Harbor Building Trust v. Commissioner

16 T.C. 1321
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 12, 1951
DocketDocket No. 20077
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 T.C. 1321 (Harbor Building Trust 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
Harbor Building Trust v. Commissioner, 16 T.C. 1321 (tax 1951).

Opinion

opinion. .

Raum, Judge:

1. Petitioner acquired the so-called Harbor property in 1939, and the first issue involves its basis for depreciation. Normally, depreciation deductions are based upon cost. Sections 113,. 114, Internal Revenue Code. However, petitioner seeks to use a considerably higher basis, namely, the basis which the property had in the hands of Harbor Trust Incorporated, and its claim is founded on the contention that it acquired the property in a transaction governed by section 112 (b (10) of the Code.1

If section 112 (b) (10) were applicable, then, pursuant to section 113 (a) (22), the basis in the hands of petitioner would be “the same as it would be in the hands of the corporation whose property was so-acquired * * The applicable provisions are reproduced in full in the margin.2

We think that sections 112 (b) (10) and 113 (a) (22) do not authorize petitioner to take over the basis of Harbor Trust Incorporated. Petitioner did not acquire the property from Harbor Trust Incorporated, and therefore could not inherit the latter’s basis under those sections.

There is no disagreement as to the basic facts concerning the history of the Harbor property. Harbor Trust Incorporated constructed a building, on land owned by it, at a cost of $1,664,660.50. It placed three mortgages on the land and building, the first and senior of these mortgages being executed as> security for a bond issue made to finance the cost of construction. As a result of a default under the third mortgage, the property was sold at a foreclosure sale in April 1928, and a foreclosure deed was given to the purchaser, a nominee of the third mortgagee. The property thereupon passed into new ownership, subject to the two prior mortgages, and Harbor Trust Incorporated lost all right or interest therein. Cf. Mt. Holyoke Realty Corp. v. Holyoke Realty Corp., 284 Mass. 100, 106, 187, N. E. 227, 230.

The new owner or his successors in interest, of whom there were several, and all of whom also acted for the former third mortgagee, administered the property until August 1930. At that time there had been a default in payments required to be made under the first mortgage, and the trustees under that mortgage, pursuant to its terms, entered the premises for the purpose of effecting a foreclosure. The property remained, from that time until about February 16,1939, under the control of and was managed by the trustees under the first mortgage. On the latter date, the property was sold to petitioner pursuant to a court decree foreclosing the first mortgage. Petitioner had been organized in accordance with a plan submitted to and approved by the court; its stock had been issued solely for first mortgage bonds; and it bought the Harbor property at the foreclosure sale for $500,000, making payment primarily by applying the first mortgage bonds, at a specified rate, and partly in cash.

These facts plainly show that, between the time Harbor Trust Incorporated owned the property and the time petitioner acquired it, there had been interposed a third and separate set of ownership interests, representing the holder of the old third mortgage. The ■original corporation had ceased to own the property by the time petitioner bought it. Indeed, it had long ceased to exist, having been dissolved in 1932. Whether or not the 1939 transfer to petitioner were otherwise a transaction not then subject to tax, as petitioner contends, it did not acquire the property from Harbor Trust Incorporated, or from anyone representing that corporation, and therefore did not become entitled to take over the latter’s basis. Cf. Bondholders Committee, Marlborough Investment Co. First Mortgage Bonds v. Commissioner, 315 U. S. 189; Adwood Corporation, 15 T. C. 148.

Of course, section 112 (b) (10) does not require that the old corporation be the transferor in a technical sense; it may well be sufficient if the transfer is made by some intermediary, provided that the separate steps are integrated parts of a single plan (cf. Helvering v. Alabama Asphaltic Limestone Co., 315 U. S. 179, 184-185), and this is recognized by the Commissioner’s regulations. See Regulations 111, section 29.112 (b) (10)-1. The difficulty here is that there is no nexus whatever between the original corporation, whose basis petitioner wishes to inherit, and the 1939 transfer.

Harbor Trust Incorporated had long since passed out of the picture; it was not even a party to the proceedings, nor could it have been, since it had been dissolved some six or seven years earlier. The 1939 proceedings were in no sense intended to reorganize Harbor Trust Incorporated or to foreclose a mortgage on its property. We have here no “intermediate procedural devices,” such as were noted in the Alabama Asphaltic Limestone Co. case.3 By reason of the 1928 foreclosure sale, brought about by the third mortgagee, all of the interest of Harbor Trust Incorporated in the property was completely wiped out. Thereafter, for some 27 months, until the first mortgage trustees made entry upon the property, the property was in the hands of the purchaser at the foreclosure sale or his successors. Default on the first mortgage bonds occurred for the first time in 1930.

Petitioner appears to contend that in reality the equity in the Harbor property was owned by the first mortgage bondholders as far back as the time when the third mortgagee foreclosed and bought the property in 1928, and that therefore there has been no break in the chain of ownership between the corporation and petitioner. Its theory would appear to be that declared in Helvering v. Alabama Asphaltic Limestone Co., 315 U. S. 179, 183-184, and Helvering v. Cement Investors, Inc., 316 U. S. 527, 532, which recognized that there may be circumstances in which creditors may be considered to have displaced the stockholders as the real owners of the corporate enterprise. To sustain equitable ownership in the first mortgage bondholders at some particular time under the principle of those cases, however, petitioner must establish at the very least that the debtor was insolvent as to them at the time in question. It has not done so. The stipulation between the parties that the corporation was “insolvent” in 1928 is insufficient for this purpose, since it leaves unresolved whether at that time the insolvency pertained only to general creditors, or to the third mortgage or the second mortgage, or whether it was so serious as to affect rights under the first mortgage as well. There was no evidence that prior to 1930, when there was a failure to make certain payments required under the first mortgage, there had been any default in the financial obligations imposed by that mortgage, or that the first mortgage bondholders or their trustees considered themselves entitled for any reason to foreclose under the mortgage or acquire control of the property. No proof was made of any attempt to exercise or enforce any rights of the first mortgage bondholders against the Harbor property prior to August 6, 1930, when the trustees entered the premises for the purpose of foreclosure.

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Related

Bankhead Hotel, Inc. v. Davis
112 F. Supp. 180 (N.D. Alabama, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 T.C. 1321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbor-building-trust-v-commissioner-tax-1951.