Halpern v. United States

286 F. Supp. 255
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 5, 1968
DocketCiv. A. 10448
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 F. Supp. 255 (Halpern v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halpern v. United States, 286 F. Supp. 255 (N.D. Ga. 1968).

Opinion

EDENFIELD, Judge.

ORDER

The facts in this action by a taxpayer seeking a refund of taxes paid are fully set forth in a stipulation by the parties. There being no conflict between the evidence and the stipulation, the latter is hereby incorporated in this order.

For convenience, however, the substance of the facts as they appear to the court may be briefly stated. At the outset of the transactions in question, plaintiff owned an equity in the Verbena property of $32,000 and had $14,-000 in cash. Chennault owned an equity in the Wadley property of $15,000 and had $17,000 in cash. Kidd and Smith together had an equity in the Hollywood property worth $19,000. Bartlett had an equity in the Gordon property worth $77,000. At the end of the transactions, plaintiff’s assets of $46,000 had been transmuted into the Wadley equity ($15,000), the Hollywood equity ($19,-000), and $12,000 worth of equity in the Gordon property. Chennault’s $32,000 worth of assets had been wholly transmuted into the Verbena equity; Kidd and Smith had $19,000 in cash; Bartlett had $12,000 in cash, and plaintiff’s note for $65,000. (Plaintiff’s mortgage on the Verbena property of $38,700 and Chennault’s mortgage on the Wadley property of $25,800 had each been assumed by the new owners of the properties.)

The taxpayer contends that the series of transactions which brought about these changes in position was designed and executed so as to make the transaction a unitary one and thus a tax-free exchange (for Halpern) of like property within the scope of Internal Revenue Code of 1954 § 1031(a). 1 The Government, on the other hand, contends that the plaintiff exchanged his Verbena property solely for the Wadley property of Chennault plus a cash “boot” paid by Chennault, which the plaintiff promptly reinvested in the Hollywood and Gordon properties. If this latter contention is so, then plaintiff’s profits from the Verbena-Wadley transfer are taxable under the provision of § 1031(b) 2 as an exchange not wholly in kind.

*257 These profits are calculated as the decrease in mortgages payable by plaintiff ($13,000), plus the difference between the sum of the fair market value of the Wadley property ($40,000) and the cash received by plaintiff ($17,000), and plaintiff’s basis in the Verbena property of $48,000, or a total difference of $9,-000. The gain realized by plaintiff is thus approximately $22,000 ($13,000 + $9,000), which when taxed at 50%, results in the $10,740.67 in dispute here.

Both sides have cited and distinguished numerous cases attempting to show that the facts in this case are or are not similar to those in some other case before some other court. These cases have been carefully studied, and it would appear that regardless of the details of the transactions involved (which inevitably vary from casé to case), certain principles have been relatively consistently applied.

It is clear, for instance, that it is legally irrelevant that the taxpayer-plaintiff intended to devise a transaction which would bring him within the letter of the statute. Intent to avoid a tax is not determinative of no liability, just as a lack of intent cannot operate to create a liability if the taxpayer is otherwise entitled to favorable treatment. C. I. R. v. Duberstein, 363 U.S. 278, 286, 80 S. Ct. 1190, 4 L.Ed.2d 1218, 1225 (1960); Carlton v. United States, 385 F.2d 238 (5th Cir., 1966).

Equally irrelevant is plaintiff’s contention that plaintiff signed the contracts to purchase the Hollywood and Gordon properties as some sort of accommodation to Chennault, and in accord with the agreement between plaintiff and Chennault executed on May 6, 1961. That agreement did not require and at no time in the course of the transaction did Chennault acquire any legal interest in either of the two properties in which the profits realized by the plaintiff from the original two-party exchange were subsequently invested.. Chennault’s only role in these transactions, even by the terms of the May 6 agreement, was to “arrange to secure the conveyance to Halpern by warranty deed of the parcels of [Gordon Road and Hollywood Road] property.” The agreement provided further that the “conveyances to Halpern of the parcels [Wadley,. Gordon and Hollywood] shall be in consideration of the conveyance to Chennault by Halpern of the [Verbena] property. * * *” There is no evidence that Chennault “arranged” the transfer of the Gordon and Hollywood properties 3 or that these clauses are anything more than a transparent self-serving attempt to create some apparent link between Chennault and the properties Halpern intended to acquire.

Two more of plaintiff’s remaining contentions are likewise of no great weight. It is conceded by the Government that all of the real property involved in these transactions is of “like kind” as required by the statute. However, it is not enough that the property be of “like kind”, as required by § 1031(a). There must be an exchange of like property. Similarly, it is not controlling that the Government has treated part of the Verbena-Wadley exchange as an exchange of like property within the ambit of § 1031(b). The question is whether the Hollywood and Gordon properties were exchanged, rather than merely purchased by plaintiff. Only if plaintiff assumes the only point in ques *258 tion (whether the transaction was a single or severable one) does the Government’s treatment of the Verbena-Wadley exchange have any significance.

Therefore, the sole question remaining is really whether the transfer of the Hollywood and Gordon properties was an integral part of the Wadley-Verbena transfer or whether it was in fact a reinvestment of the profits resulting from the Wadley-Verbena transfer. Central to this question, in the court’s view of the problem, is the fact that at no time in either the planning or execution of the transaction did Chennault ever acquire even an equitable title to the Hollywood or Gordon properties. Nor were the contracts with the owners of the Hollywood and Gordon properties, which were separately negotiated by the plaintiff, dependent in any way on the consummation of the transaction with Chennault. The facts show that the transaction with Chennault was not at all dependent on the Hollywood and Gordon transactions, although the agreement purports to make it so. When the owner of the Gordon property discovered she could not deliver a warranty deed on June 1, 1961, the transfer with Chennault was consummated regardless and the Gordon property was finally transferred to Halpern in a completely separate title closing on September 19, 1961. There is no indication that Chennault or the owner of the Hollywood property made their part in the transaction contingent in any way upon Halpern’s being able to complete his deal with Mrs. Bartlett for the Gordon property. In all the cases relied on by plaintiff in which a third party’s property was received by the plaintiff, the title to that property first passed through the second party who was the primary exchange partner.

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Bluebook (online)
286 F. Supp. 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halpern-v-united-states-gand-1968.