1931 BTA LEXIS 1966 | B.T.A. | 1931
Lead Opinion
The facts are not in dispute. Petitioner contends that the amounts paid in 1923 by the decedent Scudder, and representing legal fees and expenses pertaining to the litigation detailed in the findings, were business expenses properly to be deducted from gross income. Respondent contends that they were capital expenditures representing a part of the cost to Scudder of 53% shares of stock of the Cupples Envelope Company.
The facts show that the expenditures in question were in defending a suit brought against Scudder, together with Hamilton and Rogers, to have declared void a transfer to him by these two parties of 160
Scudder was unsuccessful in his defense of this litigation, the court voiding the transfer and holding further, as to Hamilton and Rogers, that their attempt to sell the stock was a breach of the contract under which the stock was held in trust and that this gave the right to the Cupples estate to exercise its option and acquire the stock.
We can not see that Scudder, by provoking this litigation and incurring the attendant expense in defending it, acquired anything. His attempted acquisition of 160 shares of stock from Hamilton and Rogers, and by that the control of the corporation, was unsuccessful and it was in this unsuccessful attempt that the amounts in question were expended. It is true that as a result of the court’s decision in respect to Hamilton and Rogers, that their action in attempting to dispose of the stock gave the Cupples estate the right to exercise its option to repurchase it, Scudder ultimately obtained the right to purchase from the estate 53% of the 160 shares in question, but this was a right accruing to him under his contract with Samuel Cupples and it does not appear that the validity of this contract vas in issue in the litigation. It is true that the court recognized in its decree the obligation of the Cupples estate, in the event it exer-cized the option and reacquired the Hamilton and Rogers stock, to sell one-third of it to Scudder, but it is not indicated that such obligation was denied by the trustees of the estate. On the other hand, these trustees had recognized this obligation in each case of stock reacquired from other employees and had delivered one-third of it to Scudder.
On the facts we can not conclude that the expenditure in question was an item of the cost to Scudder of the 53% shares of stock ultimately acquired by him. On 'the other hand, it is clear that it was incurred in an unsuccessful effort to defend the validity of a contract through which Scudder would have succeeded in securing 106% additional shares of Hamilton and Rogers stock, thereby gaining control of the corporation. Stated in another and shorter way, the expenditure was made in an attempt to acquire 106% shares of the Hamilton and Rogers stock.
Both the petitioner and the respondent cite and rely upon the case of Laemmle v. Eisner, 275 Fed. 504, as supporting their respec
Reviewed by the Board.
Judgment will be entered under Rule 50.