delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case brings here for review a judgment which applies Section 42, Revenue Act of 1938, 1 so as to “accrue” corporate dividends on the date of their declaration rather than the later record or payment dates. The result is that the dividends are taxable as income to a decedent taxpayer instead of to his estate.
Certiorari was granted
2
because of a conflict in conclu
*395
sion between
Tar Products Corp.
v.
Commissioner,
The decedent, Henry W. Putnam, died on March 30, 1938. Prior to his death several corporations in which he owned stock declared dividends which by the resolutions were payable and were paid to stockholders of record on dates which were subsequent to his death. Each of these dividends, aggregating in all $24,051.75, was held by the Commissioner to constitute income to the decedent under the provisions of § 42. The Board of Tax Appeals decided that the time of accrual depends upon the varying state decisions as to when a corporate debt arises upon a declaration of dividend with a provision for its payment to stockholders of record on some future date. 45 B. T. A. 517. This resulted in an agreement in part with the Commissioner’s determination.
The Circuit Court of Appeals was of the view that federal law controlled the disposition of the controversy and that the dividend accrued on its declaration.
Commissioner
v.
Guaranty Trust Co.,
We think the federal law controls. A federal revenue act applicable throughout the nation fixes liability on the decedent taxpayer under § 42 if the dividend is “accrued.” The meaning of that word in this section should be uniform unless Congress has shown an intention to permit its meaning to be varied by state law.
Burnet
v.
Harmel,
We recently examined the Congressional purpose in the enactment of § 42.
Helvering
v.
Enright,
We assume that decedent was a taxpayer on the cash receipts basis. Compare
Under the income tax acts no stockholder has a separate and divisible taxable interest in the assets of a corporation even though those assets have been increased by earnings. Earnings, before declaration of dividends, while increasing the value of his stock, have never been treated as an event to mark taxable income to the stockholder. Mere declaration of a:dividend does not alter the stockholder’s interest in the corporate assets. If no other factors were involved in value except earnings and dividends, the value of the stock would advance
pari passu
with earnings and the declaration of a dividend with a subsequent record date for-payment would not affect-the stock’s value.
United States
v.
Phellis,
In applying to the present dividends our description of accruals under § 42 as “assets of decedents, earned during their life and unreported as income, which on a cash re *400 turn, would appear in the estate returns,” 7 the Court of Appeals may have treated the words “earned during” the decedent’s life as though they included, prior to a declaration of dividends, the proportionate part of corporate earnings attributable to decedent’s stock. If so, it is a more extended meaning than was intended, since stock does not earn an identifiable separate taxable share of corporate profits for its owner before the corporation makes those profits available to the stockholder. It is not the earnings of a corporation but the separation of those earnings by a completed dividend which assigns a part of those earnings to a stockholder. The price a stockholder would receive on a stock sale after declaration and before the record date would reflect corporate earnings but would not reflect the declaration or non-declaration of a dividend. As the same value would be in the stock with or without the declaration, the price would be the same. Only an ex-dividend sale would affect price.
For the earnings of a corporation to pass into the earnings of its stockholder, so as to be subject to accrual to the stockholder under § 42, something more than a declaration of dividends with a subsequent record date to identify the distributee is required. Such a declaration leaves the identity of the recipient at large. Such uncertainty destroys any conception of accrued as involving a right to receive or an obligation to pay, elements which we think áre essential for accruals under our decisions. 8
Reversed.
Notes
52 Stat. 447, 473, § 42:
“The amount of all items of gross income shall be included in the gross income for the taxable year in which received by the taxpayer, unless, under methods of accounting permitted under section 41, any such amounts are to be properly accounted for as of a different period. In the case of the death of a taxpayer there shall be included in computing net income for the taxable period in which falls the date of his death, amounts accrued up to the date of his death if not otherwise properly includible in respect of such period or a prior period.”
The Government calls attention to the conflict in state decisions as to the event which vests title according to state law to a corporate dividend. Some specify the declaration and some compliance with the requirement of being a stockholder of record on a subsequent date.
Declaration date:
Ford
v.
Snook,
Record date:
Smith
v.
Taecker,
Accrual under § 42, however, is not dependent upon these varying concepts of when dividends vest. Despite possible difference between state and federal income taxation of dividend items, the presumed Congressional purpose to have the national revenue acts uniformly administered leads to a federal interpretation of accruals under § 42.
Such inconsistency would not occur if the federal accrual date under § 42 is held eventually to be the same for taxpayers on the accrued and cash basis. Cf.
Avery
v.
Commissioner,
Respondent argues for the judgment below on the ground that the dividends could not properly be treated as income of the estate when received, since the receipt of the dividends in cash by the estate was merely a conversion into money of one of the assets of the estate, citing
Vanderbilt
v.
Commissioner, 11
B. T. A. 291;
Nichols
v.
United States,
64 Ct. Cls. 241; 80 Treas. Reg., Art. 13. The truth or error of this position depends upon whether those dividends are income, by virtue of the accrual provision of § 42, to the decedent. If they are income to the decedent, they cannot be income also to the estate. If they are not income to the decedent, they are income to the estate. The Vanderbilt and Nichols cases were apparently decided on the theory that the items in controversy constituted income to the decedent and assets of the estate for estate tax purposes and therefore could not later be income to the estate. The regulation does not purport to direct the return as corpus of the estate of dividends declared but with a record' date subsequent to the stockholder’s death. Neither do the present regulations. 105 Treas. Reg., §81.13; cf.
United States
v.
Phellis,
Congress has modified § 42 by an amendment which is inapplicable to this case. Revenue Act of 1942, § 134, 56 Stat. 798, 830; H. Rep. No. 2333, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., § 125, p. 83; S. Rep. 1631, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., § 135, p. 100.
A reference to dividends appears in the legislative history but casts no light on the problem of the event which accrues a corporate dividend. See H. R. 7835, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., printed with Senate amendments, March 28 (Calendar day, April 13), 1934; I. R. B., C. B. 1939-1 (Part 2), p. 629, Amendment 27; § 43, Revenue Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 694; § 43, Revenue Act of 1938, 52 Stat. 473.
Therefore the construction of accrued according to the taxpayers method of accounting, which is directed in §48 (p), 52 Stat. 476, is not of use.
Helvering
v.
Enright,
See
Mason
v.
Routzahn,
See
Tar Products Corp.
v.
Commissioner,
This accords with the original holding of the Board of Tax Appeals on this question in
Estate of McGlue,
41 B. T. A. 1186, 1193. After that case was reversed on the law of New York,
Helvering
v.
McGlue’s Estate,
