Funkhouser v. Commissioner

44 T.C. 178, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 13, 1965
DocketDocket No. 2808-63
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 44 T.C. 178 (Funkhouser 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
Funkhouser v. Commissioner, 44 T.C. 178, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90 (tax 1965).

Opinion

OPINION

Raum, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in income tax in the amount of $30,344.34 against E. N. Funkhouser and Nellie S. Funkhouser, husband and wife, for their calendar year 1959. They resided in Hagerstown, Md., and had filed joint returns with the district director at Baltimore. The wife has since died, and the husband appears here as petitioner both in his own right and as representative of his wife’s estate. The only issue presently requiring an adjudication by this Court is whether two distributions to petitioner in 1959 totaling $56,761.13 from an employee pension trust are to be treated as ordinary income or capital gain. All of the facts have been stipulated.

Petitioner was a director and a principal executive officer of E. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., and was employed by it from the date on which it was organized in 1929 until October 31, 1958, when it ceased to exist by reason of its merger with the Funkhouser Co. as hereinafter more fully explained. He was also a director and a principal executive officer of the Funkhouser Co., and was employed by it from the date on which it was organized in 1927 until January 5,1959. He held the positions of vice president and treasurer of both corporations until January 10, 1947, and thereafter held the position of president of both corporations, during which times he devoted his full time to their affairs.

The Funkhouser Co. was organized under the laws of the State of Maryland on October 6, 1927. Its business consisted primarily of producing rock granules which are used in the manufacture of asphalt roofing and for other purposes. E. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., was incorporated under the laws of the State of Maryland on January 2, 1929. Its business consisted principally of the sale of products manufactured by the Funkhouser Co. It succeeded to the business which had previously been conducted by the petitioner and E. J. Funkhouser as copartners trading as E. J. Funkhouser & Co.

On October 1, 1958, the outstanding stock of both corporations was owned or controlled, directly or indirectly, largely by petitioner and E. J. Funkhouser together with members of their respective families.

On October 3,1958, the Funkhouser Co. and E. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., entered into an agreement with the Euberoid Co. (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Euberoid), a New Jersey corporation, providing for the acquisition by Euberoid of all of the assets of the Funk-houser Co. and E. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., in exchange for shares of stock of Euberoid, an assumption of liabilities, and a cash payment to be used to satisfy certain liabilities for taxes. Euberoid was then engaged principally in the manufacture of building materials, such as asphalt roofing, gypsum, and asbestos products, and was one of the principal customers of E. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc.

As a first step in carrying out the foregoing plan under the agreement of October 3,1958, E. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., was merged into the Funkhouser Co. on October 31, 1958. Thereafter, on November 12,1958, tlie Funkhouser Co. and Ruberoid entered into an amendment to the agreement of October 3, 1958, providing for the elimination of any cash payment by Ruberoid to the Funkhouser Co. and for the retention by the Funkhouser Co. of sufficient cash to pay its estimated tax liabilities. On December 24, 1958, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, upon request, issued a ruling letter to the Funkhouser Co. and R. J. Funkhouser Co., Inc., to the effect that the merger of the two Funkhouser corporations and the proposed transfer of assets of the surviving corporation to Ruberoid constituted tax-free reorganizations.

The transfer of assets by the Funkhouser Co. to Ruberoid and the assumption of the liabilities of the Funkhouser Co. by Ruberoid in fact occurred on January 5, 1959. Thereafter, Ruberoid directly operated the business theretofore conducted by the Funkhouser Co.

Pursuant to the agreement of October 3, 1958, the Funkhouser Co. amended its certificate of incorporation on January 5,1959, to change its name to “E. N. Funkhouser & Co., Inc.” Also, in accordance with that agreement, Ruberoid, on or about February 15, 1959, issued 120,-098 shares of its capital stock to E. N. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., in exchange for the assets transferred to it; 198 shares were sold and the proceeds used to defray expenses. On March 9, 1959, the remaining 119,900 shares were distributed pro rata to the holders of the capital stock of E. 1ST. Funkhouser & Co., Inc. Since that time E. 1ST. Funk-houser & Co., Inc., has been dormant and has not conducted any business, although it has not been formally dissolved.

On December 20, 1946, R. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., and the Funkhouser Co. each entered into a separate pension trust agreement with Omer T. Kaylor as trustee under which each established a noncontributory pension plan and trust for the benefit of its full-time salaried employees. Each such pension trust agreement was amended from time to time, and as so amended satisfied the requirements of section 165(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 and section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, at all times material hereto.

Benefits under such pension trust agreements were provided through income continuation policies acquired by the trustee from the Equitable Life Insurance Co. of Iowa. Benefits were payable to a participating employee or his beneficiary in the event of the employee’s death, retirement, or other termination of employment with the “Corporation,” as that term is defined in the respective pension trust agreements, or upon termination of the plan. Petitioner was an eligible employee under each such pension trust agreement and the trustee obtained from Equitable, policy No. A59352 for his benefit under the pension trust agreement of R. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., and policy No. A59351 for his benefit under the pension trust agreement of the Funkhouser Co. Petitioner became 65 years of age in 1956; subsequent thereto, retirement benefits otherwise payable to him under the pension trust agreements were postponed in accordance with the terms of those agreements, and no contributions were thereafter made in behalf of the petitioner by either “Corporation.”

Each of the pension trust agreements provided that in the event the “Corporation” should be dissolved or merged into or with another corporation which did not assume the obligation of the pension trust, the pension trust would automatically terminate. In connection with the merger of R. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., into the Funkhouser Co., these corporations entered into an agreement dated October 31, 1958, providing that upon the merger becoming effective, the obligations of F. J. Funkhouser & Co., Inc., under its pension trust agreement would be assumed by the Funkhouser Co. and such pension trust would be consolidated into and become a part of the pension trust of the Funkhouser Co. Omer T. Kaylor, as trustee under both such pension trust agreements, consented to such agreement dated October 31, 1958, and agreed to be bound by its provisions.

On December 19,1958, the Funkhouser Co. and the trustee executed amendments to the pension trust agreement of the Funkhouser Co. The purpose of the amendments was to provide for the contemplated assumption by Ruberoid of the obligations of the Funkhouser Co.

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Funkhouser v. Commissioner
44 T.C. 178 (U.S. Tax Court, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 T.C. 178, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/funkhouser-v-commissioner-tax-1965.