131 F.2d 611 | 5th Cir. | 1942
The suit was for tax refund. The claim was that moneys set up on its books as “attorney-in-fact fees” and reported by taxpayer as taxable income in its tax returns for the years 1935, 1936 and 1937, were not in fact such fees and were, therefore, not income, and the taxes, paid on such returns, were recoverable as taxes overpaid. The defendant, joining issue, denied that the taxes in question were erroneously assessed and collected. Tried on a stipulation of facts and the testimony of one witness for plaintiff, a certified public accountant,
The judgment is right. It is affirmed.
This showed: that the taxpayer, a corporation, was during each of the years in question, acting as attorney-in-fact for a reciprocal group known as Casualty Underwriters under a subscription agreement entered into pursuant to Arts. 5024-5030, Texas Civil Statutes; that by the terms of the agreement taxpayer, as attorney-in-fact, received subscribers’ funds and deposited them in a bank account opened by it for them, checks on such funds to be drawn by the attorney-in-fact alone; that the agreement authorized the attorney-in-fact to pay out of the funds subscribers’ proportion of the cost of securing, issuing and exchanging insurance, including all claims and demands. A provision of the agreement was that in .consideration for its services, “our attorney-in-fact shall deduct for itself not to exceed 10 percent of all moneys received on dues as a result of this agreement” and it further provided “our attorney-in-fact shall at all times maintain the premium and loss reserve required by law and shall forego any or all of said 10 percent' when such funds shall prove inadequate”. During the years in question the attorney-in-fact through its officers would pay out of the funds subscribed by the subscribers the cost of issuing policies, including the salaries and necessary office ' expense and would pay underwriter losses. The premium and loss reserves required by law were not maintained in adequate amounts in any of the years involved. Taxpayer, in its income tax returns, reported as “attorney-in-fact fees”, for 1935 $13,597.02, for 1936, $28,504.60 and for 1937 $24,912.46. During all the taxable years in question, the corporation was insolvent, and the books were in such condition that the officers of the corporation must have known that they were being fraudulently kept and that false entries were being made in them. The moneys drawn by the taxpayer from' the subscribers’ funds as “attorney-in-fact foes” for the years in question were disbursed for income tax and for salaries, commissions, loans and dividends to its stockholders and officers. Only the principal officers and stockholders of the company were dishonest. Part of the stockholders and officers were ignorant of the fraud that was going on. The moneys paid out in dividends were paid to innocent, as well as dishonest, stockholders. There was no proof as to the extent in each of the years in question the reserve was short, none that the claim of taxpayer to the moneys in question had not been asserted under a claim of right, none that any claim had been made by the subscribers for the. repayment of any of the sums.