Jаmes W. Bass, collector of internal revenue, appeals from the judgment on a verdict directed against him in favor of A. L. Hawley for recovery of an income tax for the year 1925. The question is whether $16,250
Income that may bo taxed includes gain derived from labor. Eisner v. Macomber,
Against this conclusion is put forward the fact that neither the Holding Company nor the committee claimed a deduction for the рayment in their tax returns. It is true that a payment which is a gift as respects the payer, and so not deductible, will likely be a gift in the hands of the recipient and not taxable, but it is not true that because a payment may not have bеen taken as a deduction by the payer that it cannot be taxed as income to the recipient. The former may have overlooked or waived his right to deduct, which would not relieve the latter from his duty to pay taxes. Or it may happen that the payer was not, when the obligation was assumed and the payment made, engaged in business and so not within the statute allowing the deduction. This seems probable in this ease.
Again it is objected that thе employer was not the Holding Company or its stockholders, but was the Railroad Company, and that the Railroad Company alone could make additional compensation; that a voluntary payment by any one еlse is necessarily a gift. The objection would have force where the third person had no interest in the employment and no cause to feel obligated to compensate the service. But in this ease although thе stockholders authorized the payment, it was made out of funds really belonging to the Holding Company as the proceeds of the sale of its assets, and the Holding Company was the sole owner of the Railroad Compаny. If the additional compensation was fairly due, and should have been paid out of the Railroad Company’s assets, it would have come to the same tiling in settling with the Southern Pacific Company. The situation produced by the sale made it inevitable that whatever was paid should eventually be the loss of the stockholders. In determining the incidence of taxation, corporate organization of taxpayers is not ordinarily to be disregarded. Burnet, Commissioner, v. Commonwealth Improvement Co.,
The claim for refund set up that the pаyment was made by the Holding Company. The amended pleadings and the evidence showed an involvement of its stockholders. The point is made that there was a departure from the case made by the claim for refund. J. P. Stevens Engraving Co. v. United States (C. C. A.)
The cause is reversed, and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
