The owners of the entire capital stock of a newspaper business received an offer of $1,000,000 for their stock and a covenant not to compete with buyers for ten years. After the offer was accepted and the contract of sale drawn up, buyer asked for a clause in the contract evaluating the covenant not to compete at $50 a share and the stock at $150 a share in order to help him taxwise. The clause was accepted with little discussion. The sellers reported the entire proceeds of the sale on their income tax returns as long term capital gain, but the Commissioner ruled that $50 per share of the proceeds constituted consideration for the covenant not to compete and was taxable as ordinary income. The Tax Court held that since the covenant was trea...
The lessor and the sublessee of a valuable piece of business property sought to remove the interveni...
In 1932 the taxpayer sold to the X corporation, which he wholly owned and controlled, certain shares...
Petitioner, E. P. Coady, and M. Christopher each owned 50 percent of the stock of the Christopher Co...
Taxpayer had the exclusive right for a period of ten years to purchase all the coal mined by the ope...
The stockholders of a closely held electric utility corporation offered to sell all the corporate st...
In 1936, a taxpayer sold his interest in a partnership the assets of which were mainly acquired subs...
Appellants were partners in the securities business with offices in New York City. In the course of ...
Petitioners had formed a corporation for the purpose of building and operating a housing project. Af...
Petitioners, from 1937 to 1940, received distributions from the liquidation of a corporation of whic...
Taxpayer, a manufacturer of products made from corn, purchased and sold corn futures contracts as a ...
A corporate promoter entered into an earnest money agreement which contemplated corporate purchase o...
A corporate promoter entered into an earnest money agreement which contemplated corporate purchase o...
A corporate promoter entered into an earnest money agreement which contemplated corporate purchase o...
The taxpayer purchased A Company stock from X for $100,000 and later sold it for $7,500, deducting t...
Petitioner, a motion picture exhibitor, sued certain motion picture distributors under the private r...
The lessor and the sublessee of a valuable piece of business property sought to remove the interveni...
In 1932 the taxpayer sold to the X corporation, which he wholly owned and controlled, certain shares...
Petitioner, E. P. Coady, and M. Christopher each owned 50 percent of the stock of the Christopher Co...
Taxpayer had the exclusive right for a period of ten years to purchase all the coal mined by the ope...
The stockholders of a closely held electric utility corporation offered to sell all the corporate st...
In 1936, a taxpayer sold his interest in a partnership the assets of which were mainly acquired subs...
Appellants were partners in the securities business with offices in New York City. In the course of ...
Petitioners had formed a corporation for the purpose of building and operating a housing project. Af...
Petitioners, from 1937 to 1940, received distributions from the liquidation of a corporation of whic...
Taxpayer, a manufacturer of products made from corn, purchased and sold corn futures contracts as a ...
A corporate promoter entered into an earnest money agreement which contemplated corporate purchase o...
A corporate promoter entered into an earnest money agreement which contemplated corporate purchase o...
A corporate promoter entered into an earnest money agreement which contemplated corporate purchase o...
The taxpayer purchased A Company stock from X for $100,000 and later sold it for $7,500, deducting t...
Petitioner, a motion picture exhibitor, sued certain motion picture distributors under the private r...
The lessor and the sublessee of a valuable piece of business property sought to remove the interveni...
In 1932 the taxpayer sold to the X corporation, which he wholly owned and controlled, certain shares...
Petitioner, E. P. Coady, and M. Christopher each owned 50 percent of the stock of the Christopher Co...