Heinz v. Commissioner

34 B.T.A. 885, 1936 BTA LEXIS 630
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedAugust 7, 1936
DocketDocket Nos. 79059, 79450.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 B.T.A. 885 (Heinz v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heinz v. Commissioner, 34 B.T.A. 885, 1936 BTA LEXIS 630 (bta 1936).

Opinions

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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Related

Bank of New York & Trust Co. v. United States
25 F. Supp. 314 (S.D. New York, 1938)
Pleasants v. United States
22 F. Supp. 964 (Court of Claims, 1938)
Heinz v. Commissioner
34 B.T.A. 885 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
34 B.T.A. 885, 1936 BTA LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinz-v-commissioner-bta-1936.