Collins v. Becklenberg

236 Ill. App. 324, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 110
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 9, 1925
DocketGen. No. 29,276
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 236 Ill. App. 324 (Collins v. Becklenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Becklenberg, 236 Ill. App. 324, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 110 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnston

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Fred Becklenberg, from a judgment in the municipal court of Chicago in favor of the plaintiff, Arthur L. Collins, in an action brought by Collins, to recover $500 alleged to be due from the defendant on a contract for the purchase of a “tax saving system.” The case was tried before the court without a jury. The court found that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the $500 and entered judgment for that amount.

The parties to the contract were Bernard Metal, doing business as Bernard Metal & Co., and the defendant, Fred Becklenberg. The claim of Metal was assigned by him to the plaintiff, Collins. The contract between Metal and Becklenberg was partly in writing and partly oral. The written part of the contract is as follows:

“Chicago, August 9, 1923.
“Bernard Metal & Co.,
10 N. Clark St,
Chicago, Illinois.
“The undersigned hereby applies for your tax saving system, and agrees to pay therefor a sum equal to one-fourth of the saving resulting from the acceptance and use thereof in connection with all real or personal property owned, controlled or to be acquired by the applicant.
“The saving is to be computed and the fee paid on or before February first of each year, based upon the previous year’s savings. However, upon acceptance and adoption of your system, the undersigned agrees to pay you the sum of Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) as an advance against the amount that will become due February 1, 1924, under this agreement.
“This application effective until mutually canceled in writing.
(Signed) Fred Becklenberg.”

The taxes which the “tax saving system” proposed to relieve Becklenberg from paying were federal taxes relating to the income tax, war profits and excess profits tax. The proposed “tax saving system” is somewhat involved and is not clearly outlined by the statement of claim or the evidence. From the statement of claim, the evidence and the briefs of counsel for the plaintiff and counsel for the defendant, the proposed “tax saving system” may be described in substance as follows: The proposed system is based principally on Regulation 62, section 1566-c of the United States Treasury Department, and on an opinion No. 149 of the Solicitor of the Department of Internal Revenue (Internal Revenue Bulletin, vol. 2, No. 8, pp. 2-7, May 28, 1923). Section 1566-c provides that no gain or loss is recognized when a person transfers any property to a corporation and immediately after the transfer is in control of the corporation; that within the meaning of the provision a person is in control of a corporation when the person owns at least 80 per cent of outstanding voting stock and at least 80 per cent of the total number of outstanding shares of all other classes of stock of the corporation. The opinion of the Solicitor of the Department of Internal Revenue is as follows:

“The M Company, a joint stock association, owned mineral leases which became very valuable upon the discovery of minerals. With the idea of ultimate sale but no immediate sale or purchaser in view, the M Company conveyed said leases unto certain Trustees under a common law declaration of trust for a recited consideration of $10 and the stockholders of M Company, which was automatically dissolved, received an amount of shares in the M Trust equal to the amount of shares held by them formerly in the M Company. Subsequently the Trustees of the M Trust sold the leases for a considerable sum. The questions passed upon by the solicitor being: First, was the transfer from the M Company to the M Trust such a sale as to subject the shareholders to a tax for profits; and, second, should the profits realized by the sale by M Trust be taxable at the rates applicable to a corporation or at the rates applicable to individuals 1 The solicitor’s opinion held, first, that the transfer from the M Company to the M Trust was not a taxable sale. The transfer was not in any sense a sale by the association and no taxable gain was realized by its members. The property interest of the former associates as beneficiaries under the trust was exactly the same after the transfer as before it. There was no change in the beneficial ownership of the supporting assets. The former associates, after the conveyance to the new Trustees, as before, were owners of identical property interests in the same property. The only effect to the conveyance was the transfer of the legal title to the assets from trustees holding, on behalf of the members as an association to other trustees who were to hold for the same parties as equitable co-owners without associate or other relationship inter sese. The transfer was not a sale resulting in taxable gain or deductible loss for income and excess profits tax purposes within the meaning of Section 202 of the Revenue Act of 1918, because in actual fact there was no change in the real ownership of the assets involved; there was merely a change in the form in which the identical parties owned the identical property. Second, the Trustees of the M Trust should return not as a corporation but as fiduciaries, and so might escape the excess profits tax and higher corporate rate of normal tax on the profits made from the final sale of the property because the M Trust was a common law trust and not an association within the meaning of Section 2 of the Revenue Act of 1921.”

According to Metal, by virtue of section 1566-c and the opinion of the Solicitor, Becklenberg in conducting his business, which presumably was the real estate business, could organize a common-law trust which he would control, and could convey property to the trust; the property could then be conveyed by the trust to a purchaser, and the trust would receive the cash payments and take back any mortgages that might be executed for the balance of the purchase money. The trust would pay Becklenberg for the property conveyed to it in certificates which the trust would be authorized to issue. Under this plan, according to Metal’s interpretation of section 1566-c and the opinion of the Solicitor, the transfer by Becklenberg to the trust would not be taxable, because there would be no change in the real ownership of the assets since Becklenberg would be in control of the trust company; the sale by the trust company to the purchaser would not be taxable under the excess profits tax or under the corporate rate of the normal tax, for the reason that the trustees of the trust would make return under the income tax, not as a corporation, but as fiduciaries, since the trust would not be a corporation within the meaning of the Internal Revenue Act.

The nature of the plan is further explained in an answer which counsel for the plaintiff made in their brief to an objection urged against the plan by counsel for the defendant in their brief. The objection of counsel for the defendant is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
236 Ill. App. 324, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-becklenberg-illappct-1925.