296 F.2d 86 | 5th Cir. | 1961
Lead Opinion
February 25, 1954 General Geophysical Company, the taxpayer, transferred certain depreciable assets having a tax basis of $169,290 and a market value of $746,-525 to two of its major stockholders in the redemption of their stock. Later that day the taxpayer reacquired the same assets from the former stockholders in exchange for corporate notes in the amount of $746,525. In its 1954 income tax return the corporation claimed depreciation deductions using as the cost basis the market value of the assets at the time of the transaction.
Earl W. Johnson founded General Geophysical Company in 1933 to engage in oil exploration, and managed its operations until his sudden death in 1953. At his death his estate, his wife, his mother, and a friend Paul L. Davis owned 77%
Witnesses for the taxpayer insisted that there was no agreement between the corporation and the stockholders to re-exchange the corporate properties transferred to the stockholders in the redemption of their shares. The trial judge so found, and it seems clear that there was no legally binding agreement to that effect. The attorney for the stockholders did testify, however, that he had discussed the possibility of such a resale and before February 25, 1954 had prepared the documents for a resale in case that was decided upon after the initial transfer.
Under Section 1012 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C.A. § 1012, “the basis of property shall be the cost of such property.” This requires a determination of when the taxpayer acquired the property and the price he paid for it. Our decision depends on whether or not the transactions in question created an interruption in the ownership of the property, producing a new basis on its reacquisition. The Government asserts that we should disregard the form of the transfer and recognize that the substance of the transactions was a redemption of the corporate stock for cash and notes, leaving the ownership and basis of the depreciable assets undisturbed. The taxpayer answers that there was no fraud or subterfuge in these transactions, that the stockholders acquired complete and unfettered ownership of the properties, and that the trial judge’s finding of two separate and independent transactions cannot be overturned on appeal.
The solution of hard tax cases requires something more than the easy generalization that the substance rather than the form of a transaction is determinative of its tax effect, since in numerous situations the form by which a transaction is effected does influence or control its tax consequences. This generalization does, however, reflect the truth that courts will, on occasion, look beyond the superficial formalities of a transaction to determine the proper tax treatment.
The ease at bar presents an unusual tax question created by the conjunction of two parts of the tax code not frequently brought together by a single transaction : the provisions governing basis and capital gains, and the rule that no gain is recognized by a corporation when it distributes property with respect to its stock. The basis of property is determined by its cost; when the property is sold the owner realizes a taxable gain equal to the difference between the basis and the proceeds received in the sale. There is no danger that a taxpayer could effect an artificial sale and repurchase to raise the basis of appreciated property, since such a transaction would subject him to a tax on the step-up in the basis. There are, therefore, no provisions to prevent tax avoidance by such a device, and the question whether a transfer and reacquisition should be recognized as independent transactions creating tax consequences would generally affect only the timing of the imposition of a tax rather than its amount. The twist here comes from the fact that the corporation did not incur a tax on the difference between basis and current market value when it transferred the assets to its shareholders in redemption of their stock. Section 311(a) of the Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 311(a), provides that “no gain or loss shall be recognized to a corporation on the distribution, with respect to its stock, of * * * property.” This provision is expressly made applicable to stock redemption distributions by the Treasury Regulations.
The facts of these transactions will not support a holding that the corporation had terminated its ownership for these purposes. It parted with bare legal title to the property for a few short hours. It made no physical delivery of any of the assets. Its control and use of the property were never interrupted. Even the surrender of its legal title was made under circumstances creating a strong, expectation that it would be returned shortly. True, the stockholders may have had complete legal freedom to refuse to resell the assets to the corporation, but there was almost no likelihood that they would do so. It was a foregone conclusion that they would resell the assets to someone, since the very reason for the original redemption was that the stockholders did not wish to continue ownership of the assets and management of the business. And since the assets were already integrated into the operations of the taxpayer and represented 47% of its assets,
The taxpayer asserts that the transactions were prompted by a valid business purpose and were effected without a motive of tax avoidance. We accept these assertions, which are supported by the trial judge’s findings, as true. They lend support to the taxpayer’s case, but they do not control the disposition of the case. Intent often is relevant in questions of taxation, particularly where the bona fides of a transaction is called into question, but in most cases tax treatment depends on what was done, not why it was done. And our decision in this case rests not on the motivation of the transactions in question but rather on our conclusion that the admitted facts of the two transfers preclude a finding of a sufficient hiatus in the corporate ownership of the assets to justify bestowal of a new basis on them after the reacquisition.
To determine the basis of the assets we look backward to ascertain when the corporation acquired them. We note the transactions here in question, but we can scarcely say that the corporation’s ownership dates from that occasion. These transactions, whatever their effect on other legal questions, did not create an interruption in the ownership sufficient to produce a new basis. The basis must be.found from the original purchase price and the adjustments made to it. ■The district court’s findings may be correct; his conclusions are in error.
The judgment is
Reversed.
. In addition to the dispute over depreciation deductions this appeal also affects the taxation of the sale of a small portion of the assets, which produced a taxable gain of $191 according to tbe taxpayer, $11,049 according to tbe Government.
. Treas.Reg. 1.311-1 (a) (1955).
. If the corporation in effect does realize the gain by handling the sale of the property after its distribution to the shareholders,, the gain probably would be attributed to the corporation. See United States v. Lynch, 9 Cir., 1951, 192 F.2d 718, certiorari denied 1952, 343 U.S. 934, 72 S.Ct. 770, 96 L.Ed. 1342; Com
The tax treatment of the corporation making a stock redemption is of course not to be confused with the taxation of the shareholders, a field bursting with difficult problems. See, e. g., Bittker, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, 208-245 (1959).
. The assets transferred were valued by the parties at $746,525. At the rate of $245 per share, that total would represent 3047 shares, or slightly over 47% of the 6461 shares then outstanding.
. If these transactions could not have been explained by valid nontax reasons, they obviously would have been only a subterfuge which could not have been effective to change the basis of the assets. Thal v. Commissioner, 6 Cir., 1944, 142 F.2d 874; Seattle Hardware Co. v. Squire, D.C.W.D.Wash.1948, 83 F.Supp. 106, affirmed 9 Cir., 1950, 181 F.2d 188.
Rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing
The petition for rehearing in this case expresses strongly the petitioner’s conviction that this Court failed to recognize the bona fides of the transaction. In denying this petition we wish, again, to make clear that we did not base the decision on a lack of good faith in the parties to the transaction. It is true that we said, “we should guard against giving force to a purported transfer which gives off an unmistakably hollow sound when it is tapped”. But this statement was set off (in the same sentence) against the other extreme: “These tax avoidance implications do not constitute a license to courts to distort the laws or to write in new provisions.” Throughout the opinion we were careful to say that our decision was not based on any lack of good faith in the parties to the transaction, and that we did not pass on the legal effect of the transaction outside of the tax frame of reference. We do not question the integrity of the parties or suggest that there was any flim-flam. We do not doubt the business purposes of the transaction. The decision does not purport to question the effectiveness of the transaction in protecting the stockholders against the holding in Robinson v. Wangeman, 5 Cir., 1935, 75 F.2d 756. But we hold and reaffirm that for tax purposes there was not a sufficient severance of the corporation’s ownership over the assets for the transaction to create the tax consequence that when the corporation reacquired the assets it took
Denied.