Bausch & Lomb Optical Co. v. Commissioner

30 T.C. 602, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 13, 1958
DocketDocket No. 53976
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 T.C. 602 (Bausch & Lomb Optical Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bausch & Lomb Optical Co. v. Commissioner, 30 T.C. 602, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161 (tax 1958).

Opinion

Tbe Commissioner determined a deficiency in income tax for tbe taxable year 1950 in tbe amount of $90,223.10. Under section 272 (e), 1939 Code, he has made claim for increase in tbe deficiency in the amount of $5,833.83.

The main issues arise out of the Commissioner’s determination that in 1950 petitioner realized long-term capital gain in tbe amount of $354,419.10 upon the liquidation of Riggs Optical Company — Consolidated in which petitioner owned stock. The chief questions are: (1) Whether there was a reorganization within the provisions of section 112 (g) (1) (C), 1939 Code. (2) In the alternative, whether petitioner owned at least 80 per cent of the voting stock of Riggs and, therefore, under section 112 (b) (6) did not realize any gain upon distribution of property in complete liquidation of Riggs. If the first question is decided for petitioner, there is another question, whether under sections 23 (s) and 122 (b) (2) (B) petitioner is entitled to carry over and deduct $27,703.22, which represents Riggs’ net operating loss for the period in 1950 preceding the transfer of all of its assets to petitioner and its liquidation.

BINDINGS OB BACT.

Bausch & Lomb Optical Company, hereinafter called petitioner, is a New York corporation having its principal office in Rochester, New York. It filed its return for 1950 with the collector of internal revenue for the twenty-eighth district of New York.

Petitioner was founded in 1853 by John Bausch and Henry Lomb, German immigrants. Its business originally was the making of ophthalmic products and spectacle lenses and frames. Its business was expanded to include the manufacture of scientific optical equipment and special types of military equipment.

The authorized stock of petitioner consists of 60,000 shares of 4 per cent cumulative preferred stock with a par value of $100 per share, and 762,500 shares of voting common stock with a par value of $10 per share. As of March 1,1950, 50,000 shares of preferred stock and 582,227 shares of common stock were outstanding.

Riggs Optical Company — Consolidated, hereinafter called Riggs, was organized in 1922 under the laws of Delaware. As of December 31,1947, petitioner owned 77.71 per cent of the voting stock of Riggs. In 1949, the only outstanding stock of Riggs was voting common stock having a par value of $100 per share of which 20,000 shares were authorized. At the end of 1949 and on March 1,1950, the outstanding stock of Riggs amounted to 12,412 shares of which petitioner owned 9,923% shares and minority stockholders owned 2,488% shares. Petitioner had acquired all of its stock in Riggs prior to 1949. The 9,923% shares of Riggs’ stock owned by petitioner constituted 79.9488 per cent of the 12,412 shares outstanding as of March 1, 1950.

In the fall of 1949 and the early part of 1950, there were discussions between the directors of petitioner and Riggs relating to the amalgamation of Riggs with petitioner which was to involve the transfer of all of Riggs’s assets, subject to liabilities, to petitioner in exchange for petitioner’s voting common stock. These discussions culminated in a proposal by petitioner to Riggs that, subject to the authorization of Riggs’s stockholders, Riggs would convey all of its properties and assets to petitioner and would be liquidated. Petitioner would deliver to Riggs 105,941 shares of its voting common stock, would assume liabilities of Riggs, would pay the costs of the proposed exchange and liquidation of Riggs, and would continue Riggs’s business as well as its own. The proposal was referred to by petitioner’s directors as a reorganization plan, and it was presented to petitioner’s directors at a regular meeting of the board of directors on February 28, 1950. At this meeting, according to the minutes, petitioner’s treasurer stated that “it was expected that each stockholder of Riggs would receive, upon the complete liquidation of said corporation which would follow such exchange, 8% shares of the voting common stock of this corporation [Bausch & Lomb] in respect of each share of the capital stock of Riggs.” At this meeting of petitioner’s directors a resolution was duly adopted approving the proposed reorganization plan and agreement, which was set forth in a proposal letter dated March 1, 1950, addressed by petitioner to Riggs and bearing at the end thereof a form of acceptance to be signed by Riggs; and authorization was given to officers of petitioner to vote the shares of Riggs owned by petitioner in favor of the proposed exchange of Riggs’s assets for stock of Bausch & Lomb. Also, authorization was given, inter alia, to officers of petitioner to cause to be issued to Riggs 105,941 shares of the unissued stock of Bausch & Lomb (after the proposed plan had been authorized and approved by Riggs’s stockholders, and at the closing) against the receipt by Bausch & Lomb of the assets of Riggs.

The letter of petitioner to Riggs setting forth the proposed plan and agreement dated March 1, 1950, is set forth hereinafter.

In February 1950, during the course of the consideration of preliminary matters by the directors and officers of Riggs, they advised 16 of their key employees about the proposed consolidation of the business of Riggs with that of Bausch & Lomb because with the 16 employees there were outstanding individual agreements under which each of those employees had been receiving credits of various amounts from Riggs for application to the purchase price of Riggs’ stock which was held in Riggs’s treasury and had not yet been issued to any of the employees. Riggs’s officers desired to work out an arrangement with this group of employees whereby they would receive benefit from the accounts on Riggs’s books in their names in which the group had been credited over several years prior to 1950 with amounts which totaled, as of January 24,1950, the sum of $5,669.29.

At various times from the middle of 1940 until the middle of 1946, Riggs had entered into the memorandum stock purchase agreements referred to above with 16 employees. Riggs offered stock to key employees because of their then active employment in positions of trust, and in consideration of continuation of such employment. Each employee made certain covenants with Riggs in consideration of the agreement. The employees were given the opportunity to acquire Riggs’ stock without any personal liability. Payment for the stock was to be made solely out of Riggs’s earnings based on dividends paid on its common stock. The agreements were to represent incentives to the employees in the performance of their services to Riggs. Provision was made for settlement in the event of an employee’s death, retirement, or termination of employment, and except for such contingencies no employee was to receive the stock covered by an agreement until total credits to the employee equaled the total purchase price of the stock covered by the contract. The memorandum of agreement of Riggs with the 16 employees provided, in general, that the purpose was to provide for the acquisition of a stated number of shares of common stock of Riggs, “with the assistance of Riggs,” which were held in Riggs’s treasury, “for transfer and delivery to the Employee upon fulfillment of the terms of payment herein provided”; and that the aggregate purchase price was to be paid as follows:

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Related

Everhart v. Commissioner
1982 T.C. Memo. 396 (U.S. Tax Court, 1982)
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Bausch & Lomb Optical Co. v. Commissioner
30 T.C. 602 (U.S. Tax Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 T.C. 602, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bausch-lomb-optical-co-v-commissioner-tax-1958.