Fairmont Creamery Corporation v. Helvering

89 F.2d 810, 67 App. D.C. 66, 19 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 601, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3595
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 15, 1937
Docket6678
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 89 F.2d 810 (Fairmont Creamery Corporation v. Helvering) 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
Fairmont Creamery Corporation v. Helvering, 89 F.2d 810, 67 App. D.C. 66, 19 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 601, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3595 (D.C. Cir. 1937).

Opinion

GRONER, J.

This is an income tax case. Petitioner is a Delaware corporation with its principal office in Omaha, Neb. Its board of directors adopted a resolution in April, 1929, inviting employees to subscribe to the corporation’s common capital stock. The price was to be $26 per share, of which $2 was to be paid in cash. The balance was to be evidenced by notes with interest at 6 per cent., payable quarterly, the principal of the notes to be payable at the rate of SO cents per share per month. The conditions of the sale were these:

1st, the shares were not to be transferred, assigned, or pledged until fully paid for and until the expiration of four years from the date of issue;
2nd, the certificate to be held in the custody of the corporation for the entire four-year period whether paid for in full or not;
3rd, if the purchasing employees’ employment with the company was terminated for any reason within the four-year period, the stock was to be canceled, the corporation to reimburse the purchaser the amount actually paid by him with interest at 6 per cent.,, less all cash dividends, with interest, received by or issued to him;

*811 4th, cash dividends were to be applied (a) to the payment of interest on the note, (b) then to the payment of due or past-due installments on the note, and (c) if any balance, to the shareholder.

During the year 1930 the dividend rate was 40 cents quarterly, and the total amount of cash dividends withheld by the corporation and applied to interest due on the notes of employee-stockholders was $26,708.63, and the first question is whether this sum constituted taxable income to petitioner for that year. The Board sustained the Commissioner’s determination that it did. Petitioner insists that it did not — because under the conditions on which the stock was sold, the sale might not be completed within the four-year period and in that case the contract would be canceled and the corporation would be compellable to repay in full the amount received as interest. Petitioner contends, in short, that the Commissioner’s determination loses sight entirely of the fact that the right of the corporation to the retention of the dividends was wholly contingent upon the continued employment of the purchaser for the four-year period.

We agree with the Commissioner and the Board that the items forming the sum of twenty-six thousand odd dollars were income to petitioner.

The agreed statement of facts shows that the corporation sold the shares of stock and received an interest-bearing note for the balance of the purchase price and was entitled to claim and receive interest thereon, and the employee-stockholder was entitled to receive in cash or as a credit on his note the dividends declared by the corporation. The shares of stock to which each employee subscribed were actually issued, though held in the treasury of the company, and in the declaration of dividends were treated like the shares of any other stockholders. In these circumstances we are of opinion that the amount which the company received as interest on the notes held by it is no less income because at some future date conditions may arise, i. e., the employee may quit the employment or the employer may discharge him — as a result of which it would have to refund the whole or a part.

In Blum v. Helvering, 64 App.D.C. 78, 74 F.(2d) 482, 484, we said:

“ * * * ' It is now the settled law that if a taxpayer derives a profit without any restriction as to its disposition, he has received income and is required to return it in the year when received, even though it may still be claimed he is not entitled to retain the money and even though he may be ultimately adjudged liable to restore its equivalent.”

In the present case, as we have seen, the employee may prior to the four-year period leave the corporation and receive back all the money he has paid with interest, and the same result will occur if the employer discharged the employee, or if the employee dies. But under the rule these contingencies do not operate to postpone the taxability of income payments received in one year, to another. The transaction as we have outlined it was a sale of stock for cash and credit. That it might be frustrated before final delivery of the certificates does not so change its nature as that interest paid from year to year on the credit notes, is any the less income in the year in which paid. See North American Oil Consol, v. Burnet, 286 U.S. 417, 52 S.Ct. 613, 76 L.Ed. 1197.

2nd. The next question urged arises out of adjustments in connection with employee subscriptions which were canceled during 1930. The sum involved is $4,120.80 and represents, as considered by the Commissipner and the Board, reversions to the corporation of the dividends declared and paid or credited to the account of employees whose stock subscription contracts were canceled during 1930. The Board, treating of this item, said:

“The reverted dividends and interest on the cancelled stock subscriptions stand in no different position from those on the other subscriptions. The items of $4,120.80 and $146.38 constitute taxable income and the $1,305.87 and $2,981.67 items are deductible.”

The $146.38 item referred to by the Board represents interest charged against the several defaulting employee stockholders upon dividends which they received or were credited with and which under the agreement they were required to return to the corporation with interest upon cancellation of their contracts. Petitioner collected this item, and undoubtedly it constitutes taxable income. The $1,305.87 item is the aggregate amount of all the interest credited to this same class of stockholders on installment payments and by the contract was returnable to them on cancellation; and the $2,981.67 item is the aggregate of the amounts of interest charged against the several employee stockholders on the notes executed by them to the company for the *812 deferred purchase price of the stock. Petitioner’s bookkeeping theory of these items is impossible to follow, as is also Commissioner’s revised method, but it appears that as to the item, $1,305.87, petitioner debited this to profit and loss and deducted it in its income tax return .for 1930. The item of $2,981.67 petitioner debited to the general interest income account and charged it off in its income tax report in computing the total interest income shown on the return. The item of $146.38 petitioner reported as taxable income, and the $4,120.80 item was treated by the petitioner on its income tax return as nontaxable income. Respondent in the deficiency notice allowed the deduction of the two items $1,305.87 and $2,981.67, amounting together to $4,287.54, but on the other hand added the item of $4,120.80, which petitioner had reported as nontaxable income, and the item of $146.38 to petitioner’s taxable income — thereby increasing petitioner’s taxable income to the extent of $4,120.80; and the Board sustained this ruling.

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Bluebook (online)
89 F.2d 810, 67 App. D.C. 66, 19 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 601, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairmont-creamery-corporation-v-helvering-cadc-1937.