The plaintiff-appellee, Alphaco, Inc., brought suit in the District Court for recovery of an alleged overpayment of federal income tax. The case was tried on stipulated facts. The District Court found for the plaintiff taxpayer and entered judgment against the District Director of Internal Revenue who prosecutes this appeal.
The record discloses that during its fiscal year ending September 30, 1961, the taxpayer, pursuant to a plan of complete liquidation qualifying under the provisions of Section 337 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (26 U.S.C.A. § 337),
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sold all of its assets at a gain in excess of one million dollars and distributed the proceeds, less amounts retained to meet claims, to its shareholders. By
We reverse. It is our conclusion that the allowance of the costs incident to the sale of capital assets as an ordinary and necessary business expense deductible from ordinary income not only violates a principle which appears basic in the scheme underlying the income tax statute, but is also incongruous with the purpose for which Section 337 was enacted.
The narrow issue here presented and adjudicated is whether expenditures incurred by a taxpayer corporation which are directly related to a sale of its capital assets in the course of a complete corporate liquidation qualifying under Section 337 constitute business expenses deductible from the ordinary income reported in the corporation’s final return. We are not here concerned with the treatment to be given corporate liquidation expenses other than those directly incurred in the sale of the corporation’s capital assets.
The scheme of the income tax statute is that the cost of producing a given type of income is to be accorded the same tax character as the income produced — that related disbursements and receipts should be given consistent tax treatment. Spangler v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 9 Cir.,
We perceive nothing in the language or in the ultimate objective of Section 337 indicative of any purpose to carve out an exception to that general rule so as to transmute the selling costs, for tax purposes, from their normal character as capital selling expenses into ordinary business expenses. On the contrary, to permit the costs of selling the corporate assets to be deducted by the corporation as ordinary business expenses would frustrate the purpose for which Section 337 was enacted.
The precise problem at which the measure was aimed was created by the two decisions of the Supreme Court in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court Holding Co.,
“The new legislation, section 337 of the 1954 Code, adopts as its principle the elimination of the corporate tax, whether the sale is made by the corporation in anticipation of the liquidation or by the shareholders thereafter. By virtue of section 337, the tax consequences to the shareholders ordinarily will be identical, whether the corporation sells the assets and then distributes the proceeds in complete liquidation or distributes the assets in kind to the shareholders for sale by them.”
The following example is illustrative. Let us assume that a corporation’s capital assets have a fair market value of $10,000, the sale of which (by the corporation or by its shareholder) would entail selling costs of $1,000, and that the cost basis of the stock is $6,000. Following sale by the corporation, $9,000 would be left, net, to distribute to the shareholder in exchange for his stock, and the capital gain to the shareholder would be $3,000. If the property was first distributed to the shareholder and then sold by him, he would report a capital gain of $4,000 ($10,000 value of the assets, less $6,000 basis of the stock) and then deduct the $1,000 selling cost — leaving him with the same $3,000 capital gain as in the first situation. Since, under Section 337, the only tax in either event is that paid by the shareholder, and since he would pay the same tax in either of the above situations, it is obvious that the tax-equalizing purpose of Section 337 is achieved.
But if the corporation in such case is permitted to deduct the selling cost from ordinary income as an ordinary and necessary business expense when it sells the property, then the corporation (and through it, the shareholder) receives an additional tax benefit in the form of the deduction against the ordinary income (the earning of which had no connection with the capital sale transaction) reported in the corporation’s last return. The tax differential Congress sought to avoid would thus be re-created, and the purpose and objective of Section 337 wholly frustrated and defeated. Consequently, the allowance of the costs incident to the sale of capital assets as an ordinary and necessary business expense deductible from ordinary income was improper in the instant case. The District Court erred in its conclusion to the contrary, and in granting judgment for the taxpayer based thereon.
The conclusion we have reached with respect to the non-deductibility of capital asset selling expenses from ordinary income is supported by the Tax Court’s similar decision in Ruprecht v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, decided May 4, 1961 (P-H Memo T.C., par. 61,125), and the rationale of Towanda Textiles, Inc. v. United States, Ct.CL,
“Certainly if the cost of distribution in kind may be deducted as ordinary expenses, the legal cost of the sale of assets should likewise be deductible.”
Its opinion does not examine the critical considerations we have discussed herein. We decline to be persuaded by Mountain.
Likewise, we do not regard any of the additional cases relied upon by the taxpayer dispositive of the precise issue here involved. Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
The judgment order of the District Court is reversed.
Reversed.
Notes
. In pertinent part Section 337 provides: “(a) General rule. — If —
(1) a corporation adopts a plan of complete liquidation on or after June 22, 1954, and
(2) within the 12-month period beginning on the date of the adoption of such plan, all of the assets of the corporation are distributed in complete liquidation, less assets retained to meet claims,
then no gain or loss shall be recognized to such corporation from the sale or exchange by it of property within such 12-month period.”
. H.Rep. No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 38-39, A-106-A-107 (3 U.S.C.Cong. & Adm.News (1954) 4017, 4064, 4244-4245. S.Rep. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 48-49, 258-259 (3 U.S.C.Cong. & Adm. News (1954) 4621, 4679-4680, 4896-4897.
