1937 BTA LEXIS 777 | B.T.A. | 1937
Lead Opinion
OPINION.
The Commissioner determined deficiencies in income taxes as follows:
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The parties have agreed upon the proper adjustment of a number of their original differences. The first issue for decision is common to both proceedings. It is whether a transaction, whereby the Associated Gas & Electric Co. acquired the stock of two other corporations for cash and certain of its debentures, constituted a statutory reorganization so that the gain realized by the petitioners from the disposition of their stock was taxable only to the extent of the cash received. The second issue, likewise common to both proceedings, is whether all of the shares of stock disposed of by the petitioner were capital assets within the meaning of the capital net gain provision of the statute. The Commissioner contends that only part of the shares were capital assets. The third issue relates only to Tyng. It involves attorney’s fees paid by Tyng in connection with the disposition of his stock. Tyng contends in his brief that the amount-paid should be deducted as an ordinary and necessary business expense. The Commissioner contends that it should be apportioned between the shares which are admittedly capital assets and those which may be held not to be capital assets and deducted from the proceeds allocable to each class of shares in computing the capital gain and the ordinary gain. The fourth issue is whether Buchsbaum is entitled to deduct from his income for 1929, 1930, and 1931 certain losses sustained in the operation of a farm. The parties have stipulated or agreed upon all of the facts of record relating to issues 1, 2,
First Issue.
The petitioners, Tyng and Buchsbaum, were among the business associates of William S. Barstow. The group specialized, among other things, in managing and financing public utilities. The members of this group, their employees, and one other person in 1929 owned all of the outstanding stock of the Barstow Securities Corporation (hereinafter called Securities of Delaware). Securities of Delaware in the early part of 1929 owned 94,005 shares of the common stock of W. S. Barstow & Co. (hereinafter referred to as Barstow of Delaware). Buchsbaum owned 1,800 shares of the same kind of stock and others owned the remaining 9,960 shares of common. There were also 8,981 shares of preferred outstanding. Barstow of Delaware owned about 55½ percent of the voting stock of General Gas & Electric Corporation. ' The Associated Gas & Electric Co. (hereinafter called Associated), was seeking control of the General Gas & Electric Corporation and offered to pay $50,000,000 in cash for all of the common stock of Securities of Delaware and Barstow of Delaware. Barstow and the petitioners refused to accept the offer unless part of the consideration would be paid in securities of Associated. One of their purposes in requiring that part of the consideration be paid in securities of Associated was to avoid income taxes. Associated, in order to frustrate attempts being made by other interests to acquire control of the General Gas & Electric Corporation, insisted that Barstow and his associates sign a contract at once which would bind them to the bargain but, at the same time, would permit the parties to work out the details of the form of the consideration. Barstow and the other stockholders of Securities of Delaware and of Barstow of Delaware on February. 5, 1929, signed a contract for the sale of their stock to Associated for $50,000,000 in cash. They signed that contract only after an oral agreement that it would be modified by one providing for payment of a part of the consideration in securities of Associated as soon as the parties could agree upon the classes and amounts of securities. Associated deposited an initial cash payment of $10,000,000. The parties entered into another contract on February 11, 1929, pursuant to the oral agreement of February 5, 1929. The- later agreement provided that the selling stockholders should accept certain issues of debentures, or evidences of indebtedness, of Associated as a part of the consideration for their stock. A final settlement was made on April 12, 1929. The stockholders had the right at that time to make further designations of specified debentures of Associated which they would take in exchange
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Some of the stockholders took all cash, some no cash, but most took a combination of cash and debentures.
The amounts received by Tyng and Buchsbaum, exclusive of their shares of the interest on the initial deposit of $10,000,000 made February 5,1929, were as follows-:
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The contract of February 11, 1929, further provided for the acquisition by Associated of all of the preferred stock of Barstow of Delaware, and Associated actually acquired most of those shares for about $980,000 par value of its debentures and a small amount of cash.
Barstow and Buchsbaum were elected directors of Associated in 1929. Barstow resigned in November 1929, and Buchsbaum in January 1933. Buchsbaum also served as vice president of Associated from April 19, 1932, to January 16, 1933. None of the other associates of Barstow who were stockholders of Securities of Delaware or of Barstow of Delaware ever became a director or officer of Associated.
Thus it appears that Tyng surrendered his shares in Securities of Delaware for cash and evidences of indebtedness of Associated, and Buchsbaum surrendered his shares in Securities of Delaware and also his shares in Barstow of Delaware for cash and evidences of in
The transaction was obviously a bona fide business deal in which Associated, for business purposes, was acquiring a controlling interest in a large public utility, the General Gas & Electric Corporation. Neither the transaction nor the use of the debentures was in any sense a sham. The stipulated facts do not show whether Securities of Delaware and Barstow of Delaware were dissolved, but the implication is that Associated continued those corporations and through them controlled the stock of the General Gas & Electric Corporation. Previously, Barstow and his associates, through their control of the General Gas & Electric Corporation, had taken quite an active part in the management and affairs of that corporation. The Commissioner, although conceding that the transaction falls within the words of section 112 (i) (1) (A), contends that the transaction was in fact a sale for cash or its equivalent and did not result in the retention by the selling stockholders of a definite substantial and continuing interest in the property transferred.
Associated was apparently willing and desirous of making a purchase of the stock for cash. A consideration of $50,000,000 was agreed upon in the original contract of February 5, 1929. But the sellers never agreed to accept that amount in cash and both parties understood at all times material hereto that a substantial portion of the total consideration was to be paid in securities of Associated. The
In deciding whether or not there was a plan of reorganization, we must look at the whole agreement of the parties as made and performed. Watts v. Commissioner, 75 Fed. (2d) 981; aff'd., 296 U. S. 387. That shows that Associated was a party to the agreement; Associated acquired under that agreement the stock of Securities of Delaware and of Barstow of Delaware in exchange for cash and securities of Associated; the two Delaware corporations were both parties to the reorganization under section 112 (i) (2); the petitioners surrendered their stock for securities of Associated in pursuance of the single plan whereby Associated was to acquire that stock; consequently, if there was a reorganization, the petitioners exchanged stock in a corporation a party to a reorganization in pursuance of the plan of reorganization for securities in another corporation a party to the reorganization. See section 112 (b) (3). Since the exchange was not only for such securities but also for money, the gain to the recipient is recognized in an amount not in excess of the sum of money received. Section 112 (c) (1). It was an essential part of the plan that the securities of Associated should be used in the exchange.
In the-foregoing discussion we have assumed that the evidence of indebtedness'of Associated received by the petitioners was “securities.” The Commissioner contends, however, that the obligations of the purchaser received by the sellers were not “securities” which gave the sellers a definite, material, and substantial interest in the property transferred. It can not be said that the securities actually received were not substantial in amount, and the real question is whether the sellers who received these debentures received securities within the meaning of section 112 (b) (3) and thereby retained a definite, material, and continuing interest in the property transferred. The debentures and obligations of the purchaser received by these sellers were not short term purchase money notes. Cf. Pinellas Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Commissioner, supra. It is also interesting to note that some of the securities in the present case were convertible
Second Issue.
Tyng exchanged 21,665 shares of stock of Securities of Delaware and Buchsbaum exchanged 7,540 shares of the stock of Securities of Delaware and 1,800 shares of the common stock of Barstow of Delaware in the transaction discussed in the first issue. The Commissioner determined and still agrees that 15,000 of the shares of Securities of Delaware exchanged by Tyng and the 1,800 shares of Barstow of Delaware exchanged by Buchsbaum were capital assets. But he resists the claim of the petitioners that the remaining 6,665 shares exchanged by Tyng and the 7,540 shares exchanged by Buchsbaum were capital assets within the meaning of section 101 (c) (8) of the Revenue Act of 1928. He points out that Securities of Delaware was organized in December 1927, the petitioners acquired the 6,665 and the 7,540 shares from Barstow for cash under contracts entered into in December 1927, and from December 1927 to the time of the disposition in February 1929 was less than two years. The petitioners contend, however, that to that period there should be added prior periods during which they held property later exchanged for the shares of Securities of Delaware. They say that they acquired property as of October 9, 1925, either in the form of stock of W. S. Barstow & Co. (hereinafter called Barstow of New York), contract-rights to such stock, or an interest in a syndicate. Section 101 (c) (8) (A) provides:
In determining the period for which the taxpayer has held property received on an exchange there shall be included the period for which he held the property exchanged, if under the provisions of section 113, the property received has, for the purpose of determining gain, or loss from a sale or exchange, the same basis in whole or in part in his hands as the property exchanged.
Barstow of Delaware was organized in June 1927, and during that year acquired all of the stock of Barstow of New York, partly for cash and partly in exchange for its own stock. Barstow and his associates organized Securities of Delaware on December 8, 1927. That corporation issued 79,005 shares of its common stock to Barstow on December 13, 1927, for the 14,400 shares of Securities of New York. The 14,400 shares of Securities of New York were released by the depositary with the consent of the associates so that they could be exchanged for the 79,005 shares of Barstow of Delaware. Securities of Delaware at the same time issued 15,000 shares to Tyng in exchange for shares of Barstow of Delaware. Securities of Delaware issued no other stock at that time. Securities of New York was then
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Tyng and Buchsbaum made the final payments of the balances of the purchase prices on March 15, 1929. They exchanged the 6,665 and the 7,540 shares thus acquired, together with other shares which they owned, in the transaction with Associated, in 1929.
The following argument is essential to the petitioner’s case: The transaction whereby Securities of Delaware issued 79,005 shares of its stock in exchange for the entire capital stock of Securities of New York was a reorganization within the definition of section 112 (i) (1); the 14,400 shares of Securities of New York were exchanged for 79,000 shares of Securities of Delaware pursuant to a reorganization; under section 112 (b) (3) no gain or loss is to be recognized from that exchange, and under section 113 (a) (6), the basis for the 79,005 shares is the same as the basis for the 14,400 shares exchanged; the petitioners owned or had an interest in the 14,400 shares and because of that interest they had a basis for gain or loss on the 14,400 shares; they acquired an interest in the 79,005 shares by reason of the exchange and their old basis carried over and became the basis for gain or loss of their interest in the 79,005 shares; consequently, section 101 (c) (8) (A) applies and there should be added to the period during which they actually held the shares of Security of Delaware the prior period from October 9, 1925, when they first acquired their interest in the 14,400 shares of Securities of New York.
These petitioners purchased shares of Securities of Delaware from Barstow in 1927 for cash. Their bases for gain or loss on those shares was the amount of cash which they paid for them. Certainly
Furthermore, the contract to purchase the shares of Securities of New York in no other way justifies including in the period of the ownership of the shares of Securities of Delaware by these petitioners any period prior to the date upon which they purchased the shares of Securities of Delaware. If they had actually acquired some of the 14,400 shares of Securities of New York under the contract of October 9, 1925, their period of ownership of those shares would not have begun on October 9, 1925. On the contrary, their period of ownership of those shares would have begun only on the date or dates upon which they acquired title. They had paid only four-fifteenths of the purchase price and had not acquired title to any of the shares in December 1927. Consequently, their period of ownership had not then begun. The fact that Barstow, the owner of the shares, exchanged them in December 1927 for other shares which he thereafter sold to the petitioners, is certainly no reason for holding that the period of ownership of the shares subsequently acquired by the petitioners began prior to December 1927. The 6,665 and the 7,540 shares of Securities of Delaware disposed of by these petitioners in the exchange discussed under the first issue were not capital assets in the hands of these petitioners because they had not been held for more than two years and there are no prior periods to be added under any of the provisions of the statute.
The assignment of error in the Tyng petition raising this issue is as follows:
The Commissioner has erroneously disallowed as a deduction from the cash received by the petitioner on the exchange of his 21,665 shares of the Barstow Securities Corp. (Del.) in 1929, the sum of $25,118.88, being the legal expenses, necessarily incurred and paid by the petitioner in connection with the said exchange.
The stipulated facts show that Tyng was not able to be present at all times during the negotiations with Associated which finally resulted in the disposition by him of 21,665 shares of Securities of Delaware. He employed an attorney who represented him while he was absent during a part of the negotiations. He paid the attorney $25,000 in 1929 for his services, but the amount was not allowed as a deduction or as an offset against “the income derived from this transaction.” The Commissioner, in determining the deficiency, treated 15,000 shares as capital assets, taxed the gain under the capital gain provisions, and taxed the gain on the disposition of the 6,665 shares as ordinary gain. He now concedes and contends that the $25,000 is deductible as a part of the cost of the 21,665 shares, and that 15,000/21665 should be deducted in computing the gain from the disposition of the 15,000 shares which were capital assets, and the remainder should be deducted in computing the gain from the disposition of the 6,665 shares which were not capital assets.
The petitioner contends in his brief that the $25,000 should be allowed as a deduction for ordinary and necessary expenses of his business. Not only do the facts fail to show that this was an ordinary and necessary expense of any business which he regularly carried on, but the assignment of error is hardly sufficient to raise such an issue. “Stipulations concerning facts and any other evidence properly are accommodated to issues adequately raised”, General Utilities & Operating Co. v. Helvering, 296 U. S. 200, 206, but issues not properly raised will not be decided. Commissions and other expenses incurred in selling or disposing of securities are generally treated as an offset in computing the gain from the sale or disposition. The $25,000 paid by Tyng to his attorney was paid in connection with the disposition of his shares. Such expenditures are properly an offset, either as a part of the cost or in reduction of the amount realized, in computing the gain from the disposition of the shares, rather than an ordinary and necessary expense of a business regularly carried on. Cf. Helvering v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., 293 U. S. 282; Marjorie Post Hutton, 12 B. T. A. 265; aff'd., 39 Fed. (2d) 459; Florence G. Baldwin, 23 B. T. A. 512; Mrs. E. A. Giffin, 19
Fourth Issue.
There was no stipulation in regard to this issue. The following facts are found from the testimony and other evidence presented at the hearing.
Buchsbaum, after disposing of his shares in the two Delaware corporations, ceased his business activity in connection with public utilities. He decided to breed, develop, and sell high grade saddle horses. For this purpose he purchased a farm in New Jersey in April 1929. The original tract consisted of 97 acres. By the end of 1930 he had purchased additional tracts containing 80 acres. The total cost of the farm was $68,502.53. There was a very old house on the property and a new cow barn. These buildings were worth about $17,000 in 1929. The petitioner began to make substantial improvements to the properties. He remodeled the house at a cost of $12,388.65 and transformed the cow barn into a horse stable at a cost of $28,201.35. He also made other substantial expenditures for improvements during the taxable years. He had had some experience in farming and with horses. The farm was in a good locality for breeding, training, and selling saddle horses. The market for saddle horses was good at that time. The petitioner spent most of his time at the farm during 1929 and practically all of his time thereafter. The only produce raised on the farm was that required for the use of the stables. He employed a farm superintendent and a number of other persons. The house was occupied by some of these employees. The following table shows the number of horses purchased, foaled, sold or disposed of, and the cost and amount realized from the sale or death of horses, including insurance.
Year Purchases Poaled Sold or died Cost
1929-$1,289.28 $2,010.00 +$720.72
1930-5,668.00 4,279.13 -1,388.87
1931-6,997.20 3,206.50 -3,790.70
1932-1,030.50 50.00 -980.50
1933-1934-20,222.12 350.00 8,679.75 500.00 -11,542.37 +150.00
1935-11,395.90 11,650.00 +254.10
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The petitioner trained his horses, exhibited them at shows and advertised them. He instructed an accountant in his employ to open a set of books covering the operation of the farm. The accountant was engaged in other matters and did not actually open the books until 1930. Records were kept of all expenditures and income for the year 1929 and entries were made for 1929 when the books were opened. Thereafter, the books, were regularly kept. Expenses were paid through a separate bank account. The following table shows the income, expenses and losses of the farm for the years involved.
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Losses for later years were as follows:
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The income included horse show prizes, amounts received for boarding horses, profits from sales of horses, and interest on the farm bank account. The operating expenses and losses were principally horse show expenses, stable expenses, pay roll, advertising, repairs, insurance, taxes, board paid for horses, and losses on sales of horses. The petitioner in his income tax returns claimed deductions for losses for 1929, 1930, and 1931 as shown above. The Commissioner disallowed the losses.
The farm was about three or four miles from the petitioner’s home in Spring Lake, New Jersey. His son was in poor health and the petitioner decided in 1930 to build a home on the farm because he believed the location there would be better than Spring Lake for his son. He set aside 6 acres and completed a home thereon in 1931 at a cost of about $225,000.
The petitioner entered into the operation of the farm for profit and he operated the farm during the years 1929, 1930, and 1931 as a business with the intention of making a profit.
Reviewed by the Board.
Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
SEC. 112. RECOGNITION OE GAIN OR LOSS.
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(i) Definition of reorganisation.—As used in this section and sections 113 and 115—
(1) The term “reorganization” means (A) a merger or consolidation (including the acquisition by one corporation of at least a majority of the voting stock and at least a majority of the total number of shares of all other classes of stock of another corporation, or substantially all the properties of another corporation) * * *.
Cost is of horses which were sold or which died, but does not include any amount for cost of horses foaled or selling costs.