Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Meridian & Thirteenth R. Co.

132 F.2d 182, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 559, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 2560
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1942
Docket7978
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 132 F.2d 182 (Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Meridian & Thirteenth R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Meridian & Thirteenth R. Co., 132 F.2d 182, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 559, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 2560 (7th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

EVANS, Circuit Judge.

Whether a corporate distribution was a dividend or an interest payment, is the major issue on this appeal which involves Federal income taxes. The M. & T. Co., made an $1,800 payment in 1936, which it claims-was interest on its indebtedness, but which the Commissioner asserts was a dividend on preferred stock. The Board of Tax Appeals concluded that the payment was one of interest on indebtedness, and therefore deductible Sec. 23(b) 1 of the Revenue Act of 1936, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev. Acts, page 827, and held that the taxpayer had overpaid its income tax by $234.

A second question is the propriety of am allowance, by the Board, of a credit, in¡ determining the undistributed net income,, which credit was based upon a finding that the Company’s funds were not available for distribution as dividends, because of a contract limitation imposed upon the Company-in 1922. 2

The facts are free from dispute — rather the problem is the construction of documents 3 to ascertain the real intention of the parties as to the nature of the interest *185 -which the “preferred” stockholders held in the corporation.

The Company was organized in Indiana in 1922 for the purpose of erecting and owning a single building, a large building, in the City of Indianapolis. It entered into an underwriting agreement to finance the erection of the building, and, pursuant to the agreement, issued what was called “preferred” stock, of 4,250 shares of $100 par value each, and 2,000 shares of common stock.

The preferred stock had definite maturity dates. The Company, on December 31, 1936, retired $20,000 of the stock, and there then remained unretired, only $10,000.

Although the quere is simple, i. e., Is the relationship that of creditor or stockholder of a corporation? its determination may often be difficult because it is the result of adding and weighing several elements of a situation some of which may give rise to conflicting inferences. Precedents 4 are abundant, but because of the widely-varying fact bases upon which the conclusions are reached, they serve only as guides. Many are the criteria 5 named to aid in the determination. Sometimes a particular one is called decisive,- — or the most important test, — sometimes a combination of the elements sways the determination.

*186 We cannot agree with the Board. Our conclusion is that the legal status here involved was that of a preferred stockholder, and not that of a creditor.

We feel impelled so to conclude, for numerous reasons, chief of which is that most of the attributes which are here claimed to be inherent in, and only compatible with, the creditor status, were here created in order to comply with, and follow, the Indiana statutes 6 relative to the issuance of preferred stock. They are therefore not at all indicative of intention of the parties to create a debtor-creditor relation. The intent of the parties in the establishment of the relation Is of extreme importance, and where, as here, there is a simple explanation for the existence of provisions which might otherwise be associated with a creditor relationship, which explanation disproves that relationship, the ambiguous provisions lose most, if not all, of their weight.

We have cited the Indiana Statute solely to aid in the interpretation of the documents under consideration. We are fully cognizant of the holding of the Court in the case of United States v. Pelzer, 312 U.S. 399, 61 S.Ct. 659, 85 L.Ed. 913, where it was held that Federal tax laws are to be construed with a national uniform view point and not according to individual state constructions.

We have no such extreme case as was presented in Arthur R. Jones Syndicate v. Commissioner, 23 F.2d 833, a case before this court, where there was obviously a misnomer of the parties’ relationship in order to evade a usury statute. It was certain, there, that the parties called the obligation a preferred stock because they couldn’t effect their illegal purpose otherwise. We believe the parties in the instant case intended the corporate certificate, by them termed “preferred stock,” to be just that.

It is often said that the essential difference between a creditor and a stockholder is that the latter intends to make an investment and take the risks of the venture, while the former seeks a definite obligation, payable in any event. But this variant in the relationship — while sharp in the case of a common stockholder and a bondholder — is less wide and distinct in the case of the preferred stockholder and the bondholder. The preferred stockholder has fortified his security with more safeguards than the common stockholder enjoys — and has deprived himself of some of the nebulous and speculative rights of the residuary claimant which the common stockholder enjoys. But, though the preferred stockholder’s status is more secure, he has not quite achieved the protection which a creditor or bondholder enjoys, for he is subject to that very creditor’s prior right to complete satisfaction of his obligation, in the distribution of the company’s assets. In re 620 Church Street, 299 U.S. 24, 57 S.Ct. 88, 81 L.Ed. 16.

Important is the dispute between the parties over the preferred stockholder’s asserted right, in the instant case, to pay *187 ment of his dividend in any event or whether his right to dividends was restricted to earnings. This has a direct relation to the character of the right involved. A creditor has a right to be paid whether or not his debtor earns anything, but, under the Indiana statute quoted in the margin, a stockholder has no such absolute right to payment of dividends.

A reading of the statute and the above-quoted documents convinces us that the right to pay preferred, stock dividends was limited to payment out of earnings. True, if dividends remain unpaid, and there be (a) a liquidation of the company, and (b) there be sufficient assets to meet regular creditors’ obligations, then (c) the preferred stockholder is to receive his dividends from the assets before the common stockholders receive anything. That is but the usual right of a preferred stockholder. It is not support for a holding that preferred stock dividends are payable even though there be no earnings.

The Articles of Association provide that the preferred stockholder “shall be entitled to receive cumulative dividends * * before any dividend shall be paid on * * the common stock.” Further, it says that “ * * the Company shall, out of its earnings or through the proceeds of the sale of additional common stock, redeem its outstanding preferred stock * * plus all accumulated dividends.

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Bluebook (online)
132 F.2d 182, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 559, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 2560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-int-rev-v-meridian-thirteenth-r-co-ca7-1942.