Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Arnold

147 F.2d 23, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 606, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 2, 1945
DocketNo. 4003
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 F.2d 23 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Arnold, 147 F.2d 23, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 606, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4376 (1st Cir. 1945).

Opinion

MAHONEY, Circuit Judge.

This case involves deficiencies in the income tax of four taxpayers for the year 1935. The Tax Court disagreed in part with the Commissioner, and the Commissioner has petitioned for review.

The facts were stipulated and as so stipulated were adopted as findings by the court below. Those facts material to the issues raised here may be summarized as follows:

[24]*24The respondents are the daughters of J. Robson Douglas. In 1923 certain members of a former corporation, including Douglas, formed a new corporation bearing the name of Douglas-Rogers, Ltd., to engage in the investment business under the laws of the Province of Nova Scotia. In August, 1930, Douglas-Rogers, Ltd., sold for the account of Douglas certain stocks, opened an account on its books in the name of his four daughters, the taxpayers herein, and credited to that account the proceeds of the sale amounting to $70,000. In requesting the corporation to open the account and credit the amount to his daughters, Douglas stated it to be his intention to set up a fund for their benefit. The account was captioned “Marion I. Davis et al., Loan Account”. Thereafter Douglas deposited other sums in that account. It was .credited with interest at the rate of six per cent in accordance with an agreement with Douglas, and during the years concerned the company was able to pay such interest.

On September 2, 1931, the credit balance of the loan account, including interest, was $836,442.50. On that date Douglas re-quested the company to issue four demand notes in equal amounts, aggregating the credit balance of the account, each payable to one of the daughters. The company issued its four demand, six per cent notes, as requested and delivered them to Douglas, who kept them in his private iron box in the vault of the company. None of the daughters had access to the vault. Douglas instructed the company to deliver the notes to them in the event of his death.

Later in September, 1931, Douglas handed the notes to Marion I. Davis, one of the respondents, at her residence in, Newton, Massachusetts. She advised her sisters of the existence of the notes and handed them back to her father to be deposited in his private box in the company’s vault. At that time he gave her a key to the box where the notes were kept. The notes remained there until Douglas’ death when the company delivered them to the daughters in December, 1934.

From September 2, 1931, to February-28, 1935, the credit balance of the loan account increased from $836,442.50 to $1,016,777. The increase included interest in the amount of $195,807 less certain withdrawals made by the taxpayers and amounts paid to a bank and a trust company.

In February, 1935, after Douglas’ death, the loan account was closed, the credit balance was transferred in equal parts to the credit of four separate accounts in the names of the daughters, and in May, 1935, the corporation was liquidated and each taxpayer received assets in cash value equal to the credit balance of her account.

In notices of deficiency, the Commissioner determined that the total amount of interest accruing on the loan account constituted taxable income in 1935.1 The taxpayers petitioned for redetermination, and the Tax Court held: “The amounts of interest paid and credited by Douglas-Rogers, Ltd. to the petitioners in years prior to 1935 having been so paid to and received by them, should have been included in their returns for those years in whatever jurisdiction they were required to be made. Such amounts are not taxable in 1935. The amounts of interest attributed to and paid in the year 1935, including the period from February 28, 1935 to May 15, 1935, are, however, subject to tax.”

In this court the Commissioner contends that the Tax Court erred in holding the amounts credited as interest prior to 1935 to the loan account were constructively received by the taxpayers prior to 1935, and in holding that those amounts are not taxable in 1935. The Commissioner concedes that Douglas made gifts from time to time to the taxpayers but contends that the record fails to show that the interest items credited to the loan account must be treated as constructively received by the taxpayers prior to the time when the account was paid over to them.

The Tax Court found that “During the years 1933, 1934 and 1935 the account was debited with withdrawals by the petitioners and amounts paid to a bank and trust company”. The evidence regarding the withdrawals by the taxpayers appears 'in the journal entries of the loan account on the books of Douglas-Rogers, Ltd. They show that the account was debited to one or another of the taxpayers on six occasions, but that the identical amounts were later [25]*25reentered as credits before the fund was paid over 2

Other entries which were afterwards reversed are also found on this same account. They were considered in some detail in the findings of fact made by the Commissioner for the Provincial Treasurer of Nova Scotia and the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia in proceedings relating to the Nova Scotia succession duties on the estate left by Douglas. Although that Commissioner commented on “all the evasion surrounding this account and the reversed entries,” he was referring to entries other than those relevant in the instant case. The Supreme Court of Nova Scotia was concurring with the findings made below when it observed: “It is also to be noted, for other purposes, that $5,000 was paid out of the account in August, 1933, to Marion I. Davis, and in November and December of the same year, two payments of $5,000 each to Eloise Arnold.”

To the Tax Court there appeared to be “no doubt” that the deposits in the loan account were subject to withdrawal by the taxpayers. It said: “The account itself shows that during the years 1933, 1934 and 1935 such withdrawals were made by them or for them.” It is clear that interest payments were regularly credited to the loan account, and the Tax Court noted that the account from which the withdrawals were made reflected the sum owed to the taxpayers by the company, “augmented by the interest payments”, that “the company was a corporation ostensibly engaged in the investment business”, and stated: “Obviously, it also acted as a banker for the petitioners. The quarterly payments of interest were without doubt constructively received by the petitioners. Under such circumstances it is consonant with .he facts to say they were actually so received.3

The decision in this case turns largely upon its special facts. It is not charged here that the Tax Court failed to follow any applicable statute or regulation. No clear cut mistake of law is alleged. The sole question presented is whether the decision of the Tax Court treating the interest on the loan account as constructively received by the taxpayers prior to the lime when the account was paid over to them in 1935 has any substantial basis in the evidence. As was recently pointed out by the Supreme Court in Commissioner v. Scottish American Investment Company, limited, 65 S.Ct. 169, in deciding such a question “the judicial eye must not in the first instance rove about searching for evidence to support other conflicting inferences and conclusions which the judges or litigants may consider more reasonable or desirable. It must be cast directly and primarily upon the evidence in support of those made by the Tax Court.”

The record discloses that the taxpayers were the book owners of the Marion I.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 F.2d 23, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 606, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-arnold-ca1-1945.