This is an appeal (petition to review), by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue from ■
We agree with the Board and the taxpayer that a transaction, otherwise within an exception of the tax law, does not lose its immunity, because it is actuated by a desire to avoid, or, if one choose, to evade, taxation. Any one may so arrange his affairs that his taxes shall he as .low as possible; he is not bound to choose that pattern which will best pay the Treasury; there is not even a patriotic duty to increase one’s taxes. U. S. v. Isham,
This accords both with the history of the section, and with its interpretation by the courts, thong-h the exact point lias not hitherto arisen. It first appeared in the Act of 1924, § 293 (h) (1) (B), 26 USCA § 934 (h) (1) (B), and as the committee reports show (Senate Reports 398), was intended as supplementary to section 112 (g), 26 USCA § 2112 (g), then section 208
(a),
26 USCA § 934 (c); both in combination changed the law as laid down in U. S. v. Phellis,
We do not indeed agree fully with the way in which the Commissioner treated the transaction; we cannot treat as inoperative the transfer of the Monitor shares hv the United Mortgage Corporation, the issue by the Averill Corporation of its own shares to the taxpayer, and her acquisition of the Monitor shares by winding up that company. The Averill Corporation liad a juristic personality, whatever the purpose of its organization; the transfer passed title to the Monitor share's and the taxpayer became a shareholder in the transferee. All these steps were real, and their only defect was that they were not what the statute moans by a “reorganization,” because the transactions were no part of the conduct of the business of either or both companies; so viewed they were a sham, though all the proceedings had their usual effect. But the result is the same whether the tax he calculated as the Commissioner calculated it, or upon the value of the Averill shares as a dividend, and the only question that can arise is whether the deficiency must be expunged, though right in result, if it was computed by a method, partly wrong. Although this is argued with some warmth, it is plain that the taxpayer may not avoid her just taxes because the reasoning of the assessing officials has not been entirely our own.
Order reversed; deficiency assessed.
