The Commissioner. of Internal Revenue found a deficiency tax against Snyder arising out of marginal transactions in the year 19B8 which were similar in character to marginal transactions of the same taxpayer in 1925 on which this court passed in Snyder v. Commissioner,
From the deficiency tax assessed by the Commissioner in the instant ease, reckoned by setting off the last sales of shares of stock against shares earliest purchased, Snyder appealed to the United States Board of Tax Appeals. That tribunal discussed in its opinion two questions: one, the validity of Article 58 of Regulations 74 promulgated under the Revenue Act of 1928; the other, the applicability of the regulation to the facts of this ease. Snyder is here on petition to review the Board’s order sustaining the tax assessed by the Commissioner. .
The regulation whose validity is challenged is in these words:
“When shares of stock in a corporation are sold from lots purchased at different dates and at different prices and the identity of the lots can not be determined, the stocks sold shall be charged against the earliest purchases of such stock. * * * ”
The validity of this regulation, and of like ones under previous statutes, now, for brevity, called the “First in, first out” rule, has repeatedly been sustained by this court and other courts. Snyder v. Commissioner (C. C. A.)
The usual ground of attack has been that the rule is arbitrary and capricious and therefore in contravention of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. This court has held that while the rule is, from the very nature of the situations to which it applies, fixed and peremptory and in that sense arbitrary, it is, from the latitude of its words, not inflexible or capricious and therefore is not unreasonable. Since this pronouncement, Heiner v. Donnan,
We re-state our judgment that the rule is valid.
The petitioner next contends that the rule, if valid, is not applicable to the instant *7 case because it is inconsistent with the Revenue Act of 1928 which provides (sections 11, 12, 21-23 [26 USCA § 2011, 2012, 2021-2023]) that there shall be levied, collected and paid “for each taxable year” normal and surtaxes at certain rates. The substance of this contention is that the annual tax is to be levied and paid only on transactions begun and completed within the “taxable year” and to that end the entire series of the petitioner’s marginal' transactions in 1928 (the tax year) should bo segregated from all transactions in prior years and that transactions of sale in tho tax year should be charged only against transactions of purchase in that year, leaving open and unanswered the question how profits from later sales of shares purchased earlier can be taxed. Tho infirmity in this contention lies in the fact that a transaction of sale of shares previously purchased, yielding a gain, is taxable in the year in which the transaction of salo takes place and the gain is made. 7 R. C. L. § 245. Until the shares, whenever purchased, are sold there is neither gain nor loss. A gain springs from a sale and the tax is imposed on the gain in the year of the transaction of sale. That is tho “taxable year.” Whether or not there is gain or loss in a, sale of shares made in the tax year depends on what shares were sold, tho last purchased or the first purchased, or shares intermediate the two, which always is a question answered by tbe taxpayer’s evidence, or by the rule, as to tho identity of the shares involved.
We find nothing substantial in this defense.
The petitioner’s next position is that tbe “First in, first out” rule, if valid, is inapplicable to the facts of this case. Tho facts as stated hy tho petitioner himself are those:
In 1928 and several prior years the petitioning taxpayer dealt, through two brokerage houses in Philadelphia, in stock of the United Gas Improvement Company known to speculators as U. G. I. through marginal accounts by the process known as pyramiding.
“On January 1, 1928, (tho beginning of the tax year) petitioner was long 5300 shares of IT. G. I. * * *. During the year 1928 the brokers bought for petitioner’s account, on Ms orders, 10,600' additional shares * * * and sold 7,900 shares * * *. On December 31, 1928 (the end of the tax year) petitioner’s account was long 8,000 shares, an increase of 2700 shares for the year. * s * All purchases and sales were in the form of ‘street certificates’ for 100 shares each endorsed in blank by some brokerage house. They, (the certificates) were inextricably mingled with other securities pledged with hanks. They (the certificates) were at all times incapable of identification as having been bought or sold for account of petitioner.”
“All facts alleged are admitted except in regard to petitioner’s intention. His intention (to sell the shares last bought) was proved at the trial by a statement received in lieu of evidence.” (The interpolations are ours.) On these facts, and against the action of the Commissioner in charging tho shares sold against shares earliest purchased, the petitioner takes the broad position that tho rule in question “is inapplicable to sales of shares of stock in the course of operating on margin accounts, because on its face it assumes sales of shares of stock under circumstances which rendered them capable of identification.”
In shorter words, his position is that shares of stock sold on margin are incapable of identification, hence the rule does not apply to such transactions.
From the petitioner’s statement of facts and his position on the law, it is obvious ho has confused identification of shares and identification of certificates in transactions of sale. Tbe rule deals with the sale and identification of “shares of stock in a corporation,” not with sale and identification of certificates. Shares of stock and certificates for shares of stock are different legal entities. Shares of stock “are intangible and rest in abstract legal contemplation.” They are tbe interest or right which the owner has in the management, profits and assets of a corporation. 14 C. J. §§ 506, 509. Though incorporeal, they nevertheless are property and are tho subject of conversion. 14 C. J. § 509; 7 R. C. L. § .166; Skinner v. Eaton, Collector (C. C. A.)
Prom these observations, abundantly sustained by decisions, it is plain that the petitioner in this case owned shares of U. G. I. stock, though neither he nor his brokers ever held certificates for them in his name; and, owning them, he had power to sell them when he saw fit and make delivery by certificates, issued to other persons, endorsed by them in blank, and held for him by his brokers; and when he sold his shares, as he did, he suffered losses or made gains at the time he sold them. Whether or not there were losses or gains, and in what amounts, depends on what shares he sold and the figures at which they were purchased, that is, whether they were the shares he purchased in 1928, the tax year, or were shares he purchased in prior years. Certainly they were one or the other and he was bound to show that factor in the tax calculation by identifying the shares (as by identifying the “lots” in which they we;re purchased) both for his own protection in paying and for the protection of the government in exacting taxes. In this and perhaps in other ways the “shares” were “capable of identification.” All he showed by way of identifying the shares he sold from “lots” previously purchased was his intention always to sell the shares last purchased. That may be true, yet he did not transmute his intention into action. He did not order his brokers to sell from any particular lot or otherwise give life to his intention. Skinner v. Eaton, Collector (C. C. A.) 45 F. (2d) 568, 569; Howbert v. Penrose (C. C. A.)
Finally, the petitioner represents that aside from the rule we have been discussing, the transactions which were the subject of the tax in question constituted a trade or business which he regularly carried on, within the meaning of section 22 of the Revenue Act of 1928 permitting (under section 23 (e) (1) deductions for losses so incurred. The petitioner averred in his petition for redetermination of the deficiency tax that during a term of years, including the tax year, “in addition to his regular employment as secretary of an insurance company on salary, (he) was engaged in a business regularly carried on for profit which * * * Was the purchase and sale of shares of stock listed on” various exchanges. The Commissioner by. his answer denied this averment. At the hearing it was stipulated that if the petitioner were present he would testify to its substance. The Commissioner introduced no evidence in contradiction nor did the Board pass upon the matter in its opinion. Taking the record and the evidence as they stand we must determine whether there was enough shown to compel the finding which the petitioner asks and to call in play the cited statute.
We cannot find on the petitioner’s averment and meager evidence that his case falls
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within tho statute. It is clear that in certain situations a person who has organized a corporation and invested in its stock and lias devoted most of his time to its management may be regarded as having regularly carried on the business and be entitled; under the statute, to malee appropriate deductions of stock losses from income. Washburn v. Commissioner (C. C. A.)
The order of the United States Board of Tax Appeals is affirmed.
