Collegiate Cap & Gown Co. v. Commissioner

59 T.C. No. 43, 59 T.C. 449, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1972
DocketDocket No. 4018-69
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 59 T.C. No. 43 (Collegiate Cap & Gown 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
Collegiate Cap & Gown Co. v. Commissioner, 59 T.C. No. 43, 59 T.C. 449, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6 (tax 1972).

Opinion

Simpson, Judge:

The respondent determined that tbe petitioner was liable as transferee for deficiencies in tbe income tax of Cap & Gown Co. for tbe fiscal years 1963 and 1964 in tbe amounts of $136,827 and $163,958, respectively. The issues in this case have been severed, and the only issue to be decided herein is whether tbe petitioner is liable as a transferee of Cap & Gown Co. under section 6901, I.R.C. 1954.1

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of tbe facts have been stipulated, and those facts are so found.

Tbe petitioner, Collegiate Cap & Gown Co. (Collegiate), is a corporation, incorporated on January 27, 1966, under tbe laws of tbe State of Delaware, which had its principal place of business in Champaign, Ill., at tbe time of filing’ its petition in this case. Since its incorporation, Collegiate has been a 100-percent subsidiary of the Cenco Instruments Corp. (Cenco), a publicly held corporation.

Cap & Gown Co. (Cap & Gown), was a corporation incorporated on May 11, 1949, under tbe laws of tbe State of Delaware, which also bad its principal place of business in Champaign, Ill. It filed its Federal income tax returns for tbe taxable years ended July 31, 1963, 1964, and 1966, with tbe district director of internal revenue, Springfield, Ill.

On February 10, 1966, the boards of directors of Cap & Gown, Collegiate, and Cenco adopted and approved an agreement and plan for what tbe respondent has ruled to be a section 368(a)(1)(C) reorganization. Under tbe terms of tbe agreement, Cap & Gown was to transfer its business and substantially all of its assets to Collegiate in return for Collegiate assuming certain debts of Cap & Gown and transferring certain shares of Cenco convertible preferred stock to Cap & Gown. “As soon as practicable” after the closing, Cap & Gown was to distribute the Cenco stock to its shareholders and then dissolve. The Davis and Gelvin families, who owned approximately 73 percent of Cap & Gown's stock, were to receive 102,622 shares of Cenco preferred stock, and this amount of stock was convertible into not more than 9 percent of the total outstanding common stock of Cenco. Furthermore, no Cenco officer or director, or any associate thereof, owned any common stock of Cap & Gown, and no Cap & Gown officer or director, or any associate thereof, owned any common stock of Cenco prior to the reorganization.

In connection with the reorganization agreement, the Davis and Gelvin families guaranteed the payment of $291,490 of Cap & Gown's accounts receivable. To effectuate this guarantee, the board of directors of Collegiate, on April 27, 1966, passed a resolution authorizing its officers to execute “a Guaranty Agreement, Pledge Agreement and Escrow Agreement, relating to the guaranty of the payment of certain outstanding notes receivable of Cap & Gown Company.” On the same day, the board also passed a resolution authorizing its directors:

to accept, and enter into, on behalf of this corporation, an Indemnity Agreement relating to state and local taxes of Cap & Gown Company, to be executed by H. I. Gelvin, Philip D. Gelvin, I. W. Davis and I. W. Davis, Jr., stockholders of Cap & Gown Company * * *

Such an agreement was executed by the Davises and the Gelvins, and it provided that for the purposes of indemnification, Collegiate and Cenco “may look to the securities deposited in our existing escrow with The Harris Trust and Savings Bank.” The agreement further provided that on May 2, 1971, any property remaining in the escrow, less a reasonable reserve for any unresolved matter covered by the escrow, would be released to the Gelvins and the Davises.

The closing of the agreement and plan of reorganization occurred on May 2, 1966, the day on which the indemnification agreement was executed. Cap & Gown transferred its business, $9,076,354 of its assets, and the rights to any tax refunds that might be payable to it to Collegiate. The only assets it retained were $200,000, which was to be used to pay certain expenses other than taxes, and $45,000, which was to be used to pay a cash dividend. In return, Collegiate executed an assumption agreement in which it assumed all the debts, obligations, taxes, and contracts of Cap & Gown, except those arising out of the closing, those with respect to the distribution of the Cenco stock to Cap & Gown’s shareholders, and those involving the liquidation of Cap & Gown. However, the assumption agreement, like the plan of reorganization, expressly provided that “The parties do not intend to confer any benefit hereunder on any creditor of Seller or on any other party except Seller.” As of May 2, 1966, the liabilities of Cap & Gown, other than its Federal income tax liabilities, did not exceed $3,111,780. In addition to assuming certain of Cap & Gown’s liabilities, Collegiate directed Harris Trust & Savings Bank (Harris), as transfer agent, to transfer 135,512 shares of Cenco convertible preferred stock to Cap & Gown, and 2,950 shares to an escrow that had been established on that same day. Simultaneously, Cap & Gown appointed Harris its exchange agent, and instructed it to deliver 138,462 shares of Cenco preferred stock to the common shareholders of Cap & Gown upon the surrender by such shareholders of their Cap & Gown stock certificates. If any of Cenco’s shares were not delivered to the shareholders by May 2, 1969, they were to be delivered to Cenco, which was to hold the shares for the account of the shareholders who had not surrendered their certificates. On May 4, 1966, Cap & Gown delivered a stock power in blank for 138,462 shares of Cenco preferred stock to Harris, and within a week of the closing, Harris had transferred the bulk of the Cenco preferred stock to the Cap & Gown shareholders.

At the time of the closing, the preferred stock was worth $95-$100 per share, and the common stock into which it was convertible was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Following the payment of its debts, Cap & Gown surrendered its corporate charter on July 27, 1966. According to its final tax return, filed on December 14, 1966, Cap & Gown’s only asset as of July 31, 1966, was $17,835 in cash which was transferred to Collegiate on August 23, 1966. Attached to the final tax return was a copy of the agreement and plan of reorganization.

Prior to the liquidation of Cap & Gown, Carl N. Stewart, as senior vice president and general manager of Cap & Gown, was responsible for the operation of all of the departments of Cap & Gown except sales. This responsibility included the supervision of the preparation of Cap & Gown’s Federal income tax returns for fiscal years 1963, 1964, and 1966, and the signing of such returns. Effective May 2,1966, he became senior vice president/comptroller of the petitioner. While employed by the petitioner, Mr. Stewart was under the supervision of Cenco, and subject to such additional supervision, he continued to carry on for the petitioner as he had for Cap & Gown.

On or before July 29, 1966, Mr. Stewart signed the respondent’s standard Form 2045 transferee agreement with respect to Cap & Gown’s 1963 fiscal year. The form in relevant part provided:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 T.C. No. 43, 59 T.C. 449, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collegiate-cap-gown-co-v-commissioner-tax-1972.