This is a proceeding for review of- decisions of the Board of Tax Appeals determining a deficiency in the income tax liability of the Pontchartain Corporation for the year 1929 and adjudging petitioners as transferees of certain assets owned by the corporation liable for said deficiency to the extent of the value of the property of the corporation received by them. There were three proceedings initiated before the Board of Tax Appeals. They were there consolidated for purpose of hearing and have likewise been consolidated for purposes of these appeals. There was a written stipulation as to certain facts, the stipulation reserving the right to either of the parties to offer other
From the findings it appears that on November 24, 19'30, petitioners were the owners in equal shares of the entire capital stock of the Pontchartain Corporation, a Florida corporation, whose assets on that date included 2,813 shares of Class A stock of Poor and Company, a corporation, which stock was distributed on that date among petitioners, as stockholders, as a dividend, the book value of the stock being charged to surplus account. The value of this stock when transferred was $15 per share. There was a balance due from the corporation on its income tax for the year 1929. The Commissioner, through appropriate proceedings, attempted to collect the balance of this unpaid income tax from the corporation and exhausted all means available to him in an attempt to make such collection, but without success. ' Immediately after the transfer of this property to the petitioners on November 24, 1930, the total actual value of the assets of the corporation was $77,226.55, and its actual liabilities amounted to $91,-009.93. The Board concluded and found that the corporation was made insolvent by the transfer to the petitioners, and that since the corporation became insolvent after such transfer, the petitioners were liable as transferees to the extent of the value of the assets respectively transferred to them.
After the Board had entered its decision in each case determining petitioners’ liability, petitioners filed motions to vacate the decisions and to reopen and present new and additional evidence. This motion was denied.
In this court it is urged that: (1) the Board in considering the question of the insolvency of the Pontchartain Corporation erred in failing to eliminate indebtedness of the corporation to the petitioners from the liabilities of the corporation; (2) the Board erred in failing to limit the petitioners’ liabilities to their pro rata share of the amount to which the corporation was rendered insolvent by the transfer of assets to them; (3) the Board erred in holding petitioners liable as transferees because there was no proof of an intent on the part of petitioners to prefer them.selves; (4) the Board erred in failing to reduce the liability of the petitioners by the amount it found the corporation to be indebted to them; (5) the" Board erred in denying petitioners’ motion to vacate the decision and to reopen for the purpose of permitting them to present new and additional facts.
The statute under which it is sought to collect taxes of the Pontchartain Corporation from petitioners as transferees is Section 311 of the Revenue Act of 1928, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 311, which, among other things, provides that:
“The amounts of the following liabilities shall * * * be assessed, collected, and paid in the same manner * * * as in the case of a deficiency in a tax imposed by this chapter * * *:
“(1) The liability, at law or in equity, of a transferee of property of a taxpayer, in respect of the tax * * * imposed lipón the taxpayer by this chapter.”
It is settled by controlling decisions that the Government may recover under this statute from distributees of assets of an insolvent corporation the value of what they received in order to discharge taxes assessed against the corporation. Phillips v. Commissioner,
The stipulated facts showed that the corporation was indebted to each of the petitioners, and it is urged that that indebtedness of the corporation to them
Petitioners next urge that their liability should have been limited to the amount by which the transfer to them made the corporation insolvent. We think this contention untenable. Under the trust fund doctrine, if the assets of an insolvent corporation are distributed among its stockholders before its debts are paid, each stockholder is liable to creditors for the full extent of the amount received by him. Phillips v. Commissioner, supra; Phillips-Jones Corp. v. Parmley,
It is urged that the decision of the Board should be reversed because there was no finding of an intent on the part of petitioners to prefer themselves to the tax claim. The Board in its opinion based upon the findings, in referring to its conclusion that the Pontchartain Corporation was insolvent at the time of the transfer, among other things, said: “If further support for this result were required in addition to the facts already outlined, it would be furnished by the apparently deliberate failure to pay the second half of the income tax admittedly due at the time of distribution. Insolvency offers the explanation of that omission most charitable to petitioners. Absence of cash or readily convertible assets can not be the excuse since there is ample evidence that Poor and Company’s stock was readily saleable in an amount greatly in excess of the tax delinquency. Petitioners chose to acquire that asset themselves, with the result that the corporation was disabled to raise the cash in that manner. And whatever other reason might have been in the minds of petitioners for their failure to have Pontchartain pay the tax would, it seems to us, be more reprehensible than the finding of insolvency on which the result here is based.”
From the facts found, intent to prefer may well be inferred. Helvering v. Wheeling Mold & Foundry Co., 4 Cir.,
As above recited, petitioners, after the Board had made final disposition of the three cases, filed motions to vacate the decision and to reopen the cases for presentation of new and additional facts. These motions were supported by affidavit asserting that petitioners had recently discovered that certain items shown by the stipulation of facts to have been carried on the books of the corporation as liabilities were not in truth and in fact liabilities of the corporation. Among these liabilities which were challenged in these motions were the following: $1,000, account payable to petitioner Elbert E. Scott; $3,588.83, account payable to petitioner Leora S. Sugden; $10,000, note payable to petitioner Elbert E. Scott; $1,127.15, account payable to J. J. McDonald; $1,000, assessment on stock of closed bank; $4,-000, mortgage payable.
The contention was that eliminating the aggregate of these items from the total liabilities of the corporation as found by the Board, the corporation would not have been insolvent. It is first observed that these items of liability are set out in the petition for redetermination of the al
The proposed new facts not only conflicted with the stipulation of facts, but conflicted with the verified petition of each of the petitioners. Petitioners may not have known what was set forth in the stipulation of facts signed by their counsel, but they are not in position to claim that they did not know what was set forth in their petitions. The verification to each of the petitions recites that the petitioner has “read the foregoing petition, or has heard the same read to him, and is familiar with the statements contained therein, and that the facts stated are true, except those facts stated on information and belief, and those facts are believed to be true.” These items of the corporation’s liability were set forth, not on information and belief, but as known facts. Applications for rehearing on the ground of newly discovered evidence are not'favored, and to warrant a reopening of the case it must appear that the evidence is in fact newly discovered and not merely that the importance of it is newly discovered. The application should ordinarily be denied if the court is not satisfied that the alleged newly discovered evidence really exists. Here, the petitioners not only do not produce evidence in support of their contention that these items of liability did not in fact exist, but they affirmatively alleged the existence of such liabilities. Substantial parts of the liability were owing to the petitioners themselves, and they should be presumed to have personal knowledge of these facts, at least when they signed the petitions on which the proceedings were based. Admissions in the pleadings upon which the trial was had are in the nature of judicial admissions binding upon the parties, unless withdrawn or amended. Darling Shops, Inc., v. Brack, 8 Cir.,
Other contentions of petitioners have been carefully considered, but we are of the view that they are wholly without merit.
The decisions appealed from are therefore affirmed.
