1942 BTA LEXIS 723 | B.T.A. | 1942
Lead Opinion
We take as our point of departure the principle of the--Bansome case
If respondent’s treatment is correct that is a short and simple ' formula for disposing of the present proceedings. Petitioners, however, assert that net taxable income and actual earnings and profits-available for dividends are two different concepts, and that “Book, entries are by no means conclusive and must yield to the actual f ácts,. which in this case are not in dispute.” For purposes of discussion we shall adopt this general approach and from that viewpoint examine-the transactions which led to the distributions in controversy. *
This should begin with the corporation to which we are referring-as the Construction Co. and the tax-free reorganization by which McClintic-Marshall acquired that company’s stock and simultaneously received , a distribution of the bulk of its assets. In December 1926,. when this reorganization took place, the Construction Co. had net assets of a value of approximately $65,000,000,
' The cost of the Construction Co. shares to McClintic-Marshall is asserted
A fundamental principle in the consideration of reorganization problems is that the successive parts of the reorganization should be viewed as a whole. Helvering v. Bashford, 302 U. S. 454; Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. Motter (C. C. A., 10th Cir.), 66 Fed. (2d) 309; Bassick v. Commissioner (C. C. A., 2d Cir.), 85 Fed. (2d) 8; certiorari denied, 299 U. S. 592; Muskegon Motor Specialties Co., 45 B. T. A. 551, 558. When'" this is done, McClintic-Marshall is seen to have received some $52,000,000 of miscellaneous assets of the Construction Co., including the stock of six subsidiary companies having a value of $15;000,000. That this $52,000,000 is denominated a “distribution” is of no consequence since the assets concerned were acquired as part of the reorganization, as the parties have stipulated, and were part of what McClintic-Marshall, on petitioners’ theory, received for its payment of $65,000,000. As we have already noted, the $65,000,000 is petitioners’ figure for the cost of everything that McClintic-Marshall got because the stock which it issued, having no other indication of market value, should be valued according to the petitioners by viewing the stipulated contemporary worth of the assets received for the stock. We can not escape the conclusion, therefore, that $52,000,000 of the stock was paid out and $52,000,000 of miscellaneous assets were received when the transaction as a whole is considered.
Following the theory presented to its logical conclusion, the cost''of the miscellaneous assets was $52,000,000 out of the total of $65,000,000 which McClintic-Marshall paid. This, of course, leaves $13,000,000 unaccounted for. But when the entire transaction was concluded McClintic-Marshall held, in addition to the miscellaneous assets, the stock of the Construction Co., which in turn still owned property which the parties have stipulated was worth approximately $13,000,000^ By a similar process of reasoning we conclude, therefore, that the remaining $13,000,000 was paid by McClintic-Marshall for the Construction Co. stock. There is thus established a true cost basis for purposes of the computation in which we are now engaged of $13,000,000 and no more
This brings us to the occurrence which, in petitioner’s view, is the nub of their whole contention. “The most important of the several transactions affecting the earnings of McClintic-Marshall Corporation,” they say in their brief, “and on which the outcome of these cases ultimately turns, is the complete liquidation in 1930 of nine of
The computations upon which petitioners rest that assertion need not be reproduced in detail. Suffice it to say that they include as the predominant item of unrecovered cost an amount of $29,500,000 or thereabouts attributed to the stock of the Construction Co., a figure which is arrived at by assuming that of the $65,000,000 paid for it only about $34,000,000 was recovered by the receipt of Construction Co-assets in 1926. This assumption in turn, proceeds on the theory that the transfer of these assets was a dividend to the full extent of the Construction Co.’s earnings, and that it wiped these out and at the same time reduced McClintic-Marshall’s recovery of its cost by a corresponding figure.
Without this premise the claim of a loss on the liquidation falls. Since, as we have seen, there is no justification for the basic assumption that the cost of the Construction Co. stock was more than the approximate $13,000,000 shown by the net result of the 1926 reorganization, all of its cost and that of the other subsidiaries was recovered by the stipulated value of the assets^received^,in the 1930 liquidation amino loss but in fact a slight profit resulted. It follows ffiatThere is no ground for the contention that McClintic-Marshall’s earned surplus was wiped out or even impaired when its subsidiaries liquidated.
It by no means weakens the force of what we have already concluded to add that the facts demonstrate how unreal and theoretical is any contention that McClintic-Marshall as a result of the transactions described was any worse off than it had been in the first place. Disregarding theories and technical provisions of the tax law, as we must to accord with petitioners’ approach, we see that McClintic-Marshall appears to have acquired all of the stock of the Construction Co., and after becoming the owner of the stock, has effected a complete liquidation of Construction Co. by eventually transferring all of the • assets of Construction Co. to itself. It thus received a total of $65,000,000 worth of net assets. Obviously, it has had no loss. It got exactly what it set out to get and has paid for it in its own stock, which stock, at best, was not worth more than $65,000,000. $65⅜000,00(> paid out and $65,000,000 received back results in neither gain nor loss. Thus, actually, McClintic-Marshall had no loss whatsoever upon the acquisition of the assets of the Construction C'o. nor upon its-liquidation.
* * ‡ These cases hold that, where there has been a reorganization in which the stockholders of an old company have received stock in the new corporation in exchange for their stock in the old, and where under the Revenue Act of 1021 the transaction was tax-free, the earnings of the old corporation continue to be earnings in the hands of the new, the distribution of which constitutes a taxable dividend. * * * [Helen V. Crocker, supra].
And it is unnecessary to attempt to determine whether here the"" successor achieved the predecessor’s earned surplus when the latter’s stock was acquired, on the one hand, or when its assets were completely transferred, on the other. For at least upon ⅛⅞ liquidation of the subsidiaries McClintic-Marshall received a full distribution of all of the assets originally held by the Construction Co. Cf. Harter v. Helvering, supra; Coudon v. Tait, supra.
[ Petitioners, in effect, are seeking to avoid the Sansome result by reliance on a procedure involving the asserted declaration of a dividend to wipe out accumulated gains and profits which in the absence of such a “distribution” would have been available for dividend purposes to the predecessor corporation before the reorganization and to the successor afterward. But there is nothing to show that, when the Construction Co. transferred assets to McClintic-Marshall, this was a dividend. True, the provisions of section 115 of the Revenue Act of 1928, that any distribution is presumed to be out of earnings and profits, would lend the argument weight in other connections. But the trouble with this assertion here is that it is in violation of the fundamental principle advanced by petitioners that provisions of the revenue act are immaterial in the computation of accumulated earnings available for the distribution of dividends. And, in any event, we are not prepared to grant that the underlying principle responsible for the conclusion reached in, Commissioner v. Sansome can be so readily and narrowly restricted. ’
""T While accepting the doctrine of the Sansome case when applied to a complete transfer which leaves the predecessor corporation without assets, petitioners resist its application if the transferor retains property which is sufficient to cover the amount of its undistributed \earnings. In this case they say it should be concluded that the old corporation has retained its earnings and profits and that consequently none are available for distribution by the transferee. Thus it is contended that in the transfer to Union that company received no part of McClintic-Marshall’s accumulated earnings and could not pass them on to Pitt Securities, its successor. Without the earnings so inherited the operations of Union and Pitt Securities produced insufficient earned surplus to cover the disputed distributions.
There is, however, a reason for rejecting the argument, which we must consider, if not as such, then as the principle by which the accumulations are to be attributed to the respective corporations. ■ ■ An asset does not ordinarily partake of a character permitting its classification as between capital on the one hand and surplus on the other, and it ⅛ not the practice to maintain books of account or balance sheets in such a way that a division of this nature can be made , by inspection of the asset or of its accounting treatment^) See Canal & Banking Co. v. New Orleans, 99 U. S. 97. Qfor all that will generally appear, and the present proceeding is no exception, the capital assets as a whole will incorporate the combined attributes of stated capital and paid-in or accumulated surplus. In the absence of other means of allocation it is difficult to avoid treating each asset similarly so that it will be considered as including its proportionate share of \ the over-all division between capital and surplus. Thus, if there is
Thus, except for the doctrine of the Sansome case that assets which do not remain in the old corporation will be considered to have endowed the successor with earnings and profits to the extent of those of the predecessor, a tax avoidance identical in kind if not in degree with that condemned in the Sansome case could be made possible by “split-off” reorganizations. This reasoning might require
But, as we have seen, there is justification for holding merely that, under such circumstances an allocation of accumulated earnings should be made as between assets retained and those transferredj/so that the ^/accumulated earnings acquired by the new corporation will be that, proportion of the total accumulations which the assets acquired are-of the total assets; and for our purposes it will be sufficient if this method of allocation is used in dealing with the transfers through which the assets passed from McClintic-Marshall to Union and from Union to Pitt Securities, the corporation responsible for the distribution to these petitioners which raises the instant questions. We are convinced that the Sansome principle governs at least to that extent.
The Sansome decision is predicated on the thought that a tax-free exchange does not operate to “break the continuity of the corporate life,” and that therefore when a reorganization “does not toll the-company’s life as continued venture” the earnings of the “original, or subsidiary, company remain * * * ‘earnings or profits’ of the-successor, or parent.” This is because such reorganizations do not
Thus when the shareholders in McClintic-Marshall received stock of Union in lieu of a portion of what their McClintic-Marshall stock had theretofore represented there was a continuity of the corporate life of the McClintic-Marshall-Union corporate enterprise. Union carried on a part of the business theretofore carried on by McClintic-Marshall and with a portion of its assets, and no gain or loss was recognized when the stockholders’ investment in such assets and business, formerly represented by their stock in McClintic-Marshall, was exchanged for Union’s shares. The continuity, however, was between the two corporate businesses, and the transfer of earnings under the Sansome principle affected them. It did not involve the shareholders, and it would be anomalous to say that any of the shareholders’ earnings were taken over and became part of the old enterprise in its new form.
On the other hand, when Union, as a stockholder in the Koppers Co., exchanged that stock for shares of the new Koppers Association, the continuity of corporate life with which an application of the Sansome principle would be concerned was that between the two Koppers companies. The earnings of the old would remain such in the hands of the new. But there was no continuity of corporate life as between Union and the new Koppers Association. The latter, we must assume, carried on the corporate business of the old Kop-pers Co., not that of Union.
Hence, the only result of the Koppers exchange material here is that possibly Union’s earnings, which were in the neighborhood of $15,000,000 before the transfer, were decreased by $2,500,000 because the new Koppers shares were worth 'only $35,000,000, whereas Union’s basis for the shares given up in exchange was $37,500,000. The earnings which, under the Sansome doctrine, would find their way to the new Koppers association, would be those of its predecessor, the old Koppers company, whose corporate life it continued. They were not those of the predecessor’s stockholder, Union, which continued to hold its own earned surplus unimpaired, any more than they would have been had Union been an individual instead of a corporation.
The conclusions we have reached make it unnecessary to consider any other issues. We have taken the view that, mainly by total or proportionate acquisition through nontaxable reorganizations from antecedent companies, Pitt Securities had on hand prior to the distribution to these petitioners earnings and profits of its own or of predecessor corporations which were available to it to cover the entire dividend then paid. This will still be true if all the other matters in controversy are decided in petitioners’ favor. The computation upon which this statement rests appears at the conclusion
Reviewed by the Board.
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
The figures throughout the opinion are approximate. They appear exactly in the findings.
An inconsistency, of course, with the tax treatment which provides that the transferee’s basis is that of the transferor. Revenue Act of 1928, see. 113. This is also a result stipulated by the parties.
The unreeovered cost as of 1930 of the Construction Co. stock must be further reduced, as petitioners concede, by $2,325,700, representing the interim retirement for cash in that amount of a corresponding block of the Construction Co. stock.
SEC. 112. RECOGNITION Off GAIN OR LOSS [Revenue Act of 1928],
(h) Same — Effect on future distributions. — The distribution, in pursuance of a plan of reorganization, by or on behalf of a corporation a party to the reorganization, of its stock or securities or stock or securities in a corporation a party to the reorganization, shall not be Considered a .distribution of earnings or profits within the meaning of section 115 (b) for the purpose of determining the taxability of subsequent distributions by the corporation.
It is evident that on either theory the provisions of 112 (h) (see footnote 5, supra) would be necessary to avoid an argument by the stockholders that the new stock, even-though tax-free under section 112, represented a distribution of the old earnings and profits, however allocated between the corporations, with a corresponding reduction of earned surplus available for future distribution. See Treasury Department statement prepared for use by Senate Finance Committee March 6, 1024, Seidman “Legislative History of Federal Income Tax Laws,” p. 690. The precautionary formula invoked by section 112 (h) would prevent this method of tax avoidance in the case of a split-off reorganization through-distributions of the earnings allocated to either the old or the new corporation. The-section makes no attempt to deal with the division of earnings as between transferor and transferee and this may well be the explanation of the use of the ambiguous “the corporation” as the last two words of the section. See clarifying amendment to the cognate section of the 1936 Act, section 115 (h) ; Senate Report, 74th Cong., 2d sess., No. 2156, p. 19. See Senate Report, 75th Cong., 3d sess., No. 1567, p. 18, which states in part: "Consequently, such earnings or profits remain unimpaired out of which taxable dividends may subsequently be declared * * * by another corporation which * * * takes in. whole or in part the transferor’s basis, so that the earnings or profits of the transferor-corporation become in whole or in part the earnings or profits of such other corporation.”'