1927 BTA LEXIS 2702 | B.T.A. | 1927
Lead Opinion
This controversy particularly involves the payments made by the petitioner to its four stockholders in excess of the amount of $2 or $3.50 per ton specifically paid them for ice delivered under the original contract of April 19, 1916, and the contract as modified. The petitioner contends that the payments of $2 or $3.50 per ton were not intended to be in full payment for ice delivered by the stockholders, but were merely advances to assist the stockholders in taking care of their operating expenses, and that the remainder of the proceeds realized from the sale of ice, less selling costs, belonged to the stockholders as additional payments for ice furnished by them. It is the contention of the respondent that the payments of $2 or $3.50 per ton were and were intended to be the purchase price of the ice delivered by the stockholders and that the other payments or distributions represented earnings and income of the petitioner and dividends to the stockholders.
The evidence presented at the hearing is voluminous, and it is not necessary to set it forth in detail here. The material part thereof, briefly summarized, shows that prior to April, 1916, the four companies that constitute the petitioner’s stockholders were competing in the manufacture and sale of ice at Mobile, each maintaining separate sales and delivery equipment. The ice business was at that time in an unprofitable state and at the suggestion of a banker with whom some of the companies dealt, their representatives held a conference to devise means of effecting economies in the business.
The respondent urges that as the distributions were always in proportion to the stockholdings and not in exact proportion to actual deliveries of ice they show that they were dividends and not payments for ice. We do not however think that fact is necessarily controlling, It is true that the distributions were exactly in proportion to the stockholdings, but they in turn were in the same proportions as the
The respondent also urges that the petitioner treated the distributions in question as “ dividend ” on the minutes of the meetings of the board of directors, and in its income-tax return for 1916, and that they were in fact dividends. The evidence however shows that they were so treated by the petitioner’s bookkeeper and treasurer, and that shortly after the close of the year 1916 he was informed by the stockholders that such treatment was erroneous; that the petitioner had not made any dividend; that the intention and purpose of the agreement was that any money over and above expenses of delivery and the initial payment of $2 per ton was an additional payment for ice, and entered into the ice purchase accounts on the petitioner’s books.
It is also contended by the respondent that if we give to the contract of April 19, 1916, the construction contended for by the petitioner it would be in violation of the anti-trust laws of Alabama. In our opinion that question has no bearing on this case. Conceding, for the purpose of this opinion only, that in making the contract of April 19, 1916, and in forming the petitioner corporation the four manufacturing companies did so in contravention of law, it can not change the fact that the petitioner engaged in business for a number of years, or transform into dividends payments actually intended and made for ice furnished it. Furthermore we are unable to perceive how it would be any the less a violation of law for the several companies to control the petitioner and receive its profit as dividends than for them to sell it their product in the manner in which they did.
The respondent also points out that the petitioner was not a party to the contract of April 19, 1916, and that we should attach no importance to it. That argument presents no difficulties. It is suffi
In the light of the evidence in this proceeding we are impelled to the conclusion that the petitioner was organized, not as a corporation to engage in business independently for the purpose of profit, but that it was and was intended to be a selling agency for the four companies which owned its capital stock, and that all proceeds from sales in excess of the initial payments for ice and the cost of selling were additional payments for ice, as contended by the petitioner. The contract is'clearly susceptible of that construction and has at all times been so construed by the parties thereto.
Eeviewed by the Board.
Judgment will he entered on 15 days' notice, u/nder Rule SO.