Hanna v. Commissioner

37 T.C. 63, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 52
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1961
DocketDocket No. 85667
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 T.C. 63 (Hanna 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
Hanna v. Commissioner, 37 T.C. 63, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 52 (tax 1961).

Opinions

opinion.

Testjens, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in income tax in the amount of $11,279.78 for the year 1958. The sole issue presented is whether a loss resulting from the redemption of stock by a corporation from a decedent’s estate is deductible by the estate when all the stock of the corporation is owned by the estate and its beneficiaries who are sisters.

The National City Bank of Cleveland is the duly appointed, qualified, and acting executor of the estate of Buth Hanna, deceased, under the appointment of the Probate Court of Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Its principal office is in Cleveland, Ohio, and it filed a fiduciary income tax return for 1958 with the director of internal revenue at Cleveland.

Buth Hanna died testate on July 4,1955, and included in her gross estate were 2,500 shares of the Leader Building Company, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Leader. .The Commissioner upon audit of the Federal estate tax return filed by petitioner determined that the value of the stock of Leader was $325 per share or an aggregate value of $812,500. The total value of the gross estate for estate tax purposes was $840,860.37.

At the time of decedent’s death, Leader had 10,000 shares outstanding, which were owned as follows:

Shares
Buth Hanna_ 2, 500
The National City Bank of Cleveland as Trustee for Natalie Hanna Marvin _ 2,605
The National City Bank of Cleveland as Trustee for Charlotte Hanna Royce _ 2,180
The National City Bank of Cleveland as Trustee for Mary Hanna Ross_ 2,715
Total_10, 000

Natalie Hanna Marvin, Charlotte Hanna Boyce, and Mary Hanna Boss were sisters of the decedent and survived the decedent. The shares owned by the National City Bank of Cleveland were held by it as trustee under separate, revocable trust agreements entered into with the bank by each of the sisters. The terms of the trust agreements are not here material.

The sisters were the legatees in equal shares of decedent’s residuary estate located or deposited in the United States, including all decedent’s stock in Leader.

On April 12, 1945, decedent and her three sisters, the shareholders of Leader, entered into a buy-sell agreement which was designated by the parties as a “Depositary Agreement.” The pertinent provisions of this agreement are as follows:

3. The formula price * * * the price at which the Stockholders shall have rights and options hereunder to purchase, shall be an amount equal to the average net earnings before depreciation multiplied by eleven and said total sum divided by the number of shares outstanding. The figures for computing the foregoing formula shall he taken from the last five annual audited Reports of The Leader Building Company available to the Depositary immediately preceding the date of the receipt by the Depositary of the notice of the Stockholder of a desire to sell or dispose of a given number of shares.

The parties amended the Depositary Agreement by an instrument dated January 7,1947.

By instrument under date November 24, 1954, the duration of the Depositary Agreement was extended for a term of 5 years until the second Monday of March 1960.

Petitioner was in need of cash to pay the Federal estate taxes and the administration expenses of the estate, which cash could be obtained only by sale or other disposition of the Leader shares held by petitioner. The other parties to the Depositary Agreement did not exercise their option rights to purchase the shares to be sold or disposed of by petitioner. And pursuant to the Depositary Agreement, Leader then redeemed its shares as follows:

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The redemption price per share paid by Leader in the foregoing redemptions was determined pursuant to the formula in the Depositary Agreement.

Petitioner in the fiduciary income tax return claimed losses on the redemption of the shares by Leader as follows:

Tear Amount
1956 _$43,951.50
1957 _ 53,335.25
1958 _ 713.30

Petitioner, on or about July 23, 1958, received $346,466.25 as a distribution in complete liquidation of Leader, which distribution was received in connection with the 897 shares still held by petitioner at that time. The liquidation distribution resulted in a long-term capital gain of $54,941.25.

With respect to the $43,951.50 claimed by petitioner in 1956, the amount of $42,951.50 was treated as a capital loss carryover to 1958. The loss of $53,335.25 sustained in 1957 was also treated as a capital loss carryover to 1958. In its fiduciary income tax return for 1958, petitioner applied the aggregate carryovers of $96,286.75 plus the $713.30 loss incurred in the redemption in 1958 to eliminate the capital gain of $54,941.25.

The Commissioner disallowed the capital loss carryover of $96,-286.75 and the capital loss of $713.30 “for the reason that the loss and the loss carryover arose from transactions between related parties.”

The shares of Leader were redeemed in the years 1956, 1957, and 1958 pursuant to the provisions of section 303, I.E.C. 1954, relating to distributions in redemption of stock to pay death taxes, and funeral and administration expenses. The question raised in the instant case is whether the losses arising from these redemptions were properly disallowed by the Commissioner.

The Commissioner disallowed the losses under section 267, I.E.C. 1954,1 contending that the losses were incurred from sales or exchanges between an individual and a corporation more than 50 percent in value of tlie outstanding stock of which was owned by or for such individual within the meaning of section 267 (b) (2). As a basis for this conclusion, the Commissioner says that under 267(c)(1), the stock in Leader owned by petitioner is considered as 'being owned proportionately by the three beneficiaries and submits that we are authorized under 267(c) (1) to look through the estate and find that the sale was not made by the estate but was actually between the three beneficiaries and Leader, citing Estate of Charles C. Ingalls, 45 B.T.A. 787 (1941), affd. 132 F. 2d 862 (C.A. 6, 1943).

In Estate of Charles C. Ingalls, supra, the estate owned more than 50 percent of the outstanding stock of the A corporation and it sold stock of the B corporation to the A corporation at a loss. The Commissioner determined that the loss deduction was not allowable under the provisions of section 24(b)(1) and (2), I.B..C. 1939.2 In the course of our opinion allowing the deduction we said:

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Bluebook (online)
37 T.C. 63, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanna-v-commissioner-tax-1961.