1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*150
P made claims against his former employer for breach of contract and personal injuries arising out of the termination of his employment. He received $ 105,000 in settlement of his claims. At the time of the settlement, both the attorney for P and the employer's attorney agreed in writing that $ 45,000 had been allocated to the personal injury claim.
58 T.C. 32">*32 The respondent determined a deficiency of $ 26,066.60 in the petitioners' 1966 Federal income tax. The only issue for decision is whether $ 45,000 of a $ 105,000 payment, which one of the petitioners received in settlement of claims against his former employer, is excludable from gross income as damages received on account of personal injuries.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated, and those facts are so found.
The petitioners, Dudley G. Seay and Sybil R. Seay, are husband and wife and maintained their residence in Minneapolis, Minn., at the 58 T.C. 32">*33 time their petition was filed in this case. They filed their 1966 joint Federal income tax return with the district director of internal revenue, Milwaukee, Wis. Mr. Seay sometimes will be referred to as the petitioner.
From 1960 until the beginning of 1965, the petitioner was president of the Basic Products Corp. (Basic). In 1965, the petitioner undertook to acquire the financial backing necessary to purchase two divisions of that corporation. Mr. Dwayne Andreas, representing the Farmers1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*152 Union Grain Terminal Association (GTA), learned of Mr. Seay's efforts to acquire such financing and contacted him. As a result of negotiations between Mr. Seay and Mr. Andreas, an agreement was reached under which GTA purchased the assets of the two divisions. The assets of one of these divisions were then leased by GTA to a corporation called the Froedtert Malt Corp. (Froedtert). This corporation was to be operated by the petitioner as president, Robert R. Ollman as vice president and treasurer, and Gordon D. Foster as executive vice president. According to oral employment contracts, their respective salaries were to be $ 60,000 per year, $ 30,000 per year, and $ 25,000 per year, and they were to share in the profits of the enterprise. The employment contracts were each for a period of 5 years and were renewable for a like period of time. In order to become president of this new corporation, Mr. Seay resigned his former position as president of Basic. The newspaper publicity regarding his resignation did not indicate that he had been given the opportunity to purchase two divisions of Basic and was somewhat embarrassing to him.
In 1966, a dispute arose between Mr. Seay, Mr. 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*153 Ollman, and Mr. Foster (the Seay group) and the management of GTA. On May 25, 1966, the board of directors of Froedtert dismissed the petitioner, Mr. Ollman, and Mr. Foster and terminated their employment. The specific reason given for the petitioner's dismissal was that the corporate bylaws required the president to be a director and he was not a director. Each member of the Seay group was notified of the board's termination of his employment by a letter of May 27, 1966, and was therein informed that Mr. Thomas R. Gettelman would arrive on June 1, 1966, to assume control of the operations of Froedtert. Each letter concluded by stating that Mr. Max Kampelman had been retained to resolve the question of the management fee due to the Seay group. Acting on the advice of counsel, the Seay group refused to vacate the premises when Mr. Gettelman arrived.
On June 7, 1966, Froedtert filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of Milwaukee County, Wis., which recited the events of May 25, 1966, to June 1, 1966, alleged that the refusal of the Seay group to vacate the 58 T.C. 32">*34 premises constituted trespass, and sought an order permanently restraining the members of the Seay group from occupying1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*154 the premises, managing Froedtert, or causing that corporation to pay them any compensation for the period after June 1, 1966.
The filing of the complaint received publicity in the Milwaukee Journal, Milwaukee Sentinel, and The Wall Street Journal. Each article repeated the basic recitations and allegations of the complaint and referred to the petitioner's having been replaced as president of Basic in 1965. The petitioner believed that the publicity was a source of personal embarrassment and damaging to his personal reputation but, on the advice of counsel, he did not reply to the publicity. However, counsel was instructed to file a counterclaim for damages arising both from the adverse publicity and from the alleged breach of the oral employment contracts. The counterclaim was never prepared, as a settlement was signed on June 24, 1966. Previous to the settlement, the corporation had obtained a restraining order and a show cause order, and the Seay group had vacated the premises. After the suit was settled, the petitioner released a statement to the press claiming that the entire dispute had arisen over the question of how to operate Froedtert.
The negotiations leading to the1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*155 settlement were mainly conducted by Mr. Orin Purintun, as counsel for the Seay group, and Mr. Max Kampelman, for both GTA and Froedtert. GTA was involved as it owned the assets of Froedtert and as the oral employment contracts were originally negotiated with it. Mr. M. W. Thatcher, the chief executive officer of GTA, and his assistant, Mr. Malusky, were given the authority by the board of directors of GTA to take the steps necessary to effect a settlement. In turn, Mr. Thatcher authorized Mr. Kampelman to settle the dispute. The only limitations that Mr. Thatcher placed on Mr. Kampelman's authority were that the settlement should not exceed $ 300,000 in cash plus 5 percent of the profits. The claims of the Seay group that there had been a breach of contract and that they had been damaged by the publicity were a part of the settlement negotiations between Mr. Purintun and Mr. Kampelman.
On June 23, 1966, a lump-sum settlement of $ 250,000 was accepted by Mr. Purintun on the understanding that it consisted of 1 year's salary for each member of the group, or $ 115,000, plus $ 45,000 for each member as damages caused by the newspaper publicity. On June 24, 1966, a settlement agreement1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*156 was signed by the members of the Seay group, the new president of Froedtert, and a representative of GTA. The agreement stated that the sum of $ 250,000 had been paid to the Seay group, but did not allocate that sum in any way. On that same day, the suit by Froedtert was dismissed by mutual stipulation. On 58 T.C. 32">*35 June 27, 1966, the proceeds of the settlement were distributed as follows:
Legal fees | $ 25,272.86 |
Out-of-pocket expenses (Dudley G. Seay) | 560.00 |
Dudley G. Seay: | |
Salary equivalent | 60,000.00 |
Additional | 36,389.04 |
Robert R. Ollman: | |
Salary equivalent | 30,000.00 |
Additional | 36,389.05 |
Gordon D. Foster: | |
Salary equivalent | 25,000.00 |
Additional | 36,389.05 |
Total | 250,000.00 |
On June 28, 1966, Mr. Purintun prepared and sent to Mr. Kampelman a letter which was directed to Mr. Purintun, to be signed by Mr. Kampelman, confirming that they had agreed on the following allocation of the $ 250,000 payment:
Salary | Additional | Total | |
equivalent | |||
Mr. Seay | $ 60,000 | $ 45,000 | $ 105,000 |
Mr. Ollman | 30,000 | 45,000 | 75,000 |
Mr. Foster | 25,000 | 45,000 | 70,000 |
The letter stated that the additional sums were "as compensation for such personal1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*157 embarrassment, mental and physical strain and injury to health and personal reputation in the community" as the members of the Seay group had suffered. Mr. Kampelman signed the letter on July 1, 1966, because he thought it reflected the understanding he had with Mr. Purintun.
On November 6, 1969, Mr. Malusky, who had become the chief officer of GTA, signed a letter which he authorized the petitioner to show to the Internal Revenue Service and which had been prepared by the general counsel of GTA. The letter stated that the allocation of the settlement payment was correctly stated in the letter which Mr. Kampelman had signed on July 1, 1966.
The petitioner, on his 1966 joint Federal income tax return, reported the $ 60,000 salary equivalent less $ 8,610.96 in legal fees as ordinary income. In his notice of deficiency, the respondent increased the petitioner's income by the $ 45,000 "additional" payment and a $ 1,255.01 item not contested in this case.
OPINION
The issue for decision is whether $ 45,000 of a $ 105,000 payment which the petitioner received in settlement of claims against his 58 T.C. 32">*36 former employer is excludable from gross income as damages received on account of 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*158 personal injuries.
The petitioner contends that he made a bona fide claim for personal injuries; that his claim was part of the settlement negotiations; and that it was satisfied by the payment of $ 45,000. The petitioner, thereby, concludes that the $ 45,000 payment was made on account of personal injuries and is exempt from taxation under
The respondent contends that the petitioner has failed to prove that he suffered any personal injuries for which he could recover damages in the courts, and therefore,
As the parties are in disagreement concerning not only what the petitioner has proved, but also what he is required to prove, we must first discuss the burden of proof which the petitioner has in this case. The petitioner's position is not that he does not have the burden of proof, but, rather, that the burden of proof does not require him to show that he had a valid claim for damages.
we consider it unnecessary to decide upon such validity, * * * for our question is not * * * [the] validity, but the nature, for tax purposes, of an amount received 58 T.C. 32">*37 in settlement, which rests not upon the validity but upon the nature of the matter settled. * * *
Although
Since there is nothing in either
Having decided that the taxability of the settlement payment depends upon the nature of the claim settled, we now reach the question of whether the petitioner has shown that such claim was a claim for personal injuries. This determination is a factual one (see
Mr. Seay believed that the publicity concerning his dismissal from employment was a source of personal embarrassment and damaging to his personal reputation, and we have no reason to doubt the bona fides of this belief. Compare
In view of that conclusion, this case is distinguishable from
In addition to questioning the bona fide nature of the petitioner's claim, the respondent also argued that GTA did not agree that the $ 45,000 was to be in settlement of a claim for personal injuries, and that the letter signed by Mr. Kampelman is inadmissible because of the parol evidence rule.
The contention that GTA did not agree that the $ 45,000 was in settlement of a personal injury claim is based on the allegation that Mr. Kampelman did not have the authority to make such an allocation. This lack of authority is said to exist because Mr. Kampelman was allegedly only a mediator for GTA, because neither Mr. Kampelman 58 T.C. 32">*39 nor Mr. Thatcher could recall discussing the allocation when Mr. Thatcher approved the settlement, and because it is not clear that the board of directors of GTA was aware of the allocation. Yet, after initially being informed that he was only a mediator, Mr. Kampelman was 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150">*166 told by Mr. Thatcher, who had been authorized by the board of directors of GTA to take steps necessary to effect a settlement, to make a settlement. At that time, Mr. Kampelman became the agent of GTA in settling the claim, and an agent's agreements are generally binding on his principal where they are within either the actual or apparent scope of his authority. Seavey, Agency, sec. 75 (1964); see
We also reject the respondent's contention that the letter signed by Mr. Kampelman which designated the $ 45,000 payment as being in settlement of a claim for personal injuries is inadmissible under the parol evidence rule. This Court has generally held that the parol evidence rule is not applicable in proceedings between a taxpayer and the Commissioner, since the Commissioner was not a party to the written agreement. See, e.g.,
The respondent's final ground for taxing the entire payment received by the petitioner is based on his argument that part of the payment was for the petitioner's embarrassment, that damages for embarrassment are not excludable under
The term "damages received (whether by suit or agreement)" means an amount received * * * through prosecution of a legal suit or action based upon tort or tort type rights, or through a settlement agreement entered into in lieu of such prosecution.
Similarly, both this Court and the respondent have long recognized that amounts received in settlement of claims arising out of the alienation of affection or defamation of character are exempt from taxation. See
Because of another uncontested adjustment,
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.↩