Lead Opinion
OPINION
An opinion was filed in this case on April 23,1973,
Subsequently, our holding in Anderson was reversed. Anderson v. Commissioner,
In James E. Anderson, supra, we found that there was no connection between the two events — the taxpayer recognized capital gains in his capacity as a shareholder but paid the alleged insider’s profit in his capacity as an officer. The Seventh Circuit found that reasoning unpersuasive. It concluded that at all times relevant, the taxpayer acted in one capacity — that of an insider. The court found that the sale and the subsequent payment were inextricably intertwined. Accordingly, under the doctrine of Arrowsmith v. Commissioner,
We have carefully reexamined our position in the light of the views expressed by the Seventh Circuit, but with due respect to that court, we are not convinced that our position should be changed. Since venue for appeal of this case is in the Second Circuit,
Simply stated, the doctrine set forth in Arrowsmith is that, without breaching the principle of the annual accounting period, the tax treatment of a transaction occurring in 1 year may control the tax treatment afforded a second transaction in a subsequent year where both transactions are integrally related. However, for Arrowsmith to apply, there must be a relationship between two transactions which is sufficient to require the conclusion that both transactions are parts of a unified whole. James E. Anderson,
In the present case, there was no such integral relationship between the sale of stock and the payment to MGM. Had Mr. Cummings made the payment to MGM in the same year as the sale and purchase, there would have been no reason to require that the payment be offset against the gain realized on the sale. When he sold his MGM stock, he sold a capital asset and realized a capital gain. The subsequent purchase of other MGM stock for a lower price does not, as a matter of tax law, provide a basis for reducing or offsetting the capital gain already realized. William L. Mitchell,
Nor is the capital gain reduced by the payment to MGM. The Seventh Circuit in Anderson appears to have assumed that there was a violation of section 16(b) and that the payment was made in satisfaction of a liability resulting from such violation. However, in Anderson., and also in the case before us today, there has been no determination that the taxpayer violated section 16(b) or that he was liable under that section to make any payment. As we pointed out before, Mr. Cummings made the payment promptly after learning of the position taken by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC); he acted without legal advice; and these circumstances indicate clearly that the payment was not made because of a recognition of a legal duty to do so. On the contrary, it is clear that the payment was made for business reasons and for reasons growing out of his responsibility as a director of MGM. He made the payment to protect his business reputation and to avoid a delay in the issuance of the MGM proxy statement. In United States v. Generes,
In our opinion, Tanh Truck Rentals v. Commissioner, supra, is not applicable in this case. In that case, the Court denied a deduction for fines paid as a result of the admitted violation of a State law, because allowance of the claimed deduction would have resulted in an immediate and severe frustration of public policy. Bach case was to be decided on the basis of its own facts and circumstances (Tank Truck Rentals v. Commissioner,
Accordingly, in the circumstances of this case, we believe that the petitioner recognized capital gains as a shareholder, but made the payment to MGrM in his capacity as a director. Had the payment been made in the same year as the gain was recognized, it would not have reduced the amount of such capital gain. Thus, Arrowsmith, v. Commissioner, supra, has no applicability in this case.
The respondent’s motion for reconsideration and revision of the opinion is hereby denied.
Reviewed by the Court.
Decision will be entered for the petitioners.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, except that any reference to sec. 16(b) is to such section of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Tile petitioners maintained their residence in New York, N.Y., at the time of the filing of their petition in this case.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: I respectfully dissent for the reasons stated in my dissenting opinion in James E. Anderson,
Drennen, J., dissenting: I did not participate in this Court’s consideration of, and decision in, James E. Anderson,
While I realize that the proposal I am making is not before the Court in this case, and may never be urged by either a taxpayer or the Commissioner, because a tax benefit in the hand is worth two possible ones in the future, I am still of the view, suggested in my concurring opinion in Mitchell, that perhaps the best way to resolve the conflicting legal arguments and equities under circumstances such as here present would be to add the amount repaid because of the threat of section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to the basis of the stock purchased and presently held by the taxpayer. Surely the purchase in both the purchase-sale and the sale-purchase transactions is basically responsible for triggering the repayment because of the possible violation of section 16(b) and thus the repayment is tantamount to an additional cost of the purchased stock. This would deny the purported “insider” recognition of his repayment loss until he disposes of the stock, the purchase of which triggered the payment, and the gain or loss on such ultimate disposition will be characterized the same for tax purposes as the gain he realized and had recognized on the sale of his previously held stock.
I recognize that this proposal would not be applicable in circumstances such as those in United States v. Skelly Oil Co., supra, and Arrowsmith v. Commissioner,
