Lead Opinion
Thеse are appeals in two actions tried together, and brought to recover income taxes erroneously collected. The result turns on whether the plaintiffs were entitled to the deduction of a “non-business debt” from their joint income tax for the year 1944; and, if they were, there was an excess deduction remaining
The first question is whether the passages in the charge that the plaintiffs challenge were directed to whether the debt survived transactions between the plaintiffs and the debtor before 1944. There can be no doubt we think that they were not sо directed, but to the privilege of postponement. The eolio-' quial charge was as follows:
“And in connection, as I say, with whether the debt became worthless in 1944 I charge you that the postponement of a bad debt deduction until the collateral is applied tо the debt cannot be permitted solely because of the existence of this collateral. Such postponement must be shown to have been in good faith and bona fide for a taxpayer.
“Under all the circumstances you should satisfy yourselves that a claim of deduction for this debt in 1944 is consistent with reason, common sense and economic reality, and it was made in good faith and in all respects bona fide.”
The court did not define the phrases, “good faith and bona fide for a taxpayer,” or “consistent with reason, common sense and economic reality”; but, if there could be any doubt that this passage was meant to impose a condition upon the privilege of- postponement, the requests that he refused lay it:
(1) “the indebtedness has not become worthless within the meaning of the Internal Revenue Code unless and until all of the collateral securing the indebtedness has been completely realized upon and credited against the indebtedness.”
(2) “if the jury found that the indebtedness was secured by collateral and that that collateral was not completely reаlized upon until the year 1944 the indebtedness could not have become worthless until that year.”
Again after the jury was recalled the judge said the following:
“If you find that in any year the Loewis held collateral and that collateral had value you are instructed that postponement of a bad debt deduction until the collateral is applied to the debt cannot be permitted solely because of the existence of that collateral. Such postponement must be shown to have been in good faith and bona fide for a taxpayer.”
This language could only have been on the hypothesis that the plaintiffs had not released the debt, and that they had continued to hold partial, though in
We cannot agree that this instruction was correct, or that a taxpayer is not privileged to liquidate his security for whatever purposes he thinks most profitable, among them the reduction of his taxes. It is so abundantly settled in decisions of the Supreme Court
In what we say we do not wish to be understood as meaning that a taxpayer’s decision as to when his security has lost all value is subject to no review. No doubt he takes his chances that that may have happened before he acts; and we do not say that he will be protected if a reasonable person in his place would have thought that it had hapрened earlier. But, so long as he passes that test he is free to choose his time, whatever his purpose. No other conclusion is possible in the case of a secured debt under a regulation that limits any deduction whatever to occasions when the debt has bеcome “entirely worthless.” We are not in accord with the decision of the Tax Court in In re Leopold Spingarn,
The two decisions of the First Circuit, Old Colony Trust Associates v. Hassett,
Judgment reversed; cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with the foregoing.
Notes
. United States v. Isham,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I agree that the judge’s charge was' somewhat confusing as to “good faith” and the like. But I would remand for a new trial solely on the issue of the so-callеd good faith of the taxpayer in disposing of the collateral in the year that he seeks to take the bad-debt deduction. For I disagree with my colleagues in the following respect: I think that, so long as the taxpayer refrains from foreclosing on the collateral bеcause of what he, in good faith, regards as valid business considerations (other than tax reduction), the debt is not to be deemed worthless; the taxpayer’s subjective reactions, in that respect, are controlling. But I think that, at the moment when, in his mind, such business considerations ceаse to exist, he may not have the benefit, for tax purposes, of postponing such foreclosure to a later date. See Leopold Spingarn, 7 T.C.Mem. 498.
It begs the question to say that a taxpayer has a legal right to decrease, “by means which the law permits,” the amount of what would otherwise be his taxes. ‘ The ' question here is whether, the statute does permit a taxpayer to. reduce his taxes‘by the means the taxpayer here employed. To put it differently, the question is whether Congress intended to allow the taxpayer to choоse to foreclose on the collateral in the year which best served his purposes taxwise. I think that such was not the congressional purpose. Section 23 (k) (4), taken together with Section 117(e) (1), constitutes a favor to the taxpayer, a boon, a grace,
Pretty obviously, Congress, in dealing with this subject, was thinking of the-ordinary case of аn unsecured debt which becomes worthless; and clearly, with respect to such an unsecured debt, Congress did not intend that the taxpayer was to have the choice of the taxable year in which to deduct the loss, since the statute provides a definite period in which bad debts must be deducted, i. e., “the taxable year” within which they become worthless. I agree with Judge HAND that, in the exceptional case where security has been given
The following will serve to show where my colleagues’ opinion may lead: Suppоse a taxpayer makes a loan of $10,-000, secured by a $500 government bond, and that, a few years later, the debtor becomes utterly unable to pay anything. The collateral, the $500 bond, will then be worth about as much as at any later time. Nevertheless, according to my colleagues, the taxpayer may continue to hold that bond and not dispose of it until 15 years later, at which time he can deduct the debt as wholly worthless.
This conclusion has startling consequences. For I understand that my colleagues agree that their ruling will necessarily apply аlso to the deduction of business bad debts secured by collateral. To be sure, business bad debts may be partially charged off by the taxpayer if he shows, to the satisfaction of the Commissioner, that part of the debt is not •collectible.
I would reverse and remand for a new trial solely on the issue of whether the taxpayer, in good faith, postponed disposition of the collateral until 1944 for what he deemed valid business reasons.
. Interstate Transit Lines v. Commissioner,
. Interstate Transit Lines v. Commissioner, supra; Deputy v. DuPont, supra; White v. United States, supra; New Colonial Ice Co. v. Helvering, supra; Mills Estate v. Commissioner, 2 Cir.,
. If part of a business bad debt has been deducted in a previous year, when the undeducted portion becomes wholly worthless, it must be charged off in the year it loses all value. Industrial Trust Co. v. Commissioner, 1 Cir.,
