Anthony M. Reinach v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

373 F.2d 900
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1967
Docket244, Docket 30568
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 373 F.2d 900 (Anthony M. Reinach v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthony M. Reinach v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 373 F.2d 900 (2d Cir. 1967).

Opinion

FEINBERG, Circuit Judge:

Taxpayer Anthony Reinach petitions for review of a decision of the Tax *901 Court 1 affirming the assessment of certain deficiencies for the taxable years 1956, 1959, and 1960. We are asked to determine whether losses taxpayer sustained were capital or ordinary and, if the latter, whether the losses occurred in 1959 or 1960. We conclude that taxpayer’s losses were capital and affirm the judgment of the Tax Court.

In the taxable years under examination, Anthony Reinach was a self-employed writer of put and call options, to which end he rented office space, hired a secretary, and incurred other related expenses. To understand the legal issues in dispute it is necessary to describe— in an oversimplified way to be sure— the put and call market. A “put” is an option to sell and a “call” is an option to buy a specified number of shares of stock at a set price at any time within an agreed-upon period. These options are granted in consideration of a cash payment, the “premium.” Standard-form contracts are used for puts and calls; 2 each option is negotiable and is endorsed by a member firm of the New York Stock Exchange. Ordinarily, puts and calls are issued on blocks of 100 shares of a popular stock listed on a national exchange. The duration of the option usually ranges from thirty days to six months and ten days. The price at which the named stock can be put or called is ordinarily the market price when the option is written and is termed the “striking price.” In order to exercise an option, it must be physically presented before expiration to the stock exchange firm that endorsed it. Options are customarily purchased by the public from put and call broker-dealers, but it is seldom they who create the option contracts they sell. 3 Rather, that is the function of writers; the writer is in contact with the put and call broker. Either one or the other may suggest writing a particular option; then they negotiate the terms, the principal bargaining point being what premium the writer will receive. Premiums vary depending on numerous factors, including the risk to the writer the particular option involves and the demand from the public. The broker’s gross profit is the difference between the premium he charges his customer and what he must pay the writer. 4 The maximum profit an option writer can make from writing the option alone 5 is the full premium he receives. This he keeps, of course, when the stock price either remains steady during the option life or fluctuates in his favor, i. e., declines on a call or rises on a put. For then the optionee will find it unprofitable to exercise his rights.

From March 29, 1956, to August 7, 1958, Reinach wrote 412 option contracts. In the case of options which were exercised, his behavior is significant: In every case of an exercised put, Reinach disposed of the put stock immediately; he never held onto a stock put to him in order to speculate on a subsequent price rise. In the case of calls, in not one instance did he own (or was he “long”) the shares involved in these options when he wrote them. 6 In operation, the optionee would present the call to Ira Haupt & Company (“Haupt”), the endorser, 7 which then notified Reinach that Haupt had contracted on his *902 account to deliver shares to the optionee. At the same time, Haupt would collect the option price for the stock from the optionee, and credit it to Reinach. On 96 of the 122 occasions when calls were exercised, Reinach ordered Haupt, as his broker, to purchase immediately shares in the market to cover those Haupt had bound itself as endorser to deliver to the optionee. But on 26 occasions, Reinach departed from his usual course of not taking a position in the stock involved in an option and he “went short” the stock called. In other words, he entered a short sale arrangement with his broker Haupt whereby Haupt agreed that Reinach did not have to replace immediately the stock it had delivered to the optionee. Eventually, Reinach purchased equivalent stock in the market to “cover” the short sale, i. e., repay Haupt for the loan of stock. Seven of such short sale transactions culminated on December 28, 1959; although one brought Reinach a profit, the eventual purchase price Reinach paid 8 on the other six was in excess of the original premium and striking price Reinach had received from the call optionee. It is Reinach’s contention that for tax purposes this difference is his net loss and that his total net losses on the transactions of over $59,000 are ordinary losses. What is actually involved can be illustrated better by an example, one of the seven transactions in this appeal.

On December 20, 1957, taxpayer wrote a six month and ten day 9 call on 100 shares of Polaroid. He received a $650 premium. On May 26, 1958, the call was exercised. Haupt delivered the stock to the optionee, leaving Reinach at that point short 100 shares to Haupt; Reinach received the net option or striking price of $4,627.65. In other words, the net striking price was about $46.28 per share. 10 We can infer from the exercise of the option that the stock was selling at more than the striking price on May 26, 1958. If it was selling for less than $52.77, Reinach would have made a profit had he immediately purchased stock to repay Haupt, since he had received a total consideration of $5,277.65 (premium of $650 for writing the option plus striking price of $4,627.65), approximately $52.77 per share. However, the record does not disclose what the market price of Polaroid was on that date, so we cannot tell how taxpayer then stood. As he explained, Reinach considered that the price of Polaroid would soon decline and therefore decided not to close out the call transaction by buying stock to repay Haupt; instead he extended it by remaining short. In brief, taxpayer was taking a new speculative position in this stock, one which was to extend far beyond that involved in the option he had written. Finally, one year and seven months later on December 28, 1959, taxpayer bought stock to cover this short sale. 11 But by then the cost of shares equivalent to the 100 he had borrowed had risen to $18,432.38, or $184.32 per share. In addition, he owed Haupt $239.75 for dividends earned during the short sale period, another $2.40 per share. For tax purposes, Reinach considered that the event requiring recognition of loss was the purchase of stock to cover the short sale. In computing the loss, he added the premium and striking price he had received in 1958 ($5,-277.65) and subtracted his cost items, the cover price in 1959 and dividend *903 expense ($18,432.38 + $239.75 = $18,-672.13). He thus reported a loss of $13,394.48. Reinach handled the other five loss transactions in a similar manner.

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Bluebook (online)
373 F.2d 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-m-reinach-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1967.