The taxpayer-appellant in this case, Wood Preserving Corporation of Baltimore, Inc. [hereinafter Wood Preserving], was unsuccessful in the district court in recovering $15,925.06 in federal income taxes and interest it paid under protest to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for its fiscal years ending June 30, 1958, 1959, and 1960. After hearing the matter without a jury, the court below concluded that certain amounts advanced to or expended in behalf of the taxpayer between June 30, 1955, and May 11, 1956, by its sole stockholder at this time, F. Bowie Smith, did not give rise to an “indebtedness,” as that word is used in section 163 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. The court ruled instead that these advances and expenditures [hereinafter referred to simply as advances] in reality were contributions to the taxpayer’s equity capital and that the Commissioner had properly disallowed certain interest deductions which the corporation had claimed. 1
The record reveals that the taxpayer was incorporated under the laws of Maryland on April 26, 1955, and several months thereafter began engaging in the business of treating lumber by impregnating it with chemicals under pressure. The corporation’s entire initial capital was obtained by Mr. Smith’s subscription of 250 shares of stock at $100.00 per share. Mr. Smith testified that he anticipated that the taxpayer would be in operation (on property leased to it by another Smith corporation, F. Bowie Smith & Son, Inc.) by October, 1955, but numerous difficulties were encountered which not only postponed for several months the start of income-generating activities but also necessitated the expenditure of almost $130,000.00 in addition to the original capital investment during the corporation’s first full fiscal year. Acting in response to a request made to him at a special meeting on May 4, 1955, by the taxpayer’s board of directors, Mr. Smith advanced Wood Preserving money from time to time as the circumstances demanded. Although the evidence is not completely clear, it appears that most of this money was spent to acquire machinery and equipment, to make improvements to the leased property, to purchase inventories, and to meet other initial operating costs.
The minutes of the previously referred to meeting of the taxpayer’s board of directors on May 4,1955, stated that in return for his financial assistance, Mr. Smith was to receive “6% interest on open account and up to one-half of interest on bank loans.” Beginning in 1956 and until the end of 1960, payments referred to as interest were regularly credited to Mr. Smith’s ledger account and made by check to him. No payments referred to as repayments on the principal of the advances were made until after the tax years currently in issue.
The taxpayer was aware in the district court that the question of the nature of the advances was a question of fact and that the burden was upon it to establish that these advances were loans rather than capital investments. Jewell Ridge Coal Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
The brief filed in this court by the taxpayer’s counsel and his oral argument before us have in effect invited us to substitute our appraisal of the factual evidence for that of the district court. This course of action, however, is not open to us, for even if we might have decided the case differently had we been the initial finders of fact, we are bound by the district court’s factual findings unless it can be said that they are clearly erroneous. 2 3 On this record, we cannot say that Judge Thomsen’s finding regarding the nature of Smith’s advances to Wood Preserving is clearly erroneous.
While we feel it unnecessary to attempt to detail exhaustively the evidence of record which we think lends support to Judge Thomsen’s conclusion that Mr. Smith’s advances in this case were really capital contributions, there are certain factors which we think are worthy of comment. Like the district judge, we note that there was almost a complete absence of any formal debtor-creditor relationship between Smith and Wood Preserving. 3 No debt instruments evidenced the advances; they were recognized simply by credit entries styled “cash” and “expenditures” in a ledger account. No security whatsoever was provided by the alleged debtor, a fact which seems- particularly noteworthy in view of the district court’s express finding that no responsible banker or businessman would have loaned the taxpayer money as Smith did at the time the advances were made. Moreover, Mr. Smith himself testified that he only intended that Wood Preserving repay the advances if profits were earned. Thus two supposedly indispensable indicia of a creditor relationship — an obligation to repay in all events and a fixed or ascertainable debt maturity date — are absent in the instant case. In the district judge’s opinion, Smith also “did not act like a creditor,” for he made no effort to collect any part of the principal of the advances until after the taxable years presently in issue. 4
Since the decision of the district court was not clearly erroneous, 6 the judgment below must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The opinion of the district court is reported at 233 JT.Supp. 600 (D.Md.1964).
. Rule 52(a), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
. The only evidence pointed to by taxpayer’s counsel is the notation in the minutes of the May 4, 1955, meeting of the directors that Mr. Smith was requested to assist the taxpayer in its financial troubles and that in return for that assistance he would be paid interest.
. While this situation is not difficult to understand, in view of the complete identity
. Treating the advances as loans, when the last of them was made, the debt-equity ratio was approximately 5 to 1.
. On appeal, the taxpayer’s counsel has strenuously contended that the judgment below contained an internal inconsistency because even though he held the advances in 1955 and 1956 to be capital
contributions, Judge Thomsen held a $52,000.00 advance made to Wood Preserving in a similar fashion on June 30, 1960, to be a true loan. Not unexpectedly, counsel for Wood Preserving has argued that the decision on the latter advance is the correct one and that for this reason, among others, the decision regarding the nature of the earlier advances ought to be reversed. Since the propriety of the characterization given the $52,000.00 advance is not presently before us, we think it both unnecessary and unwise to comment extensively upon it. We would observe, however, that the alleged internal inconsistency argument advanced in behalf of the taxpayer could with equal logic be turned against it and support an assertion by the Government that the district judge erred in his ruling on the $52,-000.00 advance. Also there were some factual differences in the circumstances surrounding the 1955 and 1956 advances and the 1960 loan.
Nor do we think Mr. Smith’s financial dealings with F. Bowie Smith & Son, Inc. control the disposition of this case. The factual differences between the advances to that corporation and those to Wood Preserving are too great for it to be said that identical tax treatment of the proceeds advanced is required.
