287 F. 41 | 3rd Cir. | 1923
In 1913 the state of New Jersey, ■by its statute of March 24 (Laws N. J. 1913, p. 152), provided for the mutualization of its insurance companies, and authorized the valuation Of their shares of stock. In pursuance thereof, the Court of Chancery of that state appointed three commissioners to investigate the affairs of the Prudential Insurance Company and determine its value. At that time and long prior thereto, as well as on March 1, 1913, the decisive income tax date here involved, Mrs. Emeline C. Blanchard owned 1,890 shares of such stock, and with other stockholders was by notice made a party to the valuation proceeding. There is no proof as. to what her stock originally cost her. The commissioner’s investigations covered three years, involved a careful study of the assets of the company and the assistance of experts and accountants to determine the value of the shares of its outstanding stock, and it is quité apparent that an attempt to arrive at a fair value thereof by an individual owner, or a casual buyer thereof, was simply impossible, and that a sale or purchase thereof could at best be a mere surmise, and not a de- ( pendable standard of value. The report of this commission was duly made to the Court of Chancery, and fixed the value of the stock at $455 per share, was confirmed by it, and the mutualization of the company by the purchase of the stock at that price authorized. In pursuance of this valuation, Mrs. Blanchard in the early part of 1915 trans
“For the purpose of ascertaining the gain derived from the sale or other disposition of property, real, personal, or mixed, acquired before March 1,1913, the fair market price or value of such property as of March 1, 1913, shall be the basis for determining the amount of such gain derived.” Comp. St. § 6336b (c).
As a-result thereof, they held that the stock of Mrs. Blanchard from March 1, 1913, to the date of her surrender of stock to the company, had increased in value $192.50 per share, and they accordingly taxed her with having received such an income thereon, and collected from her, over her protest, the corresponding income tax which is here in controversy.
To the ordinary mind, in the absence of loss or gain of assets of the insurance company or in the intrinsic value of its stock, this situation is inexplicable, for it is apparent that, if the ascertained value of $455 in 1915, which Mrs. Blanchard got from the company, is the true value of her stock, her stock was of that same intrinsic value, viz. $455, when the statutory valuation proceedings were begun in 1913, was their value on March 1, 1913, when the income base value was fixed, and remained $455 during 1914 and 1915, when the valuation investigation proceeded. The judgment of the court below, entered upon a verdict of the jury, having fixed the value of the stock on March 1, 1913, a-t $262.50, and that an income of $192.50 per share additional was received thereon by Mrs. Blanchard, as contended by the government, this writ of error was sued out by the executors.
Without entering into a discussion of the numerous assignments of error, which involve refusals of evidence, the charge of the court as to what constituted fair market value under the act, the fixation of value by the taxing authorities, etc., we may say that the questions involved in the case may be resolved into the inquiry as to what, under the peculiar facts of this case, as disclosed by the proofs and rejected offers, are the elements which determine the “fair market price” as provided by the statute. In that regard the charge of the court was:
“This stock of the Prudential Insurance Company was assessed by the representative of the government for taxing purposes as of the value of $262.50 on March 1, 1913. The Revenue Department fixed the fair market value of the Prudential stock as of March 1, 1913, at the sum of $262.50.*44 We have that to start out with. Suit has been brought by the plaintiffs against the government by executors of the estate of a person who owned some of that stock, in which suit it is alleged that the value of the stock as of March 1, 1913, was $455, or some sum in excess of $262.50. It is the burden of the plaintiff to establish to your satisfaction by a fair preponderance of evidence that the stock was worth more than $262.50 on March 1, 1913. It is stipulated in the case that in January, 1915, almost two years after-wards, some stock was sold for $455 a share. Other evidence regarding the value of the stock indicates the record of sales of stock made both before and after March 1, 1913. You will recall some of the statements of the brokers and the amounts at which they sold stock. It is your duty to decide whether the plaintiff has proved that the stock was worth more than $262.50 on March 1, 1913. In deciding that, you may have to decide, or may incidentally decide, what the stock was worth on that day. Now, shares of stock are worth what they bring, and the best evidence of what they bring is the price they actually did bring when offered for sale and sold upon the Stock Exchange. Where stock was freely dealt in before, on, and after March 1, 1913, the quotations on that date are clearly the best evidence of the value of the shares on that day; but in this case there is no quotation as of March 1, 1913, so it becomes your duty to examine the selling price of stock before and after March 1, 1913, and consider it in finding out what the value was on March 1, 1913.”
And this was supplemented by the approval of points on behalf of the government, viz.:
“(5) It would appear from the witnesses produced by the plaintiffs that the stock was sold in the so-called market where local securities were dealt in at prices ranging from $205 in 1912 to $262.50 in September, 1913, and the jury may take this into consideration in determining the fair market value as of March 1, 1913. '
“(6) In the absence, of prices to the contrary, the price at which the stock was sold in the open market is the best guide by which to determine fair market value.
And in its refusal of the defendant's request:
“In sales of such stock as that of the Prudential Insurance Company of America, all the elements or factors which make up actual or intrinsic values are to be taken into account.”
At this point we deem it proper to say that, as an abstract statement of the law, the court was right, for undoubtedly the law, as well as the provisions of the governing statute heretofore quoted, is that evidence of intrinsic value is not resorted to when’ fair market value is evidenced by sales. But the difficulty here is not with the principle, as stated in the charge, but with its application to the peculiar facts of this case.
Turning to such statute, we note the taxpayer’s gain — “the gain derived” — was what Congress meant to tax, and it manifestly follows that, where no gain was derived by the taxpayer, no tax was to be imposed. The statute also recognized that “the gain derived” could be ascertained in two ways, viz.: (a) “The sale”; or (b) “other disposition of property.” It also recognized that, in ascertaining what was “the gain derived from the sale or other disposition of the property,” the basis for determining the amount of such gain derived was also twofold, viz. the primary, well-recognized, and commercially determined evidence of value, viz. “the fair market price,” where it existed; but, when that could not be done, as would manifestly be the case
Now, what is the market price? What is the fair market price of the statute? We say “fair,” since every word used by Congress must be given due effect in the construction of this widely applicable statute, for obviously, while a stock might be bought and sold — and so marketed — and might thus be said to evidence some market price, yet it is obvious .that Congress by the addition of the words “fair market price,” certainly meant that not only must the market price be ascertained by sales, but that sales so made, the circumstances under which they were made, the subject-matter of the sales, all the attendant circumstances, were to be considered to determine whether such sales served to evidence not alone a market sale, but the fair price which Congress said should be the statutory start or base from which subsequent “gain derived” should be determined.
We start, then, with the fact that we are here dealing with the existence of a market, and a market price evidenced by sales in such market; so that our first and basic inquiry is whether there actually was a market for the sale of this insurance stock. Now, market implies the existence of supply and demand, for without the existence of either factor no market value is shown.
' “It always required time and effort, I think without exception, in making a transaction in Prudential stock. It must he remembered that in making a sale a buyer had to be developed at the same time, which was, of course, not easy. There never was a market figured out and offered on Prudential. If it was, it was very nominal. The figures were so nominal, either bid or offered, that it would be difficult to make a transaction without a great deal of delay and consideration.”
And when asked what the conditions were which brought this about, counsel for the government objected, and their objection was sustained. In answer to the question as to what he meant by developing a buyer, the witness said:
“The answer is that stocks such as this stock we are speaking of cannot be marketed with any success at all, except as in this case. A purchaser bought that with the knowledge of the company. They bought with no idea of income. It was a matter of hanging on until the mutualization or the real value did appear. It was generally known by every, one at that time that that was the case. I do not thmlc I ever sold that stoclc to <my one, unless there was a man who had, the money set to wait for ultimate muiuaVtmiion.”
Instancing how sales of 'this stock were made, the witness testified as to 20 shares he sold:
“I had that stock for sale, and ftowbottom wished to sell it. I made an effort to sell that. I think it took me two or three months to finally make a market for it, and finally get some one to buy it. He was a young man, who lived- away up in the back country up here. I think his antecedents were old Prudential, original Prudential stockholders, and I finally gold it. I had to make a buyer, develop a buyer.”
Bearing in mind that there are 40,000 shares of this stock outstanding, and that the entire sale, covering the several years here involved, was but 600 or 700 shares, we must also note that some 488 shares were forced sales, and that no sales of any character took place nearer than six months to March, 1913. The proofs show that W. W. Blanchard owned 488 shares of the stock that was testified to as being sold, and that it was pledged to banks as collateral; that during the years from 1910 to 1913 he was forced by the banks to sell -it all, to liquidate his loans. His testimony was:
“I bad loans in various banks, in tbis city and other cities. I could not pay the interest, and I was notified by the .banks that they would sell the collateral unless I would pay, the interest, and I was forced to let.the-stock go. The banks sold it to pay the-loans.” , • ....
Offers were made, and rejected, to prove the circumstances attendant on the sales made; the testimony of an experienced broker, who was one of four to whom all sales of these stocks were restricted, showing that the sales were forced ones; by other witnesses, what the intrinsic value of the stock was; that there had been no change in the asset value of the stock in the years, 1912, 1913, 1914, and 1915, and that in 1902 a trust company in New Jersey had paid $300 a share for substantially nearly 20,000 shares, which it held and got $455 for at the close of the mutualization, were all excluded. Without entering into further details, we may say, the contention of the taxpayer is summarized by the statement made by counsel before the charge, as follows:
“I do not think, your honor, that the government of the United States, or its-Internal Revenue Department, has ever sought by any mere technical position to fasten a tax like this. Here was a stock which, owned by only a few people, manifestly the families here in Newark who had practically always owned it, was owned with the clear understanding during those years that the Prudential was going to mutualize, owned with the understanding, public and clear and available to everybody, that the stock would probably be bought by the company at a fair intrinsic valuation. It is not the intention of the United States or its Internal Revenue Department, and I do not think its courts, to say that we will ignore all that stock that was gradually gaining, by a healthy growth through many years, we will ignore all that, because there were a few sporadic sales — and those we have dealt with have been shown eventually to have been forced — we will say that the fair market value of this stock has been fixed, or that we have failed to show that it was not fixed by those few sales. I will grant you, your honor, that if Mrs. Blanchard had bought this stock March 1, 1913, for $262.50; and sold it in January, 1915, for $455, she should pay a tax on the difference; but, had she bought it March 1, 1913, she would have bought it from somebody who was being forced to sell, practically. She would not have paid its fair value. These people were holding their stock.”
We are of opinion the court fell into error in holding, as it did, that because sales of this stock had been made, the fact of sales, in itself and without any regard to the circumstances under which they were made, conclusively established the statutory “fair market price” of this stock. Clearly not. As we have said, and again recite, the circumstances were peculiar. The capital stock consisted of 40,000 shares and the state had authorized proceedings looking toward an acquisitioii of such stock by the policy holders of the company, on the basis of an ascertainment of its value. That it would he mutualized was | well understood and on this account, and the fact that Mrs. Blanchard held some 1,800 of its shares, and a strong trust company had 10 years before bought nearly 20,000 of its shares at $300, it is quite evident there would be, as proved the fact, very little movement of the stock, and that when a sale was made a buyer had to be developed, and 'that, when a sale of as small a lot as 20 shares was attempted, it took from 2 to 3 months to get a buyer, and that, when obtained, it was a man of a family group who held stock and was awaiting mutuali
The conclusion we have reached finds support in adjudged ‘cases, text-writers, and treasury rulings. North American Tel. Co. v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 254 Fed. 417, 166 C. C. A. 49; Chamberlayne on Evidénce, § 2099, h and i; Holmes’ Fed. Taxes (Ed. 1923) p. 510; Montgomery’s Income Tax Procedure (Edition 1923) pp. 538, 1117.
Taking the proofs as they stand in this record, we are of opinion the judgment below must be reversed, and a new trial awarded.
Mill’s Political Economy: “The value at any particular time is the result of supply and demand, and is always that which is necessary to create a market for the existing supply.”