Anna I. Woodworth v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

218 F.2d 719, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1576, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5233
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 1955
Docket12158
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 218 F.2d 719 (Anna I. Woodworth v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anna I. Woodworth v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 218 F.2d 719, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1576, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5233 (6th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

STEWART, Circuit Judge.

The question here is whether the petitioners realized the equivalent of a taxable dividend in 1945 upon cancellation by a corporation of shares of stock standing in their names coincident with cancellation of their notes payable to the corporation. The Commissioner determined that the surrounding circumstances brought the transaction within the reach of § 115(g) of the Internal Revenue Code then in effect, 1 and assessed deficiencies. The Tax Court sustained the Commissioner, and the petitioners sought review here.

The controversy grows out of the acquisition of control of The Buckeye Stamping Company, hereinafter called “Buckeye,” by a purchasing syndicate in 1943. The petitioners were members or are successors in interest to members of the syndicate.

Buckeye, an Ohio corporation, was organized prior to 1913. Its capital structure at the time of organization consisted of two hundred shares of common stock, issued at a par value of $100 per share. By 1943, as a result of two stock dividends and the transfer by the corporation of $180,000 from its earned surplus to its capital account, there were two thousand outstanding shares of $100 par stock. Earle C. Derby and his wife, Lillie G. Derby, together owned eighteen hundred shares; ownership of the remaining two hundred shares was distributed among five different persons.

Early in 1943 Earle C. Derby died, leaving his widow, personally and as executrix, in control of ninety per cent of Buckeye’s outstanding shares. At that time Buckeye had substantial accumulated earnings, represented largely by government bonds and other marketable securities. Mrs. Derby, of advanced age and with no experience or training to conduct the affairs of the corporation she thus controlled, embarked upon negotiations for the disposition of her interest in Buckeye almost immediately upon her appointment as executrix.

These negotiations reached fruition on September 4, 1943, when Mrs. Derby executed a written agreement with the members of a purchasing syndicate, including petitioners or their predecessors, for the sale of her eighteen hundred shares of stock in Buckeye at $170 per share. The agreement recited a down payment of $5,000, and provided that delivery of the shares would be made to the syndicate members or their nominees on or before October 15,1953, upon payment to Mrs. Derby of the balance of the $306,000 purchase price. The agreement further provided that prior to the consummation of the sale, Mrs. Derby and her attorney would resign as di *721 rectors of Buckeye, and that meanwhile the assets of Buckeye would not be depleted by the declaration of dividends or otherwise than in the normal operation of the business. Under the agreement, Mrs. Derby undertook to persuade the owners of the remaining two hundred shares to sell them to the syndicate at the same price of $170 per share.

One week later the minority stockholders did sell their shares to the syndicate members for $170 per share, payment being made by cashier’s check. Two days thereafter, on September 13, Mrs. Derby and her attorney did resign as directors of Buckeye.

Four days later, on September 17, a rather bewildering series of events took place. First, a new Board of Directors was elected, consisting principally of syndicate members. The minutes of the first meeting of the new Board on that day contain resolutions ratifying the purchase of Mrs. Derby’s eighteen hundred shares by Buckeye at $170 per share and authorizing said shares to be held as treasury shares. Another resolution ratified the sale of Buckeye’s securities and other assets to pay for Mrs. Derby’s stock. These corporate assets were delivered the same day to a bank, which issued a cashier’s check for $175,-000, payable to Buckeye. The check was endorsed by Buckeye to Mrs. Derby and was delivered to and cashed by her on the same day. Also on the same day two other cashier’s checks for the balance of the purchase price were delivered to Mrs. Derby. These apparently represented the balance of Buckeye’s quick assets, plus two loans to Buckeye total-ling $95,000. After Mrs. Derby was paid for her eighteen hundred shares, the certificates therefor were surrendered to Buckeye and cancelled. Also on the same day the syndicate members executed and delivered their personal notes in varying amounts to Buckeye, in the total amount of $340,000, equal to the purchase price of the two thousand previously outstanding shares.

Some days later Buckeye issued certificates for two thousand shares in the names of the syndicate members, the number of shares to each member being proportionate to the amount of the note each had executed at the rate of $170 per share. These stock certificates were never delivered to the syndicate members, but were held by Buckeye as security for payment of the notes.

The syndicate members or their successors in interest reduced their note obligations at various times from September, 1943, to the end of 1945. In the latter part of 1945 Buckeye’s counsel advised the company that in his opinion the issuance of stock for notes was illegal under the laws of Ohio. Acting on this advice, the syndicate members surrendered seventy-five per cent of the number of shares standing in their respective names, and received credit on their notes at the rate of $170 per share. This resulted in cancellation of the note obligations held by the company, after certain small cash adjustments, and the retention by petitioners of their proportionate ownership of Buckeye stock.

In the light of the foregoing circumstances, the Commissioner determined that the cancellation of $255,000 in notes and equivalent cancellation of stock on December 31, 1945, resulted in a taxable dividend to the shareholders in that year to the extent .of Buckeye’s post February 28, 1913, accumulated earnings, and assessed deficiencies against the petitioners accordingly.

In sustaining the Commissioner’s position, the Tax Court found as a fact that Mrs. Derby sold her stock not to Buckeye but to the syndicate members in accordance with the written agreement of September 4, 1943. The court found that the syndicate members had, in effect, borrowed the funds from Buckeye with which to purchase Mrs. Derby’s stock in 1943. When in 1945 their notes to the corporation and the corporation’s shares held as security therefor were can-celled, the court pointed out that no change was effected in the relative position of the stockholders to the corporation. Upon these factual findings, the court concluded in a closely reasoned *722 opinion that the Commissioner had correctly determined that the cancellation of the notes was essentially the equivalent of a dividend taxable to the petitioners in 1945.

On this review petitioners vigorously urge that the Tax Court’s factual findings are clearly erroneous. They say that the written agreement of September 4 was superseded by “other and different agreements,” and that in the actual transaction as carried out Mrs. Derby caused Buckeye’s accumulated earnings represented by its liquid assets to be paid over to her, leaving Buckeye only its operating assets before the syndicate members acquired control of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
218 F.2d 719, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1576, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anna-i-woodworth-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca6-1955.