Bowen v. Commissioner

2 T.C. 1, 1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 1, 1943
DocketDocket Nos. 111348, 111494
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2 T.C. 1 (Bowen 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
Bowen v. Commissioner, 2 T.C. 1, 1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150 (tax 1943).

Opinion

OPINION.

Black, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies of $396.02 and $1,380.13, in petitioners’ income tax for the years 1939 and 1940, respectively. The deficiency for 1939 is due to the disallowance by the Commissioner of a deduction of $18,902.73 claimed by the taxpayer on its income tax return filed for that year as interest paid. This adjustment is explained by the Commissioner in his deficiency notice, as follows:

(a) In your income tax return for the year 1939 an interest deduction was claimed in the amount of $18,902.73 representing payments allegedly made by you during said year to the Receiver of First National Bank of Detroit. These payments in fact represented collections received by the said Receiver in 1939 either as income from collateral or from the proceeds of the sales of collateral previously deposited with the First National Bank by Paul M. Bowen, deceased, sometime prior to 1939, as security for three certain loans made to him by said bank. The Receiver’s records disclose that said amount of $18,902.73 was applied as credits against principal and not against interest due thereon. Accordingly, the sum of $18,902.73 has been disallowed as a deduction from your gross income for the calendar year 1939.

The deficiency for the year 1940 resulted from the disallowance by the Commissioner of a deduction of $4,538.10 claimed by the taxpayer as a deduction on its income tax return filed for that year as interest paid. This adjustment was explained in the deficiency notice as follows:.

(a) In your income tax return for the year 1940 an interest deduction was claimed in the amount of $4,538.10 representing payments allegedly made by you during said year to the Receiver of First National Bank of Detroit. During the year 1940 said Receiver collected certain income from collateral and also certain amounts from sales of collateral, a portion of which collections was applied against principal and- the balance of $10,827.46 was applied against interest.
There was $41,210.51 accrued and unpaid interest due the Receiver of First National Bank, Detroit, Michigan, at the date of decedent’s death which amount has been allowed as a deduction for Federal estate purposes as a debt of the estate. Since the amount of $10,827.46 applied by the Receiver against interest in the year 1940 did not equal the amount of interest accrued at the date of decedent’s death, no deduction is allowable for Federal income tax purposes as said amount is chargeable against the corpus of the estate. Accordingly, the amount of $4,538.10 claimed in the return as an interest deduction has been disallowed.

Petitioners by appropriate assignments of error contest the correctness of both the foregoing adjustments. As to the year 1940 petitioners claim an overpayment of $14,012.48 under their main contention. They claim an overpayment of $9,954.10 under their alternative contention in case their first contention is not sustained. Petitioners’ respective contentions will be stated in more detail later' in this opinion.

The facts have been stipulated and as stipulated are adopted as our findings of fact. The following statement of some of these facts will suffice for the purpose of this opinion.

Petitioners are the duly appointed executors of the estate of Paul M. Bowen, who died December 17, 1935, a resident of the State of Michigan. For the years 1939 and 1940 petitioners filed fiduciary income tax returns with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Michigan at Detroit. At the date of death, Paul M. Bowen, hereinafter referred to as decedent, owed the First National Bank— Detroit the sum of $248,782.67, of which $207,572.16 represented unpaid principal on three promissory notes and $41,210.51 represented interest accrued thereon at the date of death. This indebtedness was secured by a pledge of stock in various corporations, which collateral was listed on the back of the notes.

In the estate tax return filed by the estate of Paul M. Bowen, the amount of $248,782.67, representing unpaid principal and interest accrued to date of death, was claimed as a deduction under schedule L of the return as a debt against decedent’s estate.

Early in the year 1983 the First National Bank — Detroit became insolvent and its assets were committeed to a receiver, B. C. Schram. who is referred to herein as the receiver. At some date prior to date of death of decedent the receiver, having ascertained the decedent’s inability to make payments on the notes, arranged for the payment directly to him of all dividends paid on the stocks held .for collateral and also the proceeds from all sales of stock held as collateral to secure payment of the three notes. Thereafter, all dividends and sales proceeds from such collateral were paid directly to the receiver and were applied by him against the principal sum of the indebtedness, and until 1940 no part of such collections was applied by him to interest on indebtedness. The executors of the estate of Paul M. Bowen, after having ascertained that, the receiver was applying all collections to principal on such indebtedness, in a letter dated June 8.1937, addressed to the receiver, stated: “We instruct you to apply any further sums which you may realize, either as dividends or as the proceeds of the sale of the securities, first against the interest owing upon the notes, until the same is paid in full and only thereafter upon the.principal.” Upon receipt of such letter the receiver, nevertheless, continued to apply such collections-in the same manner as he had done theretofore.

At the time of taking over the insolvent National Bank here involved, the receiver charged himself or was charged by the office of the Comptroller of the Currency with the principal of the assets and also any interest accrued to that date. The practice of the receiver with regard to payments made by debtors of the insolvent bank was to try to clean up the assets he had been charged with, or, in other words, to clean up the principal of the assets. The receiver was under no instructions from the Comptroller of the Currency to apply payments or collections first against the principal of the indebtedness, but he so applied them because he considered it good business under the circumstances.

The amounts received by the receiver during the years 1939 and 1940 from dividends on the stock held as collateral and from the proceeds of sales of stocks held as collateral were reported in gross income in the fiduciary income tax returns for the years 1939 and 1940 filed by petitioners as executors of the estate of Paul M. Bowen. With respect to the amounts collected by the receiver out of the collateral held by him to secure the indebtedness, the petitioners have been allowed by the Commissioner no deduction for interest for either the year 1939 or the year 1940. Petitioners’ fiduciary return of income for the year 1939 was filed March 15, 1940, and showed no tax due. Petitioners’ fiduciary return of income for the year 1940, filed March 15,1941, disclosed a tax liability of $16,382.78, payment of which was made within three years before the filing of the petition in this proceeding. Both such returns were filed on the cash basis.

One of the notes which the decedent owed the bank was for the principal sum of $196,500. The terms and provisions of this note are representative of all three notes, and pertinent parts of these provisions are as fpllows:

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Bluebook (online)
2 T.C. 1, 1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-commissioner-tax-1943.