The petitioners appeal from orders of the,. Tax Court which assessed deficiencies in income tax against them for the year 1941. The quer^n is whether shares of stock held by then, 'nd transferred to the corporation, were thereby “cancelled or redeemed,” and whether payments, made in exchange out of the corporation’s accumulated earnings, were distributions “essentially equivalent to the distribution of the taxable dividends,” under § 115(g) of the Internal Revenue Act of 1938, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 115(g). The taxpayers, together with one Berkman, were engaged in a textile business in New York, which they incorporated in 1934, each subscribing $10,000 for 100 shares of stock. From time to time thereafter additional shares were issued to them, until on May 31, 1938, each held 240 shares. Berkman died in June, 1939, and his widow wished to sell his shares; whereupon the taxpayers each bought 120; and in 1940, caused the corporation to declare a stock dividend of 280 shares, one half to each. In December, 1941, the corporation passed a resolution, buying from each taxpayer 166-2/3 of his 500 shares at $300 a share, the resolution declaring that the shares so bought should be “held by the corporation as treasury stock, subject to resale.” The Tax Court held that, although there was no cancellation of the shares, they were “redeemed,” and that the resulting “liquidation was essentially equivalent to a taxable distribution.” This ruling, so far as it held that the transaction was a redemption of the stock, was contrary to our decision in Al-pers v. Commissioner,
In cases where it affirmatively appears that the Tax Court has made a plainly erroneous legal proposition the basis of its decision, we will assume arguendo that a question does emerge with adequate certainty to be reviewable by us, although we are not sure, for at times it has seemed that, in addition, the erroneous legal proposition must be one of general application. Be that as it may, Commissioner v. Estate of Bedford, supra,
It is quite true that we did not have such doubts before the decision of the Supreme Court just mentioned; but that decision has engendered more than doubts. The case came orginally before us (Bedford’s Estate v. Commissioner,
Perhaps we should stop with that; but tax cases do not all come up through the Tax Court; taxpayers sometimes pay their assessments and sue in the District Courts. For that reason we wish to go further and say that we think that Commissioner v. Estate of Bedford, supra,
One point remains. Section 115(g) applies only when the shares have been “can-celled or redeemed,” and in Alpers v. Commissioner, supra,
Orders affirmed
