Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Whitaker

101 F.2d 640, 22 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 500, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2540
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 28, 1938
Docket3345
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 F.2d 640 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Whitaker) 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. Whitaker, 101 F.2d 640, 22 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 500, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2540 (1st Cir. 1938).

Opinion

McLELLAN, District Judge.

This petition to review a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals relates to a transaction whereby in 1931 the taxpayer, Stella S. Whitaker, surrendered 1,000 shares of $6 preferred stock of the General Baking *641 Corporation, a Maryland corporation, and received 1,500 shares of common stock of the General Baking Company, a New York corporation, $3,000 face value 5% per cent debenture bonds of the same company, $41.25 in cash, representing accrued interest on such debentures, and a further cash payment of $750. The Board of Tax Appeals held that the stock was surrendered pursuant to a plan of reorganization and that no gain was to be “recognized” under the Revenue Act of 1928, 45 Stat. 791. The Commissioner contends that what took place was merely the liquidation of the Maryland corporation, and that the amounts received are taxable accordingly.

The summarized facts follow:

In 1923 the taxpayer received as a gift from her father 500 shares of the common stock of the General Baking Company, a corporation organized in 1911 under the laws of New York for the purpose of operating a large number of baking plants. In October, 1925, and thereafter until the transaction of 1931 mentioned below, the outstanding stock of this corporation, hereinafter referred to as the New York Company, consisted of 90,775 shares of $8 cumulative preferred stock and 429,719 shares of common stock. Both classes of stock had equal voting rights. In 1925, the General Baking Corporation, hereinafter referred to as the Maryland Corporation, was organized under the laws of Maryland for the purpose of acquiring the common stock of the New York Company, and it eventually acquired 212,308 shares of the common stock of the New York Company for cash and 217,098 shares in exchange for its own stock. At this time the taxpayer exchanged her 500 shares of the common stock of the New York Company for 1,000 shares of Class A and 3,000 shares of Class B stock in the Maryland Corporation. In 1928, as a résult of a recapitalization of the Maryland Corporation, the taxpayer received 1,000 shares of $6 no par value cumulative preferred stock of the Maryland Corporation and 3,500 shares of no par value common stock of the Maryland Corporation. Prior to 1931, the taxpayer sold all her common stock, so received, so that at that time, she held only the 1,000 shares of the $6 cumulative preferred stock.

Early in 1931, the directors of the Maryland Corporation decided that the continued existence of the Maryland holding company and the New York operating company was unwieldy and against the best interests of both. On January 10, 1931, a letter signed by the members of a “Committee for Capital Readjustment” representing the directors and stockholders of the Maryland Corporation and the directors of the New York Company was sent to all the stockholders of the Maryland Corporation. The letter recommended a plan for capital readjustment. It was proposed that the holding company should be dissolved, that accrued and unpaid dividends on preferred stock of the Maryland Corporation should be met by an issue of 5% per cent debenture bonds of tbe New York Company, and that the common stock of the New York Corporation held by the Maryland Corporation should be distributed among the stockholders of the latter. It was proposed that holders of the $6 preferred stock of the Maryland Corporation, of whom the taxpayer was one, should be entitled to receive for each 100 shares held, 150 shares of new common stock of the New York Company, plus “for all dividends then accrued and unpaid, Ten Year 5%% Sinking Fund Gold Debentures of General Baking Company, with interest thereon adjusted and accruing from January 1, 1931 * * * at the rate of $300 principal amount thereof on each 100 shares of stock.” Holders of common stock were to receive three shares of new common stock for each 100 shares held. It was stated that upon the consummation of the plan it was proposed to inaugurate quarterly dividends on the new common stock of the General Baking Company at the. annual fate of $2 per share and that it was hoped that the plan could be consummated promptly so that the initial dividend might be paid April 1, 1931.

On the same date, a deposit agreement was executed purporting to be between certain named individuals “as a Committee for Capital Readjustment, and such holders of shares of stock of” the Maryland Corporation as might later become parties to the agreement by depositing their shares in the manner therein provided. The Bankers Trust Company of New York was designated as depositary. The agreement referred to the circular letter of January 10, 1931, and provided that certificates of deposit should entitle the holders thereof to receive in lieu of deposited Maryland preferred stock or Maryland common stock, securities of the New York Company in full satisfaction of claims with respect to *642 shares in the Maryland Corporation on the basis set forth in the plan.

On February 5, 1931, an agreement was made between the New York Company and the Maryland Corporation, in furtherance of fhe consummation of the plan proposed in the letter of January 10, 1931. By Article III of this agreement, the Maryland Corporation agreed to amend its Certificate of Incorporation so that (a) it should have one class of stock, consisting of 7,000,000 shares of common stock without par value, of which 1,593,640.8 shares should be issued and outstanding, and (b) its 3,472,360 issued shares of preferred stock should be reclassified into 104,170.8 shares without par value common stock, and (c) the 992,980 issued shares of preferred stock should be reclassified into 1,489,470 shares of common stock without par value. It will be seen that the Maryland Corporation would then have outstahding the same number of shares of its common stock which its shareholders would be entitled to receive of the new stock of the New York Company under the terms of the proposed plan.

By Article II of, the agreement, the New York Company agreed to amend its certificate of incorporation so that its 429,-719 shares of common stock outstanding would be changed into 1,594,798.93594 shares of par value $5 common'stock. Of this the Maryland Corporation, as stockholder, would be entitled to receive 1,593,-637.31156 shares. It was further agreed in a later article that the New York Company should transfer the extra three and a fraction shares to make the number equal.

The agreement provided that after the reclassification of stock in both companies had been completed, the' Maryland Corporation should “upon its dissolution or as an incident thereof (1) distribute to its stockholders pro rata the shares of common stock of the Company as changed and reclassified thereby effecting the distribution of the shares of the Company desired by it, and (2) transfer to the Company such items of its property as shall not have been realized upon -or such as shall not be readily susceptible of distribution * * In consideration therefor, the New York Company agreed to assume the Maryland Corporation’s debts and to declare a dividend on its stock (the old stock apparently) up to but not exceeding $2,981,112.22 payable in its Ten Year 5%% debenture bonds, said dividend to be up to but not exceeding an amount necessary to produce $3 face value per share of the preferred stock of the Maryland Corporation. The Maryland Corporation agreed to distribute these bonds pro rata to the holders of its preferred stock.

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Related

Lewis v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
160 F.2d 839 (First Circuit, 1947)
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103 F.2d 873 (Third Circuit, 1939)
Commissioner of Internal Rev. v. Food Industries
101 F.2d 748 (Third Circuit, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
101 F.2d 640, 22 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 500, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-whitaker-ca1-1938.