Edwards v. Allen

216 F.2d 794
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 16, 1954
DocketNos. 15018, 15019, 15020
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 216 F.2d 794 (Edwards v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Allen, 216 F.2d 794 (5th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

We have here for consideration the 'question as to whether payments made by the stockholders and officers of a corporation to satisfy a guaranty agreement previously executed by them in order to obtain additional credit for their wholly owned corporation, such payments being made when the corporation’s assets had dwindled to the point that they would never thereafter be sufficient to reimburse them, caused such stockholders to sustain losses during the taxable year “incurred in [a] transaction entered into for profit,” within the meaning of Section 23(e),1 Internal Revenue Code of 1939, or whether such payments gave rise to non-business debts which became worthless within the taxable year within the meaning of Section 23 (k) (4) 2 of the Code. If they fall within the former section they are fully deductible in computing ordinary income; if the latter, they are deductible only as short term capital losses.

The trial court found that these losses were properly claimed by the taxpayers to be deductible under Section 23(e), and the defendant appealed.

The facts are not really in dispute, since the trial judge disposed of the case on a motion for summary judgment filed by the taxpayer, supported by two affidavits in addition to an affidavit attesting to the truth of certain facts contained in the complaint. The facts necessary to an understanding of the issues are:

In 1946 the taxpayers organized Home Builders Corporation to engage in the business of making prefabricated houses, and subscribed to its entire capital stock of $50,000. Taxpayers served as officers of the corporation. In order to induce the Trust Company of Georgia to make loans to the corporation, the taxpayers signed an agreement in which they jointly and severally guaranteed to the Trust Company of Georgia the payment of all indebtedness Home Builders Corporation might at any time owe to the Trust Company of Georgia. They also signed agreements in which they agreed that any indebtedness that Home Builders Corporation might owe them would be subordinate and inferior to all indebtedness Home Builders Corporation might owe Trust Company of Georgia and that no payment would be made to them as long as Home Builders Corporation was indebted to Trust Company of Georgia in any amount.

The venture was unsuccessful. 'In December 1947 when the corporation was indebted to the trust company for $160,-[796]*796000, as evidenced by its promissory notes, the trust company called on the taxpayers to make payment on their guaranty and advised them that the notes would not be renewed on their guaranty unless substantial payment were made. The taxpayers paid a portion of the debt and endorsed new notes which the corporation gave in renewal of the balance. The trust company endorsed the corporation’s original notes without recourse, and delivered them to taxpayers. Further payments and renewals were made during 1948, and each time the old notes were endorsed to the taxpayers without recourse. In the latter part of 1948 when the debt had been reduced to $45,000, taxpayers substituted their personal obligations, and paid them off by the end of 1949, thus retiring the entire $160,000 debt.

There was also a guaranty agreement between the Home Builders Corporation and the Ira H. Hardin Company, Inc., to induce the Hardin Company to erect certain prefabricated houses manufactured by the corporation. This agreement took the form of a letter dated March 29, 1947, from Home Builders Corporation to the Hardin Company, signed by taxpayers as officers of the corporation and also individually, guaranteeing to protect the Hardin Company against any loss on the erection of the houses. When the Hardin .Company sustained a loss in excess of $15,000, it agreed to accept $15,000 in satisfaction of the corporation’s liability, which was paid by the taxpayers in 1948, and the Home Builders Corporation gave the taxpayers its notes for the amounts they had paid.

Since the financial condition of the corporation steadily declined in the years following 1947, it paid nothing to taxpayers to retire the $175,000 in notes which they held against it. On April 24, 1950, taxpayers sold to a bona fide purchaser all their stock in the corporation together with the notes they had received by endorsement from the trust company for $33,550.03. After deducting expenses of the sale the net purchase price received by taxpayers was approximately $31,000.

By affidavit it was shown that at no time from December 1, 1947, (the first payment was made on December 16, 1947) until after the final payments in 1949 were the assets of the corporation worth more than $25,000. Upon the payment of the final sum in 1949 the taxpayers received notes from the corporation of the value of $18,450, which reduced the amount of the loss sustained and deducted in that year to that sum.

The commissioner allowed taxpayers to take only capital loss deductions as non-business bad debts within the meaning of Section 23(k) (4), Internal Revenue Code. Taxpayers brought suits for refund of the deficiencies paid, claiming deductions for ordinary losses incurred in a trade or business or in a transaction entered into for profit within the meaning of Section 23(e), Internal Revenue Code. The District Court held in favor of the taxpayers on their motions for summary judgment. From those decisions, the Collector has appealed tó this Court.

There are here combined three cases involving the same questions, inasmuch as all three plaintiffs below made payments in varying amounts under identical circumstances and with the same legal effect flowing therefrom.

1. Appellant here contends, and appellees concede, that Sections 23(e) and 23(k) are mutually exclusive; further, that 23(e) is a general broad residuary clause which covers those losses, and only those losses, which are not covered by the other more particular subsections of Section 23. The taxpayers then concede that if the losses in question were deductible as losses from “debts which became worthless within the taxable year” within the meaning of 23 (k) they could not be deducted under 23(e). Spring City Foundry Co. v. Commissioner, 292 U.S. 182, 54 S.Ct. 644, 78 L.Ed. 1200.

2. Appellant Collector of Internal Revenue contends that these losses [797]*797are from such debts that became worthless within the taxable year “if they are deductible at all.” Taxpayers insist that they are not, first, because it was not the fact that the debt became worthless that caused their loss, but rather it was these payments made to a worthless debtor that caused it; and, second, they say that the debts did not become worthless within the taxable year, because the debts to them were already worthless when they sprang into existence by the payment the taxpayers made to the bank on behalf of the corporation to discharge their previously assumed obligation. We believe the taxpayers are clearly right in this. Pollak v. Commissioner, 3 Cir., 209 F.2d 57; Eckert v. Burnet, 283 U.S. 140, 51 S.Ct. 373, 75 L.Ed. 911.

Arguments made by appellant to the effect that the Eckert case did not decide that a loss such as here incurred did not result from a debt becoming worthless within the year is not supported by an analysis of that case.

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216 F.2d 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-allen-ca5-1954.