Ayer v. Commissioner

100 F.2d 850, 22 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 339, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4569
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 17, 1939
DocketNo. 3363
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 F.2d 850 (Ayer v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayer v. Commissioner, 100 F.2d 850, 22 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 339, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4569 (1st Cir. 1939).

Opinion

WILSON, Circuit Judge.

The petitioners are here on a petition for a review of a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals entered’ on the twenty-fourth day of May, 1938, finding a deficiency in the income tax of the petitioners for the year 1929 in the sum of $697.27. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue had determined a deficiency in income tax in the sum of $8,051.37, and the petitioners in their petition to the Board claimed that there was no deficiency and that in fact they had overpaid their tax in the sum of $20,159.11.

The petitioners in 1929 owned 9,000 shares or interests of Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd., which had cost them between October 6, 1915, and June 11, 1923, [851]*851when the last of the shares were bought, a total aggregate sum of $1,017,915.

Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd., was organized under the laws of the State of Michigan as a partnership-association in the year 1908 and is concededly to be treated as an association under the Internal Revenue Acts. It was the successor to a similar association known as Keweenaw Association, Ltd., which was organized under the Michigan statutes on February 13, 1891. Keweenaw Association, Ltd., the old Association, had -a paid-in capital at the time of its organization of $40,000, divided into 40,000 interests or shares of $1 each. There were five members of the Association, each of whom subscribed for and paid for his 8,000 interests or shares. From the time of its organization in 1891 to its termination in 1908, Keweenaw Association, Ltd., owned extensive acreage in the State of Michigan covered with growing timber and having valuable ore deposits. It carried on operations in the selling of timber and also of leasing the ore properties for operation on a royalty basis.

Under the statutes of Michigan the life of Keweenaw Association, Ltd., was restricted to a term of twenty years. Its original charter, therefore, would have, expired in 1911. However, steps were taken in 1908 to obtain a new charter, as some of the shareholders were of advanced years and it was desirable to form a new association before complications arose resulting from the death of such shareholders.

The new association, Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd., which was organized on July 14, 1908, also had an authorized capital of $40,000, represented by 40,000 interests or shares of a par value of $1 each. All of these shares were subscribed for by the members of the old association, and to pay for these shares the old association declared a dividend payable direct to the new association in behalf of its shareholders, in the sum of $40,000. On October 12, 1908, the managers of the old association voted to sell and transfer the entire real and personal property of the association and all its assets to the new Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd., for the sum of $40,000, and on the same day a special meeting of the managers of the new association voted to accept the sale of these properties by the old association and pay therefor the sum of $40,000. These transactions were consummated in accordance with the votes.

The property which was transferred from the old association to the new association had a value greatly in excess of $40,000, though no value in excess of this was set up on the books of the old association, nor was any value put upon such assets, other than the $40,000, on the books of the new association. The books of the old association were carried along without change by the new association, a single treasurer’s statement being rendered for the two associations for the fiscal year ending April 1, 1909. This statement showed the method of payment for the stock of the new association.

The officers of the new association at the time the change was made in 1908 were the same as the officers of the old association with the exception of the secretary.

The new association continued to operate in the same manner as the old association. The charter of the new association as respects the character of the business to be continued by it was the same as the charter of the old association, although the new association was expressly limited to the “leasing” of ores, minerals and other deposits, whereas the language of the charter of the old association was “selling” ores, minerals and other deposits.

As of March 1, 1913, the value of the ore-content in the property owned by Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd., the new association, was $12,385,808.22 and the value of the timber thereon was $4,690,-200. These values are the agreed basis for depletion of ore and timber by Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd. Of the March 1, 1913 value of ore and timber, namely, $17,076.008.22, of which $4,412,000, or 25.837 percent, represented the value of mines that were discovered by the new association, Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd., between October 12, 1908, and March 1, 1913.

As indicated at the outset, there is a wide divergence in the conclusions of the Commissioner, the Board of Tax Appeals and the petitioners as to the tax due from the petitioners for the year 1929.

The Commissioner found that the cost of the shares of the petitioners had been entirely met by the distributions from depletion reserves prior to January 1, [852]*8521929, and treated the sum of $225,694.35 distributed in 1929 as capital net gain and wholly taxable.

The Board of Tax Appeals, while it found that the cost of petitioners’ shares was entirely extinguished prior to January 1, 1929, held that such part of the distributions from depletion reserves in 1929, which represented the ratio of $4,-412,000 to $17,076,008.22, or 25.837 percent of the total sum distributed from depletion reserves in 1929, amounting to $58,312.65, was non-taxable in the hands of the petitioners in that year, as it came out of the increase in value of the property accrued to Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd., between October 12, 1908 and March 1, 1913, and held that the balance of said $225,694.35 distributed in 1929, amounting to $167,381.70, was taxable under Sec. 115 (d) of the 1928 Act, 26 U.S.C.A. § 115 (d) and note, so far as it exceeded the basic cost of the stock of the petitioners because it came out of a paid-in surplus of Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd.

The petitioners contended that the distribution of $225,694.35 from depletion reserves in 1929 was from the increase in value of the property between October 12, 1908 and March 1, 1913, under Sec. 115(b) of the 1928 Act, 26 U.S.C.A. § 115(b) was exempt from taxation.

Both parties to these proceedings, however, agree that the question raised by the petition for review is: What part, if any, of the distribution in 1929 of $225,694.35 was taxable?

The petitioners rely chiefly on the contention that the new Association organized in 1908, since it had the same officers, the same property, and continued to do the same business as the old, was the same both in substance and in form, that there was the same continuity of interest in the shareholders of the new as there was in the old, and hence any accumulation of gains prior to March 1, 1913, was not taxable under Sec. 115 (b) of the Revenue Act of 1928 and the entire sum of $225,694.35 was exempt from taxation.

There were, however, two separate entities, which were not mere matters of form. As the court said in the case of Turner-Farber-Love Co. v. Helvering, Com’r, 62 App.D.C. 369, 68 F.2d 416, 417:

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1996 T.C. Memo. 76 (U.S. Tax Court, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
100 F.2d 850, 22 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 339, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayer-v-commissioner-ca1-1939.