This is an action to recover income taxes paid on an asserted deficiency for the calendar year 1958.
For many years prior to August 6, 1958, plaintiff Thomas R. Yandell was a co-partner with one Leslie Clarke in a business known as Clarke Publishing Company. This company was engaged in the advertising and publishing business in Portland, Oregon, and was primarily interested in the publication of neighborhood shopping newspapers. Prior to the formation of the partnership, Yandell and Clarke each operated their own advertising and publishing business in said area. Yandell’s principal duty in connection with the partnership was supervising the purely business area of the operation. Clarke was engaged in supervising the actual publishing of the newspaper, in which operation he used his privately owned printing company and its fixtures, machinery and equipment. Plaintiff had no interest in this printing establishment.
In 1958 the partners engaged in an extremely acrimonious partnership fight, as a result of which rather heated and bitter litigation arose. In June of that year, Clarke instituted an action against Yandell in the Circuit Court for the State of Oregon for Multnomah County, a court of general jurisdiction, asking for a declaratory judgment as to the respective rights of the parties and that the partnership be dissolved and for such further and additional relief as might be necessary and proper in the premises. Subsequent to the filing of the complaint the partners, through their respective counsel, started negotiations for a settlement of the litigation. The first draft of a settlement contract mentions, among other things, a sale of “good will,” no mention being made of a “covenant not to compete.” The second draft mentions a “covenant not to compete.” The third draft provides that Yandell’s share of the purchase price for “good will” should be determined by a board of arbitration, while the final draft eliminates the language “good will as determined by arbitrators” and substitutes therefor a “covenant not to compete” on the part of Yandell. The record is quite clear that the question of the tax consequences of the transaction were thoroughly discussed by the partners and by their respective counsel and that Clarke and his attorney insisted on the “covenant not to compete” being an essential part and parcel of the final draft. The final draft was signed by the parties and the original lodged in the court above mentioned, and based thereon, an order was entered approving the stipulation as signed, thus disposing of the controversy. In this final draft it is provided that Clarke pay Yandell the sum of $15,000 for the “covenant not to compete.” The issue presented is whether the item of $15,000 included in the sale of Yandell’s interest in the partnership represented a sale of good will and thus entitled to capital gains treatment, or whether it was consideration for a covenant not to compete and thus represented ordinary income to Yandell. On the income tax return the plaintiffs took the position that they were entitled to treat this item as a capital gain, while defendant, on its subsequent proceedings in asserting and collecting the asserted deficiency, claimed that such item should be treated as ordinary income.
The testimony makes it absolutely clear that when the parties signed the final stipulation they were fully and completely aware of the tax consequences of labelling the $15,000 item a “covenant not to com
The plaintiff carries a heavy burden. The very purpose of reducing to writing an agreement between parties is to establish the terms, provisions and conditions of their agreement and their intentions with reference thereto. Historically, the courts found oral contracts quite unsatisfactory and at an early date established what we now know as the Parol Evidence rule. At or about the same time, the courts established the Best Evidence rule to prevent parties from testifying to the contents of an agreement which was in writing. Even these rules were found insufficient to control some of the unsavory practices which had grown up with the early common law and, as a result, Parliament passed the first Statute of Frauds which absolutely prevented evidence of certain agreements unless the same were in writing. The substance of this statute has been adopted by most, if not all, of the states, including Oregon.
It is a rule of law in this district that a partner may sell his good will in a partnership and, in a proper case, may receive capital gains treatment for tax purposes. Rees v. United States, D.C. Or., 1960,
The Ninth Circuit has considered somewhat similar cases in Rogers v. United States, 9 Cir., 1961,
The facts in the Rogers case are more closely related to the facts in this case. In that case, as in this, the taxpayer was attempting to circumvent a provision in the written contract which set aside a portion of the consideration for a covenant not to compete. In Rogers, as here, the parties segregated the covenant not to compete and the consideration in support of the covenant from the general sales price of the business. Under ordinary circumstances, a party to a contract should not be permitted to change, modify or contradict its terms or conditions. As was said in Rogers, “the taxpayers probably have been maneuvered by their purchaser into a big tax disadvantage.” In that case, the court refused to go behind the contract which was the result of voluntary negotiations between the parties. Ordinarily, the creator of a plan does not have a right to disregard an arrangement which he has selected after due deliberation. Higgins v. Smith,
Other cases cited by respective counsel have received my consideration. These authorities are of no assistance in arriving at my conclusions. I have resolved the question of fact against plaintiffs.
The agreed facts as set forth in the pretrial order and my findings in this opinion shall stand as my findings of fact and conclusions of law. Judgment for defendant.
Notes
. ORS 41.580.
. ORS 41.850 “Conclusive presumptions. The following presumptions, and no others, are conclusive:
* * * is *
“(3) The truth of the facts recited from the recital in a written instrument, between the parties thereto, their representatives or successors in interest by a subsequent title; but this rule does not apply to the recital of a consideration. $ # >»
. “ * * * Admittedly, both courts relied heavily on the formal means which the parties used. However, there it was the partios rather than the Oommissioner who sought to vary the formal instruments. * * * ” (
