Foster v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

96 F.2d 130, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 94, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3438
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1938
Docket3
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 96 F.2d 130 (Foster v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 96 F.2d 130, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 94, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3438 (2d Cir. 1938).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The result of this appeal is by agreement to determine the proper way to compute the income taxes for the year 1930 of four taxpayers, though only those of Emily Foster are immediately reviewed. Both she and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue appeal from an order of the Board of Tax Appeals fixing her tax *131 deficiency at $6,608.97, the taxpayer on the ground that the Board declined to allow sufficient deductions for losses on sales of stock, and the Commissioner on the ground that it allowed too much for losses on such sales. We think the Board was right and that its order should be affirmed.

The taxpayer is the widow of O. E. Foster of Buffalo, who died in 1928 leaving a substantial fortune. Helen Foster and Edna Foster Smith are their daughters, and Henry O. Smith, now deceased, was the husband of' Edna Foster Smith. The estate of O. E. Foster was distributed in kind between his widow Emily Foster and his two daughters, with the exception of two claims against the Bank of Montreal which were transferred to a corporation known as the Lonsdale Assets Corporation organized by the widow and daughters to hold the claims until they could be liquidated. The claims were transferred in consideration for the issue of its capital stock, which was owned 50 per cent, by the widow and 25 per cent, by each of the two daughters, their interests corresponding with the shares they had received in the O. E. Foster estate. Henry O. Smith became the president of the corporation and one Kuhlmann its secretary and treasurer. Neither of them owned any of its stock. It had no activity up to November 25, 1930, other than the holding of the two claims and the effort to realize on them. Prior to that date one of the claims was distributed in kind to the stockholders and the capital stock was reduced accordingly. The remaining claim was written off as worthless and the corporation was dissolved in the year 1932. Prior to November 25, 1930, it had never engaged in the buying and selling of securities. It had its office in the same place as two other corporations in which the taxpayer and her family were interested.

On November 25, 1930, Smith, acting for himself, his mother-in-law (the taxpayer), and his wife and sister-in-law, prepared a list of stocks which these four persons wished to sell in order to create losses for income tax purposes and advised Kuhlmann, the secretary and treasurer of the Assets Corporation, that it might purchase them. The corporation had no funds for the purpose, so a loan of $375,000 was obtained from the Marine Trust Company in which the taxpayer and her family had a - substantial stock interest through the intervention of Smith and Kuhlmann. The loan was made without any security, merely on the demand note of the corporation, and, while no time for payment was fixed, it was understood that the loan would be of short duration. The money-borrowed from the Trust Company was placed to the credit of the corporation which, on November 26, 1930, drew its checks to the four taxpayers ,in order to pay for their stocks at the current market price, and the various securities properly indorsed by the owners were transmitted to the Trust Company with instructions to have them transferred to the Assets Corporation. As a result of the distribution by the latter to the taxpayer and her daughters, they at once had large sums to the credit of their individual accounts with the Trust Company. These moneys they proposed to loan to the corporation go that it might repay its loan of $375,000 to the bank. In pursuance of this'plan the corporation, on November 26 and 28, 1930, issued its three demand notes aggregating $378,000 drawn respectively to the taxpayer and her two daughters; that is to say, to the taxpayer for $73,000, to Helen Foster for $110,000, and to Edna Foster Smith for $195,000. The taxpayer and her two daughters drew checks for amounts corresponding with these notes to the order of the Assets Corporation, and the latter, out of the proceeds, paid off its indebtedness to the Trust Company on December 1, 1930. Thus, the stocks owned by the taxpayer, her two daughters and son-in-law on November 25, 1930, had been placed in the name of a corporation which the mother and daughters owned and finally the taxpayer and her daughters not only retained stock control of the corporation but held its demand notes in amounts sufficient to cover the value of the stocks transferred.

Beginning January 8, 1931, and ending March 10, 1931, the corporation assigned to the four individuals who had made the transfers of their stock to it all of the securities which had been assigned to it by them in November, 1930. They at the same times drew their individual checks to it for amounts representing the current market value of the stocks being transferred. By means of these reassignments Helen Foster and Henry O. Smith got back the same number of shares of various companies which they had transferred in November, 1930. Helen Foster and Henry *132 O. Smith also purchased certain of the shares of stock which the taxpayer and Edna Foster Smith had transferred to the Assets Corporation in that month, Henry O. Smith having been furnished most of .the money required to make the purchases in January, February, and March 1931 by his wife. The individual checks given to the corporation in exchange for the transfer of the stocks were deposited to its credit and the proceeds used by it to pay off, the three demand notes held by the taxpayer and her two daughters. The result of the foregoing transactions was that Helen Foster and Henry O. Smith, early in 1931, got back all the stocks which they had transferred in November, 1930, while the taxpayer and Edna Foster Smith got back only part of theirs. .

The Board concluded that the taxpayer and the other three members of her family were not entitled to deduct losses in case of stocks corresponding with those transferred to the Assets Corporation to the extent that they were reacquired in the early part of 1931 by the identical persons who had held them in November, 1930. But the Board allowed deductions to the extent that stocks sold in November, 1930, were not reacquired by the persons who sold them but were transferred to the other members of the family. We think both rulings were right.

While the' Board found that “there was no agreement between the parties who transferred the stocks in 1930 to the corporation, and the corporation that the stocks would be subsequently reacquired,” yet it was implicit in the decision of the Board that to the extent that the stocks transferred in November, 1930, were reacquired by the very persons who made the transfers, the reacquisition was the result of an original plan to reacquire, for it was found that such stocks “were not sold bona fide and as to these stocks no deductible losses were sustained.”

The refusal to allow the deductions in case of the stocks transferred by the taxpayer in November, 1930, and repurchased by her early in 1931, was justified by our decision in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Dyer, 2 Cir., 74 F.2d 685, 686. There each of seven persons, on November 30, 1927, sold certain stocks which they held to a company called Elan-co which they controlled, and in January, 1928, repurchased a like number and kind of'stocks at an advance of twenty cents per share.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F.2d 130, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 94, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1938.