19 F.2d 230 | 6th Cir. | 1927
Prior to March 1,1913, defendant in error became one of three partners in a wholesale grocery business in Nashville, Tenn., operating under the firm name of Orr, Mizell & Murrey. On September 1,1919, he purchased the interests of his copartners therein (65 per cent, of the whole), paying them, in addition to the inventory value thereof, a bonus of $20,500, which was thereafter carried on the books of his company as good will. Mizell and Murrey immediately established a competing business, representing to their former customers that they were in fact the old firm. One year later Orr sold to Walton Cunningham an undivided one-third interest in the entire business, consisting of merchandise, accounts, fixtures, and all other assets of the company. Cunningham refused to pay anything for good will. In his income tax return for 1920, Orr claimed a loss of $20,500 in good will. The claim was disallowed, and, after paying his taxes for that year, Orr brought this suit to'recover the taxes he had paid as a result of the disallowance of that item. The case was tried by agreement before the court without a jury.
Seasonable requests by the government for findings of fact were not made, and the exceptions which it filed to those made by the court are not sufficient to raise any question as to their correctness. The findings were substantially the same as the facts averred in the declaration. Under the assignments of error, the question presented to us is whether the facts found by the lower court warranted a judgment against the government in an amount representing the difference between taxes paid by plaintiff for the year 1920 and what he would have paid, had he been allowed as a loss the $20,500 which he paid to his former partners.
Profits and losses from the sale of good will are eoncededly taken into account in the assessment of income taxes. Section 214a, subd. 4, of the Revenue Act of 1918 (Comp. St. § 6336%g), provides that, in computing net income, there shall be allowed as deductions “losses sustained during the taxable year and not compensated for by insurance or otherwise, if incurred in trade or business.” It is, we think, indisputable that losses occurring in trade or business, which are deductible as such in computing net income, are only such losses as have been realized. If plaintiff had sold at a profit a one-third interest in the good will he purchased from his former partners, he could not have been charged as income with the increase in the book value of the entire good will, but only with the profit derived from that part which he sold. Good will may fluctuate in value, and there is no way of arriving at losses or profits thereon for income purposes, except by comparison of sale receipts with cost, or with the value as of March 1,1913, if it was acquired prior to that date.
Plaintiff contends that the sale of September 1, 1920, demonstrated that the good will of the firm had been wholly lost or destroyed during the tax year, and for that reason he was entitled to deduet the value of the
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.