Estate of Freeman v. Commissioner
This text of 1964 T.C. Memo. 306 (Estate of Freeman v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
DAWSON, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in the income tax of petitioners' decedents for the years 1955, 1956, and 1957 in the respective amounts of $136,050.64, $6,728.96, and $5,462.49. Other issues herein having been settled by agreement of the parties, the sole question remaining for decision is whether the redemption by the Hotel Rieger Company in 1955 of 360 shares of its stock owned by Zila M. Freeman was essentially equivalent to a dividend within the purview of
*35 Findings of Fact
Most of the facts have been stipulated by the parties. Their stipulation, together with attached exhibits, is incorporated herein by this reference.
At all times material to this proceeding Elgin S. and Zila M. Freeman (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the Freemans) were husband and wife residing in Cleveland, Ohio. Their joint Federal income tax returns for the calendar years 1955, 1956, and 1957, made on the cash basis, were filed with the district director of internal revenue at Cleveland, Ohio.
During the years here in issue and for some time prior thereto the Freemans were engaged primarily in the ownership and operation, as partners, of various rooming houses and small hotels. In December of 1954 they purchased, for a price of $326,625, all of the stock of the Hotel Rieger Company, an Ohio corporation located at Sandusky, Ohio (sometimes hereinafter referred to as the corporation), consisting of 750 common shares. All of these shares were acquired in the name of Zila M. Freeman. The Freemans made a partial payment of $5,000 cash from their own funds and borrowed the remainder of the purchase price, or $321,652, from the Cleveland Trust Company under*36 an agreement dated December 24, 1954. Pursuant to this agreement, which is more fully detailed in the stipulation of facts, the Freemans agreed to repay the Cleveland Trust Company approximately $168,500 of the $321,652 six months from date and the balance over a longer period of time.
At the time they purchased the stock of the Hotel Rieger Company, the Freemans intended to liquidate the corporation, manage its principal asset - a resort hotel located on Lake Erie - as partners, and renegotiate the $168,500 short term loan owed the Cleveland Trust Company with a long-term note secured by a mortgage on the hotel property. However, sometime subsequent to the purchase, the Freemans found that it was impossible to have the hotel's liquor license transferred from the corporation to themselves individually because of an earlier conviction of Elgin Freeman for having feloniously operated an illicit still. Since maintenance of the hotel's liquor license was a condition precedent to the Cleveland Trust Company's loan, and since the license would be lost if the hotel were transferred to them as individuals, the Freemans decided to continue to operate the Hotel Rieger in the corporate form.
*37 This decision, however, made it necessary for the Freemans to find some other way of satisfying their $168,500 short term indebtedness to the Cleveland Trust Company, due July 15, 1955. Therefore, sometime prior to May 27, 1955, Zila Freeman proposed to the Hotel Rieger Company that it redeem from her 360 of the 750 shares of its stock held by her for a price of $168,500 and on May 27, 1955, this proposal was accepted by the corporation. Thereafter, on May 30, 1955, Zila Freeman assigned 360 shares of her Hotel Rieger Company stock to the corporation, appointing the Cleveland Trust Company as attorney to transfer the shares on the corporate books. On August 12, 1955, the corporation borrowed the sum of $168,500 from various banks and with this money paid the $168,500 short term indebtedness of the Freemans to the Cleveland Trust Company.
At all times here material the Hotel Rieger Company had accumulated earnings and profits in the amount of $152,748.31. Immediately after the consummation of the abovedescribed transactions the stock of the Hotel Rieger Company consisted of 390 outstanding common shares owned by Zila Freeman and 360 common shares held as treasury stock.
Opinion
*38 The single issue involved in this proceeding is whether or not the redemption by the Hotel Rieger Company of 360 shares of its stock from Zila Freeman, its sole shareholder, accompanied by a corporate payment of $168,500 in satisfaction of an indebtedness owed by Zila Freeman to a third party was the essential equivalent of the distribution to her of a taxable dividend. Petitioners contend that it was not, relying on such cases as
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1964 T.C. Memo. 306, 23 T.C.M. 1893, 1964 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-freeman-v-commissioner-tax-1964.