The question raised upon this petition to review the Board of Tax Appeals is whether any part of profits realized from sales of stock which was acquired through the exercise cf rights to subscribe therefor is taxable under section 101 of the Revenue Act of 1928 (26 U.S.C.A. § 101 note) at the rate of 12½ per cent, as capital net gain, where the stock was sold less than two years after the rights were exercised though more than two years after *184 the stock on which the rights were issued was acquired.
The testator, V. Everit Macy, acquired 1,350 shares of stock of the Chase Bank in April, 1926, at a cost of $347,350. On December 7, 1927, he received as a stockholder rights to subscribe for 270 additional shares at $325 per share. He exercised these rights of subscription on December 27, 1927, and paid $87,750 for the 270 additional shares. On the date of issue, the fair market value of the rights was $41.25 a right, and that of the Chase stock ex rights was $531.87% a share. On the date the rights were exercised, the market value-of the Chase stock was $542.50 a share.
On June 12, 1928, the testator received as a stockholder rights to' subscribe for 324 further shares at $400 per share. He exercised these rights of subscription on July 2, 1928, and paid $129,600 for the 324 additional shares. On the date of issue, the fair market value of the rights was $40 a right, and that of Chase stock ex rights was $580 a share. On the date the rights were exercised, the market value of the Chase stock was $546 a 'share. In May, 1929, less than two years after the testator had exercised these rights, but more than two years after he had acquired the original shares, he sold the 270 shares for $298,752.09 and the 324 shares for $358,-502.51.
Article 58 of Regulations 74 issued under the Revenue Act of 1928 provides that the cost basis to a taxpayer of stock acquired through the exercise of rights to subscribe shall be the subscription price plus that portion of the cost of the original stock which the value of the rights when issued bears to the value of the stock and rights at that time.
The percentage which the value of the rights to subscribe for the 270 shares bore to the value of the stock and rights at the time the latter were issued was .071974. Accordingly, the rights then represented $25,000.17 out of the $347,350 which the original stock cost. The $87,750 paid to take up the rights, plus $25,000.17, the value of the rights when issued, made the original cost basis for the 270 shares equal $112,750.17.
The percentage which the value of the rights to subscribe for the 324 shares bore to the value of the existing stock and rights at the time the latter were issued was .064516. Accordingly, the rights then represented:
Portion of cost of original lot of 1350 shares allocated to the 324 rights, or .064516 X (347,350 — 25,000.17) = $ 20,796.72
Portion of cost of 270 shares allocated to the 324 rights, or .064512 X 112,750.17 = 7,274.19
The amount paid to take up the 324 rights = 129,600.00
$157,670.91
At the time of sale in May, 1929:
The cost basis for the 270 shares was $112,750.17 —$7,274.19= $105,475.98
The cost basis for the 324 shares was $157,670.91
The Commissioner computed the profit: From the sale of the 270 shares at $298,752.09 — $105,475.-98 = $193,276.11
From the sale of the 324' shares at $358,502.51 — $157,-670.91 = 200,831.60
The tax was figured at the ordinary rates, and not at 12½ per cent, on the above gains. To the extent that the gains were “capital assets,” i. e., “property held by the taxpayer for more than two years,” the tax under section 101 of the Revenue Act of 1928 should have been computed at 12½ per cent. The Court of Appeals of the First Circuit decided in Wood v. Commissioner,
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A somewhat analogous decision is Dunigan v. Burnet,
It is to be noticed that section 101 (c) (8) of the act (26 U.S.C.A. § 101 note) defines “capital assets” thus:
“ ‘Capital assets’ means property held by the taxpayer for more than two years.” The word “property” in the above clause is not limited to the specific certificates of stock. A stock dividend is regarded as held for more than two years if the stock interest upon which it is based has been held for that period. Article 501 of Regulations 74 provides:
“ "* * * The specific property sold or exchanged must in general have been held for more than two years * * *. If the taxpayer has held for more than two years stock upon which a stock dividend has been declared, both the original and dividend shares are considered to be capital assets.”
The Supreme Court cited a similar regulation in Helvering v. N. Y. Trust Co.,
The right to subscribe for stock of a corporation offered to its shareholders has been characterized by the Supreme Court as “essentially analogous to a stock dividend.” Miles v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.,
“To treat the stockholder’s right to the new shares as something new and independent of the old, and as if it actually cost nothing, leaving the entire proceeds of sale as gain, would ignore the essence of the matter. * * * The district court proceeded correctly in treating the subscription rights as an increase inseparable from the old shares, not in the way of income but as capital; in treating the new shares if and when issued as indistinguishable legally and in the market sense from the old; and in regarding the sale of the rights as a sale of a portion of a capital interest that included the old shares.”
Similarly in Hyde v. Holmes,
“An increase of capital by the corporation, which represents not only the amount then paid in, but also a value necessarily included in the capital because the stock is worth more than its par value, is in the nature of a stock dividend by the corporation, to the amount of this additional value represented by the rights to subscribe.”
See, also, Blair v. Dustin’s Estate,
The circumstance that the right to receive additional stock is conditioned upon the stockholder’s contributing new capital 'to the corporation does not alter the fact that, when the condition is fulfilled, he receives what is essentially a partial stock dividend. The condition precedent, does not destroy the identity of that portion oi the new stock which has been derived from the original interest in the corporation.
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The decision of Commissioner v. Cummings,
77
F.(2d) 670 (C.C.A.5), is not opposed to that of Wood v. Commissioner,
It seems evident from the foregoing that a portion of the 270 and 324 shares represented the taxpayers old stock interest in the 1,350 shares of the corporation which he had held for more than two years before the sales of the additional shares were made at a profit. Thus a portion of the profit was a capital asset and should only be subject to taxation at the rate of 12½ per cent.
Inasmuch as the Commissioner has not presented his theory of the proper method of apportioning the profits between “capital gains” and ordinary income, we shall not attempt to make the computation, though we should have done so had the matter been argued by both sides. As the case stands, the contention of the petitioners that the method of apportionment applied in Wood v. Commissioner (C.C.A.)
Order reversed.
