settlement proceeds is allocable to the punitive damages claims and how much is allocable to the remaining claims which give rise to taxable income. Since the entire sum allocable to the remaining claims is taxable as ordinary income, it is not necessary that we determine what portion is allocable to each individual item in that category.*871 The parties to the compromise settlement merely agreed to a lump sum payment and made no attempt to decide how much was paid and received in settlement of each claim or how much was attributable to the punitive damages claims.  Under those circumstances, an allocation is necessary and proper.  Specialty Engineering Co., 1173">12 T. C. 1173; cf.  Cramp Shipbuilding Co., 17 T. C. 516; see Helvering v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 316 U.S. 56">316 U.S. 56.The petitioner proposes that we allocate to the punitive damages claims that proportion of the gross settlement proceeds ($ 813,358.24) which the value assigned to those claims*152  by the petitioner at the beginning of settlement negotiations bears to the total value ($ 1,530,000) assigned to all claims at that time.  Pursuant to that proposal, petitioner allocated $ 324,529.94 to the punitive damages claims and the balance to the remaining claims.We accept the general method of allocation proposed by the petitioner as a reasonable one which in our opinion is fair to the respondent, and in so doing we are not unmindful of the respondent's objection that this method ignores the relative weight possessed by those various claims.  However, we do not deem this material since the respondent does not suffer from the allocation as proposed.  The failure to take into account relative weight did not increase, and possibly decreased, the amount of the settlement proceeds allocated to the punitive damages claims.  For example, by giving equal weight to the claim for destruction of the fruit jar business, admittedly the weakest claim, the amount allocated to ordinary income was proportionately increased and the amount allocated to the punitive damages claims was proportionately decreased.Furthermore, not only did the claims for punitive damages possess more weight than*153  the claim for destruction of the fruit jar business but, in addition, we think they possessed at least approximately the same weight as all other claims, other than the first three relatively small claims totaling $ 44,938.47 and the interest thereon.The claims for punitive damages, especially the claim in No. 2791, were serious claims that undoubtedly figured prominently in the settlement negotiations and final settlement agreement.  In No. 1650, the petitioner pressed a claim for treble damages under section 4 of the Clayton Act.  Hartford had already been found guilty of violating Federal antitrust laws and the judgment was affirmed by the United States Supreme Court.  In No. 2791, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled that the petitioner should receive punitive damages and prepared the way for a large award by scathingly denouncing the fraud of which the petitioner had been a victim, and by stating that "In those circumstances, the trial court has power to inflict such damages, 'having in view the enormity of * * * *872  [the] offense rather than the measure of compensation * * *.'" Hartford had earned large profits as a result of those fraudulent practices. *154  The sum of $ 813,358.24 received as a lump sum settlement will be apportioned in the manner set forth in our findings and the tax thereon will be computed as we have determined herein.The parties have agreed that the legal fees incurred in the litigation and settlement of the several claims against Hartford should be allocated between the claims in the same proportion as the settlement proceeds are allocated. They further agreed that the fees allocated to the claims that gave rise to taxable income are deductible as an ordinary and necessary business expense, and that the fees allocated to the claims that did not give rise to taxable income are not deductible.Decision will be entered under Rule 50.  Footnotes*. This $ 26,283.33 item is not involved in the present proceeding.↩1. On the schedule attached to the income tax return, these three items were combined at a total percentage of 40.20, and a total sum of $ 236,520.01↩2. On the schedule attached to the income tax return, these four items were combined at a total percentage of 59.80, and a total sum of $ 351,838.23.  The two items under Civil Action No. 1650 (antitrust suit) were totaled at $ 165,000 and referred to as "Damage to Business Covered by Antitrust suit." No part of the $ 165,000 sum was referred to as punitive damages.↩