F. Brody & Sons Co. v. Commissioner

11 T.C. 298, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 91
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1948
DocketDocket No. 12128
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 T.C. 298 (F. Brody & Sons Co. 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.

Bluebook
F. Brody & Sons Co. v. Commissioner, 11 T.C. 298, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 91 (tax 1948).

Opinions

OPINION.

Harlan, Judge'.

The Commissioner contends that when the taxpayer in 1918 distributed checks to its stockholders in proportion to their existing stockholdings in a total amount equal to its surplus and special reserve accounts, or $227,437.63, and concurrently therewith delivered stock to said stockholders having a par value of $275,000 upon receipt of checks from its stockholders of $275,000, the taxpayer in legal effect declared a stock dividend of $227,437.63 and actually sold stock only to the value of $47,562.37. The Commissioner contends also that the taxpayer is entitled, under the provisions of section 718 (a) (1) of the Internal Revenue Code,1 to include only $47,562.37 in its equity invested capital for the taxable year instead of $275,000 which the taxpayer did include.

The Commissioner argues that the corporation in June 1918 did not intend that its dividend checks be actually cashed except for immediate return as a payment back to the corporation for the new stock issued; that there was $2,862.13 in the corporation’s bank account on June 24, 1918, when these checks, aggregating $227,487.63, were written; and that the bank account of at least one of the stockholders, Harry Brody, president of the company, had an opening balance of but $293.23 on June 24, 1918. On that date Brody deposited, however, $99,014.73, which included the dividend check of $83,014.73, and then wrote one check for $16,000 and another for $82,900 payable to petitioner in payment for the stock issued to him. In short, the Commissioner argues that the only real cash involved, so far as the corporation was concerned, was $47,562.37 which the stockholders actually paid in, and that in reality the rest of the transaction was a conversion of the corporate surplus and special reserve accounts into a stock dividend.

The Commissioner cites Theresa, Zellerbach, 2 B. T. A. 1076, 1083, wherein a corporation, in order to avoid criticism from its customers, attempted to give what was in reality a stock dividend the appearance of a cash dividend. Ninety-two per cent of the stockholders knew that in reality a stock dividend was being declared, but the minutes were so drawn as to have the appearance of creating a cash dividend. No dividend checks were issued and these stockholders gave no checks for the stock. Eight per cent of the stockholders who were not informed did make a payment for the stock issued, but the amount of this payment was later returned to them. We discern little application of these facts or the law involved to. the case at bar.

The Commissioner also quotes from W. Q. Wright, 10 B. T. A. 806, to the effect that the real understanding between the stockholders and directors and the financial ability to issue cash dividends should receive greater consideration than the actual book entries. In that case the Board of Tax Appeals held that the facts showed the issuance of a stock dividend rather than a cash dividend, as contended for by the Commissioner. However, the Wright case in facts is so far from the facts in the case at bar that it furnishes little help. To illustrate, the stockholders therein issued promissory notes for the stock and agreed among themselves that the notes should never be paid and no dividend checks were ever issued by the corporation.

The Commissioner also cites, without comment, United States v. Mellon, 279 Fed. 910, and United States v. Davison, 1 Fed. (2d) 465. In the Mellon case a very substantial majority of the stockholders entered into a plan whereby a certain amount of a new stock issue was to be sold for cash to raise needed funds and the rest was to be issued to the stockholders agreeing to the plan in satisfaction of a dividend of $100 on the outstanding stock which it was agreed would be declared. The stockholders, in the agreement, also agreed to purchase for cash from those stockholders who were not in on the plan and who might not wish to accept the stock in payment of the contemplated dividends. The Court held that such an arrangement was only a disguised cash dividend, that in reality it was a stock dividend, and that the taxpayer should not be taxed thereon. The Davison case is very similar to the Mellon case and is just as easily distinguishable from the facts in the case at bar.

In the case at bar the corporate minutes clearly provide for a cash dividend and make special provision for any stockholder who does not wish to apply that dividend to the purchase of new stock. There is not a hint that the stockholders had any contrary secret understanding. Dividend checks were issued and, while the bank account of petitioner could not have cashed those checks without the petitioner borrowing money or without its relying upon the receipt of checks from the stockholders, the amount of petitioner’s liquid assets during June 1918 was such as to indicate that such borrowing could easily have occurred if necessary. The standing of the corporation, furthermore, with its bank is indicated by the bank’s willingness to honor petitioner’s checks on June 1, 1918, in a sufficient amount to create an overdraft of $10,800. This does not indicate a corporation in a weak position to borrow money when needed.

In Eugene E. Paul, 2 B. T. A. 150, dividend checks were issued to stockholders but never deposited by them. The checks were immediately endorsed back to the corporation upon receipt by the payee and stock certificates were given to the payee in exchange. That case presented a much stronger case on the facts against the reality of a cash dividend than the one at bar, yet the Board of Tax Appeals, at page 152, said:

* * * The agreement between the individual stockholders to purchase new stock with dividends when paid does not serve to change the character of the corporate action and make that a stock dividend which was intended to be a cash dividend.
* * * We do not regard the fact that the corporation had insufficient cash on hand to pay the dividend as of controlling importance. It had a surplus in excess of the dividend declared, and the indebtedness to its stockholders existed irrespective of that fact. The right to declare a dividend from surplus profits was exercised by the directors and it became their duty to provide ways and means to make payment thereof. If surplus profits have in fact been earned and are invested in property used in the business of the corporation, a dividend may properly be paid by borrowing money. * * *

Petitioner relies heavily upon W. J. Hunt, 5 B. T. A. 356. The deficiency in that case arose out of petitioner’s claim that certain stock received by him constituted a nontaxable stock dividend. The Board of Tax Appeals held, however, that the stock had been purchased by the petitioner and that the dividend was a cash dividend. Thus the Commissioner and the petitioner in the Hunt case contended for exactly the opposite of the legal principles which they now present in the case at bar.

In the Hunt case the corporate directors, on December 1,1917, recommended to the stockholders a capital stock increase and issue of $35,000 to be offered to existing stockholders in proportion to outstanding holdings. This plan was approved by the stockholders. On December 24, 1917, the directors declared a. $60 per share dividend on all stock outstanding on January 1,1917.

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F. Brody & Sons Co. v. Commissioner
11 T.C. 298 (U.S. Tax Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
11 T.C. 298, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-brody-sons-co-v-commissioner-tax-1948.