Cole v. Usry, 18713.

Decision Date08 September 1961
Docket NumberNo. 18713.,18713.
Citation294 F.2d 426
PartiesDr. C. Grenes COLE and Mrs. Hallette B. Cole, Appellants, v. Chester A. USRY, District Director of Internal Revenue, Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

Elton A. Darsey, Houma, La., St. Clair Adams, Jr., New Orleans, La., Adams & Reese, New Orleans, La., for appellants.

Charles K. Rice, Lee A. Jackson, Washington, D. C., M. Hepburn Many, Nicholas J. Gagliano, New Orleans, La., Burt J. Abrams, Washington, D. C., Louis F. Oberdorfer, Asst. Atty. Gen., A. F. Prescott, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., for appellee.

Before RIVES, CAMERON and WISDOM, Circuit Judges.

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

This case presents the oft-litigated question of whether subdivision lots should be excluded from "capital assets" as constituting "property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business."1

The Coles sued for the refund of income taxes for the calendar years 1953, 1954 and 1955, aggregating approximately $23,000.00. The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict answering "yes" to the interrogatory: "Were the lots in suit held and sold by the taxpayers primarily in the course of their business?" On this appeal, the Coles insist, inter alia, upon objections to evidence, and that the district court erred in not granting them a directed verdict or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

That the apparent simplicity of the issue submitted to the jury is a deceptive illusion is demonstrated by the scores of appeals in cases presenting the same question under various factual settings.2 Those cases have listed and re-listed various factors proper to be considered in determining whether property is "held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business." As Mertens has noted, however, those factors "in and of themselves * * * have no independent significance, but only form part of a situation which in the individual case must be considered in its entirety to determine whether or not the property involved was held primarily for sale in the ordinary course of business." 3B Mertens Law of Federal Income Taxation, Zimet & Weiss Rev., Sec. 22.138, p. 623.3

As if the issue were not already difficult enough for a jury to comprehensively understand and correctly decide, able, but too zealous, counsel for the Government further complicated it by artful appeals to emotion and prejudice; such as, cross-examining Mrs. Cole on whether from 1933 to 1936, about twenty years before the period here involved, her brother-in-law had held title to the property under "a fraudulent conveyance just to keep it away from your creditors," and after objection was sustained to that inquiry, further cross-examining her as to her retention of the mineral rights, so that "if suddenly oil comes popping up he (the lot purchaser) is out of luck, because that is your property?" Again objection was sustained, but it is doubtful whether the innuendo was dispelled from the minds of the jurors.

In this setting, Government counsel were permitted further to divert the issue by cross-examining Dr. Cole and Mrs. Cole at great length concerning their claimed deductions from ordinary income for telephone expenses, stationery and supplies, bank charges, legal and tax services, and automobile expenses. The effort was to establish by a process of elimination that these business expense deductions were connected with the sale of the lots. The theory upon which the district court permitted such cross-examination is shown by its charge to the jury that, "If you find that any of these deductions related to the lots in question, these claimed deductions under consideration, you may consider this as an admission against the plaintiffs' interest."

Insisting on appeal that such testimony was admissible as showing an "admission against interest," the Government relies upon a series of cases to the effect that the taxpayer's listing his occupation as including dealing in real estate may be considered as an admission against interest.4 Those cases differ from the present one in that here any circumstantial effect of the claimed deductions as admissions of the ultimate question was expressly negatived in the very same returns by the taxpayers' claim that their gains were capital gains.5 We need not, however, hold that such testimony was entirely inadmissible, for we are of the opinion that its probative value was so slight that it could not convert into a jury issue what would otherwise be a question of law.

In this case several of the witnesses had been subpoenaed by both sides, and all who testified were actually introduced by the plaintiffs. In addition to the two taxpayers themselves, the witnesses consisted of an expert on the sugar industry to show the effects of the "mosaic disease" on growing sugar cane, the two engineers who had surveyed and platted the property, the contractor who had cleared and leveled the property and graded the roads, the shell dealer who had shelled the streets, the taxpayers' accountant who had prepared their returns, and their lawyer who had handled the sales of the lots.

The uncontroverted evidence concerning the acquisition and sale of the real estate in question is as follows. In 1927 Mrs. Cole purchased 553.9 acres of land from R. R. Barrow, Inc., a family corporation. The land had been in Mrs. Cole's family since 1826 and contained the family residence. In 1935, 150 acres were sold to the Parish of Terrebonne for an airport, and in 1943, another 200 or 300 acres were condemned by the United States for a naval air station. During 1951 and 1952, Mrs. Cole employed engineers and contractors to lay out three adjoining subdivisions on about 50 acres of the remaining 100 to 200 acres of the original tract. The South Terrebonne subdivision was staked off into 42 lots in 1951. No streets or roads were required since all the lots faced on the highway. In 1952 the Roberta Grove and Oleander subdivisions of 57 and 14 lots, respectively, were laid out. A general contractor cleared the property and cut and graded four streets with drainage ditches. The streets were then shelled as required by local ordinance. No facilities for water, sewage, gas, or electricity were installed in any of the three subdivisions. The overall expenditures in making the subdivisions came to $8,458.19.

Between 1951 and 1956, 93 lots were sold in 61 transactions with profits averaging between 74 and 97% of the sales price. The only advertising undertaken was a "For Sale" sign along the highway with Mrs. Cole's telephone number on it. Mrs. Cole's attorney, Elton Darsey, handled the details of all the sales, and any customers who did not go to him directly were referred to him by Mrs. Cole. Mr. Darsey's compensation was paid by the purchaser. The notes on installment sales were collected by a local bank. Mrs. Cole retained all mineral rights in the land and incorporated restrictive covenants in the deeds. In 1955 an aerial photograph was taken of the remaining acreage for possible future subdivision.

During this period Mrs. Cole would spend long weekends at the family residence to handle all necessary matters which included, besides the sale of the lots in question, the managing of some 5 or 6 thousand acres leased out for pastures, farming, warehouses, and oil rights. The rest of the week was spent at the Cole's rented residence in New Orleans. With respect to the subdivisions, Mrs. Cole handled all matters personally except for the final sale concluded by Mr. Darsey.

Let us turn to some of the factors to be considered in determining whether the lots were held and sold by the taxpayers primarily in the course of their business.

First, as to the classification important in determining the nature of the taxpayers' business; that is, whether either of them more nearly meets the general description of an "investor" or that of a "dealer." Dr. Cole has been a licensed physician since 1908 and actively engaged in his profession until he retired in 1950. He was Coroner of the Parish of Orleans from 1934 to 1950 and served as President of the Louisiana State Medical Society in 1940. Upon his retirement as Coroner, he became Secretary-Treasurer of the Louisiana State Medical Society, which position he still holds. Mrs. Cole, in addition to being a housewife, has been the business manager for herself and Dr. Cole, and for the family corporation, R. R. Barrow, Inc. In 1952, Mrs. Cole had actively participated in a 158-lot subdivision of some of the corporate property. She received substantial salaries from the corporation — $5,100.00 in 1953, $8,700.00 in 1954, and $8,000.00 in 1955. Dr. and Mrs. Cole owned five or six thousand additional acres in Terrebonne Parish which they leased out for various purposes, including "oil leases, pastures, farming, and warehouses." Other than the lots involved in this case, and except for two homes, neither Dr. Cole nor Mrs. Cole had ever sold any lots of land. There was no evidence that the proceeds of sale from the lots here involved were reinvested in property held for sale. We conclude that neither of the taxpayers can fairly or reasonably be classed as a "dealer" in the sale of lots.

The district court, after detailing various other factors to be considered by the jury, charged that, "of the foregoing factors, the ones to which you should give the most weight are the extent and continuity of the sales." The plaintiffs objected to that instruction. Without stopping to decide on whether these factors are entitled to "the most weight," let us briefly review the extent and continuity of the sales. The total number of lots included in all three subdivisions was 114 lots. Of these 8 were sold in 3 transactions in 1951, 27 in 20 transactions in 1952, 38 in 29 transactions in 1953, 15 in 9 transactions in 1954, 2 in 1 transaction in 1955, 3 in 2 transactions in 1956,...

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    ...with earlier investment intent to sell subdivided property and remain subject to capital gains treatment. See, e.g., Cole v. Usry, 5 Cir. 1961, 294 F.2d 426; Barrios Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 5 Cir. 1959, 265 F.2d 517; Smith v. Dunn, 5 Cir. 1955, 224 F.2d The Government, a......
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