This is an appeal by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (the Commissioner) from a decision of the Tax Court (C. Moxley Featherston, Judge) 1 that there was no deficiency in the Federal income tax for the taxable year 1966 paid by appellees, Walter R. Carrington and Ada Rаye Carrington (collectively referred to as Carrington). The tax deficiency assessed was $5,573.71 and was based upon the Commissioner’s increase in Carrington income of $10,959.80, which the Commissioner claimed was an unreported dividend. In his deficiency notice, the Commissioner asserted that “redemption by Cardinal Construction Company of 51 shares of its stock which you had contributed to St. Matthews Episcopal Church was equivalent to a dividend to you of $10,959.80 in 1966.”
The background facts are not complicated. Carrington was a member of the vestry, the governing body, of thе Church and a member of a committee created for- the purpose of acquiring a new rectory. Carrington was the sole stockholder of two corporations, Cardinal Construction Company (Cardinal) and Day Realty Company (Day). Cardinal and Day as a partnership (Cardinal-Day Enterprises)- owned a residence suitable for a rectory.
The stipulation of facts states:
The purpose of the various integrated transactions involving the real property described in paragraph 9, above, was to place the property in the hands of St. Matthews Episcopal Church at the maximum tax benefit to petitioners, Walter R. Carrington and Ada Raye Carrington. (Par. 16, Appendix at 26.)
As the Tax Court recognized, there were several ways in which the transaction could have been handled, each with its own tax consequences. Carrington “was еntitled to choose the method most favorable to him tax-wise. Gregory v. Helvering,
The method selected was as follows:
On December 19, 1966, Carrington transferred fifty-one of the one hundred outstanding shares of Cardinal stock, of which he was the owner, to the Church.
*706 On December 23, 1966, Cardinal-Day conveyed the residence to Cаrdinal subject to an outstanding mortgage of $30,600.
On December 27, 1966, Cardinal redeemed the fifty-one shares of its stock held by the Church and, as consideration therefor, conveyed the residence subject to the mortgage to the Church. 3 The value (undisputed) of the residence was $41,559.80. Thе equity ($41,559.80 less the mortgage of $30,600) accounts for the $10,959.80 which the Commissioner claims was dividend income chargeable to Carrington.
Cardinal did not reissue the fifty-one shares and on June 30, 1967, Cardinal was liquidated.
The Commissioner argues that Carrington’s gift of stock “although complete in form, must be disregarded for tax purposes because it was merely an intermediate step in the taxpayer’s overall plan” to transfer the residence to the Church “without the imposition of a dividend tax on the distribution” (Gov’t Br. at 9). In other words, because several steps were required to аccomplish the transfer, the Commissioner would regard the redemption as if made while Carrington was the owner of all the Cardinal stock.
There is no doubt that in any “step transaction” situation careful analysis of the transaction as a whole must be made to distinguish between prоper tax avoidance and illegal tax evasion.
The Commissioner argues that to arrive at the “substance” of this transac- ' tion we should refuse to recognize the transfer of the Cardinal stock to the Church and the subsequent redemption of that stock eight days later. Having done this, says the Commissioner, the exchange of the fifty-one shares for the rectory may then be regarded as a redemption by Carrington, the sole Cardinal shareholder, which distribution, under United States v. Davis,
Kanawha Gas & Util. Co. v. Commissioner,
In determining the incidence of taxation, we must look through form and search out the substance of a transaction. [citations omitted] .This basic concept of tax law is particularly pertinent to cases involving a series of transactions designed and executed as parts of a unitary plan to achieve an intended result. Such plans will be viewed as a whole regardless of whether the effect of so doing is imposition of or relief from taxation.
See also
Commissioner v. Court Holding Co.,
It is, of course, elementary that Carrington had “[t]he legal right * * * to decrease the amount of what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether avoid them, by means which the law permits * * Gregory v. Helvering,
supra,
There have been several cases which have presented situations analogous to that which we face here. In Stuart A. Rogers,
The test seems to be simple: Did the donor part with title to the property producing the income ? If he did, then the sale by the donee does not result in taxation to the donor.
* * # * * *
This gift, when delivered and accepted, gave the donee the indefeasible right to the first $10,000 to be realized from the timber stand. * * * The subsequent sale thereof does not cause realization of income by him.38 T.C. at 789
In
Rogers, supra,
the Tax Court relied in part on our holding in Campbell v. Prothro,
Two cases involving complete liquidations of coi’porations are also instructivе of the law in this area. Jacobs v. United States
5
and Winton v. Kelm
6
each involved the donation of corporate stock to charity immediately prior to payment of a liquidating dividend. In both cases the gifts were held to be effective and thus the taxpayers were found to have reсeived no income from the liquidating dividend paid on the donated shares. Apt v. Birmingham
7
concerned a gift of shares to a taxpayer’s wife just seven days prior to the distribution of a liquidating dividend. In that case, too, the Commissioner urged that “under the
realities
of the situation” there was no gift of stoсk, but only of the distribution in liquidation.
The Commissioner suggests that United States v. General Geophysical Co. 8 and Crenshaw v. United States 9 in this Circuit should control our decision in this case.
General Geophysical concerned the proрriety of a stepped-up basis for certain depreciable assets. Two of Geophysical’s major stockholders redeemed their shares for depreciable assets with a tax basis of $169,290. Later the same day these assets were sold back to the corрoration for their fair market value of $746,525. Judge Wisdom’s opinion in that case pointed out that:
The facts of these transactions will not support a holding that the corpo *708 ration had terminated its ownership * * *. 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.296 F.2d at 89
The Court denied the corporation a stepped-up basis for its assets. This case is distinguishable from the instant case not only because the facts establish that there was no bona fide loss of dominion and control by the corporation, but also because the case concerned the question of the proper basis for depreciable assets held by a corporation. Crenshaw v. United States involved a complex financial transaction designed to make the sale of an interest in a partnership under Section 741 of the Internal Revenue Code appear to be a “liquidating dividend” of a partnership interest, which, under Section 736 of the Code- would not be taxed as income. The Court denied the taxpayer the benefits of Section 736 treatment since the final result of that transaction was that the taxpayer received $200,000 in cash and the remaining partners controlled the former partner’s interest in the partnership. We cannot agree with the Commissioner that these cases, either separately or taken together, should control the result of the case before us. Neither General Geophysical nor Crenshaw concerns a gift of property or a redemption of donated stock.
The law which does control thе result in this case is clear beyond peradventure. As was said in a case involving the redemption of corporate promissory notes which had been donated only a few days earlier by the corporation’s sole shareholder:
The law with respect to gifts of appreciatеd property is well established. A gift of appreciated property does not result in income to the donor so long as he gives the property away absolutely and parts with title thereto before the property gives rise to income by way of sale.
Humacid Co.,
supra,
From the cases we have examined' we believe that the central inquiry in a case such as this one, which concerns donated property
10
and which the Commissioner has attaсked through the “step transaction” doctrine, is: Did the donor part with all dominion and control over the donated property?
11
Thus we must determine whether Carrington retained any control over his gift of fifty-one shares of Cardinal stock to St. Matthew’s Church. If he did not retain any vestige of сontrol, the gift was com
*709
píete, and this ease must follow the many analogous eases already discussed. From the stipulated facts we learn that Carrington transferred and “delivered fifty-one (51) of his one hundred (100) shares of stock in Cardinal Construction Company to St. Matthews Episcopal Church, a charitable organization, and he retained ownership of the remaining forty-nine (49) shares.” (Par. 8, Appendix at 24). This alone should suffice to establish that by retaining “ownership” of only forty-nine shares Carrington had completely divested himself of the fifty-one donated shares. Consideration of the facts of the transaction compels a similar conclusion. A gift of stock between competent parties requires donative intent, actual delivery, and relinquishment of dominion and control by the donor. Ellsworth v. Ellsworth,
The Tax Court noted that the Commissioner had suggested no reason why recasting the distribution of the residence as a dividend to Carrington would reflect the substance of the transaction any more accurately than would giving effect to the form adopted; that Carrington had parted with ownership of his stock; that no gain on a redemption had been realized by him at that рoint; and that the Church had acquired the rectory directly from Cardinal. Upon the facts and the law we agree with the Tax Court that Carrington realized neither an actual nor a constructive dividend upon the redemption of the Cardinal stock.
The decision of the Tax Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Judge Featherston’s opinion is unofficially reported at
. Id. at 953.
. The property was actually held for the use of St. Matthews Episcopal Church by the Prostestant Episcopal Church Council of the Diocese of Texas, which holds all real property owned by the Episcopal Church in Texas.
. See the dissenting opinion of the Hon. Richard T. Rives, U.S.C.J.,
. Jacobs v. United States,
. Winton v. Kelm,
. Apt v. Birmingham,
. United States v. General Geophysical Co.,
. Crenshaw v. United States,
. The question of whether аn item is property or income has been often litigated. Helvering v. Horst,
. See the portions of the following opinions quoted
supra.
Stuart A. Rogers,
