OPINION.
SteRnhagen:
The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioner’s individual income tax of $11,428.86 for 1981 and $22,633.78 for 1932. Two questions of law require decision. The facts are stipulated, but it is not necessary to set forth the entire stipulation.
[886]*886The petitioner’s transactions here in question were in two different stocks, but a detailed statement of the facts of one may be taken as typical of the other. As to one, suffice it to say, that petitioner sold, on November 24, 1931, 2,000 shares of Pennroad Corporation stock, after having held them for more than two years; on the next day he bought 2,000 shares of Pennroad stock, which he in turn sold two days later, with a resulting loss, the character of which is now questioned.
As for the other transaction, the petitioner, on October 30, 1931, owned 300 shares of class A stock of the American Cyanamid Co. Of these, 278 shares had been acquired more than two years before and were therefore “capital assets” as defined by the Revenue Act of 1928, section 101 (c) (8).1 Leaving aside antecedent details not necessary for a consideration of the matter to be decided, the statutory cost of the 300 shares was $24,828.78. On October 30, 1931, petitioner sold the 300 shares at a price of $4,535 per share, and received $1,360.50, thus sustaining a loss of $23,468.28 upon the entire 300 shares. As to so much of this loss as was properly apportionable to the 278 shares which had been owned more than two years, the loss was “a capital loss” as defined in section 101 (c) (2).1 Twenty [887]*887days later, on November 19,1931, petitioner bought 278 class A shares for $1,430.35 and thereby, in view of section 118, Eevenue Act of 1928,2 precluded the deduction of a proportionate part of the loss sustained by the sale of October 30. On November 27, he sold for $1,136.08 the 278 shares which he had acquired on November 19; and the basis for determining the gain or loss upon this sale was fixed by section 113 (a) (11), Eevenue Act of 1928,3 as the sum of the basis which would have been applicable to the original 278 shares plus the difference between the October 30 sale price and the higher November 19 purchase price.
The Commissioner treated the shares sold on November 27 as if they had been held for more than two years, and the loss from their sale as if it were a statutory “capital loss” which became a statutory “capital deduction” as defined in section 101 (c) (3).1 The taxpayer insists that the property sold on November 27 was not in fact held for more than two years and was therefore not a capital asset but was squarely within the statutory definition of “ordinary deduction” found in section 101 (c) (4).1 He urges that the shares sold on November 27 may not be treated either as the shares purchased more than two years earlier or as taking the place of such shares.
There can be no doubt that, taken literally, the provisions of the Eevenue Act of 1928 support the taxpayer’s contention. The shares sold on November 27 had in fact been owned only since the pre[888]*888ceding November 19, a period of eight days. During the twenty days from October 30 to November 19, he owned no Cyanamid shares, had no right to any, and knew not how the market price might vary in the event that he should purchase any. Sttrictly, therefore, he on October 30 sold and finally disposed of a “capital asset” and thereafter, by an entirely separate transaction, bought and sold a non-capital asset. There is nothing either in the general law or in the special statutory definitions which gainsays this.
Section 118, however, without changing the ordinary concept of loss and without denying its recognition, denies deduction of the loss sustained in the earlier sale. This is only because of the subsequent purchase. There is express recognition that the earlier loss has been sustained. The section has the narrow purpose of preventing a simple and transparent tax device by refusing the deduction, or, as the House Committee expressed it, “to prevent evasion of the tax through the medium of wash sales.”4 Unlike many other special statutory provisions, such as the reorganization provisions and the tax-free exchange provisions, it does not attempt to set up a new statutory scheme of “recognizing” or refusing recognition for tax pur[889]*889poses of described transactions and of their normally resulting gains or losses. For its own purpose, it simply denies a deduction.5
The Commissioner’s contention is, in effect, that section 113, which substitutes in respect of stock purchased after a so-called “wash sale” the base of the original shares for the base of the new shares (with an adjustment not necessary to consider here), must be read as identifying the new shares for all purposes with the original shares held. This construction, as already suggested, is one which is opposed to the literal meaning of the words describing “capital assets”, and may be sustained, if at all, only as a necessary means of promoting the legislative .purpose lying back of the capital gain provisions. The fear is that a literal interpretation would mar the harmony and symmetry of the statute.
Section 202 (d) (3) of the Revenue Act of 1921 is the prototype of section 113 (a) (11), and, to the extent that it provides that the later property involved in a wash sale should take the place of the earlier, it is limited “for the purposes of this section” 6 to the base to be used and therefore negates any broader implication which, might be drawn from the more general language of the Congressional reports.7
That the later property is not to be identified with the earlier, even though section 118 prohibits deduction of the earlier loss, was the controlling reason for the Commissioner’s refusal to apply the first in, first out rule in Richard Coulter, 32 B. T. A. 617. In that case it was said:
* * * ¶¾6 fallacy, however, of the petitioner’s position is in the idea that the wash sale disallowance connotes an identity in the shares sold and those purchased within the preceding 80 days. The wash sale statute is not concerned with the identity of the shares sold, hut only provides categorically that the deduction shall be disallowed if any substantially identical property is acquired within SO days. For the purpose of the wash sale provision, therefore, it is only necessary that the Commissioner should disallow so much [890]*890of tlie loss as is proportionately applicable to 200 shares. In determining the measure of the loss sustained on the sale of the 500 shares on December 18, the first in, first out rule is no less applicable because part of the loss is precluded from deduction under the wash sale statute.
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OPINION.
SteRnhagen:
The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioner’s individual income tax of $11,428.86 for 1981 and $22,633.78 for 1932. Two questions of law require decision. The facts are stipulated, but it is not necessary to set forth the entire stipulation.
[886]*886The petitioner’s transactions here in question were in two different stocks, but a detailed statement of the facts of one may be taken as typical of the other. As to one, suffice it to say, that petitioner sold, on November 24, 1931, 2,000 shares of Pennroad Corporation stock, after having held them for more than two years; on the next day he bought 2,000 shares of Pennroad stock, which he in turn sold two days later, with a resulting loss, the character of which is now questioned.
As for the other transaction, the petitioner, on October 30, 1931, owned 300 shares of class A stock of the American Cyanamid Co. Of these, 278 shares had been acquired more than two years before and were therefore “capital assets” as defined by the Revenue Act of 1928, section 101 (c) (8).1 Leaving aside antecedent details not necessary for a consideration of the matter to be decided, the statutory cost of the 300 shares was $24,828.78. On October 30, 1931, petitioner sold the 300 shares at a price of $4,535 per share, and received $1,360.50, thus sustaining a loss of $23,468.28 upon the entire 300 shares. As to so much of this loss as was properly apportionable to the 278 shares which had been owned more than two years, the loss was “a capital loss” as defined in section 101 (c) (2).1 Twenty [887]*887days later, on November 19,1931, petitioner bought 278 class A shares for $1,430.35 and thereby, in view of section 118, Eevenue Act of 1928,2 precluded the deduction of a proportionate part of the loss sustained by the sale of October 30. On November 27, he sold for $1,136.08 the 278 shares which he had acquired on November 19; and the basis for determining the gain or loss upon this sale was fixed by section 113 (a) (11), Eevenue Act of 1928,3 as the sum of the basis which would have been applicable to the original 278 shares plus the difference between the October 30 sale price and the higher November 19 purchase price.
The Commissioner treated the shares sold on November 27 as if they had been held for more than two years, and the loss from their sale as if it were a statutory “capital loss” which became a statutory “capital deduction” as defined in section 101 (c) (3).1 The taxpayer insists that the property sold on November 27 was not in fact held for more than two years and was therefore not a capital asset but was squarely within the statutory definition of “ordinary deduction” found in section 101 (c) (4).1 He urges that the shares sold on November 27 may not be treated either as the shares purchased more than two years earlier or as taking the place of such shares.
There can be no doubt that, taken literally, the provisions of the Eevenue Act of 1928 support the taxpayer’s contention. The shares sold on November 27 had in fact been owned only since the pre[888]*888ceding November 19, a period of eight days. During the twenty days from October 30 to November 19, he owned no Cyanamid shares, had no right to any, and knew not how the market price might vary in the event that he should purchase any. Sttrictly, therefore, he on October 30 sold and finally disposed of a “capital asset” and thereafter, by an entirely separate transaction, bought and sold a non-capital asset. There is nothing either in the general law or in the special statutory definitions which gainsays this.
Section 118, however, without changing the ordinary concept of loss and without denying its recognition, denies deduction of the loss sustained in the earlier sale. This is only because of the subsequent purchase. There is express recognition that the earlier loss has been sustained. The section has the narrow purpose of preventing a simple and transparent tax device by refusing the deduction, or, as the House Committee expressed it, “to prevent evasion of the tax through the medium of wash sales.”4 Unlike many other special statutory provisions, such as the reorganization provisions and the tax-free exchange provisions, it does not attempt to set up a new statutory scheme of “recognizing” or refusing recognition for tax pur[889]*889poses of described transactions and of their normally resulting gains or losses. For its own purpose, it simply denies a deduction.5
The Commissioner’s contention is, in effect, that section 113, which substitutes in respect of stock purchased after a so-called “wash sale” the base of the original shares for the base of the new shares (with an adjustment not necessary to consider here), must be read as identifying the new shares for all purposes with the original shares held. This construction, as already suggested, is one which is opposed to the literal meaning of the words describing “capital assets”, and may be sustained, if at all, only as a necessary means of promoting the legislative .purpose lying back of the capital gain provisions. The fear is that a literal interpretation would mar the harmony and symmetry of the statute.
Section 202 (d) (3) of the Revenue Act of 1921 is the prototype of section 113 (a) (11), and, to the extent that it provides that the later property involved in a wash sale should take the place of the earlier, it is limited “for the purposes of this section” 6 to the base to be used and therefore negates any broader implication which, might be drawn from the more general language of the Congressional reports.7
That the later property is not to be identified with the earlier, even though section 118 prohibits deduction of the earlier loss, was the controlling reason for the Commissioner’s refusal to apply the first in, first out rule in Richard Coulter, 32 B. T. A. 617. In that case it was said:
* * * ¶¾6 fallacy, however, of the petitioner’s position is in the idea that the wash sale disallowance connotes an identity in the shares sold and those purchased within the preceding 80 days. The wash sale statute is not concerned with the identity of the shares sold, hut only provides categorically that the deduction shall be disallowed if any substantially identical property is acquired within SO days. For the purpose of the wash sale provision, therefore, it is only necessary that the Commissioner should disallow so much [890]*890of tlie loss as is proportionately applicable to 200 shares. In determining the measure of the loss sustained on the sale of the 500 shares on December 18, the first in, first out rule is no less applicable because part of the loss is precluded from deduction under the wash sale statute.
An examination of the legislative history of the capital gain provisions amply demonstrates that the reconciliation between that section and the wash sale provisions, here contended for by the Commissioner, is one which rests on no express words used in either of those sections in the 1921 or later revenue acts before the statute of 1932; and an examination of the Commissioner’s interpretation of the 1921 and later acts shows that he consistently treated the two sections as wholly separate and distinct, and that his about-face is directly traceable to implications supposed to exist in the Supreme Court’s decision in Helvering v. New York Trust Co., 292 U. S. 455, decided May 28, 1934.
Section 101, like section 118, is a special provision which first appeared in the Revenue Act of 1921. It had its genesis in section 206 of that act, with a controlling purpose to promote transactions ’ by limiting the tax on capital gains to 12½ percent and thus relieving them from the higher surtaxes.8 It was originally conceived as entirely alleviatory and was thus directly opposite in purpose to the wash sale provision. It dealt, by express statutory definition, with specific property which had been held for more than two years, while the wash sale provision dealt broadly with “substantially identical” property. There is no word in all the legislative or administrative history of these two provisions which suggests a relation one with the other.
[891]*891In the 1924 Act, to the scheme of specially taxing capital gains was added a limitation upon the deduction for capital losses. It is apparent from the statutory provisions inserted at this time that the limitation of deduction for capital losses was balanced with the limitation in tax upon capital gains.9 In the Treasury Regulations both were made applicable to “the specific property” which had been held for more than two years.10 Specific exceptions were inserted in the [892]*892Revenue Act of 1926, section 208 (a) (8), in respect of property which had been received in an exchange, or by gift, or by distribution in prescribed cases.11 These exceptions were carried into the 1928 statute without substantial change and are found in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of section 101 (c) (8). The exceptions do not cover [893]*893wash sales or suggest any relation between the wash sale provision and the capital gain and loss provision.
In the administration of the statute, the Government had disclaimed any intention to regard the wash sale provision as affecting the capital loss provision. In 1921, interpreting the wash sale provision of the Revenue Acts of 1924 and 1926, the General Counsel issued G. C. M. 1210, VI-2 C. B. 60, tacitly recognizing the lack of identity between the new property and the old property involved in a wash sale transaction, and stating the method for determining the measure of the deduction allowable upon the second sale. The capital loss provision was not mentioned. In the latter part of 1928, this ruling was modified by I. T. 2443, C. B. VII-2, p. 127, in respects not material to our present inquiry, and in this ruling we find the following:
Witt reference to tte capital gain ancl loss provisions of section 208 of the Revenue Act of 1926, it is noted that although the deduction of any loss is postponed in the case of such “wash sales” until there is a disposition of the stock with no repurchase within the proscribed period, the stock in the case under consideration was not held for a period of more than two years. During the period from the date of the “wash sale” to the date of repurchase the taxpayer did not own or hold any stock. The two-year period in such case, for the purpose of the capital gain and loss provisions of section 208, accordingly runs from the date of the repurchase and not from the date of the original purchase.
In 1931 both of the foregoing rulings were carried along with apparent approval in I. T. 2576, G. B. X-l, p. 164, in which they were cited without reservation. Thus, so far as published rulings disclose, it is safe to say that the unvarying practice of the Government from the beginning of the period when the special wash sale provision was in force and through the time when the particular transactions now before us took place, was to treat the second transaction as a sale of property different from that earlier sold and to regard the capital loss provision as inapplicable. This practice, so far as we can find either from this record or from the published rulings, continued throughout the period of effectiveness of the 1928 Act until the latter part of 1934, when, in I. T. 2832, XIII-2 C. B. 201, there was a “modification” of I. T. 2443, and it was held that the two-year period of the capital assets section under the Revenue Act of 1928 and prior acts “runs from the date of acquisition of the original securities, and not from the date of repurchase.” In support of this entirely new ruling, the statement is made “see generally the reasoning contained in the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Helvering v. New York Trust Co., Trustee, 292 U. S. 455.”
We are thus brought to the question whether the decision of the Supreme Court requires this present overthrow of established inter[894]*894pretation and practice. That decision did not at all consider the capital gain provisions in relation to the wash sale provision. Two questions were raised, only one of which is germane to our inquiry here. The first was whether property received by the taxpayer in trust for another -was “acquired by gift” by the trustee within the meaning of section 202 (a) (2), Revenue Act 1921, which substituted the basis of the property in the hands of the donor for the basis it would ordinarily have had in the donee’s hands. The constitutionality of this provision had been sustained by the Supreme Court in Taft v. Bowers, 278 U. S. 470. In the New York Trust Co. case this question was resolved in the Government’s favor, and the trust property was held to be a gift. The second question arose, whether, since the donee must take the donor’s base, he would be entitled to tack his tenure to that of his donor in order to obtain the benefit of the capital gain provision, which, as already pointed out, allowed the lower rate of 12½ percent on gains on “property acquired and held by the taxpayer * * * for more than two years.” The Court held that “the continuity required to be used to get the base was also intended for use in finding the rate. No valid ground has been suggested for requiring tenures to be added for the one purpose and forbidding combination for the other. The legislative purpose to be served by the application of the lower rate upon capital gains is directly opposed to the Commissioner’s construction.”
In Taft v. Bowers, supra, the Court pointed out that the appreciation in value of the gift in the donor’s hands, which on its severance from the original capital would constitute income, did not lose its character as income under the Sixteenth Amendment on transference to the taxpayer as donee, cf. Irwin v. Gavit, 268 U. S. 161; and that, since the statute specifically held gifts not to be income, there was no realization of gain or loss until the donee’s later sale, when the increase accumulating, both in the donor’s hands and the donee’s hands, became separated and realized; and that, since the donee accepted the benefit of the gift with knowledge of its burden, Congress deprived her of no right and subjected her to no hardship in laying a tax on the entire increase. The donee stepped into the shoes of the donor for all purposes. This doctrine goes far to explain the New York Trust Co. decision.
As already said, the capital gain provision as it stood in the 1921 Act was wholly remedial in nature. Reference to the Committee Report quoted in the margin, supra, (footnote 8) shows that the House, while limiting capital gains, proposed also to limit capital losses, and even suggested as a reason for adoption of the new provision that “under present conditions there are likely to be more losses than gains.” The Senate, however, thought otherwise, and, while fixing the limitation on capital gains, permitted the taxpayer to deduct his [895]*895entire capital loss. The Senate view prevailed, the House receded, and as a consequence, the capital gain provision afforded a substantial benefit to the taxpayer without any corresponding burden. That the House view prevailed in later revenue acts is immaterial here, for it was the 1921 Act which the Supreme Court dealt with in the New York Trust Co. case. And it seems beyond question that the Court considered the capital gain provision solely in the light of an alleviatory measure, for it there said:
In respect of the legislative purpose to lessen hindrance caused by high normal and surtaxes, there is no distinction between gains derived from a sale made by an owner who has held the property for more than two years and those resulting from one by a donee whose tenure plus that of the donor exceeds that period.
And again:
There is no ground for discrimination such as that to which the trustee was subjected. It is to be inferred that Congress did not intend penalization of that sort.
These were the reasons for a liberal interpretation of the statute. The opinion discloses nothing to indicate that without these considerations the same decision would have been reached.
In the present case these considerations are absent. Since the amendment of the 1924 Revenue Act, imposing a limitation on capital losses, as well as allowing the limitation on capital gains, the provision no longer confers an unmixed blessing on the taxpayer. Moreover, while the benefit of the gains limitation is left to the taxpayer’s option, the limitation on his deduction of capital losses is absolute. The principle of conforming the rate to the base, thought necessary by the Court in that case to promote the statute’s purpose, might well under a later statute lose much of its compelling force; and certainly such conformity of rate to base is not to be resorted to in all cases as a general principle of construction. Cf. McFeely v. Commissioner, 296 U. S. 102.
But there are still more significant differences which forbid the application of the New York Trust Co. case’s rule to the present situation. In that case the same specific property was held throughout and the only question was whether there might be a tacking of the tenures of both donor and donee; here the original property was sold, new property was acquired and the new property by specific words in the statute is given not the same base as the old, but a new base calculated with express regard for the second transaction. In the Taft case, because of the continuity of holding of specific property without any recognizable break for tax purposes, in the successive hands of donor and donee, the original base was thought justified; and, by extension, the same principle was applied in the Trust Co. case to the rate, the holdings of the two being merged. [896]*896Since the burden of tax upon the entire increment is laid on the donee when realized, it is not unreasonable that he should have the correlative benefit. But here specific property is sold and the occasion for realizing gain or loss thus arises. Realization takes place. The statute does not forbid the recognition of gain on the first sale, and in case of loss it forbids only the deduction. The statute by one provision disallows the wash sale deduction and by another, in the event of such a disallowance, fixes a new base. Because of the disallowance of the loss deduction on the wash sale, it is contended that the taxpayer’s tenure of the new and entirely distinct property should, despite the intervening lapse, be tacked to the tenure of his old, in order to establish the rate, regardless of the fact that if the result of the original sale had been a gain, his two periods would not have been tacked. Congress may conceivably tack the same taxpayer’s tenures of different pieces of property for tax purposes as it does the tenures of the same property held by successive taxpayers, but, in the absence of a clear indication of intention to do so, there must be some logical necessity for adopting a construction contrary to the plain words of the statute. No such logical compulsion exists here, for the result sought by the Commissioner would lack the very balance and harmony which is said to be its justification. The wash sale provision and its dependent provision, changing the base of property coming within its terms, is too narrow in its intent and effect to be extended by implication.
In McFeely v. Commissioner, supra, it was urged by the Commissioner that the decision in the New York Trust Co. case required a construction of the capital gain provision of the 1928 Act which would fix the same date for the beginning of the holding period as section 113 (a) (5) sets for determining the base of property transmitted at death. The latter provision expressly sets in certain cases the date of distribution of property as the basic date for fixing value. The taxpayers took, some through intestacy and some through general bequests, and thus fell within this provision. The Court thought that the word “held”, as used in the capital gain provision, did not mean mere physical possession, but connoted beneficial ownership, and on this reasoning held that the residuary legatee’s ownership related back to the date of decedent’s death, notwithstanding the intervening legal title of the executor. His holding, therefore, for the purpose of determining the applicable rate, would begin at decedent’s death, but his holding, for the purpose of fixing his base, would begin only on distribution. In answering the argument raised on the New York Trust Co. case that the base in one section must be harmonized with the rate in the other, the Court said:
We think, however, that the case is not authority here. The Act oí 1921 exhibited an inconsistency in that while a donee was permitted to tack his [897]*897tenure to that of his donor, he was not permitted to use his donor’s basis. This inconsistency flowed from a literal reading of the separate sections dealing with these two subjects. Such a result the court held would run counter to the very policy and purpose of the capital gains rate reduction, which was to encourage sales of capital assets, and would penalize the taxpayer making such sales. The departure from the strict terms of the act was justified in order to secure him the benefit intended to be conferred. The court was careful to say “The rule that where a statute contains no ambiguity, it must be taken literally and given effect according to its language is a sound one ⅜ * That rule was held inapplicable for the reasons stated.
The New York Trust Co. case was decided in May 1934 and it was not until later in 1934 that I. T. 2832 was issued in reliance upon the New York Trust Co. decision and modifying I. T. 2443, which, as we have seen, continuously held that the two-year period “runs from the date of repurchase and not from the date of the original purchase.” Meanwhile, the matter had come to the attention of the Congress in its consideration of the Revenue Bill of 1932. In the Report of the House Committee on Ways and Means (No. 708, 72d Cong., 1st sess., p. 16), the operation of the existing law under the Revenue Act of 1928 was fully recognized and a deliberate change was proposed. The Committee Report on this subject is quoted in full in the margin.12
[898]*898The Report of the Senate Committee is also set out in the margin,13 ancl we think recognizes, no less than the House Report, the situation which was to be changed. The law was amended in the Revenue Act of 1932, by adding the following paragraph to section 101 (c) (8) :
(D) In determining tlie period for which the taxpayer has held stock or securities the acquisition of which (or the contract or option to acquire which) resulted in the nondeductibility (under section 118 of this Act or the Revenue Act of 1928, relating to wash sales) of the loss from the sale or other disposition of substantially identical stock or securities, there shall be included the period for which he held the stock or securities the loss from the sale or other disposition of which was not deductible.
[899]*899There can be no doubt, therefore, that from the time when the 1932 Revenue Act became law the composite loss from the first and second sales was to be treated as a capital loss if the period of the combined tenures of the original and of the newly purchased stock was two years or more. The Commissioner, however, treats paragraph (D), supra, of the 1932 Act as merely a clarifying provision of existing law. This is without foundation. It is a new provision. Congress might indeed have undertaken to make it retroactively effective to cover situations antedating its enactment, but it failed to do so. In the light of its unmistakable knowledge of the operation of the existing law, appearing from its Committee Reports, there can be no doubt that the failure to make the provision retroactive was deliberate. Neither the Commissioner nor the Board has power to change the effect of this deliberate choice of Congress by construing the provision of the 1932 Act as if it had been made retroactive. And this is likewise true of any present attempt by the Commissioner to make his present interpretation of the 1928 Act retroactive. All considerations appear to support the taxpayer’s view, unless there is to be read in the opinion of the New York Trust Co. case an application by indirection to wash sales.
The determination of the Commissioner is reversed.
The second question, which arises for both the years 1931 and 1932, is whether petitioner in computing the deductible amount of certain stipulated contributions to charity in those years is limited to 15 percent of “net income” as prescribed by section 23 (n), Revenue Act of 1928, and the corresponding section of the Revenue Act of 1932, without any diminution thereof by reason of capital net losses sustained by him in those years. This question is present on the facts for the year 1931, regardless of how the first point in this case is decided, since petitioner sustained other losses in that year which were admittedly capital losses.
The present situation offers the converse of the question considered by the Supreme Court in Helvering v. Bliss, 293 U. S. 144. There the Court held that “net income”, for the purpose of computing the [900]*90015 percent deduction for charitable contributions, was not “ordinary net income” as defined by section 101 (c) (7), in distinction from “capital net gain”, but was gross income, less all permissible deductions under section 23, and thus included capital gain. The Court further held that the deduction of gifts to charity, to the extent allowed, were “ordinary deductions” and as such would not diminish the income taxable as capital gain; a construction, it was said, which flowed necessarily from the public policy lying back of the two provisions, to liberalize the law in the taxpayer’s favor. The Court thought, in other words, that, since both the allowance of a charitable deduction and the reduction of the rate of tax on capital gains had the same purpose of lightening the taxpayer’s burden, the latter privilege should not be held to circumscribe or limit the former.
In the instant case it will be seen that the capital loss provision indirectly works to the petitioner’s advantage, when read in conjunction with the provision for deducting charitable contributions, for while the former section limits the amount of losses to the petitioner’s disadvantage, it increases the amount of his total net income, and to that extent, therefore, enlarges the charitable deduction which is measured by a percentage of that income. The ameliorative purpose of the two sections is therefore retained here. And there is nothing in the Bliss decision which warrants going farther.
The same question has already been considered in James H. Lockhart, 32 B. T. A. 732 (on review, C. C. A., 3d Cir.); Sewell L. Avery, 32 B. T. A. 948; aff'd., 84 Fed. (2d) 905; and Louis W. Hill, 33 B. T. A. 891 (on review, C. C. A., 8th Cir.), and there is in the petitioner’s argument no persuasive reason for overruling them. In computing the deduction for charitable contributions, the petitioner’s net income, after deducting capital net loss, constitutes the proper measure of the percentage.
Reviewed by the Board.
Judgment will he entered under Rule 50.