This is a petition to review a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals. The sole question involved, is whether payments of guaranteed dividends on preferred stock of petitioner are deductible as interest paid on indebtedness within the meaning of Sec. 23(b) of the Revenue Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 680, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 23(b). These guaranteed dividends were paid by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, as assignee of the lessee of the properties of petitioner, direct to the stockholders. There is no' question but that such payments constituted income to the petitioner, the question being whether, as they were made in discharge of an obligation of petitioner, petitioner was entitled to a deduction in the amount of the payments on the theory that they constituted in reality interest on an indebtedness and not dividends on stock.
The stock on which the dividends were paid was issued by petitioner under an act of the General Assembly of Ohio of April 16, 1870, 67 Ohio Laws, p. 89, and the payment of the dividends was secured by mortgage on petitioner’s property, which lay wholly within the state of Ohio. The act has been interpreted and the rights of stockholders under the mortgage have been authoritatively declared by the Supreme Court of Ohio in Miller v. Ratterman,
“Nor did the stipulation guarantying to the holders of the preferred stock payment of dividends thereon negative the idea that they were stockholders. It was not a stipulation to pay dividends in any event, but a stipulation to pay only out of surplus profits; for the company must be presumed to have proceeded in view of the terms of the second section of the act referred to, and the general rule of law on the subject. That rule is that payment of dividends to preferred stockholders differs from such payment to the holders of common stock only in that they are entitled to dividends in priority to any dividends upon the common stock. Dividends to either are to come from one common source, to-wit, from funds properly applicable to the payment of dividends; that is to say, net earnings. In the nature of things, this must be so. As well might one member of a partnership be permitted to appropriate to his own use assets of the firm to the prejudice of creditors as for a stockholder of a corporation to do it. A contract to permit this to be done would be contrary to public policy, and void. Pierce, R. R. 124, 125; St. John v. Railway Co.,
“It may not be easy to satisfactorily determine what office the mortgage from the Dayton & Michigan Company to holders of the certificates to secure payment of dividends was expected to perform, inasmuch as those holders, if stockholders, could not thereby be given priority over creditors, either then existing, or those who became such afterwards. However, this consideration is hardly a sufficient reason for concluding that the giving of the mortgage implied a purpose to change the apparent status of the holders, though not entirely inconsistent with such purpose. If, in giving it, the intention was to treat the holders as creditors, we are at a loss to account for the absence of any provision fixing a definite time when the debt would mature, and the creditors have a right to enforce a return of the principal sum advanced; and, though the instrument, regarded as made to stockholders, was ineffectual to accomplish the most usual purpose of a mortgage, yet it does not follow that it was a vain thing, especially when considered in connection with the agreement against the execution of a further mortgage. The Dayton & Michigan Company’s road having been leased, and being then in the possession of the lessee, and being operated by it, a contract of record might have been, in the view of the company, important, in order to clearly establish the rights of the new stockholders, and the obligation of the lessee company to them, and for the information of the public; and this might as well be done by mortgage as in any other way. It may be added that, so far from being inconsistent with the idea of an issue of stock, it is directly in line with it, inasmuch as preferred stock is itself a form of mortgage. 2 Redf.R.R. § 237*
The case is readily distinguishable from Helvering v. R., F. & P. R. Co., 4 Cir.,
interest in a corporation represented by bonds, debentures, or other securities, by whatever name called, including so-called preferred stock, if with respect to the payment of either interest or principal it ranks with or prior to the interest of the general creditors, is borrowed capital and cannot be included in computing invested capital. Any such preferred stock may, however, be so included if it is deferred with respect to the payment of both interest and principal to the interest of the general creditors.’ ”
Since the preferred stock here, under the controlling decision of the Supreme Court of Ohio, was deferred “with respect to the payment of both interest and principal to the interest of the general creditors”, there can be no question but that it was properly treated as stock by the Board and that deduction of the amount paid as dividends was properly denied. See, also, Commissioner of In
*630
ternal Revenue v. Schmoll Fils Associated, 2 Cir.,
“The cases appellant and appellee cite are not in conflict. . They all agree- that the question for decision in each case is, not what the payments are called, but what in fact, they are, and that if taken as a whole, the evidence shows a relation of debtor and creditor, the payments made on account of that relation, will be interest, no matter how called, while if taken as a whole, the evidence shows a stockholding relation, the payments made will be dividends, equally no matter how called. We think it plain that the payments in this case were dividends under the rule set out and applied in all of the cases. We find no real conflict in the cases, no difficulty in attempting to apply them.
“The cases on which appellee most strongly relies are all cases where there was either a statutory lien securing payment, a fixed guarantee of payment or a fixed time to pay, plainly showing that the payments were to be of interest on a debt, payable at all events, rather than •of dividends, payable out of earnings. * * *
. “Cases on which appellant relies are those in which there being no fixed time to pay, and the facts as a wh.ole showing merely an interest in the company, the payments whether called interest or dividends, are treated as dividend payments.”
It is argued for the petitioner that the Supreme Court of Ohio did not correctly construe the act of 1870 or correctly determine the rights of preferred stockholders under the mortgage executed pursuant thereto. It was well settled, however, even before Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
Petitioner further contends that its position is sustained by the Ohio decision of Burt v. Rattle,
While not controlling upon us, it is worthy of note that this preferred stock has uniformly been treated both by petitioner and by the revenue department of the government as a part of the capital stock of the corporation. It was reported by petitioner as capital in its capital stock returns for 1933, .1934 and 1935 and was at all times prior to 1935 carried on petitioner’s books as a part of its capital. Under the decision of the Supreme Court of Ohio construing the statute under which it was issued and determining the rights *631 of holders under their certificates, we enter tain no doubt as to the correctness of these reports and entries. The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals will accordingly be affirmed.
Affirmed.
