60 F.2d 38 | 2d Cir. | 1932
The plaintiff company is a corporation formed on May 8, 1916, in succession to a firm of two partners which had done the same business. The value of the firm’s assets was $206,771.49' against which it had debts of $65,474.92. From their cash the
The decision appears to us right. The “credit” was indeed a debt; it was not a condition upon payment that the company should have paid all its other ereclitors, though these had a prior “lien” upon its property. If for instance there had been enough quick assets in the treasury to answer all existing claims, apparently the shareholders might demand their credit, or at least so much as left the “lien” unimpaired ; they wore not therefore like preferred shareholders, who must wait for a liquidation; the condition might be fulfilled during the life of the business. Were the shareholders to sell their shares, retaining their claims, it might indeed be difficult not to say that thereafter the claims became “borrowed capital” within section 326 (b). Nevertheless, while their holdings remained as they were, the two partners were merely eoadventurers in the enterprise in both capacities, as creditors and as shareholders; and it would deny tho substance of the transaction to treat them otherwise. The company was no doubt a new legal person, and owed the debts; for ordinary purposes it made no difference that the lenders were also shareholders, even though their claims were subordinate to those of other creditors. But we are dealing with a statute designed to tax unusual profits, which we must construe with its purpose in mind. The exclusion in tho section of “borrowed,” from “invested,” capital is to insure the allowance as a basis for the calculation of the tax percentages, of. only so much as the shareholders have at stake in the enterprise. Sums borrowed from another group of persons are not at the shareholders’ risk; the share of the lenders in the profits (interest), is excluded from taxable income, and correspondingly, for purposes of computing invested capital the assets are treated as though already allocated pro tanto to the debt. It may indeed be possible even under this statute for a shareholder to oeeupy a double position; to be truly a lender, qua creditor, and a coadventurer, qua shareholder; but the form of his contract does not determine it; he and his fellows are not lenders — whatever form of words they use — ■ if as a class they lend to themselves pari passu as shareholders. The only embarrassment in the case at bar arises from the fact that the credits were not equally divided, as were the shares; but this seems to us irrelevant, because the same group was on each side of the transaction. Possibly if. the single owner of a business were to receive a credit for the assets, even if subject to all present and future debts, his claim would be “borrowed capital,” though lie owned a share or two; but when, as here, all are equally in each class, some inequality in distribution need not upset the conclusion that the assets were not, “borrowed,” and that the interests of both in each aspect were at the risk of the yenture. The section is to be read colloquially, rather than by legal analysis. Nor would it disturb our conclusion, if by a sale of the shares, the credits should change into “borrowed” capital; for such a separation of interest would result in creating two kinds of rights, of which the credits would bo in hostility to those of the shareholders.
Tho regulations (Regulations 45, article 813), appear to provide for such arrangements. They recognize that the phrase,
Of the assets transferred to the company, $20,000 was for the value of the firm’s good will, and was “invested” capital, unless excluded for other reasons. It was not however originally “paid in for stock or shares” under section 326 (a) (5), 40 Stat. 1092, nor was it “paid in surplus,” under section 336 (a) (3). Landesman-Hirschheimer Co. v. Com’r, 44 F.(2d) 521 (C. C. A. 6); Crossett Co. v. U. S., 50 F.(2d) 282 (Ct. Cl.); Prentiss & Co. v. U. S., 57 F.(2d) 676 (C. C. A. 2). The second is clearly true, since otherwise there would be no means of limiting the allowance to twenty-five per cent, of the total share capital. Section 326 (a)(5), (e). Thus until April 1, 1918, when $90,000' of shares were issued in consideration of the cancellation of a like amount of the credits, no part of the good will was “invested capital.” The question is whether any part of it is to be allocated against the shares then issued; so far as it is not, it cannot now be treated as “invested capital.” In Prentiss v. U. S., supra (C. C. A.) 57 F.(2d) 676, a predecessor company had conveyed a mixed fund of “tangibles” and “intangibles,” and we allocated the shares altogether against the first; but this was because the company had so allocated the “tangibles” on its books. Here there was nothing of the sort; the $90,000 of shares were issued generally against the credits, and these were set up generally against the mixed fund. Shares represent ownership in the property as a whole; and while the shareholders are indeed owners of the surplus, when it becomes necessary to appropriate part of the assets to shares — a wholly artificial conception in any case— there appears no reason to prefer “tangibles.” Certainly there is none in the statute itself. Section 326 (a) requires shares ' to be “specifically issued” for “tangibles”; yet no one would say that because no allocation was “specifically” made, the shares did not represent “tangibles” at all. There is not even this requirement as to “intangibles”; it is enough that they are “paid in for” shares. When nothing appears to the contrary, the only rational method is to allocate shares against both' classes according to their relative value. Landesman-Hirschheimer Co. v. Com’r, supra (C. C. A.) 44 F.(2d) 521, and Crossett Co. v. U. S., supra (Ct. Cl.) 50 F.(2d) 292, contain nothing to the contrary. Hence the amount of the good will against which the remaining credit stood was that proportion of the original credit which it represented; as twenty is to one hundred and thirty-one. To this extent the credit was not “invested capital.”
The plaintiff asserts that' there should be'also included in its invested capital an item of $32.,273.09, credited to the partners as their salaries while acting as officers of the company from the time of its organization until January 31, 1919. This because the salaries were the same kind of debt as the credits set up to pay for the assets on their transfer on May 8, 1916. Whatever may be said for this as an original matter, the claim is not before us. In its return for the year ending January 31, 1920, the company set up an invested capital of $173,569.66. The Commissioner reduced this to $85,569.-
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the foregoing opinion.