This is a petition to review an order of the Tax Court
in banco,
opinion by Rice, J.,
As a new question it is indeed hard to see why the transfer of a business for purposes of liquidation from a corporation to its single shareholder — or for that matter to its shareholders collectively should^ be different for .tax purposes from liquidation by a ^ receiver, which is treated as a continuation of the corporate business. 1 „ In-the case at bar Ungar did indeed continue the business under the contract of September 1, 1950 with Exportadora, but it is often true that a receiver continues a business awaiting a favorable sale of it as a going enterprise in order to preserve its good will and avoid disposing of the property as scrap. The shareholders have no just complaint when this is done; for the corporate rates are imposed because they hav,e enjoyed the privilege of limited liability-, that incorporation gives, and liquidation is as much a part of the original ¡venture as its active conduct. We cannot help thinking, there-, fore, -that it would better have accorded with the underlying thesis of the Revenue Law for pourts to regard an assignment in liquidation by a corporation tp its shareholders, as no more than a procedural step in the corporate enterprise: that is, its termination. However, there is enough contrary authority to make it at least doubtful whether such a disposition of the case at bar would be permissible. 2
So far as concerns claims against others, such assignments have been dealt with as “anticipatory a^sigm ments” ; and the income is charged against the assignor, when he or it has “earned” it, and, in the case of a corppration, when it has not wholly ceased funetioii. In Lucas v. Earl,
*93 The petitioner says first that the payment of the “Future Commissions” had not been' “earned” on September 15, 1950; and second, the Corporation then wholly ceased to function. It is true that all sales by Exportadora were subject to defeat by conditions some of which might arise after September 15; but, none of the commissions claimed was so defeated. Moreover, all these conditions subsequent were independent of any action by the Corporation. We do not mean that contingencies might not have arisen that it would have been within the power of the Corporation to control; but we do mean that in fact none did. Although these possibilities make it permissible to treat the commissions as “unaccrued” till the goods were shipped, that is irrelevant. The petitioner asserts, however, that it did perform after September 15 some of the services which were the consideration for the commissions, and that therefore these had not been wholly “earned” on September 15. We do not agree. All that Ungar personally did after September 15, was as follows: “During the latter part of September and during October, Ungar engaged in negotiations with Exportadora for the filling of the orders prior to the expiration of the renewed letters of credit. * * * Ungar was afraid that if the shipments were not made prior to the expiration of the letters of credit or the export licenses, the purchasers would no longer be obligated to buy. * * * He believed that if a break in the market price below $65 had occurred between October and the end of December, as to any letters of credit then expired, that such contracts would not be fulfilled and that he would lose his commissions thereon.” Again: “Shipments made during October and November were so small in quantity that Ungar obtained permission from Ex-portadora to prorate them among its various customers.” As to this last statement it is important to observe that one of the conditions of the contracts was as follows: “This contract shall be deemed severable as to all goods sold, and non-delivery, delayed delivery or non-conformity with contract requirements as to any part or lot shall not affect Buyer’s obligations to accept and pay for any other part or lot.” Although it may indeed be true that the activities just described were beneficial to the buyers in the sense that if conditions had changed they would have helped to protect the sales, nevertheless they turned out to be no part of the services that were part of the consideration for the Corporation’s commissions. They were at most provision against the-possible defeat of the sales.
Next as to the argument that, the Corporation altogether ceased to exist on September 15. Although, again as a new question, we do not see why that should be determinative, we do not. think that the Corporation had ceased to exist. Section 29.52-1 of Regulations 111 of 1939 reads in part as follows:
“ * * * If a corporation was not in existence throughout an annual accounting period * * * the corporation is required to make a return for that fractional part of a year during which it was in existence. A corporation is not in existence after it ceases business and dissolves, retaining no assets, whether or not under State law it may thereafter be treated as continuing as a corporation for certain limited purposes connected with winding up its affairs, such as for the purpose of suing and being sued. If the corporation has valuable claims for which it will bring suit during this period, it has retained assets, and it continues in existence. * * * ”
We cannot avoid reading this language-as meaning that a corporation in process of liquidation is still in existence, if it, retains assets to pay its debts, or indeed to distribute among shareholders; and that, where that is true, its return-, must include the period of the “reten
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tion.” This may indeed seem to be a strange condition to impose, but in taxation it is often true that, not only in the beginning but at the ending, is the Word. Of a regulation, as well as of a statute it is usually, though not so rigidly, true that, “having determined that different tax consequences shall flow from different methods by which the shareholders of a closely held corporation may dispose of corporate property, we accept its mandate.” United States v. Cumberland Public Service Co., supra,
Order affirmed.
Notes
. Treasury Regulations 111, 1939: § 29.22 (a)-20; O'Sullivan Rubber Co. v. Commissioner, 2 Cir.,
. United States v. Cumberland Pub. Serv. Co.,
