CRANE v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE.
No. 68
Supreme Court of the United States
April 14, 1947
331 U.S. 1
Argued December 11, 1946.
J. Louis Monarch argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Acting Solicitor General Washington, Sewall Key and Morton K. Rothschild.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question here is how a taxpayer who acquires depreciable property subject to an unassumed mortgage, holds it for a period, and finally sells it still so encumbered, must compute her taxable gain.
Petitioner reported a taxable gain of $1,250.00. Her theory was that the “property” which she had acquired in 1932 and sold in 1938 was only the equity, or the excess in the value of the apartment building and lot over the amount of the mortgage. This equity was of zero value when she acquired it. No depreciation could be taken on a zero value.2 Neither she nor her vendee ever assumed
The Commissioner, however, determined that petitioner realized a net taxable gain of $23,767.03. His theory was that the “property” acquired and sold was not the equity, as petitioner claimed, but rather the physical property itself, or the owner‘s rights to possess, use, and dispose of it, undiminished by the mortgage. The original basis thereof was $262,042.50, its appraised value in 1932. Of this value $55,000.00 was allocable to land and $207,042.50 to building.4 During the period that petitioner held the property, there was an allowable depreciation of $28,045.10 on the building,5 so that the adjusted basis of the building at the time of sale was $178,997.40. The amount realized on the sale was said to include not only the $2,500.00 net cash receipts, but also the principal amount6 of the mortgage subject to which the property was sold, both totaling $257,500.00. The selling price was allocable in the proportion, $54,471.15 to the land and $203,028.85 to the building.7 The Commissioner agreed that the land was
The Tax Court agreed with the Commissioner that the building was not a “capital asset.” In all other respects it adopted petitioner‘s contentions, and expunged the deficiency.9 Petitioner did not appeal from the part of the ruling adverse to her, and these questions are no longer at issue. On the Commissioner‘s appeal, the Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, one judge dissenting.10 We granted certiorari because of the importance of the questions raised as to the proper construction of the gain and loss provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.11
The 1938 Act,12
Logically, the first step under this scheme is to determine the unadjusted basis of the property, under
We think that the reasons for favoring one of the latter constructions are of overwhelming weight. In the first place, the words of statutes—including revenue acts—should be interpreted where possible in their ordinary, everyday senses.13 The only relevant definitions of “property” to be found in the principal standard dictionaries14 are the two favored by the Commissioner, i. e., either that “property” is the physical thing which is a subject of ownership, or that it is the aggregate of the owner‘s rights to control and dispose of that thing.
In the second place, the Commissioner‘s position has the approval of the administrative construction of
Moreover, in the many instances in other parts of the Act in which Congress has used the word “property,” or expressed the idea of “property” or “equity,” we find no instances of a misuse of either word or of a confusion of the ideas.23 In some parts of the Act other than the gain and loss sections, we find “property” where it is unmistakably used in its ordinary sense.24 On the other hand, where either Congress or the Treasury intended to convey the meaning of “equity,” it did so by the use of appropriate language.25
Under these provisions, if the mortgagor‘s equity were the § 113 (a) basis, it would also be the original basis from which depreciation allowances are deducted. If it is, and if the amount of the annual allowances were to be computed on that value, as would then seem to be required,26 they will represent only a fraction of the cost of the corresponding physical exhaustion, and any recoupment by the mortgagor of the remainder of that cost can be effected only by the reduction of his taxable gain in the year of sale.27 If, however, the amount of the annual allowances
Thus it appears that the applicable provisions of the Act expressly preclude an equity basis, and the use of it is contrary to certain implicit principles of income tax depreciation, and entails very great administrative difficulties.30 It may be added that the Treasury has never furnished a guide through the maze of problems that arise in connection with depreciating an equity basis, but, on the contrary, has consistently permitted the amount of depreciation allowances to be computed on the full value of the property, and subtracted from it as a basis. Surely,
We conclude that the proper basis under
Petitioner urges to the contrary that she was not entitled to depreciation deductions, whatever the basis of the property, because the law allows them only to one who actually bears the capital loss,32 and here the loss was not hers but the mortgagee‘s. We do not see, however, that she has established her factual premise. There was no finding of the Tax Court to that effect, nor to the effect
At last we come to the problem of determining the “amount realized” on the 1938 sale.
Petitioner concedes that if she had been personally liable on the mortgage and the purchaser had either paid or assumed it, the amount so paid or assumed would be considered a part of the “amount realized” within the meaning of
Therefore we conclude that the Commissioner was right in determining that petitioner realized $257,500.00 on the sale of this property.
Petitioner contends that the result we have reached taxes her on what is not income within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment. If this is because only the direct receipt of cash is thought to be income in the constitutional sense, her contention is wholly without merit.41 If it is because the entire transaction is thought to have been “by all dictates of common sense . . . a ruinous disaster,” as it was termed in her brief, we disagree with her premise. She was entitled to depreciation deductions for a period of nearly seven years, and she actually took them in almost the allowable amount. The crux of this case, really, is whether the law permits her to exclude allowable deductions from consideration in computing gain.42 We have
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, dissenting.
The Tax Court concluded that this taxpayer acquired only an equity worth nothing. The mortgage was in default, the mortgage debt was equal to the value of the property, any possession by the taxpayer was forfeited and terminable immediately by foreclosure, and perhaps by a receiver pendente lite. Arguments can be advanced to support the theory that the taxpayer received the whole property and thereupon came to owe the whole debt. Likewise it is argued that when she sold she transferred the entire value of the property and received release from the whole debt. But we think these arguments are not so conclusive that it was not within the province of the Tax Court to find that she received an equity which at that time had a zero value. Dobson v. Commissioner, 320 U. S. 489; Commissioner v. Scottish American Investment Co., Ltd., 323 U. S. 119. The taxpayer never became personally liable for the debt, and hence when she sold she was released from no debt. The mortgage debt was simply a subtraction from the value of what she did receive, and from what she sold. The subtraction left her nothing when she acquired it and a small margin when she sold it. She acquired a property right equivalent to an equity of redemption and sold the same thing. It was the “property” bought and sold as the Tax Court considered it to be under the Revenue Laws. We are not required in this case to decide whether depreciation was properly taken, for there is no issue about it here.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS join in this opinion.
