Middlesex Banking Co. v. Eaton

233 F. 87 | 2d Cir. | 1916

WARD, Circuit Judge.

This is an action at law by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant, United States Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Connecticut, taxes paid by it under protest to him, assessed on its net income for the years 1909, 1910, 1911, and 1912 under section 38 of the Act of August 5, 1909. The case was tried before Judge Thomas without a jury, and he entered a judgment in favor of the defendant, to which this writ of error is taken.

The plaintiff was incorporated in 1872 as the Middlesex Trust Company under a charter giving it the franchises of a bank, trust company, and safe deposit company. In 1874 the power to receive fiduciary or trust funds and to act as guardian of the property of minors was repealed, and the power to take securities for loans authorized by the *88charter and to sell and guarantee payment of the same was conferred. In 1875 the name was changed to the Middlesex Banking Company. In 1889 the charter was amended by repealing the power to act in a fiduciary capacity as a trust company and its powers were defined as follows :

“The corporation hereby created shall have power to receive on deposit or in custody for safe-keeping, bonds, plate, jewelry, stocks and other valuable property upon such terms and for such compensation as may be agreed upon by the said corporation and by the depositors of any such property aforesaid; to receive money on deposit and to allow and pay interest on said money, and to loan the same at interest; to borrow money and issue its obligations negotiable or otherwise therefor, in,which obligations, if secured by first liens upon real estate worth at least double the face thereof, holders of trust funds may invest such funds.”

This gives the company the powers of a safe deposit company, of a bank of deposit, and, of a company to sell securities. Practically the whole of the business done by the plaintiff during the years in question was the sale of its own obligations, called debenture bonds, secured by mortgages on property in the South and West, deposited with the Columbia Trust Company as trustee for the bondholders and of the obligations of borrowers to the plaintiff secured by mortgages which accompanied by its own interest coupons for a less rate of interest than •it receives from the. borrowers, it guarantees as to' both principal and interest and sells to purchasers. These latter are called guaranteed real estate securities.

Both these forms of securities the plaintiff sells throughout-the East by means of agents and its profit in each case is represented by the difference between the rate of interest it receives from its Southern and. Western borrowers and the interest which it pays to the Eastern purchasers of the obligations. The company’s gross income for the four y„ears in question was:

1909 .........■:........................................$401,846.31
1910 ............■...................................... 405,335.46
1911 ................................................... 364,663.72
1912 .................................................. 341,376.04

And it claims the right to deduct therefrom interest paid on its debenture bonds and guaranteed real estate securities as follows:

1909 ..................................................$240,819.47
1910 .................................................. 241,497.20
1911 .................................................. 220,777.51
1912 ..............:................................... 212,436.47

The theory is that the plaintiff, is a bank or banking association, and that the interest in question is paid upon money deposited with it as such, and is deductible under the provisions of subdivision 3 of paragraph 2 of section 38 of the Act of 1909 (36 Stat. p. 112). Section 38 (sections 6300, 6301) reads:

“That every corporation, joint stock company or association, organized for profit and having a capital stock represented by shares, * * * now or hereafter organized under the, laws of the United States or of any state or territory of the United States or under the acts of Congress applicable to Alaska or the District of Columbia * * * shall be subject to pay annually a special excise tax with respect to the carrying on or doing business *89by such corporation, joint stock company or association, * * * equivalent to one per centum upon the entire net Income over and above five thousand dollars received bs; it from all sources during such year, exclusive of amounts received by it as dividends upon stock of other corporations, joint stock companies or associations * * * subject to the tax hereby imposed. * * *
“Second. Such net income shall be ascertained by deducting from the gross amount of the Income of such corporation, joint stock company or association, ® * * received within the year from all sources (first) all the ordinary and necessary expenses actually paid within the year out of income in the maintenance and operation of its business and properties; * * * (second) all losses actually sustained within the year and not compensated by insurance or otherwise; * * * (third) interest actually paid within the year on its bonded or other indebtedness not exceeding the paid-up capital stock of such corporation, joint stock company or association, * * * outstanding at the close of the year, and in the case of a hank, banking association or trust company, all interest actually paid by it within the year on deposits. * * * ”

Without stopping to analyze the charter powers of the plaintiff and to determine whether it is or is not a bank or hanking association and whether if so it has not also other and different powers, we think it perfectly clear that the interest in question is not interest upon money deposited with it, but is interest paid on its own obligations or on the obligations of others guaranteed by it, which it has sold to the investing public. The purchase price is no more money deposited with the plaintiff at interest than is money paid to a railroad company for the purchase of its bonds. The transaction is not a banking transaction at all like the giving of a passbook or a certificate of deposit to a depositor, but a business of selling securities to investors. Selden v. Equitable Trust Co., 94 U. S. 419, 24 L. Ed. 249. We attach no importance to the contention that, even if the foregoing be true, still the interest in question is deductible as an ordinary and necessary expense actually paid out of the income in the maintenance and operation of the business provided for under the first subdivision of paragraph 2, because the whole subject of the deduction of interest is specifically regulated in subdivision 3.

The judgment is affirmed.

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