119 F.2d 819 | 5th Cir. | 1941
Touching income taxes for the year 1934, the taxpayer, Alabama Asphaltic Limestone Company, called herein the new corporation, claimed depreciation and depletion deductions based on the cost of
This was a typical reorganization through a court sale of an insolvent corporation. We think it was a reorganization rather than a gain-and-loss-realizing-sale under the income fax laws. The definitions of reorganizations in Revenue Act of 1928, § 112(i), contemplate that there be transfers of title by sale. No difference is indicated between a private and a court sale. What is important is the purpose or plan, and the result of the sale, as defined by the statute. We follow the Board in applying the words of Section 112(i) (1) : “The term ’reorganization’ means (A) a merger or consolidation (including the acquisition by one corporation of * * * substantially all the properties of another corporation).” As settled in LeTulle v. Scofield, 308 U.S. 415, and cases cited on page 420, 60 S.Ct. 313, 84 L.Ed. 355, acquisition by simple sale for cash, or cash and notes or bonds, is not meant, but on acquisition which has the character of a merger, a transfer bodily of the properties of one corporation to another, accompanied by a retention of a “substantial stake”, a “proprietary interest”, in the acquiring corporation by those interested previously in the properties. The LeTulle case and Helvering v. Tyng, 308 U.S. 527, 60 S.Ct. 378, 84 L.Ed. 445, settled that such “proprietary interest” is not retained by the transferror becoming a creditor of the acquiring corporation.
In the case of a merger, the transferring corporation ceases to do business. What is paid for its properties goes to discharge its debts first, and the remainder to its stockholders, if solvent. When it is confessedly insolvent, or is so adjudged as in this case, the stock is valueless, the assets have become a trust fund for the benefit of the creditors. The officers are trustees and the creditors the beneficiaries. So in bankruptcy, the creditors alone make determinations and control the disposition of the property. The corporation is not dead, it still has title to its properties, but the creditors rather than the stockholders are the beneficial owners. We are of opinion that an insolvent corporation can be merged or reorganized by a transfer of its properties in accordance with the wishes of its creditors, either by act of the corporation or by a judicial sale by a court acting for that purpose. The consideration, since the business of the old corporation is at an end, will be distributed to its creditors rather than its stockholders, because the proprietary interest in the properties is, since the insolvency, in them. What distinguishes the transaction as a merger rather than a sale is that what is paid for the properties is not money or a money measured obligation, but in whole or substantial part stock in the acquiring corporation, so that the former proprietors of the property continue to have a proprietary interest in it. In this case, but for the two dissenters, there would have been no sale at all, the note holders would have taken stock in the old instead of the new corporation, the former capital stock being ignored or subordinated because of the financial condition of the company. Wliat has happened was not intended by the parties or the court as a sale, but a reorganization by merger. Tax consequences on that basis are in accordance with the truth and justice of the case. Commissioner v. Southwest Consolidated Corporation, 5 Cir., 119 F.2d 561; Commissioner v. Kitselman, 7 Cir., 89 F.2d 458; Commissioner v. Newberry L. & C. Co., 6 Cir., 94 F.2d 447. The note holders were in fact informal stockholders in the transferring corporation, according to Arnold v. Phillips, 5 Cir., 117 F.2d 497.
Affirmed.