Thomas v. Thomas
Thomas v. Thomas
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit by one brother against another to compel repayment of part of the former’s income taxes, under an indemnity or assumption agreement entered into at the dissolution of a partnership between them. It was tried before Judge Clark, sitting in the Circuit Court for Howard County, without a jury, and, at the conclusion of the case, a judgment was entered for the defendant for costs, whereupon the plaintiff appealed.
It appears from the record that the plaintiff, the defendant, and a third brother, Lee Thomas, were partners in a business conducted in the firm name of Three Springs Fisheries. Leicester Thomas, Jr., son of the defendant, was the manager, and the business of the partnership was the raising and selling of goldfish, water lilies, etc. The place of business was Lily Pons, Frederick County, Maryland. On January 10, 1936, another business was started, to deal in feeds, grains, seeds, and fertilizers. It was called Thomas Supply Company, and had its office in the office 'of the Three Springs Fisheries. Leicester, Jr., was the manager. He contends that he was the sole proprietor, but the plaintiff, Clarence, claims that this was always a partnership, consisting of himself, Leicester, Lee, and Leicester, Jr. Three Springs Fisheries made regular partnership income tax returns, but no partnership returns were made for Thomas Supply Company until 1945. It was claimed by Leicester, Jr., that he included the income of that business for the preceding years in his personal returns.
On October 19, 1944, as a sort of settlement between the three remaining parties, Clarence, Leicester, and Leicester, Jr., it was agreed that the profits of the Supply Company to that date had amounted to $39,000. One third thereof, $13,000, was immediately set up on the company’s books as a credit to each, and three Supply Company checks for $5,000 each were drawn, charged against said credits, and delivered to the parties. Clarence deposited his in his own account. Leicester and Leicester, Jr., say the credit of $13,000 to Clarence was a gift made to keep peace, but Clarence insists that he had always been a partner, and that these credits were a belated distribution of the partnership profits. He did not, however, include the $13,000, or any part thereof, in his income tax returns for 1944, and neither did Leicester. Finally, in November, 1947, the difficulties between the parties culminated in an agreement whereby Leicester was to buy out Clarence’s interest in Three Springs Fisheries for $55,000, and Leicester and Liecester, Jr., were to buy out his interest in the Supply Company for $11,820. The agreement for the Three Springs Fisheries transaction was copied by a typist from an agreement which had been prepared by counsel when Mrs. Lee Thomas sold out her interest, and it
The Internal Revenue Department made an audit in 1947 of Clarence’s 1944 income tax returns and assessed an additional tax of $862.22 against him. He paid this. At that time, the distribution of the $39,000 made by the Supply Company in October, 1944, had not been brought to the Government’s attention. Subsequently,
We may assume without deciding, as did the trial judge, that the agreement is a valid and binding contract made by Leicester. The trial judge held, upon this assumption, that it did not cover the reimbursement of the taxes, and his decision was based upon that question alone. If we agree that his decision on this point was correct, that ends the case, and there is no occasion to discuss the other question.
It is earnestly contended by the appellant that Clarence was fearful of difficulties which would arise as a result of the management of the business by Leicester, Jr., and he was particularly anxious to be protected against any claim that might be made on that account. He refers to the well known rule that in the determination whether any uncertainty or ambiguity exists, or de
The appellant, however, says that while this is true, and, while it is not contended that these taxes were debts of the partnership, they arose or grew out of the business of the partnership, and therefore are included in the indemnity agreement. He supplements this by saying that it was due to the conduct of the business and the way it was conducted by Leicester, Jr., that no profits were distributed prior to 1944, and that had profits been properly distributed or accounted for prior to that year, taxes would have been paid on them, and the obligation would not have arisen.
If we look at this contention in the light of circumstances surrounding the whole matter, we find that the parties all agreed to the method adopted for the setting up of the $39,000 in 1944. If this was income, as claimed by Clarence, he is charged with notice that taxes would be due by him on it. Had there been in
We have not been referred to any cases directly in point, nor have we found any, although a number involving somewhat similar indemnity agreements are annotated in 4 A. L. R. 2d, 1314, supra, 21 A. L. R. 108, 58 A. L. R. 621, and 168 A. L. R. 1088. There are, however, cases which involve analogous situations. Thus, in Codman v. American Piano Co., 229 Mass. 285, 118 N. E. 344, there was a covenant by a lessee to pay “all taxes and assessments whatsoever which may be payable for or in respect of the leased premises” (emphasis supplied) during the term. The federal income tax. law imposed a tax upon a voluntary association which succeeded to the rights of the lessor. This tax was upon the rent paid the association by the lessee. The association sued the lessee under the covenant to recover these taxes. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts denied the claim, saying: “The legal signification clearly is that the taxes • [in respect of the leased premises] are those which relate directly to the premises themselves and not to the rent reserved which, when due, is a separate and independent estate”, and, “The words chosen by the parties, cannot fairly be extended by us beyond their natural or ordinary meaning,
The Western Union Telegraph Company,- toward the end of the 19th Century, absorbed into its telephone system a number of independent companies by means of long-term leasing of all of their assets. Under these leases, questions arose as to whether the income tax on the rentals was an obligation of the lessor or of the lessee. In the case of Johnson v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 293 N. Y. 379, 57 N. E. 2d 721, one of these cases was before the Court of Appeals of New York. As was the case under, apparently, all of these leases, the rent was to be, paid direct to the stockholders of the lessor. The lessor, therefore, was left with no property in its possession, and no money receipts, since the rental payments went to the stockholders. Federal income
Subsequently, another case involving three similar leases, was decided in the same court, Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Pacific & Atlantic Telegraph Co., 297 N. Y. 124, 75 N. E. 2d 843, In that case, the references to taxes in the three leases were in different forms, but the payments to the stockholders were to be made without any deduction or abatement on account of taxes or assessments. The court said that, inferentially, these clauses called upon the lessee to pay all property taxes, but did not include income taxes, citing for this conclusion the Johnson case, supra, and the railroad case of Brainard v. N. Y. C. Railroad Co., 242 N. Y. 125, 151 N. E. 152, 154, 45 A. L. R. 751. The rule laid down in the Brainard case was quoted as being still the law. That rule was: “Unless the lease expressly provides for the payment of taxes on the income from rentals received under the lease, the imposition of such a burden on the lessee is not justified.” In the Pacific & Atlantic case, there was held to be no liability on the lessee.
In N. Y. Central Railroad Co. v. N. Y. & Harlem Railroad Co., 297 N. Y. 820, 78 N. E. 2d 612, there had been a number of successive leases of a similar nature, from the Harlem Railroad to the New York Central. The question was whether the lessee had to pay income taxes on the rent paid directly to the stockholders of the lessor. The agreements were to pay taxes on the
These cases, while not strictly applicable, as we have said, to the question before us, show that courts generally will not construe an agreement to pay taxes, as including income taxes on individual incomes, unless there is a special and direct statement to that effect. If we assume, as we think we can correctly, that the agreement between the parties in this case contains an obligation to pay taxes arising or growing out of the business of the partnership, that nevertheless cannot be broadened or changed by judicial construction to mean ah obligation to pay the income taxes of the appellant, unless there is specific language to that effect. Since there is no such specific language, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THOMAS v. THOMAS
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