Estate of Otis E. Byrd, Jimmie Lou Byrd, Administratrix, Peitioner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

388 F.2d 223
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 1968
Docket24135_1
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 388 F.2d 223 (Estate of Otis E. Byrd, Jimmie Lou Byrd, Administratrix, Peitioner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) 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
Estate of Otis E. Byrd, Jimmie Lou Byrd, Administratrix, Peitioner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 388 F.2d 223 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinions

JOHN R. BROWN,

Chief Judge:

This appeal presents a novel question in the field of income taxation. The question is whether, for purposes of a stock redemption that will qualify for exchange treatment under § 303,1 26 U. [225]*225S.C.A. § 303, Taxpayer 2 can include not only stock owned directly by him in the redeeming corporations but also. the value of stock owned indirectly by him through another corporation which owns shares in the redeeming corporations. Belatedly asserted in the Tax Court is the further contention that the redemption qualifies for exchange treatment under § 3023 as “not essentially equivalent to a dividend.” The Tax Court, upholding the Commissioner, determined that the redemptions were taxable as dividends. We affirm. Proving again the sometimes weird tax world results, Tandy Leather Co. v. United States, 5 Cir., 1965, 347 F.2d 693, 695 (concurring opinion), in the first the taxpayer is denied the benefit of attribution, cf. Phinney v. Tuboscope Co., 5 Cir., 1959, 268 F.2d 233, while in the second the Government gets it.

The facts, fully stipulated, can be quickly presented with the aid of a [226]*226schedule4 in which bracketed numbers [1] [2], etc. have been inserted for ease of reference. Otis Byrd died in 1957 owning substantial and controlling in[227]*227terests, directly ([4], [5], [6],) and indirectly ([7], [8]), in four corporations. The assets of one corporation, Peoples Savings, consisted primarily (but not exclusively) of stock in the other three corporations — Alabama Banking, Hub City, and Rock Finance (see [7], [8]). The decedent owned 88.9% of the stock in Peoples Savings. In valuing the decedent’s gross estate,5 there was included not only the value of the stock owned directly by the decedent in the redeeming corporations, but also the value of decedent’s stock ownership of 88.9% of Peoples Savings.

In 1959, a part of the stock owned directly by the decedent in three of the corporations — Alabama Banking, Hub City, and Rock Finance — was redeemed for $88,900 [12], the same amount for which it was valued for estate purposes. The redemption was for the purpose of providing funds with which to discharge certain estate expenses6 in excess of $100,000.

In the estate’s income tax return for the taxable year ending December 31, 1959, Taxpayer treated the proceeds of the redemptions as distributions in full payment in exchange for the stock redeemed under § 303, “Redemptions to Pay Death Taxes.” The Commissioner disagreed, and assessed a deficiency on the ground that the redemptions failed to qualify for exchange treatment under either § 302 or § 303 7 and that therefore the proceeds were to be treated as dividends under § 301. Confining its consideration to taxpayer’s § 303 contentions in the petition8 the Tax Court agreed. Byrd v. Commissioner, 46 T.C. 25 (1966). By motion for reconsideration and motions to amend the petition and reopen the record, Taxpayer sought to raise the § 302 contention that the distributions were “not essentially equivalent to a dividend,” but after a hearing, these motions were denied.

I.

The only issue initially presented to and determined by the Tax Court (see note 7 supra) was whether the distributions received by the estate on the redemption of stock qualified under § 303 for treatment as distributions in exchange for the stock, or failing that, under § 301 as dividends. This in turn, depends upon whether for purposes of satisfying the 75% requirement of § 303 (b) (2) (B), and therefore the 35% or [228]*22850% requirements of § 303(b) (2) (A) (see note 1 supra) Taxpayer can include not only the value of the stock directly owned by the decedent in the redeeming corporation (which concededly he can) but also the value of the stock indirectly owned by the decedent in the redeeming corporations through his ownership of Peoples Savings. The Government agrees that if Taxpayer can include the value of the stock indirectly owned in the redeeming corporations, then the percentage requirements of § 303 will be met and the distributions would qualify for exchange treatment.

In support of its contention that the indirectly owned stock may be taken into account, Taxpayer asserts two basic arguments. First, Taxpayer urges that under the constructive ownership rules of § 318, the stock owned by Peoples Savings in the redeeming corporations was attributed to decedent to the extent of his proportionate ownership in Peoples Savings. Such ownership, if attributable is more than sufficient (see schedule [11] and note 5 supra) to satisfy the percentage requirements of § 303. Second, relying on the wording of § 303 (b) (2) (B), Taxpayer urges that even though owned by Peoples Savings, the stock of the redeeming corporations literally was “included in determining the value of the decedent’s gross estate * * This is so because decedents’ 88.9% ownership of Peoples Savings was determined solely by reference to the value of the underlying assets — the stock owned by it in the redeeming corporations.

a. Constructive Ownership Under § 318

On this appeal, Taxpayer relies primarily on the applicability to § 303 of the constructive ownership rules of § 318, 26 U.S.C.A. § 318.9 Although § 318 is not expressly or by cross-reference10 made applicable to § 303, Taxpayer strenuously argues that this was neither legislative oversight nor an expression of Congressional intent that the attribution rules should not apply. Quite the contrary, it urges that such provision was deemed unnecessary by Congress, indeed its inclusion would have been superfluous. This is so from an analysis of the statutory scheme. Thus, the argument runs, the statutory provision that levies the tax, § 302(d), has certain exceptions, some of them found in § 302 (b), but also including § 303. The at[229]*229tribution rules of § 318 are expressly and by cross-reference made applicable to § 302 through § 302(c). Consequently, the same rules — i. e., the attribution rules — which are applied in fixing the scope of the levy must also be applied in ascertaining the scope of all exceptions to the levy, which includes § 303.

A careful examination, not only of the wording of the provisions in question but more important of their legislative history, convinces us that Taxpayer’s argument that § 318 attribution should apply under § 303(b) (2) (B) cannot prevail. The legislative revisions of the 1954 Code sections relating to “corporate distributions and adjustments” represented a “complete structural overhaul” of existing law.11 In these revisions, Congress sought not only to clarify existing law, but also to liberalize provisions for tax relief where warranted while at the same time precluding some then-existing methods of tax avoidance. These objectives find expression in the provisions here in question. As a tax relief provision, § 303 was first added to the Code by the Revenue Act of 1950.

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388 F.2d 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-otis-e-byrd-jimmie-lou-byrd-administratrix-peitioner-v-ca5-1968.