When this case was here before,
We can now forget about
Boston Fish Market.
We had noted,
On the other hand, appellant Sirbo’s arguments are quite persuasive in support of our intimation in our earlier opinion that the terms “a sale or other disposition of real property” and “a casual sale or other casual disposition of personal property” in I.R.C. § 453(b) are more restrictive than “sales or exchanges of property used in the trade or business” in I.R.C. § 1231(a).
With Sirbo thus deprived of the aid we thought it might get from Boston Fish Market and the Commissioner' gaining little assistance from the decision as distinguished from the dicta in Billy Rose, we must decide thе basic question whether Sirbo’s receipt of the $125,000 payment came within I.R.C. § 1231(a). We hold that not all of it did and that, since Sirbo has twice failed to avail itself of an opportunity to proffer evidence that would support an allocation, the Tax Court should be affirmed.
The problem with respect to the tax treatment of payments for the termination of contract rights having a property flavor is among the most frustrating in income tax law. Anyone reading such materials as Professоr Eustice’s article, Contract Rights, Capital Gain, and Assignment of Income — the Ferrer Case, 20 Tax.L.Rev. 1 (1964), Professor Chirelstein’s article, Capital Gain and the Sale of a Business Opportunity: The Income Tax Treatment of Contract Termination Payments, 49 Minn.L.Rev. 1 (1964), or, for those with smaller appetites, the analysis of cases in 1 Surrey, Warren, McDaniel and*Ault, Federal Income Taxation 1049-54 (1972 ed.) must end with deep disappointment at the failure of decisions to fulfill the goals of predictability and of prinсipled decision-making and at the enormous expenditure of professional and judicial time in accomplishing nothing more than a debatable decision of a particular case. “Unfortunately,” Professor Eustice reminds us, “matters remаin nearly as muddled as ever; and the seemingly unending growth of litigation on this question shows little sign of abating, or, for that matter, of even reaching a general consensus of what the law is, not to mention what it ought to be.” Eustice, supra, 20 Tax L.Rev. 1. Yet Government counsel said, in answer to a question from the bench, that little would be gained by an attempt at legislative revision since the variety of problems is too great. Perhaps this is so, although even a quick look at the American Law Institute’s Draft of a study of Definitional Problems in Capital Gains Taxation (1960) makes one wonder whether a new attempt should not be made. 6 However, we must take the statute as we find it.
When the case was last here, we pointed out that the covenant in the lease, see
We also suggested, however, that CBS’ covenant to remove its own property “clearly was not ‘property used in the trade or business’ ”,
Despite this plain intimation, Sirbo made no effort to supply an allocation on the remand. Perhaps the initial failure to do this had been excusable; within reason a taxpayer shоuld be allowed to contend for the most favorable result in the first instance and to supply an allocation later,
7
as we allowed in CIR v. Ferrer,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Our previous opinion states the facts; familiarity with it will be presumed.
. “For all tax rulings, it is important that there be like treatment to those who should be dealt with on the same basis.”
. Speaking of the IBM decision, supra, Professor Davis remarks:
No one would disagree with the principle of equality which the IBM dеcision advances. The problem of the case is not whether equality is desirable; of course it is. The problem is how much deviation from complete equality must be allowed as a concession to the difficulties of administration. If one taxpayer gets a favorable but erroneous ruling on a specific question, equality requires that every other taxpayer having that same question be allowed the advantage of the error. But is that practical? Do even the bеst of tax administrators have the capacity to carry the equality principle all the way?
.
See
H.R.Rep. No. 1, 69th Cong., 1st Sess. (1926), reprinted in Internal Revenue Bulletin, Cum.Bull. 1939-1 (Part 2) at 315, 346-47, where the drafters of § 212(d) of the Revenue Act of 1926, 44 Stat. 23, explained the necessity оf “validating” the Commissioner’s prior regulatory practices in recognizing an installment basis for reporting income. These practices had suffered setbacks before the Board of Tax Appeals,
see
Manomet Cranberry Co.,
. Towanda Textiles, Inc. v. United States,
. See, e. g., the seven page definition of a capital аsset, 20-27, and the substitution of “complete disposition”, defined at 27-30, for “sale or exchange”.
. We are not here speaking of contractual allocations, or non-allocations, where different considerations may apply. Compare King Broadcasting Co. v. CIR,
