District of Columbia v. Louis Neyman

417 F.2d 1140, 135 U.S. App. D.C. 193, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12666
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 1969
Docket21587_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 417 F.2d 1140 (District of Columbia v. Louis Neyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District of Columbia v. Louis Neyman, 417 F.2d 1140, 135 U.S. App. D.C. 193, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12666 (D.C. Cir. 1969).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

The question for our decision is whether the transaction in suit was a sale by a corporation’s sole stockholder of his corporate stock resulting in a gain nontaxable by the District of Columbia, or was actually a corporate sale of assets which produced a taxable corporate dividend to the stockholder. The administrative ruling that the transaction bore the latter character was nullified by a determination of the District of Columbia Tax Court that it did not. We commence our review, as we always do, with a close examination of the relevant facts.

Respondent, a resident of the District, was the owner of all of the outstanding capital stock of the Victoria Apartment House Corporation, a Delaware entity, and he, his wife and his attorney were its directors and officers. Respondent purchased the stock about 1955 at a cost of $23,333.33, and maintained continuous ownership of it until early 1963. The corporation owned an apartment building and an adjoining parking lot in the District which were encumbered by a deed of *1141 trust securing a corporate debt of approximately $105,000.

In the summer of 1962, respondent received an offer from David Korn and Zev Sufott to purchase those properties. 1 The offer contemplated respondent’s acquisition of the real estate through liquidation of the corporation, and its subsequent sale by respondent to the offerors. Respondent rejected this proposition, stating that he was interested only in a sale of his stock in the corporation. Shortly thereafter, respondent accepted an offer from Korn and Sufott for the purchase of the stock, but this agreement was subsequently rescinded.

Finally, in September, 1962, the parties entered into another contract, the features and method of consummation of which gave rise to the present controversy. Respondent agreed to sell his stock for the price of $360,000 subject to specified adjustments. Of the purchase price, $105,000 was to be evidenced by an installment note executed by the purchasers and their spouses and secured by a deed of trust on the then corporately-owned realty. That deed of trust was to be junior to another deed of trust to secure the repayment of a $225,000 loan, for which the purchasers had arranged. The contract provided that the purchasers would dissolve the corporation, take title to its real estate, and execute and deliver the deferred purchase money note and the second deed of trust securing it.

At the time fixed for performance, respondent delivered in escrow to Lyon, Roache & Horan Title Settlements, Inc., the designated settlement agent, the documents required of him by the contract, including his endorsed stock certificates and the resignations of the officers and directors of the corporation. On the same day, the purchasers, in meetings as the new stockholders and as the new directors elected by themselves as the stockholders, authorized all corporate activities specified by the contract, including the dissolution and a plan for the liquidation of the corporation. 2 In January, 1963, the settlement agent completed the transaction. 3

*1142 The District’s assessing authority asserted a tax deficiency for the year 1963 on the theory that there had in effect been a sale by the corporation of its real estate and a distribution by the corporation to respondent of a taxable liquidating dividend. 4 The Tax Court, however, granted respondent’s petition for a refund of the assessed deficiency, holding in substance that he had made a legitimate sale of his corporate stock — a capital asset by reason of his ownership for more than two years 5 — and that his gain thereon was accordingly excluded from his gross income. 6 The District urges here, as it did before the Tax Court, the view to which its assessor had subscribed, while respondent supports the Tax Court’s position. After mature consideration of the opposing contentions in the light shed by the record, we affirm the Tax Court.

To be sure, a tax cannot be eluded by a device contrived to disguise the real nature of a transaction and make it appear to be something that it is not. 7 And with equal certainty, the judicial challenge, on presentation of a substantial claim of tax evasion, is to penetrate through form in a most careful search for substance, upon which the incidence of taxation depends. 8 But the Tax Court explored the District’s charge that the transaction here was a subterfuge for a corporate sale of assets promoted by respondent, 9 and found instead that respondent had engaged only in a sale of his stock:

This is a case of avoidance and not of evasion of tax • liability. The petitioner had the right to select the transaction involving the sale of his stock in order to avoid the liability for an income tax, which would have resulted if the real property had been conveyed to him upon dissolution of the corporation and then sold to the buyers. 10 It was natural and good business for him to have the note of $105,000 not only secured by a deed of trust on the property but to have the buyers and their wives guarantee its payment. The security of the deed of trust could not be effected until the property was transferred to Korn and Sufott or their trustee, which was done simultaneously with the delivery of his stock by the petitioner to the title company, Lyon, Roache & Horan Title Settlements, Inc. who like all title companies in similar transactions act as escrow agents until title is cleared. The fact that the deed, deeds of trust were not recorded, and the instruments, notes and cash were not distributed until January 3, 1963 is not significant or important. It is well known that title companies and attorneys reporting title to property and settling its sale or other transactions involving it do not distribute cash, notes or other instruments immediately upon the execution of appropriate documents. Caution requires *1143 that a further examination be made of title records to see if there has been any conveyance, lien or change in the title since the effective date of the title report. * * *
The Court is of the opinion that upon delivery of his capital stock in the Victoria Apartment House Corporation by the petitioner to Lyon, Roache & Horan Title Settlements, Inc. and simultaneous execution of conveyance above described 11 the sale of the stock was effected; and that the transaction, as far as the petitioner was concerned was a capital transaction; and that he did not receive any taxable dividend from the corporation. 12

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Bluebook (online)
417 F.2d 1140, 135 U.S. App. D.C. 193, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbia-v-louis-neyman-cadc-1969.