Hawkinson v. Commissioner

23 T.C. 933, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 236
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1955
DocketDocket No. 47392
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 T.C. 933 (Hawkinson 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
Hawkinson v. Commissioner, 23 T.C. 933, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 236 (tax 1955).

Opinion

OPINION.

Tietjuns, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency of $41,377.24 in income tax for the year 1948.

Petitioners assign error in respondent’s determination that the discharge of an indebtedness of Laura W. Hawkinson (hereafter called petitioner) to the Whitney Chain. & Mfg. Company (hereafter called Whitney Chain) was taxable as a dividend. A deduction with respect to medical expenses depends upon resolution of the main issue.

The facts have been stipulated and the stipulation is adopted and included herein by reference.

Petitioners are husband and wife. They filed their return for 1948 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Connecticut.

Whitney Chain was incorporated in 1906 under the laws of Connecticut and since that time has maintained its plant and home office in Hartford, Connecticut. Its authorized capital stock from incorporation up to and including February 2, 1948, was 15,000 shares of common stock of a par value of $100 per share.

On February 2,1948, and prior thereto, the capital stock of Whitney Chain was owned and held as follows (the individuals named below being sometimes hereinafter referred to collectively as the Whitney family) :

Shares
Nellie Hurlburt Whitney_ 3, 817
Laura Whitney Hawkinson- 2,293
Dorothy Whitney Stevens- 2,295
Winthrop H. Whitney- 751
Lawrence A. Whitney_ 2,145
Treasury shares_ 3,693
Directors’ qualifying shares_ 6
Total _15,000

Nellie Hurlburt Whitney is the widow of Clarence E. Whitney, the founder of Whitney Chain. Laura Whitney Hawkinson, Dorothy Whitney Stevens, Winthrop H. Whitney, and Lawrence A. Whitney are children of Clarence E. Whitney. The treasury stock was purchased by Whitney Chain for cash from Nettie Whitney Opdyke, sister of Clarence E. Whitney, in 1936.

The Hanson Tap and Gauge Company (hereafter called Hanson Tap and Gauge) was a corporation incorporated in 1920 under the laws of the State of Connecticut and had its plant and home office in Hartford, Connecticut. Hanson Tap and Gauge had only one class of stock, namely common stock.

The Hanson-Whitney Machine Company (hereafter called Hanson-Whitney) was incorporated in 1919 under the laws of Connecticut and since that time has had its plant and home office in Hartford, Connecticut, on property adjoining that of Whitney Chain. Its original authorized capital stock was 1,000 shares. In 1939 a stock dividend was issued of 6 shares of common on each outstanding share thus increasing its outstanding shares of common stock to 7,000.

Hanson-'Whitney’s outstanding stock at February 2,1948, and prior thereto was owned and held as follows:

Whitney Chain_5,246
Einar A. Hanson_ 879
Svea H. Hanson_ 871
Directors’ qualifying shares_ 4
Total _7, 000

On February 2, 1948, and prior thereto, the officers and directors of Whitney Chain and Hanson-Whitney and their ownership of stock of said corporation were as follows:

Whitney Chain
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Hanson-WMtney
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Whitney Chain and Hanson-Whitney, except for common officers and directors, were separate organizations. Both corporations were engaged in the manufacture and sale of metal products.

Hanson-Whitney, as originally constituted, was organized by Clarence E. Whitney and B. M. W. Hanson. Clarence E. Whitney then, and until his death in 1933, was president and principal stockholder of Whitney Chain.

Clarence E. Whitney died on January 22, 1933, at which time he owned directly or indirectly substantial interests in Whitney Chain, Hanson-Whitney, and Hanson Tap and Gauge.

In 1933, after Clarence E. Whitney’s death, Hanson-Whitney and Hanson Tap and Gauge were unable to meet their debts which were chiefly to the Estate of B. M. W. Hanson, to Whitney Chain, and to Clarence E. Whitney. An arrangement was worked out whereby the two corporations were merged to become known as The Hanson-Whitney Machine Company (Hanson-Whitney) and the stock of Hanson-'Whitney was issued 75 per cent to Whitney Chain and 25 per cent to Hanson’s heirs. This distribution of the stock was roughly in proportion to the debts and interest owed as aforesaid by Hanson-Whitney and Hanson Tap and Gauge. The result of this merger was that Whitney Chain received 750 shares out of 1,000 shares of the stock issued by Hanson-Whitney and the stock interests of Clarence E. Whitney in Hanson-Whitney and Hanson Tap and Gauge were extinguished. For bookkeeping purposes, the eliminated debts amounting to approximately $587,000 were set up as capital surplus of Hanson-Whitney.

At his death, Clarence E. Whitney was indebted to Whitney Chain. During the course of administration his estate borrowed funds from Whitney Chain. The indebtedness owing to Whitney Chain by the estate at the time it was closed was as follows:

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As part of the settlement of the Estate of Clarence E. Whitney, a novation was effected by an agreement dated December 1938 between the estate, the heirs, and Whitney Chain whereby Whitney Chain acquiesced in the heirs’ pro rata assumption of the estate’s indebtedness to it upon the transfer to the heirs by the estate of the total amount of stock held by the estate. By agreement dated as of March 29, 1939, the heirs of Clarence E. Whitney readjusted their proportionate stock ownership and share of indebtedness. After such adjustment and until February 2, 1948, petitioner owned 2,293 shares of the stock of Whitney Chain. After such adjustment her assumed indebtedness was $56,584. In addition, she had previously borrowed from Whitney Chain $13,500. As of February 2, 1948, petitioner’s indebtedness had been reduced to $67,500.

The value of the stock of Whitney Chain at the time of Clarence E. Whitney’s death was $120 per share.

On December 8,1947, all of the shareholders of Whitney Chain and all of the shareholders of Hanson-Whitney entered into an agreement to vote their shares in favor of the consolidation of the two corporations in accordance with a plan of statutory consolidation.' The agreement was conditioned, inter alia, on the part of Svea A. Hanson and Einar A. Hanson, holders of 25 per cent of the stock of Hanson-Whitney, on the agreement of the holders of the stock of Whitney Chain that their (the Whitney family’s) indebtedness to Whitney Chain be canceled.

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Related

Berghash v. Commissioner
43 T.C. 743 (U.S. Tax Court, 1965)
Kniffen v. Commissioner
39 T.C. 553 (U.S. Tax Court, 1962)
Hawkinson v. Commissioner
23 T.C. 933 (U.S. Tax Court, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 T.C. 933, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkinson-v-commissioner-tax-1955.