Angelus Building & Investment Co. v. Com'r of Int. Rev.

57 F.2d 130, 10 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1515, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936, 1932 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9172, 10 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 1515
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1932
Docket6579
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 F.2d 130 (Angelus Building & Investment Co. v. Com'r of Int. Rev.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angelus Building & Investment Co. v. Com'r of Int. Rev., 57 F.2d 130, 10 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1515, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936, 1932 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9172, 10 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 1515 (9th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

JAMES, District Judge.

In this proceeding, brought by the petitioner corporation, to review a decision of the Board o^ Tax Appeals, there is presented the question whether certain payments, made by the petitioner in 1922 to persons listed as holders of its stock, are to be considered as dividends, or as interest on money borrowed. If the former, they were not deductible from gross revenue in computing income tax; if the latter, they ■ were deductible. The Commissioner held that the payments were dividends distributed to shareholders, and hence were not deductible. The Board of Tax Appeals approved that ruling.

By the Revenue Act of 1921 (42 Stat. 227), § 201, dividends, not deductible from gross income, are defined as: “Any distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders or members, whether in cash or in other property, out' of its earnings or profits. » *

Treasury Regulations (62 — art. 564), in force at the time material here, provided that: “So-called interest on preferred stock, which is in reality a dividend thereon, cannot be deducted in arriving at a net income.”

Petitioner was organized as a “family corporation” in the year 1910, having for its general purposes the subdivision and sale of real estate. Up to December 31,1919, A. H. Braly and Herman Janss, brothers-in-law, owned all of the issued corporate stock, Prior to the date last mentioned, J. H. Braly, father of A. H. Braly and of Mrs. Janss, had loaned to the petitioner large sums of money. A. H. Braly had advanced money for use in the business of the company. The brothers-in-law had also owned what was known as Braly-Janss Investment Company in equal shares, the assets of which had been transferred to petitioner, at the stated value of $70,000; A. H. Braly and Herman Janss taking credit on petitioner’s books by open account in the amount of $35,000 each.

On December 31, 1919, all stock issued was canceled and reissued in several amounts. As J. H. Braly, the father, was then a man 88 years of age, his sons, A. H. •Braly and H. H. Braly, and daughter, Mrs. Janss, were designated to act as his trustees. Stock was issued to them at par in amount sufficient to cover the sum of his cash loans or advances to petitioner, which at the time were in excess of $2Q0,000. Stock was also *131 issued to cover amounts carried on open account to the credit of A. H. Braly and Herman Janss. Additional stock was issued separately to A. H. Braly which was apparently for cash. Other changes in and additions to the stock issue were subsequently made, which are not necessary to be detailed. On all of the stock there was distributed during the year in question sums equivalent to 7 per cent, on par. These payments were entered on the books of the, corporation as “interest,” and no dividend account was carried. The petitioner claimed that the transactions whereby stock was issued to J. H. Braly’s trustees to cover amounts advanced by J. II. Braly, and to A. IT. Braly in amount equivalent to his open account credit, were mere forms and did not convert the “loans” into stock purchases. In income returns for prior years (1920 and 1921) the petitioner had included these alleged loan amounts as “invested capital.”

On January 18, 1920, J. H. Braly’s trustees signed with the petitioner an agreement which first recited that, as the corporation had sold and transferred to the trustees “'certain certificates of corporate stock” for «ash, the trustees agreed to resell the stock to the corporation upon payment by it of the full price of $1 per share, “together with an amount equal to 6 per cent, interest per annum, compounded quarterly from the date of issuance of said first mentioned certificate.” A. H. Braly at the same time in writing agreed to pay the interest specified “until said stock is taken up by first party.” A further agreement of date April, 1922 (the tax year concerned herein), changed the interest agreed to be paid to 7 per cent, on the repurchase of the stock, with the added conditions that none of the parties concerned would dispose of the shares without the consent of the others, and that the assets of the corporation would not be disposed of except as necessary in the proper conduct of the business. It was also stated that the stock issued to Braly trustees and to A. H. Braly should be considered as “preferred stock and guaranteed dividends in an amount equal to 7 per cent.”

Repurchase agreements are by no moans unusual in sales transactions involving corporate stock. As stated, the claim of the petitioner is that it never treated the stock issued to cover advances made by the several parties, as converting the loan accounts into any different form of obligation; and never intended so to do’. Mr. A. H. Braly testified as follows: “We wanted to get it in more convenient form, and we also wanted something behind that account. Therefore we decided as a convenience and more as a matter of bookkeeping to issue stock to him and myself for the indebtedness with a rate of interest specified to' ns so that we could retire the stock as money came in. We thought this would be more convenient than trying to give securities in the shape of mortgages. It would be more difficult to release those than to reissue stock.”

Plainly it was the intention that the recipients of the stock should be, in their relation to the corporation, vested with the rights of stockholders. How else could the share representation put “something behind” tho accounts as A. H. Braly said was desired. By plain interpretation, stock representation was what was intended to be given, and it was given.

A taxpayer cannot, by a form of book entry, merely, change the amount of an income total. Gan it be doubted that, had the status of the Braly trastees, and A. H. Braly, as stockholders, been challenged by a stranger with an interest, the trustees and Braly would have stoutly maintained tlieir right to the shares for what they purported to' be? Otherwise, how could the possession of the certificates have protected them in the way Mr. A. H. Braly testified it was designed they should bo protected. The charging of the amounts of money received from those sources to invested capital in former years (1920-1921); the payment of the same rate of “interest” to all stockholders out of profits; the recitals in the agreement first mentioned that the stock had been “sold and transferred” to the Braly trustees; are all facts indicating that the holders of the certificates were to be invested with the character of stockholders of the corporation. The Commissioner was therefore authorized to conclude that the payments made by the company to all stockholders constituted a division of profits in proportion to shares, and that they were, within tho meaning of the Revenue Law, “dividends.” Whether the attempt to change the form of tho stock from “common” to “preferred” was effectual or not would make no difference in the result in the income tax computation [Elko Lamoille Power Co. v. Commissioner (C. C. A.) 50 F.(2d) 595, this circuit]; neither would the written agreements shown to have been made, in our view, in any wise change the relation of the parties, or convert that relation into something different from the *132 ordinary one existing between a corporation and its shareholders.

But petitioner has a further contention to urge against the tax assessment: That has to do with the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act of California (St. 1917, p. 673, as amended).

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Bluebook (online)
57 F.2d 130, 10 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1515, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936, 1932 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9172, 10 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 1515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angelus-building-investment-co-v-comr-of-int-rev-ca9-1932.