Forrester v. Commissioner

4 T.C. 907, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 210
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1945
DocketDocket No. 2634
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 4 T.C. 907 (Forrester 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
Forrester v. Commissioner, 4 T.C. 907, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 210 (tax 1945).

Opinion

OPINION.

Disney, Judge:

Most of the issues herein relate to the gain realized or loss sustained by petitioner upon the liquidation in December 1938 of the Forrester Co. In his return for 1938, he reported a loss of $39,597.06, computed as follows, of which one-half was claimed as a deduction:

Receipts_$107, 902, 56
Cost of stock:
150 shares acquired 12/7/22_$94, 530. 90
150 shares acquired 10/22/26- 52, 968. 72
- 147,499.62
Doss_ 39,597.06

The parties agree that the liquidating dividends received by petitioner in cash and other assets had a value of $107,902.56, as reported by petitioner in his return. In his determination of the deficiency, the respondent held that the stock acquired in 1922 had a cost basis of $49,554.02, an amount equal to petitioner’s cost of the Nace Co. stock exchanged therefor; that the shares acquired in 1926 had a basis of $25,515, an amount equal to the fair market value thereof; that the total cost should be reduced by $11,219.50 for a capital distribution in the December 1929 dividend; and that as the Forrester Co. had earnings and profits accumulated since February 28, 1913, of $81,197.86, and petitioner owned one-half of the stock of the corporation, of the resulting gain, an amount equal to 50 percent of the earnings, or $40,598.93, was taxable to petitioner as a dividend, petitioner having elected to receive the benefits of section 112 (b) (7.) of the Revenue Act of 1938. The adjustments made by the respondent in the cost basis of the stock are in issue.

Petitioner concedes upon brief that the 150 shares of stock acquired in 1922 had a cost basis of $49,554.02, as determined by the respondent.

Cost of 150 Shares Acquired October 22, 1926.

The parties are now in agreement that the basis for these shares is cost, but differ on how the cost should be determined. They have stipulated that the stock of the General Box Co. acquired in the same transaction had a cost basis of $22,365. In his petition, petitioner alleged that his cost was $48,235.85. Upon brief he contends that the stock had a cost of $53,382.35, computed as follows:

Cost of annuity for his father and mother_$39, 646. 50
Liability assumed for his father_ 36,100.85
75,747.35
Less cost of General Box Co. stock_ 22, 365.00
53,382.35

The difference of $5,146.50 in the cost bases is due to a present contention that the cost of the annuity, which constituted part of the consideration paid, was $39,646.50, an amount which petitioner would have had to pay a standard life insurance company for a like annuity, rather than $34,500, the amount actually paid to the annuitants under the contract prior to their deaths.

Upon brief, respondent contends that petitioner’s cost of the annuity contract was $34,500, or, if it was the greater amount of $39,-646.50, as contended by petitioner, then that adjustments reducing it to the lower amount are necessary on account of actualities, and he concedes that the cost basis for the stock is $48,235.85 ($34,500 plus $36,100.85, minus $22,365), if we agree with his position that petitioner is taxable on gain realized from the acquisition of the account in 1938 for less than its face amount. Respondent contends, in the alternative, for a cost of $18,680.31 by using as cost of the liability assumed its discount value of $6,545.31 on October 22, 1926, and that if we consider the transactions in December 1935 and 1938 respecting the account as a reduction of the purchase price of the stock, the cost' should be adjusted on the basis of the discount value of the account when the transactions occurred.

In Mastin v. Commissioner, 28 Fed. (2d) 748, affirming 7 B. T. A. 72, there was a transfer of stock in consideration of an agreement of the transferee to pay living expenses of the transferors for the remainder of their lives. It was held that no loss could be determined until the transaction was completed at the time of the deaths of the transferors and that the payments made by the transferee were capital expenditures for the stock. The facts in Citizens National Bank v. Commissioner, 122 Fed. (2d) 1011, are very similar to those here. There the bank in 1920 received title to a piece of improved real property for its agreement to pay the owner $200 a month fox-life. The bank sought to deduct the payments in 1936 as rent or a loss, or, in the alternative, a portion of the payments applicable to the grantor’s' interest in the building, which was demolished in 1923. One of the grounds advanced by the bank for an expense or a loss deduction of the entire payments was that its agreement constituted a contract to pay an annuity of a specified value and as the payments prior to 1936 exceeded such amount, the payments in 1936 constituted an expense or a loss to it and gain to the recipient. The court said:

* * * In the instant case the theory is purely fictitious and bears no actual relation to the transaction between the parties. The relation in this instance is entirely contractual. The bank bargained to purchase and Frank Baird to sell the right to the possession of the premises during the life of Baird. Nothing in the contract relates to the market value nor to Baird’s life expectancy. The parties were at liberty to pay and receive any price agreed upon whether more or less than market value. The amount agreed upon, although payable in installments contingent as to number during life, was a capital investment and is not deductible either as a business expense under § 23 (a) nor as a loss under § 23 (f) of the Act. * * *

Here, there is no indication that the parties bargained on the basis of what an annuity of $500 a month for the lives of petitioner’s parents would cost from a standard life insurance company. The arrangement was simply an agreement to pay the amount without regard to cost. Cf. May Rogers, 31 B. T. A. 994; Anna L. Raymond, 40 B. T. A. 244. As the survivor of petitioner’s father and mother died before the taxable year, we know petitioner’s capital outlay and need not apply a theoretical method to ascertain his entire cost. Petitioner elected to obligate himself to pay the amount rather than purchase an annuity contract to relieve him of the liability and is bound by his choice of possible plans. See Helvering v. Butterworth, 290 U. S. 365.

The case of Helvering v. American Chicle Co., 291 U. S. 426, does not support petitioner’s view. There the question was whether the purchase by the corporation of bonds, payment of which it had assumed in the purchase of all of. the assets of a corporation, at less than their face amount resulted in taxable gain, or required an adjustment of the cost of the assets. The court, from the meager facts, held that the difference was taxable as gain.

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Forrester v. Commissioner
4 T.C. 907 (U.S. Tax Court, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
4 T.C. 907, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forrester-v-commissioner-tax-1945.