*260 Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
In 1945, petitioner paid a final judgment entered in a Florida State Court which assessed damages of $ 16,500 against him for breach of his obligation to pay a real estate sales commission to a registered Florida brokerage firm for services rendered by said firm pursuant to certain sales negotiations petitioner had with this firm in early 1944. Sale of the same properties was actually consummated through a different broker and to different parties in December 1944. Petitioner's co-owners contributed $ 11,000 as their share of the judgment expenditure. Held, that $ 5,500 representing petitioner's proportionate share of the judgment expenditure was an ordinary and necessary expense paid during the taxable year for the management, conservation or maintenance of property held for the production of income under
*504 The respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of $ 4,930.48 against the petitioner for the calendar year 1945. The only question remaining for decision is whether an amount paid in 1945, pursuant to a judgment in a Florida State Court, is deductible under
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The facts have been stipulated in part and, as stipulated, are here found.
The petitioner is a resident of Miami, Florida. His income tax return for 1945 was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Florida.
In and prior to 1944, the petitioner, his brother, Scott Braznell, and his sister, Melvina B. Atkinson, owned certain hotel, apartment, and ocean front property at Miami Beach, Florida, commonly known as the Braznell Hotel Properties. These properties consisted of a 94-room hotel, two apartment houses, comprising approximately thirty units, a garage with servants' quarters above, and 200 feet of ocean frontage, of which 100 feet was unimproved, while on the remaining 100 feet there was located a swimming pool, a cabana club and restaurant.
Prior to World War II, the petitioner, his brother and sister had operated the hotel properties, his brother acting as manager. Early in 1942, the Federal Government had taken over the properties for occupation*263 and use by the Armed Forces. With the termination of such occupancy, the petitioner, his brother and sister would have to decide whether to restore and recondition the properties and undertake the recapture or the rebuilding of a clientele, or to sell the properties. There was no lack of persons or interests desiring to buy, the question being the procurement of a satisfactory price.
Early in 1944, a representative of Harold R. Davis, Inc., a real estate concern in the area, brought to petitioner a man named Claman as a prospective buyer for the hotel properties. The petitioner discussed the matter with his brother, but not with his sister. His brother expressed the view that the time had come to sell, if a favorable price could be had. The exact point to which negotiations and discussions with Davis and Claman progressed is not shown, but, in the end, no sale to Claman was consummated.
*505 On March 2, 1944, a suit was begun against the petitioner in the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida, by Harold R. Davis, Inc., claiming breach of a contract to pay a brokerage commission of $ 40,000 for negotiation of a sale for the hotel properties. In its complaint, Davis alleged*264 that it was a duly registered and licensed real estate broker under the laws of the State of Florida; that in January 1944, it had been employed by the petitioner to find a purchaser for the hotel properties, at a price of $ 950,000 and on terms satisfactory to the petitioner, and that the petitioner had agreed to pay for such services a brokerage commission of $ 40,000; that in January 1944, it found and produced such a purchaser "on terms agreed to by the defendant," but that the petitioner refused to complete the sale and, at all times thereafter, had failed and refused to pay the commission of $ 40,000 to Davis. Damages were claimed in the amount of $ 75,000.
The petitioner in due course filed his answer in the proceeding, denying that he had ever employed Davis as alleged; that he had ever agreed to sell the hotel properties for $ 950,000, or that pursuant to any such employment, Davis had found and produced a purchaser, and denying that he was ever indebted to Davis as alleged.
In March or April of 1944, the petitioner went from Miami to Hendersonville, North Carolina, where he remained most, if not all, of the remainder of the year. In October of 1944, the petitioner received*265 a call from S. S. McCahill, advising the petitioner of an offer to buy the hotel properties. McCahill was a Miami attorney who had represented the petitioner and his family generally in legal matters. The petitioner discussed the matter with his brother and sister, and, between them, they decided upon a price of $ 1,000,000 net for the properties and that they would sell if the offer was a bona fide offer. McCahill transmitted an offer of $ 1,050,000 to the prospective purchaser. The $ 50,000 was added to cover selling commissions. The offer transmitted by McCahill was from William Liebow and D. F. Reeder, and on December 7, 1944, the properties were sold to those individuals for a gross sales price of $ 1,050,990.72. The petitioner, his brother and sister paid a real estate commission of $ 50,000 to McCahill, Louis Pokress and Leo Stoller. None of those individuals had any connection with Harold R. Davis, Inc., and Harold R. Davis, Inc., had no connection with, or part in, the sale made.
The suit filed by Harold R. Davis, Inc., was thereafter tried before the court and a jury, and on June 19, 1945, the jury returned a verdict for Davis in the amount of $ 16,500. The judgment*266 was paid by the petitioner and he was reimbursed by his brother and sister for two-thirds of the amount thereof.
At the time the hotel properties were sold in December of 1944, an initial payment on the purchase price was made amounting to $ 225,990.72. The balance was to be paid in installments. Pursuant to the *506 terms of the sale, an installment payment of $ 17,063.49 was received by the sellers in 1945. In reporting his taxable net income for 1945, the petitioner claimed as a deduction from gross income the $ 5,500 representing his share of the amount paid in satisfaction of the judgment obtained against him by Harold R. Davis, Inc. He reported as capital gain his pro rata part of the capital gain represented in the above installment payment of $ 17,063.49, the amount of the capital gain being computed without any application of the said $ 5,500 as an offset or capital charge against the installment of selling price received.
In his determination of deficiency the respondent disallowed the $ 5,500 deduction claimed by the petitioner as above set forth. He did allow it, however, as an offset against the 1945 installment payment received for the purpose of computing *267 and determining the gain to be reported by the petitioner in the taxable year from the sale of the hotel properties.
OPINION.
It is the claim of the petitioner that the $ 5,500 paid by him to Davis in satisfaction of the above-described judgment constituted a proper deduction from gross income, under
If, on the facts here, the expenditure is to be regarded as a sales commission we think it clear that the respondent's view properly reflects the law, for we consider it settled law that commissions on purchases and sales of investment property by a taxpayer for his own account are to be applied as capital charges in arriving at the gain or loss realized or sustained upon sale of the property *268 and are not expense items deductible from gross income.
It is true that in the above cases the question was whether the commissions were deductible under
Aside from a statement of the conclusion sought, namely, that the payment of the judgment was an expenditure in the preservation of the hotel properties, and, therefore, deductible under
It is at once apparent that such argument is beside the point and is no answer to our question here. Deductions are matters of legislative grace, and the absence of a statutory provision providing for the deduction of an expenditure of a particular character not only supplies no basis for judicial allowance of a deduction therefor, but, to the contrary, indicates the nondeductibility of the item. Furthermore, the disallowance of the deduction does not mean that the petitioner is to receive no benefit, taxwise, from the expenditure, since if the expenditure constituted a capital charge, it is to be applied against the selling cost of the properties. See
Our question, then, is whether, on the facts here, the amount paid in satisfaction of the judgment was of such character as to place it in the same category as expenditures incident or essential to the acquisition, continued ownership and ultimate disposition of the properties, which expenditures are capital in character and are to be taken into account in computing the capital gain or loss in case of a subsequent sale; or whether the payment more nearly resembles, and should fall in the category of, expenditures having to do with the management of the properties and maintenance, upkeep and preservation for the further or subsequent production of income, in which case the expenditure is deductible under
In
In the instant case, the hotel properties were held for the production of income no less than were the trust properties in
It is accordingly our conclusion that for the purpose of applying
For the record, the parties stated that agreements had been reached with respect to all of the other issues in this proceeding and that effect would be given thereto under Rule 50.
Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
Murdock, J., concurring: The verdict of the jury for Davis and against the petitioner must be taken as conclusive proof that there was an agreement between the petitioner and Davis authorizing the latter to obtain a purchaser for the property on a commission basis. That was a transaction entered into by the petitioner for profit. Davis completed his side of the bargain but the petitioner decided it would be to his best interests financially not to sell, so he breached his agreement and sustained a loss of the amount*280 which the court required him to pay Davis. That transaction was not connected with the actual sale of the property. Thus, whether or not the amount was deductible under