delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents further questions regarding the application to marginal transactions on the stock exchange of Article 58 of Regulations No. 74, as well as some of those already considered in Helvering v. Rankin, decided this day, ante, p. 123.
Snyder was the salaried secretary of an insurance company. During 1928, as in previous years, he made on his individual account, at different dates and different prices, *136 many purchases and sales on margin of United Gas Improvement Company stock. In his Federal Income Tax return for the calendar year 1928 he reported, apparently, no profits from trading on the stock exchange. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue concluded that he had made large gains; determined that his net income was $197,496.85; and, after making the appropriate deductions, assessed a deficiency tax of $38,961.22. The large income computed by the Commissioner was the result of applying the sales made in 1928 against purchases in earlier years, in accordance with the “First-in, first-out” regulation and §§ 111-113 of the Act. The Board of Tax Appeals, 29 B. T. A. 39, and the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, 73 F. (2d) 5, affirmed the Commissioner’s determination. The facts found by the Board of Tax Appeals, upon which the case was submitted, are these:
Snyder traded in United Gas Improvement Company stock for profit through brokers on margin; and increased his holdings by the method known as “ pyramiding.” On January 1,1928, there stood to his credit 5,300 shares; and his debit balances aggregated $501,865.59. He purchased during the tax year 10,600 shajes and sold 7,900. At the close of the year, 8,000 shares stood to his credit, and his debit balances aggregated $932,822.67. Upon rises in the market, paper profits had been used to increase his holdings. Upon declines in the market, when his margin fell below the required percentage, the brokers reduced his debit balances by sufficient sales to make up the deficiency in the margin. The purchases and sales were effected by the brokers transferring so-called “ street certificates,” each for 100 shares, in the name of some stock exchange concern, endorsed by it in blank. At no time was any stock certificate delivered by the brokers to Snyder, or by him to them; nor was any certificate earmarked for him or his account. The certificates were inextricably *137 mingled with other securities pledged with banks. They were at all times incapable of identification as having been bought or sold for the account of Snyder. The transactions between him and the brokers were reflected solely in entries in Snyder’s account on the brokers’ books; and no entry indicated that any particular lot theretofore purchased had been sold or retained. The only attempt at identification found by the Board, was the uncontradicted testimony of Snyder to the effect that “ in each case where a sale was made it was his intention to sell the last acquired stock first and shortly thereafter to buy back an equivalent amount in order to increase his margin and acquire additional shares of the stock.”
First. Snyder contends, in the alternative, that his intention to sell the last acquired stock first, constituted sufficient identification to make the “ First-in, first-out ” rule inapplicable; or else that the regulation as applied to marginal transactions on the stock exchange is invalid, because there is no possible means, other than the trader’s intentions, of identifying the shares sold. What has already been said in Helvering v. Rankin is enough to dispose of both of these contentions. It is there determined that shares traded on margin are capable of identification for the purposes of the regulation; but that the mere intention of the trader to sell particular shares, without further designation, does not constitute sufficient identification.
Second.
Snyder contends that the “First-in, first-out” regulation may not, consistently with the provisions of the Revenue Act of 1928, be applied to the facts of this case. The argument is that his market operations constituted a trade or business as those terms are used in § 22 (a) of the Act; that according to that section, and the applicable decisions of this Court,
Burnet
v.
Sanford & Brooks Co.,
Third.
Neither in the findings of the Board of Tax Appeals, nor in the facts upon which the case was submitted to it, is there any support for the controverted allegation in Snyder’s petition that his market operations constituted a “ business regularly carried on for profit.”
1
It is true that a taxpayer may be engaged in more than one trade or business, as those terms are used in various
*139
provisions of the Revenue Acts; and that, in addition to other business activities, one may be “ regularly engaged in the business of buying ,and selling corporate stocks.” Compare
Dalton
v.
Bowers,
Fourth.
The attack upon the Commissioner’s method of computing income falls with the unsupported allega
*140
tion that the stock transactions constituted a “business regularly carried on for profit.” In his brief in support of his petition to this Court for certiorari, Snyder makes it clear, perhaps for the first time, that he is “insistent upon the point that the operations constitute a trade or business or transaction entered into for profit, not in order to deduct losses, but to emphasize the controlling rule that the law requires the tax to be computed on the segregated transactions of the year.” But it is now too well settled for argument, that gains realized from sales of property purchased in previous years, measured, as prescribed by §§ 111-113 of the 1928 Act, by the excess of proceeds of sale over cost, constitute income taxable in the year in which the sales are made.
Doyle
v.
Mitchell Bros. Co.,
Fifth.
Moreover, Snyder suggests no other practicable method of accounting which would reflect income for the year more fairly than the method adopted by the Commissioner.
5
He concedes that he is not a dealer in securities, in the sense of one who buys securities for the purpose of resale to customers; and that, consequently, he is not entitled to compute income on an inventory basis.
6
Compare
Lucas
v.
Kansas City Structural Steel Co.,
Affirmed.
Me. Justice Stone concurs in the result, but thinks that the petitioner failed to show that the particular shares sold were capable of identification with respect to the date of their purchase, and that they could not be identified merely by the taxpayer’s designation of them to the broker as the shares to be sold.
Notes
The answer of the Commissioner denied that the “ brokerage accounts . . . constituted a trade or business within the meaning of any provision of the Revenue Act of 1928.” The Board of Tax Appeals made no specific finding on this issue; but the Court of Appeals assumed that the Board meant to find against the taxpayer, and concluded that the assumed finding was supported by the evidence.
I. T. 1818, II-2 C. B. 39; Schwinn
v.
Commissioner, 9 B. T. A. 1304; Elliott
v.
Commissioner, 15 B. T. A. 494; Hodgson
v.
Commissioner, 24 B. T. A. 256; Schermerhorn
v.
Commissioner, 26 B. T. A. 1031. Compare
Black
v.
Bolen,
Compare Hutton v. Commissioner, 39 F. (2d) 459, where the deduction of brokers’ commissions on purchases of securities, as business expenses, was disallowed. The Board found that the taxpayer was “engaged in the business of buying, holding and selling realty securities, etc.”; but regarded the commissions as “ capital expenditures.” 12 B. T. A. 265. Compare Vaughan v. Commissioner, 31 B. T. A. 548; Keeney v. Commissioner, 17 B. T. A. 560.
Proceeds from sales in the regular course of business constitute gross income of the business only to the extent that they exceed the cost of the goods sold. See
Spring City Foundry Co.
v.
Commissioner,
Snyder does not attempt to bring himself within the general rule of § 41 of the 1928 Act, to the effect that “net income shah be computed upon the basis of the taxpayer’s annual accounting period in accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed in keeping the books of said taxpayer.” Neither does he state that the method he now suggests was followed in his return.
Article 105 of Regulations No. 74, permit dealers in securities to make returns on inventory basis. A dealer is defined as a “ merchant of securities, . . . with an established place of business, regularly engaged in the purchase of securities and their resale to customers.” Compare Harriman National Bank v. Commissioner, 43 F. (2d) 950; Pan-American Bank & Trust Co. v. Commissioner, 5 B. T. A. 839; Adirondack Securities Corp. v. Commissioner, 23 B. T. A. 61; Northeastern Security Corp. v. Commissioner, 29 B. T. A. 297; Lowell v. Commissioner, 30 B. T. A. 1297; Fried v. Commissioner, 31 B. T. A. 638; Brendle v. Commissioner, 31 B. T. A. 1188.
In Snyder’s computation, although he purports to take “ the difference between the purchase price and sale price of shares bought and sold during the year,” the cost of the last 1,500 shares bought in one of his two brokerage accounts during the year is deducted from the total cost of purchases in that-account, because purchases exceeded sales by 1,500-shares.
