These two cases involve no issue of fact and but a single issue in tax law. The problem is simply stated as follows:
A tenant in possession of premises under a lease, upon receipt of payment by the landlord, and pursuant to an agreement made with the landlord, “vacated and surrendered the premises”
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before the date at which the lease expired. Is the money received by the tenant for getting out of the premises and .turning them over to' the landlord before the expiration date of the lease the product of a “sale or exchange” so as to allow the tenant to pay an income tax upon capital gain only under section 117 of the Internal Revenue Code?
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The Tax Court gave an affirmative answer. 1951,
The scope for our consideration is narrowed by two lines of authority. First, if the tenant had transferred his lease to a third party at a profit, the resulting gain would be subject to the capital gains tax if other conditions were complied with. Sutliff v. Commissioner, 1942,
The second line of cases, existence of which is grudgingly admitted by the Commissioner, holds that where a life tenant transfers his interest in a trust to the remainderman, this is a transfer of a capital asset and any profit thereon is to be taxed as a capital gain. Bell’s Estate v. Commissioner, 8 Cir., 1943,
Why then is a transfer of a leasehold interest by a tenant to a landlord not a “sale?” To call the transaction a cancellation or termination of a lease and not a sale is, we think, to assume the point to be decided. Undoubtedly there is a cancellation of the lease when the tenants voluntarily surrender the premises to a landlord in accordance with an agreement, but the fact that the cancellation occurs does not negative the fact that the transaction may constitute a sale. A lease is certainly prop *74 erty, 3 although it admittedly is not an estate of freehold as that term was. used in the common law pertaining to real estate. This property was transferred by the then owner to another fura stipulated price which was paid. That would seem to constitute a sale unless there is some limiting requirement that nothing can be sold except a tangible chattel, which is not the case. 4
■ There is a case from the District of Columbia which says that a cancellation of a lease is not a “sale or exchange”. United Cigar-Whelan Stores Corp. v. District of Columbia, 1949,
The Commissioner makes much of the point that section 117 does not mention the giving up of a lease by a tenant as a category of “sale or exchange”. We are not impressed by this argument. If the transaction fits the legal requirements for a sale, we see no reason for specific mention of it among a list classifying as a sale that which would not ordinarily be regarded as such a transaction.
Hort v. Commissioner, 1941,
We think the Tax Court was right and its decision will be affirmed.
Notes
. This language is taken from a stipulation entered into between the Taxpayers and the Commissioner.
. 26 U.S.C. § 117(b): “In the case of a taxpayer, other than a corporation, only the following percentages of the gain or loss recognized upon the sale or exchange of a capital asset shall be taken into account in computing net capital gain, net capital loss, and net income: * * * 50 per centum if the capital asset has been held for more than 6 months.”
. See the definition of “property” in Restatement, Property, Chapter 1, Introductory Note, as denoting “legal relations between persons with respect to a thing.” ‘The Board of Tax Appeals has consistently held that a lease is property and that therefore an amount paid by a lessor to a lessee for surrender of the leasehold is not deductible as an ordinary business expense, but only as a capital expenditure recoverable over the life of the léase acquired. Borland v. Commissioner, 1933;
. It is no longer open to doubt that intangible property may be the subject of a sale, e.g., good will (Williston on Contracts § 412, § 1640 (Rev.Ed.1937)), clioses in action (Williston on Sales, § 145 (Rev.Ed.1948) •). It is* also unquestionable that “sale or exchange” in § 117 of the Internal Revenue Code comprehends intangible property. Jones v. Cor-byn, 10 Cir., 1S50,
