Ayers v. State Tax Commission

207 N.E.2d 294, 349 Mass. 132, 1965 Mass. LEXIS 695
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 30, 1965
StatusPublished

This text of 207 N.E.2d 294 (Ayers v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayers v. State Tax Commission, 207 N.E.2d 294, 349 Mass. 132, 1965 Mass. LEXIS 695 (Mass. 1965).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

This is the taxpayer’s appeal from a decision of the Appellate Tax Board denying the taxpayer’s application for abatement of a tax on income received in 1958, assessed under G. L. c. 62, § 5 (c), as amended through [133]*133St. 1957, c. 540, § 1.1 The case was heard before the board on a statement of agreed facts.

On December 12, 1958, the taxpayer owned 735 shares of nonvoting common stock of The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, Inc. a Maryland corporation. On that day, pursuant to articles of merger, The New York Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, Inc. (the New York corporation) was merged into the Maryland corporation.

Prior to the merger the Maryland corporation had outstanding 260,362 shares of first preferred stock, 1,150,000 shares of voting common stock, and 935,812 shares of nonvoting common stock. The New York corporation owned as its only assets all the Maryland corporation’s voting common stock, 96,035 shares (about 37%) of its first preferred stock, and 577,510 shares (about 62%) of its nonvoting common stock.2

In the merger all the shares of the Maryland corporation and of the New York corporation were converted into 21,639,206 shares of new $1 par value common voting stock of the Maryland corporation. Three shares of the new common stock were issued for each share of the Maryland corporation’s first preferred stock, and ten new common shares were issued for each share of the Maryland corporation’s old common stock, whether voting or nonvoting. No new common shares of the Maryland corporation (distributable on account of its old shares held by the New York corporation) were issued directly to the New York corporation. Instead, the new common stock was exchanged for [134]*134such old shares directly with the shareholders of the New York corporation in proportion to their respective indirect interests in the old shares of the Maryland corporation which had been owned by the New York corporation. As a total consequence of the transactions accompanying the merger, it seems to be undisputed that this taxpayer’s position in the Maryland corporation changed as indicated in the margin.3

If the split-up of the old common stock, taken in connection with other aspects of the merger, constituted a taxable exchange under c. 62, § 5 (c), as in effect on December 12, 1958,4 the taxpayer received substantial gains in that year. Upon the amount of his computation of such alleged gains, the commissioner assessed an additional tax. After credits, the total net amount of additional tax claimed from the taxpayer, plus surtax and interest, is $12,832.26. No part of this amount has been paid.

[135]*135Two issues are presented for decision, viz. (1) whether the substitution of the taxpayer’s new common shares in the Maryland corporation for her old nonvoting shares constituted a taxable exchange; and (2) if the exchange was taxable, what fair market value is properly to be attributed to the new common shares when acquired by the taxpayer.

1. This is the most recent in a line of cases arising under § 5 (c), as it stood prior to the 1959 statute (see fn. 1), in which the Massachusetts taxing authorities have attempted to impose an income tax upon an alleged gain from an exchange of shares made in connection with a corporate reorganization in circumstances in which no gain or loss would have been recognized under the then applicable Federal income tax statutes.5 6 The commission, in arguing that gain must be recognized, now principally relies upon Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. State Tax Commn. 340 Mass. 250. The taxpayer makes essentially three contentions in support of the position that no taxable transaction was involved: (1) that, breaking down the merger into its component transactions, and viewing individually those transactions affecting holders of the old common nonvoting stock (as distinguished from the exchanges of the old Maryland corporation preferred stock for new common shares), the only transaction which partakes of an exchange is the surrender of one old Maryland corporation common nonvoting share for ten new common shares; (2) that this exchange is essentially a paper exchange (see State Tax Commn. v. Smith, 331 Mass. 387, 389) by way of nontaxable split-up; and (3) that, in any event, after the merger each holder of the old nonvoting common stock had essentially the same interest in the same assets as before the merger. [136]*136In support of her first contention, the taxpayer argues that (a) changing the old common shares from no par common shares to $1 par value common shares, (b) adding voting rights (and possibly also preemptive rights) to the old nonvoting shares, and (c) retiring the preferred stock, involved by themselves no element of taxable exchange for the holders of the old nonvoting common stock.

We think that, if only these three changes in capitalization and shareholders’ rights had occurred, there would have been (a) no exchange of shares sufficient to cause the realization of gain or loss and (b) no alteration of interests giving rise to any substantial change in each common shareholder’s percentage interest in the total corporate assets, which themselves remained unchanged. Cf. Madden v. State Tax Commn. 333 Mass. 734, 739 (different assets).8 Whether there here was an occasion for the recognition of taxable gain must depend upon (a) whether the merger is to be viewed as a single transaction or (b) whether its component parts which involved no exchange may be separated from the single transaction affecting the old common shareholders which might be regarded as an exchange.

In Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Corps & Taxn. 273 Mass. 187, 193, 196,7 the commissioner separated out one element from a corporate reorganization (in essence a single transaction made up of several steps) which was (if viewed broadly as a single transaction) a nontaxable exchange of shares. By examining each step separately, it became possible to treat a single component part of the reorganization as a taxable dividend. This court in 1930 upheld this separate treatment. There is no [137]*137logical reason for not similarly breaking a reorganization into its component parts when the consequence may be to make the transaction nontaxable. Particularly is this true where each holder of old common stock, viewing the transaction as a whole, comes out after a merger with essentially the same proportionate interest in the same corporate assets as that theretofore held by him.

If the transaction is viewed in its component parts, the split-up by itself would not have been a taxable transaction in respect of the holders of old common shares if it had been carried out (as it could have been) separately from the other adjustments of the common shares. If the merger is viewed as a unit, it perhaps may come within the limits (permitting trivial variations between old and new securities without recognition of gain) in effect approved as constituting “the same interest in the same assets” in Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn. v. Tousant, 309 Mass. 84, 90. This we need not decide if we view the split-up transaction wholly by itself. We recognize, of course, that, in the Tousant

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Madden v. State Tax Commission
133 N.E.2d 252 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1956)
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150 N.E.2d 14 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1958)
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163 N.E.2d 637 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1960)
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State Tax Commission v. Smith
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Bluebook (online)
207 N.E.2d 294, 349 Mass. 132, 1965 Mass. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayers-v-state-tax-commission-mass-1965.