Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Godley's Estate

213 F.2d 529, 45 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1614, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4428
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 1954
Docket11202
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 213 F.2d 529 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Godley's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Godley's Estate, 213 F.2d 529, 45 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1614, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4428 (3d Cir. 1954).

Opinion

STALEY, Circuit Judge.

The Commissioner petitions for review of a decision of the Tax Court. 19 T.C. 1082 (1953). The facts were stipulated and were found accordingly. We will attempt to state them generally so that this opinion does not become a welter of figures.

Respondents’ decedent held stock of the Southern Natural Gas Company. In 1947 she and the other shareholders of the gas company received a distribution partly in cash and partly in property. The property consisted of shares of stock of the Southern Production Company, Inc., which had been held by the gas company. The production company stock had been acquired by the gas company at a cost of $3,199,950. At the time of distribution, its fair market *530 value was $8,988,407.75. The total cash distribution by the gas company was $2,113,722.03, making the total of the cash and property received by the shareholders $11,097,129.78. At the time of distribution, the gas company had available for dividends, earnings or profits totaling $5,674,586.32. The footnote contains a tabular account of the arithmetic of what happened. 1 The decedent treated roughly half of what she received from the gas company as ordinary income for the year 1947. The Commissioner’s deficiency assessment held her total receipts from the gas company to be taxable as ordinary income. Respondents were successful in the Tax Court, and the case comes here.

■Forgetting for the moment the cash distribution, the case amounts to this, when reduced to its essentials. A corporation made a distribution in kind to its shareholders of property whose fair market value at the time of distribution exceeded its cost to the corporation and also exceeded the corporation’s earnings or profits available for dividends, when considered apart from the property’s appreciation in value. The earnings or profits were, however, sufficient to cover the cost to the corporation of the property distributed. In order to decide the tax effect on the distributees, therefore, we must determine whether a distribution in kind of appreciated property reduces the distributing corporation's-earnings or profits by the fair market value of the property, without addition of the increment in value, as the Tax Court held, or whether it reduces earnings or profits only by the cost of the property. The two methods produce substantially different results. If earnings or profits, without addition of the increment caused by the appreciation in value, must be matched against the fair market value of the property, the distribution will be a dividend only to the extent of earnings or profits and the distributees will be taxed on that amount only, with the excess over earnings or profits going first to reduce the basis of the shares held by the distributees and any excess' over basis being taxed as a capital gain under Section 115(d). 2 This was the -'Tax Court’s view. On the other hand, if earnings or profits, again without addition of the increment in value, must be matched against the cost of the property, the entire distribution will be a dividend and the distributees will be'taxed upon the full fair market value as ordinary income.

The problem acquires its setting from the following provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. By Section 22(a) “ ‘Gross income’ includes gains, profits, and income derived from * * * divi *531 dends * * *.” 3 But Section 22(a) does not define a “dividend.” For that purpose, its subsection (e) 4 directs us to Section 115. Section 115(a) defines a dividend as a corporate distribution to its shareholders “out of its earnings or profits. * * *” Section 115(b) provides a conclusive statutory presumption to the effect that every corporate distribution is “out of earnings or profits to the extent thereof. * *” Finally, Section 115(j) values a property dividend by providing that the property received “shall be included in gross income at its fair market value. * * *” 5

The Tax Court said that the genesis of the problem was the Supreme Court’s decision in General Utilities & Operating Co. v. Helvering, 1935, 296 U.S. 200, 56 S.Ct. 185, 80 L.Ed. 154. There General Utilities distributed to its shareholders property that had appreciated in value over its cost to the corporation. The Court held that General Utilities derived no taxable gain from the distribution. Because of procedural points involved and the sequence of the Commissioner’s arguments before the Board of Tax Appeals, the Fourth Circuit, and the Supreme Court, the scope of the holding of the General Utilities case is uncertain. 6 There is no doubt, however, that the case has received judicial and administrative acceptance as standing for the proposition that a corporation does not realize income from the distribution of property which has appreciated in value over its cost. 7 We will so accept it for purposes of discussion here. Construing the General Utilities case as stated above, the Tax Court held that the so-called rule of that case should be applied in computing the amount of a corporation’s earnings or profits available for dividends even where no question of the effect on its taxable net income was involved. 8 Therefore, the appreciation in value of the property held and distributed by the gas company here was not added to its earnings or profits. The result was that the distribution of the cash and property was a dividend and, thus, taxable to the distributees as ordinary income, only to the extent of the gas company’s earnings or profits.

The Commissioner’s contention was that earnings covered the cost of the *532 property distributed and, therefore, the distribution was “out of earnings or profits” under 115(a) and was backed by earnings or profits “to the extent” of cost under 115(b). The distribution was, therefore, a “dividend.” Having been classified as a dividend under 115 (a) and (b), 115(j) then comes into operation and imposes a tax upon the dis-tributees to the extent of the then fair market value of the property received. This argument wás rejected by the Tax Court because it was said to destroy what was thought to be the proper correlation between taxability to the shareholder-distributees and the effect upon statutory earnings or profits of the corporation and because it was thought that to allow the Commissioner’s argument to prevail would be to allow him to do indirectly what the Court in General Utilities prevented him from doing directly, i. e., write up the earnings or profits of the distributing corporation by the amount of the unrealized appreciation of the property distributed. We concede, of course, that the solution is not free from difficulty, but we think the Commissioner’s theory has none of the effects attributed to it by the Tax Court and is the better of the two rules.

There is no statutory definition . of “earnings or profits.” The attempt to ascertain its meaning is usually made in a negative way.

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Bluebook (online)
213 F.2d 529, 45 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1614, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-godleys-estate-ca3-1954.