The Tax Court held that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue rightly included in the gross income of the petitioner, Walter G. Hougland, Jr., all the income for the year 1940 from a partnership arrangement between petitioner and his mother and his wife.
The record shows that the petitioner, by means of the financial assistance of his father by whom he was employed, purchased a towboat for $158,000; and, under the name “Hougland’s,” engaged profitably in river transportation. In August 1939, about two years after his purchase of the towboat, petitioner sold a one-half interest therein to his mother. She delivered to him her promissory note in the face value of one-half of the cost of the towboat, less an agreed depreciation, and assumed joint liability with her son on three promissory notes, aggregating $30,000, which he had delivered to his father to cover the cash borrowed. The liability of his mother to petitioner, however, was to be discharged out of her share of the profits of the business.
On January 1, 1940, the petitioner and his mother “sold” a one-third interest in “Hougland’s” to the wife of petitioner under virtually the same arrangements which had been made at the time petitioner sold a half interest to his mother. Neither the mother nor the wife had funds of their
These facts were found by the Tax Court upon substantial evidence, and plainly bring the case within the ambit of Commissioner v. Tower,
Since the announcement of the opinions in Commissioner v. Tower, supra, and Lusthaus v. Commissioner,
The decisions of the Tax Court are affirmed.
