Petitioner seeks review of a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals wherein the latter sustained the Commissioner’s determination of a deficiency in petitioner’s income tax for the year 1936 upon the theory that a voluntary reduction of mortgage indebtedness in the sum of $7,000 constituted income to petitioner.
Petitioner in 1928 purchased certain real estate for $29,000, paying $10,000 in cash and assuming a mortgage indebtedness of $19,000. Partial payments were made until, on April 5, 1936, the balance remaining due was $15,000. At that time the property had depreciated in value to $8,000 and petitioner began negotiations with the mortgagee for settlement. He offered to convey the building to the mortgagee in full satisfaction of the debt. The creditor refused but said he would take $8,000 in payment of the balance of $15,000 remaining due. This proposal petitioner accepted and upon receipt of $8;000 the mortgagee released the mortgage. Petitioner still owns the property. The asserted tax resulted from treating the reduction of $7,000 as income.
In determining what constitutes income, substance rather than form is to be given controlling weight. Bowers v. Kerbaugh-Empire Co.,
“Income” within the purview of the Revenue Acts, has been defined to be “gain derived from capital, from labor, or from both combined,” and includes “profit gained through sale or conversion of capital.” Bowers v. Kerbaugh-Empire Co.,
Here we are concerned with a capital asset, purchased in 1929 for $29,000 on the purchase price of which the taxpayer has paid $22,000 and the balance of which, $7,000, has been cancelled. Petitioner now owns the property worth $8,000 or $21,000 less than what he agreed to pay for it and $16,000 less than he has actually paid for it. To say that anything of value has moved to him is contrary to fact.
Under certain circumstances forgiveness of indebtedness as such, becomes income, but the cases in which this rule has been applied do not seem in anywise comparable to the one presented here. We cannot say categorically that all reductions constitute income. Paul & Mertins on Income Taxes, Vol. 1, p. 269. Each case must rest upon its own facts. In United States v. Kirby Lumber Co.,
The courts have felt impelled to contrary decisions, under the particular facts involved, in Burnet v. John F. Campbell Co.,
Respondent argues that the reduced mortgage should not be considered a purchase-money security, for the reason that after his purchase, when the mortgage which the petitioner assumed came due, petitioner borrowed the same amount from another and satisfied the first mortgage. We think this fact insufficient to affect the applicability of the principles involved. The result was the same as if the first mortgagee had assigned his mortgage to the second mortgagee. The same amount of purchase price remained unpaid. Petitioner was in the same position both before and after the transaction, and neither received gain nor incurred loss in the mere change of mortgagee. To all effects and
The decision of the Board will be reversed and remanded, with directions to compute the tax upon the basis of exclusion of $7,000, representing the voluntary reduction in the purchase price.
