274 F. 952 | S.D.N.Y. | 1921
(after stating the facts as above).
Therefore I think that Peabody v. Eisner, 247 U. S. 347, 38 Sup. Ct. 546, 62 l. Ed. 1152, does not apply. I agree that, had these shares been once free treasury assets, it would be impossible to distinguish that case; the dividend would have been declared in specific property. But since the shares, even in the case of the Ohio Company were always the property of the stockholders, the transactions must be taken as a whole, and the case determined from their effect upon the rights of the stockholders.
In Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U. S. 189, 40 Sup. Ct. 189, 64 L. Ed. 521, 9 A. L. R. 1570, the case was of a mere stock dividend, which was held to be no more than new evidence of the stockholder’s original ownership. Had' the shares been without par value, that would have been literally the case; but they were not. The stock dividend did change the relation of the corporation and the stockholder to the surplus, by permanently impounding it, as it were, in the business, and giving the stockholder a right to insist upon it as an investment, should his fellows later wish to realize it as profit. Yet, though he thus got, and the corporation lost, this element of control over the surplus so declared, it was not regarded as a severance of the property. So far, therefore, Eisner v. Macomber, supra, helps the taxpayers here; it shows that there may be some changes in the relation of the stockholders to the surplus which do' not amount to the severance of income.
A corporation, stripped of its fictitious personality, is an association of persons mutually agreed upon the execution of more or less definitely expressed purposes, publicly registered as the law requires. In the case of industrial corporations, the personnel of the membership is an immaterial matter; the original members leave as they please and their substitutes enter merely by purchase. Even the number of the members changes from time to time. If so, it is the common purposes and their execution alone that determine the corporation, and whatever substantially changes these changes the corporation itself, and the rights of its stockholders.
The result of the conveyance of the pipe line property was to put it under the contract of an association committed exclusively to its operation as a separate enterprise from that of the oil company. Indeed, this severance in management was the sole result of the transaction, unless there were a surreptitious agreement between the two groups which nullified the dissolution, which is not suggested. Accepting, therefore, the taxpayers’ argument that forms should be disregarded, the question is whether a group mutually agreeing to manage the pipe line, property independently of the oil property is a different group from one agreeing to manage the pipe line and the oil property jointly. If the association does not depend upon the number or makeup of its membership, but upon its charter, there can he no question that the difference between the two is substantial, because to conduct two businesses as a unity has practical results very different from conducting them in complete independence.
Eor illustration, let me assume that the pipe line property had been conveyed in specie to the stockholders as co-owners, and that they had incorporated for convenience. The original conveyance to them would have fallen directly within Peabody v. Eisner, supra, and Rynch v. Hornby, supra. It would have made no difference that they had later incorporated. Yet, judged by results, this is exactly what happened; the pipe line was broken from an association committed to its joint management with the oil properties, and consigned to an association which must manage it alone.
Or suppose that the Prairie Pipe Line. Company, for example, had been a going concern with property of its own. Upon its acquisition of the pipe line and the issue of its new shares to the oil company stockholders, they would have an interest in an association operating two properties. These new shares would certainly be income in their hands to some extent. Would they be altogether income, or only in the pro
Or consider, again, the analogy of many of the dissolutions under the Sherman Act. These consisted in no greater separation than was accomplished here, yet it was thought enough to sever the enterprises and create new rights in the new corporations. Nor was it thought to be an answer that the stockholders started out the same. Because the members might join or leave the new group, which conducted only a part of the old business, it was considered that the old group was effectively broken up.
Southern Pac. Co. v. Lowe, 247 U. S. 330, 38 Sup. Ct. 540, 62 L. Ed. 1142, is not to the contrary. There the assets taken over had always been in the actual possession and under the control of the corporation. All the shares of the subsidiary were owned by it, and the two were treated as merged. Nothing of the sort is true in the cases at bar. In Gulf Oil Corp. v. Lewellyn, 248 U. S. 71, 39 Sup. Ct. 35, 63 L. Ed. 133, it is indeed true that the property of the subsidiaries was not in the possession of the parent corporation, but it owned all their shares, and they were all “a single enterprise,” controlled by it. In no sense did the pipe line companies and the oil companies here remain “a single enterprise.” They might in fact be so conducted for a period; but, if so, it would only be by the spontaneous assent of two independent groups of persons. If they remained in fact “a single enterprise,” the whole plan was a mere cover.
Phellis v. U. S. Court of Claims, March, 1921, was a case where all the assets were sold to another corporation, which — omitting irrelevant details — gave its own shares, two for one, to the old stockholders, and conveyed its debenture shares to the old company par for par. The result was that the old stockholders had their old shares now represented by the assets of the old corporation — i. e., the debenture shares in the new corporation — and double their original holdings in common shares of the new corporation. Whatever may be the proper answer to the case, with the greatest deference I cannot follow the reasoning of the learned judge, now urged upon me as authorita-
Demurrers sustained. Judgment absolute on the demurrers, dismissing Harkness’ complaint, and awarding recovery against Rockefeller as prayed.
©saFor other cases see same topic & KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests & Index®»