Chenango Textile Corp. v. Commissioner

1 T.C. 147
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1942
Docket104873
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 T.C. 147 (Chenango Textile Corp. 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
Chenango Textile Corp. v. Commissioner, 1 T.C. 147 (tax 1942).

Opinions

OPINION.

Ttjener, Judge:

The petitioner contends that there was a forgiveness of indebtedness to it by Mrs. Till; that Mrs. Till was one of its stockholders ; that the forgiveness of the indebtedness was gratuitous; and that under article 22 (a)-14 of Kegulations 86, the gratuitous forgiveness of indebtedness to a corporation by one of its stockholders does not result in the realization of gain by the corporation. It relies on that sentence of the regulation reading as follows: “If a shareholder in a corporation which is indebted to him gratuitously forgives the debt, the transaction amounts to a contribution to the capital of the corporation.”

It is the contention of the respondent that there was no gratuitous forgiveness of indebtedness and, the petitioner being solvent, there was realization of income through the cancellation or reduction of the indebtedness of petitioner to Mrs. Till.

In 1929 Mrs. Till, at the instigation of her son, who with Lynch constituted the executive committee of petitioner and managed and directed its affairs, sold certain securities to petitioner for an agreed price of $650,000. Her son and Lynch had represented to Mrs. Till that the transaction would operate to the advantage of petitioner, but there was no intention or thought that she should or was giving or donating anything to it. The price, according to the stipulation, was a fair price. The formal agreement executed approximately one week after delivery of the securities provided for payment of the agreed purchase price 20 years later and that Mrs. Till in the meantime should receive on the amount due interest at the rate of 5% percent annually. She had up to the time of the sale been one of petitioner’s first, preferred stockholders and the rate of interest was designed to provide her with an annual income over the 20-year period of an amount slightly in excess of the amount she was then receiving on the stocks sold to the petitioner, including the 2,179 shares of petitioner’s first preferred stock. Eather obviously it was through the agreement and the delayed payment of the purchase price of the securities in 1949 that petitioner was to benefit. The earnings from its silk manufacturing business had slumped considerably due to the advent of rayon, and Erhart Euegg and Lynch had decided to launch petitioner into the buying and selling of stocks and securities. The securities acquired from Mrs. Till were to supply some of-the immediate cash needed for that purpose. Accordingly, most of the securities, other than the shares of petitioner’s first preferred stock, were sold within a period of seven .months and the proceeds were used to pay the indebtedness owing on certain stocks which had been bought previously and in the purchase of additional stocks. Several years later some of the holders of the first preferred stock took the position that the transaction with Mrs. Till, through the agreement to pay to her annually as interest 5% percent on $650,000 for a period of 20 years, was designed to and did place her in a position of preferment as to the earnings and distributions of the petitioner over all other preferred stockholders, contrary to the petitioner’s articles of incorporation. A suit was filed by three preferred stockholders naming petitioner and Mrs. Till as defendants and alleging tbat the agreement in 1929 whereby Mrs. Till sold the various stocks to petitioner was ultra vires and illegal and in violation of petitioner’s articles of incorporation. Among other things, it was pointed out that the articles prohibited the creation of any indebtedness by petitioner which was payable more than one year after date without the consent of three-fourths of the holders of the preferred stock outstanding. No such consent had been obtained at the time of the sale in 1929, nor until January 29, 1934, approximately three months before the filing of the suit by the preferred stockholders. In the meantime, on December 30,1933, the preferred shares of the petitioner which had been acquired from Mrs. Till in the 1929 transaction had been returned to her and the $650,000 of indebtedness in her favor had been credited with an amount equal to the par value of the preferred stock so returned. These shares were obviously voted at the meeting of the preferred stockholders on January 29, 1934, which had approved the 1929 transaction between petitioner and Mrs. Till. In their suit the preferred stockholders asked that the contract of May 6,1929, between petitioner and Mrs. Till be declared illegal, invalid, void, and of no effect, that Mrs. Till be ordered to return all moneys received, that the petitioner be required to present a full and complete account of its receipts and earnings and its indebtedness and disbursements over the period of years, and that the directors be perpetually enjoined from paying Mrs. Till anything further under the agreement.

In settlement of that suit Mrs. Till, petitioner, and the suing stockholders entered into an agreement the effect of which is in issue in this proceeding. A reading of the settlement agreement makes it at once apparent that the purpose sought to be accomplished, and in fact accomplished, was the complete cancellation of the agreement of May 6, 1929, and a return to Mrs. Till of all the securities received from her in 1929 or their equivalent in money as of the date of the settlement plus a further amount of $3,297.62 which, when added to the amount she had actually received as interest under the 1929 agreement, would equal the amount of dividends she would have received during the period from May 6,1929, to the date of settlement had she continued to hold the stocks herself, the accrued but unpaid interest under the 1929 agreement being canceled along with the agreement itself. Mrs. Till had already had returned to her the 2,179 shares of petitioner’s first preferred stock. All of the other stocks, except 100 shares of Union Pacific Kailroad Co. stock and 20 shares of 6 percent preferred stock of the American Gas & Electric Co., had been sold by petitioner or liquidated. Instead of going on the market and buying similar shares to turn back to- Mrs. Till, it was agreed that she should receive an amount approximating as nearly as practical the then current market price of the stocks in question, specified amounts being designated as the amounts at which the shares of the corporations which had been liquidated should be carried into the transaction. This settlement agreement was carried out.

On such state of facts, we find nothing in the transaction to justify the conclusion that there was anything gratuitous about the settlement reached. In fact, the reasoning which would lead to a conclusion that there was a forgiveness of indebtedness to petitioner by Mrs. Till is not apparent. There was no claim or contention that the preferred stockholders who instituted the suit against petitioner and Mrs. Till did not do so in perfectly good faith, and certainly there was color to a number of their allegations, regardless of the fact that Mrs. Till, her son and Lynch might have thought and hoped that petitioner would be benefited through the use of the proceeds from the sale of Mrs. Till’s securities in its stock dealing program. We do not need to conjecture on the outcome of the lawsuit if it had been litigated - to a conclusion instead of being settled by an agreement of the parties. Obviously there was substantial consideration flowing from all parties and we are therefore concerned only with the settlement and its effect in the year 1935 for income tax purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
1 T.C. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chenango-textile-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1942.