
    373 F. 2d 938
    GOLDEN STATE TOWEL AND LINEN SERVICE, LTD. (1) AND OAKLAND CALIFORNIA TOWEL COMPANY (2) v. THE UNITED STATES
    [No. 64-63.
    Decided March 17, 1967]
    
      
      Valentine Brookes, attorney of record, for plaintiffs. Paul E. Anderson, Richard A. Wilson and Kent, Brookes and Anderson, of counsel.
    
      Leonard 8. Togman, with whom was Assistant .Attorney General Mitchell Rogovin, for defendant. Lyle M. Turner and Philip R. Miller, of counsel.
    Before CoweN, Chief Judge, Laramoee, Duefee, Davis, ColliNS, SeeltoN, and Nichols, Judges.
    
   Per Curiam:

This case was referred to Trial Commissioner C. Murray Bernhardt with directions to make findings of fact and recommendation for conclusions of law. The commissioner has done so in a report and opinion filed on March 28, 1966. Exceptions to the commissioner’s report, opinion and findings were filed by plaintiff, briefs were filed by the parties and the case was submitted to the court on oral argument of counsel. Since the court is in agreement with the opinion, findings and recommendation of the commissioner, with slight modifications, it hereby adopts the same, as modified, as the basis for its judgment in this case, as hereinafter set forth. The commissioner’s opinion and conclusion are wholly consistent with Parmelee Transportation Co. v. United States, 173 Ct. Cl. 139, 351 F. 2d 619 (1965), which involved the loss of a separate and identifiable line of business which became completely worthless. Plaintiff is therefore not entitled to recover and the petition is dismissed.

OPINION OE COMMISSIONER

Bernhardt, Commissioner:

The plaintiff linen service corporations purchased two competitors and in the sales agreements allocated specified portions of the purchase prices to the acquisition of customer lists and other enumerated assets both tangible and intangible. They claim the right, under section 165 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (26 TT.S.C. 165), to deduct as a loss the cost of acquisition of a purchased customer in the year in which that customer ceased doing business with plaintiffs. The customer lists were capitalized on plaintiffs’ books. The issues are whether a customer list is an indivisible asset for tax purposes and, if not, whether plaintiffs have satisfactorily established the cost basis of the lost customers.

Section 165 (a) provides:

There shall be allowed as a deduction any loss sustained during the taxable year and not compensated for by insurance or otherwise.

Sections 1.165-1 (b) and 1.165-2 (a) (26 C.F.R., Sections 1.165-1 and 1.165-2 (1961)) of the Treasury Regulations on Income Taxes (1954 Code) are relevant. The former provides:

To be allowable as a deduction under section 165 (a), a loss must be evidenced by closed and completed transactions, fixed by identifiable events, and actually sustained during the taxable year. Only a bona fide loss is allowable. Substance and not mere form shall govern in determining a deductible loss.

Section 1.165-2(a) provides:

A loss incurred in a business or in a transaction entered into for profit and arising from the sudden termination of the usefulness in such business or transaction of any nondepreciable property, in a case where such business or transaction is discontinued or where such property is permanently discarded from use therein, shall be allowed as a deduction under section 165(a) for the taxable year in which the loss is actually sustained. * * *

In Metropolitan Laundry Co. v. United States, 100 F. Supp. 803 (N.D. Cal. 1951), the taxpayer lost all of its San Francisco customers in 1943 when the United States seized its laundry plant for military use, causing Metropolitan to sell its delivery equipment and thus lose not only its customers but the ability to serve them, retaining, however, its Oakland customers. Under section 23(f) of the 1939 Code, the predecessor to section 165(a) of the 1954 Code, Metropolitan deducted the cost basis of its San Francisco routes purchased in 1903. The Commissioner disallowed the deduction for the reasons that the claimed loss was not a “closed and completed transaction” since the taxpayer still conducted its Oakland routes, and that the loss of its San Francisco routes represented merely a temporary fluctuation in the value of its total customer list. The court sustained the deduction on the ground that Metropolitan’s loss of its San Francisco routes was a permanent closed and completed transaction bearing no economic relation to the taxpayer’s retained but separate Oakland routes, but endorsed the general rule in these words at page 805:

* * * in a tax sense, a capital asset in the form of a list of customers regularly subscribing for goods or services is not to be regarded as an aggregation of disconnected individual subscribers. 'Such lists have been treated as unitary structures irrespective of incidental fluctuations and alterations, [citations]. The gradual replacement of old patrons with new ones is not to be regarded as the exchange of old capital assets for new and different ones, but rather as the process of keeping a continually existing capital asset intact.

The court excepted Metropolitan from the general rule that business goodwill cannot be depreciated nor can it be entirely destroyed while the 'business continues, because the taxpayer’s San Francisco goodwill had a “distinct transferable value” separate from its Oakland business and its loss was a closed transaction for tax purposes. The permanency of the loss was graphically demonstrated by the taxpayer’s inability to recapture its San Francisco business when it regained its facilities in 1946 but closed down three years later after an unsuccessful effort to reestablish itself in San Francisco.

One cannot say that the plaintiffs’ annual crop of terminated customers had a “distinct transferable value” as did the entire body of San Francisco routes in the Metropolitan Laimdry instance, for whereas the one might well have constituted the subject matter for a sale had Metropolitan so wished, it cannot be imagined that the plaintiffs would have been able or desirous of selling to another their right to serve the periodically departing customers. There was no market for a piecemeal sale of customers.

The general rule described in the Metropolitan Lamidry ease, supra, has had wide application in cases where depreciation deductions on customer lists or their equivalents have been unsuccessfully taken. Thrifticheck Service Corp. v. Commissioner, 287 F. 2d 1 (C.A. 2 1961), and cases cited, including The Danville Press, Inc., 1 B.T.A. 1171 (1925), the latter involving attempted depreciation of a subscription list which was among the assets of a newspaper publishing company purchased by the taxpayer, possibly the earliest application of the so-called “indivisible asset” rule.

The “indivisible asset” rule has also been applied to defeat loss deductions. Boe v. Commissioner, 307 F. 2d 339 (C.A. 9, 1962; loss of purchased medical contracts); Hillside Dairy Co., 3 T.C.M. 174 (1944; dairy customer lists); Anchor Cleaning Service, Inc., 22 T.C. 1029 (1954; customer list for window and general cleaning service). There have been distinguishable exceptions. Seaboard Finance Co., 23 T.C.M. 1512 (1964; small loan contracts); Johnson v. United States, 61-1 USTC § 9278, 7 AFTR 2d 793 (W.D. Tex. 1961; medical patient charts).

There is a significant distinction in principle between a depreciation deduction and a loss deduction in the “indivisible asset” category of cases. Depreciation is a form of estimated loss, the estimate being as to the useful life of the depreciable asset. In most of the cited cases involving depreciation deductions, as in Thrifticheck Service Corp. v. Commissioner, supra, there was either no basis for determining the average life span for the contracts purchased, or for allocating values among the contracts, although the court conceded in Thriftieheeh that “Whether, under appropriate methods of allocation or accounting, a deduction might be taken upon cessation of relations with one or more of the banks in question, we do not decide.” Customer lists and similar intangible assets have an indefinite useful life, thereby precluding depreciation deductions, whereas life span is immaterial to a loss deduction.

Each of the cited cases involving loss deductions endorses the “indivisible asset” rule, and only one (Metropolitan Laundry Co. v. United States, supra) presents a tenable exception. The others have certain points of dissimilarity with the facts under consideration upon which the plaintiffs seize as grounds for their sharing the Metropolitan Laundry exception. In Boe v. Commissioner, supra, the court denied loss deductions claimed upon termination of purchased medical service contracts which, as with our plaintiffs’ linen service customer lists, were terminable at will. $2,346.27 of the total $272,389.08 consideration for the sale of a contract medical practice in Boe was allocated to tangible assets and the balance was assigned as a lump sum without allocation to some 9,000 medical contracts (indiscriminately embracing goodwill, covenant not to compete, accounts receivable, medical and surgical supplies), which the court treated as goodwill or its inseparable nondepreciable equivalent, the distinction being held immaterial. “To us, the essence of goodwill is the expectancy of continued patronage, for whatever reason.” Ibid, p. 343. The medical contracts were “purchased as a single indivisible asset, as the Tax Court correctly found, and therefore, they cannot be amortized under section 23 (l), 26 U.'S.C. § 23 (?), or individually subject to loss deductions under section 23 (e), Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 26 U.S.C. § 23(e).” Ibid, p. 343. The cost allotted to each of the terminated contracts by Boe for loss purposes was a prorated per capita share of the total, and was held to be arbitrary by the court.

In the instant case the cost of each lost customer was not provided by the contracts but was computed as that proportion of the sale prices allocated to customer lists which the average weekly billings to the lost customer bore to the aggregate of such billings for all customers on the lists. This is a somewhat more reliable method of evaluating each customer than in Boe, but is nevertheless subject to the valid criticism that the allocation of value to the aggregate customer lists was subjective and arbitrary, nor could it well have been otherwise. It necessitated an implausible separation of customer lists from goodwill, one a mirror reflection of the other, for goodwill=expectancy of continued patronage=customer lists=goodwill. At least, if goodwill and customer lists are not mutually coextensive, the former includes the latter, and the lesser is inextricable from the greater. Cf. Michaels v. Commissioner, 12 T.C. 17 (1949). In the vernacular, goodwill is a customer list with trimmings. The sellers agreed to cooperate in introducing their customers to the plaintiffs. Without such agreement the customer lists would have been of no more utility and value than the same raw information plucked from the Yellow Pages. At one point in their submissions the plaintiffs consider this vital agreement to cooperate to be part of goodwill, yet at another point attribute it as an element of customer lists, a collision in thought illustrating the binding quality of the marriage between goodwill and customer lists, which are but one in contemplation of law. The parties may contract to observe a separation for themselves, but their agreement does not dictate the fact for tax purposes. Finally, the value allocated to the total customer lists by the plaintiffs was merely the residuum after the total sales prices had been successively reduced by values allotted to other tangible and intangible assets. The latter included goodwill, covenants not to compete and, eventually, customer lists. While the amounts allocated to these intangibles were seemingly in fair proportions, by their nature they resist precise appraisal, and rest on wholly subjective considerations. Estimates and crude approximations of losses are not sufficient. 5 Mertens Law of Federal Income Taxation (Kev.), sec. 28.05. The total prices were the product of arms-length bargaining between the parties, but the allocations of the prices were strictly the plaintiff’s, acquiesced in by the sellers who had little or no tax concern in the allocation of the sales prices among intangibles. A rule-of-thumb formula of $40 to $70 per $1 of weekly sales was used as a rough criterion of the total purchase prices, but this was more an insurance that the bargained prices would lie within accepted industry norms than a standard for setting the prices.

In Hillside Dairy Co., 3 T.C.M. 174 (1944), the taxpayer purchased the customer lists of several competing dairies, and sought to deduct the cost of customers who terminated their patronage. The Tax Court disallowed the claim because the loss of some but not all of the purchased customers was held to represent merely a partial loss of a single capital asset, and the loss deduction would have to await the final disposition of the investment. This partial loss theory was applied to disallow a similar claim made in Anchor Cleaning Service, Inc., v. Commissioner, supra. There the taxpayer purchased a cleaning service business consisting principally of lists of customers for window and general cleaning services. The contract assigned each customer a value based upon a formula ($9 or $10 for each dollar of the customer’s monthly billings), and the total price was an aggregate of the individual customer values. The seller agreed to refund the value of each customer terminating service within two months of the date of sale. The taxpayer deducted as route expense the cost of acquisition value of those purchased customers who discontinued service in the third and fourth years after the sale. The Tax Court rejected the taxpayer’s contention that the purchased customer list constituted “a composite of separate individual capital assets.”, holding that it was a single tangible asset, that the base employed for valuation of the list was merely a price formula and did not “make each customer’s account a separate unit or asset”, and that, unlike the Metropolitan Laundry case, supra, in losing occasional customers the taxpayer had not abandoned an identifiable segment of its business or put itself in a position of being unable to serve such customers in the future, but had merely suffered an incidental fluctuation of the entire list. The present plaintiffs liken themselves to Metropolitan Laundry rather than Anchor Cleaning Service, in that they consider their losses of purchased customers to be permanent losses of business assets in closed transactions, for the number of such customers who later resumed the service was de minimus. The distinction between the plaintiffs’ case and that of Anchor Cleaning Service is thin. In neither case did the taxpayer place itself in a position where it was unable to serve the lost customers should they later resume service, which was the saving feature in Metropolitan Laundry. There is some arguable merit to the plaintiffs’ contention that their losses of purchased customers were permanent losses for practical purposes, and that the acquisition or loss of a particular purchased customer had no bearing or effect on the acquisition or loss of any other customer, nor did the temporary retention of a customer later lost have any demonstrable effect on securing other clientele for the plaintiffs. However, these considerations are merged into the integrated concept of a customer list whose only constant is its existence and not its contents.

These conclusions are not defeated or diminished by Seaboard Finance Co. and Johnson v. United States, both supra. The Seaboard case involves a variant class of asset unlike those to which the “indivisible asset” rule is commonly applied. Seaboard purchased the outstanding loan contracts of several small loan companies and paid a premium on top of the aggregate value of all of the purchase contracts. Each individual loan contract was separately valued according to the balance owed, the borrower’s credit record, family situation, etc. The taxpayer sought to depreciate the premium over a period of three to five years. In sustaining the deduction the Tax Court held that the indivisible asset rule did not preclude depreciation deductions where the purchased contracts are binding agreements calling for a fixed payment, or where they have an identifiable value apart from goodwill, or where the purchaser has valued the contracts individually rather than as a group, thus indicating to the sophisticated buyer that they are not fungible. This does not correspond to the case under review, for we are concerned not with depreciation deductions, but with loss deductions for nonbinding contracts not calling for a determinable amount of income over an ascertainable period, which contracts were terminated at will and were not separately valued in the purchase instrument nor susceptible to reasonably accurate valuation. The plaintiffs here acquired merely an expectation of continuing to receive the patronage of the purchased customers, with no enforceable rights thereto.

In Johnson v. United States, supra, the taxpayer physician purchased a medical practice and assigned $25,000 of the $30,000 price to 5,000 patient charts at $5 per chart. The court reallocated $2,500 of the $25,000 to goodwill (the personal nature of a physician’s services rather minimizes the prospects of a transfer by sale of goodwill in the form of succeeding to patients), and the remainder to the charts, explaining:

The value of the charts was in the medical history of the patient. A chart would be of value only if the patient should go to Dr. Johnson. Without the medical history the doctor would have to secure the information from the patient and use approximately $30.00 worth of time, for which he would not charge. There was very little value in the charts in securing or inducing the patients to come to Dr. Johnson because the patients did not know he had the charts, and no effort was made to inform them.

In allowing Johnson to depreciate the medical charts over their estimated useful life of six years, it is obvious that the court considered them not as a directory of likely customers but only as a means for the taxpayer to reduce his office costs by avoiding duplication of effort should the same patients seek his services. Again the facts are not comparable to those before us, where plaintiff’s customer lists were of no intrinsic value without the sellers’ agreements to cooperate in ensuring continued patronage.

Summing up, a purchased terminable-at-will type of customer list is an indivisible business property with an indefinite, nondepreciable life, indistinguishable from — and the principal element of — goodwill, whose ultimate value lies in the expectancy of continued patronage through public acceptance. It is subject to temporary attrition as well as expansion through departure of some customers, acquisition of others, and increase or decrease in the requirements of individual customers. A normal turnover of customers represents merely the ebb 'and flow of a continuing property status in this species, and does not within ordinary limits give rise to the right to deduct for tax purposes the loss of individual customers. The whole is equal to the sum of its fluctuating parts at any given time, but each individual part enjoys no separate capital standing independent of the whole, for its disappearance affects but does not interrupt or destroy the continued existence of the whole. It is only when all or a substantial, identifiable, vendible portion of the list of customers is terminated permanently, either through extraneous causes or the sudden and involuntary inability of the owner to serve them, that a tax loss may be claimed, and then only where the loss may be adequately measured. For these reasons the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover and their petition is to be dismissed.

FindiNgs of Fact

1. Plaintiffs Golden State Towel and Linen Service, Ltd. (hereafter “Golden State”), and Oakland California Towel Company (hereafter “Oakland”) are California corporations with their principal offices in Oakland. Golden State is a wholly owned subsidiary of Oakland.

2. Each plaintiff is in the towel and linen supply business (hereafter referred to simply as “linen supply business”). Each owns towels and linens (called “cotton goods” in the trade) which it rents to its customers, such as barbers, doctors, beauty parlors, and service stations, serving them by periodically delivering clean towels and linen to each customer’s location and collecting the soiled towels and linen. Each maintains lists of its customers for this purpose, according to the custom in the industry, and every customer receives regular service according to his needs or wishes until he cancels service. In addition, each plaintiff is to a small extent engaged in the commercial laundry business, i.e., laundering-articles owned by large corporations such as hotels and Safeway Stores. This procedure is typical of this industry.

3. Golden State engages in business in Sacramento, California, and in a 100-mile radius of Sacramento, except that toward the City of Oakland its deliveries stop at Davis. Its business extends as far north as Chico and as far south as Stockton. In addition to its linen supply business, Golden State operates a drycleaning plant in Sacramento.

4. Oakland operates in the San Francisco Bay area, i.e., in all counties surrounding San Francisco Bay. It operates a cleaning plant in Oakland. Oakland also maintains a collection and distribution depot in the City of Santa Bosa, under the trade name “Sonoma Linen Service”.

5. (a) On November 7, 1957, Golden State and Oakland bought all of the linen supply business of Bertain’s Napa Laundry and Dry Cleaners (except that done with doctors, dentists and caterers), a proprietorship owned by Jean V. Bertain and Ellen F. Bertain. Golden State bought the part of the business in its operating territory, and Oakland bought that part in its territory. The part bought by Oakland was assigned to its branch depot in Santa Bosa, Sonoma Linen Service.

(b) On May 14,1959, Golden State entered into an option to purchase the linen supply business of Walter and Buthie Smith carried on under the name “Golden Arro w Linen Service”. The sale was consummated on June 1,1959.

6. In calculating the price to be paid for a linen supply business it is customary to employ a rule-of-thumb formula, consisting of a multiple of the average weekly dollar volume of business done by the business to be purchased. This multiple varies, depending on the particular circumstances, between $40 and $70 for each $1 of average weekly business. The amount of the multiple to be used in a given case depends upon such factors as the type of customer being served, the geographical location of the business, and the amount of accounts receivable and cotton inventory. The purchase agreements involved in this litigation did not assign a purchase value to each individual customer on the customer list purchased, but merely stated the average weekly volume of business provided by that customer. It may be concluded that, in the purchase of the two linen supply businesses involved in this litigation, the multiplier factors were not employed as the means of arriving at the purchase prices paid to the sellers, but at most were used as a guide to determine whether the prices negotiated with each seller on the basis of other factors were within the scope of the normal criteria. Thus the prices negotiated for the sales determined by a mathematical process the value paid for each $1 of weekly business purchased, rather than the other way around.

7. The sales agreements covering the purchase by plaintiffs of Bertain’s Napa Laundry and Dry Cleaners expressed a consideration to be paid totaling $80,000 and allocated the consideration separately to $38,000 for customer lists, $11,985 to cotton inventories, $15 to towel cabinets, $15,000 to goodwill, and $15,000 for the seller’s agreement to refrain from competing in the same area for a specified period. The ratio of the total purchase price ($80,000) to the average weekly dollar volume of Bertain’s business was 60 to 1.

8. The allocations of the purchase price referred to in the preceding finding 7 were made initially by Mr. Brooke Petray, president of plaintiff companies, and were then submitted to Mr. Bertain. Mr. Bertain had previously discussed the prospective sale with his certified public accountant for the purpose of obtaining advice as to the resultant taxes to be paid. The accountant, a Mr. Sargent, advised Mr. Bertain that the excess of market value over book value of the cotton goods would be ordinary income, that the consideration paid for a covenant not to compete would be ordinary income, and that any remaining gain on the sale would be taxed at capital gains rates. Mr. Bertain testified that he did not discuss with his accountant the allocation of the total purchase price among the different assets sold, but was interested in the main in what he would have left after payment of taxes arising from the same. However, the tax consequences to Mr. Bertain would necessarily depend on the amounts to be allocated to the specific assets, so it is obvious that he must have had some discussion of the allocations with his accountant. In discussing the details of the sale with Mr. Petray, Mr. Bertain negotiated the allocations which Mr. Petray had proposed with respect to the cotton goods inventory and the covenant not to compete, but agreed to Mr. Petray’s allocation because the fair market value of Mr. Bertain’s cotton goods inventory would not have supported the higher value which he wanted the agreement to provide. Mr. Bertain was not interested in the amounts to be allocated between the customer list and goodwill, probably because any gains from these sources would have the same tax treatment as capital gains. Mr. Petray, in behalf of the plaintiff, had discussed the proposed sale with Mr. Sargent, who was also the plaintiffs’ accountant, but did not seek tax advice from him prior to the sale because, as an astute business man and a graduate lawyer, he was aware of the tax ramifications of the transaction. Prior to the sale Mr. Petray did discuss with Mr. Sargent, however, the latter’s projection of plaintiffs’ prospective net annual profit to be derived from the acquisition of Mr. Bertain’s business. The projection, which was computed without reference to deductions for loss of customers acquired in the transaction, was considered by plaintiffs in formulating a business judgment as to the merits of the purchase, including the amount to be paid.

9. After the total purchase price of Mr. Bertain’s linen supply business was agreed upon, it was allocated in the agreement by the plaintiffs in the following maimer:

(a) Gotton goods inventory: A physical count was taken of the used cotton goods in Mr. Bertain’s possession and in the possession of his customers and it was valued at fair market value. Mr. Bertain’s inventory records of cotton goods in the possession of his customers were inaccurate. Unused cotton goods in Mr. Bertain’s possesssion were valued at invoice cost, probably as the equivalent of their fair market value.

(b) Towel cabinets and rolling stock (i.e., vehicles) : Valued at their fair market value, but no separate value was allocated in the agreement to the rolling stock nor was it mentioned in the agreement.

(c) Goodwill: Valued at an amount subjectively determined by the plaintiffs on the basis of such factors as the length of time Mr. Bertain had been in business in the area, how well known he was in the community, his agTeement to cooperate with plaintiffs in effecting a smooth transition of the business by introducing the purchasers to his customers, the fact that he planned to continue in family laundry and drycleaning business in the area and to a limited extent in the linen supply business, and the fact that plaintiffs were not acquiring the right to use Mr. Bertain’s name in conducting the business acquired. Mr. Petray testified that goodwill is an intangible item and, therefore, he could not set a precise value upon it.

(d) Covenant not to compete: Subjectively determined by plaintiffs on the basis of factors such as the term of the covenant and the fact that Mr. Bertain planned to continue in noncompeting business in the area, with minor specified exceptions.

(e) Customer list: The values assigned to the assets described in paragraphs (a) through (d) of this finding were subtracted from the total purchase price and the residuum was allocated by plaintiffs to the customer lists. This was a subjective determination to the extent that certain other values involved in the equation were subjective, such as goodwill and the covenant not to compete. The customer lists had a substantial value to the plaintiffs and were indispensable to their willingness to purchase Mr. Bertain’s business, but their precise value as distinct from the value of the goodwill was not susceptible to accurate measurement. The record does not clearly establish the line of demarcation between goodwill and customer lists as assets for separate valuation. Nor does the record establish what consideration or weight, if any, in evaluating the customer lists, was given to such factors as the type of customer involved, the type of article rented, and the location of the customer, beyond the fact that these matters were considered in arriving at the total price to be paid for Mr. Bertain’s business. The value of the customer lists was not the subject of arms-length bargaining between the parties, but was rather Mr. Petray’s idea of the proper allocation. Mr. Bertain’s laundry plant was retained by him to operate his family laundry business, and it did not pass to plaintiffs in the sale. The additional business was performed in plaintiffs’ existing plants.

10. The same purchase price formula which was used in the case of the purchase of Mr. Bertain’s business was employed also in Golden State’s purchase of the linen supply business of Walter and Ruthie Smith (finding 5(b)), except that in the Smith purchase the ratio of the total purchase price ($30,960) to the average weekly dollar volume of the Smiths’ business was 40 to 1. The sales agreement covering the purchase by Golden State of the Smiths’ business expressed a consideration to be paid totaling $30,960 and allocated the consideration separately to $500 for an automobile, $240 for 14 cabinets, $7,740 for cotton inventory, $15,480 for customer list, $6,250 for a covenant not to compete, and $750 for goodwill. Mr. Smith did not own a plant. These allocations were prepared by Mr. Petray, the president of plaintiff companies, and approved by both Mr. 'Smith and his attorney after discussion. The allocations of the purchase price did not make much difference to Mr. Smith. Tax considerations involved in the allocations served a useful tax purpose to the plaintiffs, but according to Mr. Petray were not of controlling importance. Mr. Petray did not seek or obtain any advice as to the tax consequences of the allocations, but he was personally familiar with the tax consequences. Mr. Petray’s allocations of the total purchase price of the Smith property, as expressed in the sales agreement, were governed by the same principles used in the case of the purchase of Mr. Bertain’s property, although some of the controlling facts were different.

11. In the case of both the Bertain and Smith purchases, plaintiffs would not have been interested in purchasing the two businesses unless they also could acquire (as they did) the customer lists and the agreement of the sellers to help in introducing the plaintiffs’ drivers to the sellers’ customers so as to secure their continued patronage. Both are of considerable value in the service trades. In the linen supply business the best method for acquiring new customers is to purchase them by buying an existing linen supply business. This was the only effective way for the plaintiffs to obtain any significant number of the customers being served by Messrs. Bertain and Smith. To have attracted the customers away from Messrs. Bertain and Smith by offering lower prices would not have been as effective because it would have meant reducing or eliminating the profit in the resulting additional business lured away. Generally a linen supply company is not primarily interested in physical assets when it purchases another linen supply company. The main object of such an acquisition is the expectation of adding the seller’s customers to the purchaser’s volume, although there is no obligation on the part of the customer to continue, and hence no assurance that the purchase will result in a continuation of the patronage. Plaintiff’s retained most of Mr. Bertain’s customers, for example, although a few large ones were lost. Mr. Ber-tain was instrumental in retaining some customers for plaintiffs who would otherwise have terminated the service. Mr. Bertain’s influence with his customers was based upon his good relationship with them.

12. Plaintiffs capitalized on their books the amounts allocated in the sales agreements as the cost of purchasing the customer lists of Messrs. Bertain and Smith. In both cases the amounts thus capitalized were further suballocated among the various customers on the list so as to arrive at the cost of purchasing each individual customer. The cost of each customer was computed as being an amount which bears the same ratio to the total 'allocation for the customer list as the average weekly volume of that particular customer’s business bears to the aggregate average weekly volume of business of all customers on the list, without distinction as to the kind of linen service provided to the particular customer, or his type of business, or his geographical location which would affect the cost of delivery.

13. A customer list has a fluctuating nature. There is a continual departure of old customers and acquisition of new ones. The recapture of old customers who discontinued service but resumed it later was de minimus. Each loss of a purchased customer represented an economic loss to the plaintiffs’ business, but such losses were offset by the acquisition of new customers in the course of a steady annual turnover. To an unknown but probably minor extent the customers acquired by plaintiffs from Messrs. Bertain and Smith generated additional business for plaintiffs by either (a) increasing their own requirements for linen service through business expansion, or (b) referring new customers. Mr. Petray, president of plaintiff companies, was aware of his certified public accountant’s view that a customer list was divisible and that the cost of lost customers could be deducted when such customers ceased doing business with the plaintiffs.

14. Employing these principles, each time one of the customers on the customer lists sold by Messrs. Bertain and Smith ceased doing business with plaintiffs, they deducted from gross income on their income tax returns the amount they had assigned as the cost of acquiring that customer. In this manner plaintiffs arrived at the following accurately computed deductions for lost customers:

Golden State, fiscal year ended 1959_$5,964. 69
Golden State, fiscal year ended 1960- 3,908. 00
Oakland, fiscal year ended 1958_ 6,239. 00
Oakland, fiscal year ended 1959_ 2,092. 55
Oakland, fiscal, year ended 1960- 2,532.78

These amounts were disallowed as deductions by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Plaintiffs thereafter filed timely claims for refund as follows:

Golden State, fiscal year ended 1959_$1,777.92
Golden State, fiscal year ended 1960_ 2,032.17
Oakland, fiscal year ended 1958_ 3,244.28
Oakland, fiscal year ended 1959_ 1,088.13
Oakland, fiscal year ended 1960_ 1,317. 04

These claims for refund were denied in due course and plaintiffs then filed this suit for refund.

Conclusion of Law

Upon the foregoing findings of fact and opinion, which are adopted by the court and made a part of the judgment herein, the court concludes as a matter of law that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover and the petition is dismissed. 
      
      The opinion, findings of fact, and recommended conclusion of law are submitted under the order of reference and Rule 57 (a).
     
      
       The Tax Court decision has since been affirmed by the Court of Appeals, 367 F. 2d 646 (C.A. 9, 1966). The Ninth Circuit’s opinion does not support plaintiff here, [footnote by the court]
     
      
       Physically, an alphabetical listing of customers, their addresses, articles rented, average weekly volume, and cash or credit status.
     
      
       Some customers Rave higher mortality than others, or less expansion potential. Some customers require colored or embroidered linens which are not interchangeable with other customers. Geographic location of customers affects the cost of servicing.
     
      
       The sales agreements did not allocate any specific value to the sellers* agreement to cooperate by introducing plaintiffs to the new customers, and it cannot be determined whether this agreement to cooperate was considered as part of goodwill or as part of the customer list.
     