Helvering v. Jane Holding Corporation

109 F.2d 933, 24 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 426, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4020
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 1940
Docket11520, 11522
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 109 F.2d 933 (Helvering v. Jane Holding Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helvering v. Jane Holding Corporation, 109 F.2d 933, 24 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 426, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4020 (8th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

These cases are before the court on separate petitions for review of two decisions of the Board of Tax Appeals rendered in proceedings instituted by two petitions for re-determination of income tax liability as determined by two separate deficiency letters issued by the 'Commissioner of Internal Revenue. One proceeding was instituted in the Board of Tax Appeals by petition for re-determination filed by Jane Holding Corporation, petitioner, respecting its income tax liability for the year 1933. That case is now before this court as No. 11,520 on petition for review filed by the Commissioner. The other proceeding was instituted in the Board of Tax Appeals by petition for re-determination filed by Edward Mal-linckrodt, Jr., and St. Louis Union Trust Company, Trustees under indenture of trust made April 17, 1918, petitioners, respecting their income tax liability for the year 1932. That case is before this court as No. 11,522 on petition for review by said trustees. The cases were consolidated in the Board of Tax Appeals for hearing, briefing and opinion, and the Board made the foregoing findings of fact upon which it based its conclusions and opinion covering both *937 of the cases. It decided in favor of the taxpayer, Jane Holding Corporation, in case No. 11,520, and in favor of the Commissioner in case No. 11,522. After the separate petitions for review had been filed in this court, the cases were submitted here upon a consolidated record.

Case No. 11,520.

We consider first the case of the Jane Holding Corporation which was decided by the Board of Tax Appeals in favor of the corporation and against the Commissioner. It involves the question whether the corporation was taxable in respect to the amount of $2,510,222.07 which was carried on the books of the corporation as a debt due the Mallinckrodt trust for interest due on money loaned and which the trust forgave and cancelled as of December, 1933.

On the hearing of the cases before the Board the Commissioner presented alternative contentions upon which he sought to impute tax liability for the year 1933 in respect to the same amount of $2,510,222.07 both to the Jane Holding Corporation and to the Mallinckrodt trust, claiming that such was the tax effect of the transactions between the trust and the corporation set out in the findings of the Board. Deficiency in the amount had been duly determined against both taxpayers. But in this court the Commissioner has not pressed further the claim against the trust. He now stands upon the contention that the result of said transactions between the corporation and the trust was that the Jane Holding Corporation realized income in the year 1933 in the amount of $2,510,222.07 in respect to which it became taxable for that year. He asks for reversal of the decision of the Board refusing to allow the deficiency determined by him in that amount for that year against the corporation.

We discuss first his point presented under appropriate assignments that the Board erred in finding that, “The trust, the sole stockholder of the corporation, * .* * gratuitously canceled and relinquished its indebtedness against the corporation”.

He contends that the cancellation was not gratuitous and'that good and valuable considerations therefor were shown by the undisputed evidence to have moved between the parties to the transactions.

The relevancy of the question whether or not the cancellation was gratuitous appears by reference to Treasury Regulation 77 promulgated under the Revenue Act of 1932, Article 64, which was in force at the time of the transaction. It concludes with the sentence reading as follows: “If a shareholder in a corporation which is indebted to him gratuitously forgives the debt, the transaction amounts to a contribution to the capital of the corporation”. Since contributions to capital are not taxable as income, the corporation’s position here is that the regulation should be given the force of law, Helvering v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 306 U.S. 110, 59 S.Ct. 423, 83 L.Ed. 536, and that the forgiveness and cancellation of the corporation’s $2,510,222.07 indebtedness to the trust must be deemed to have effected only a non-taxable contribution to the corporation’s capital.

But we think the facts found by the Board conclusively establish that the cancellation was not gratuitous either on the part of the corporation or on the part of the trust, and that there was good and valuable consideration therefor. Reference to the Mallinckrodt trust indenture of April, 1918, discloses that it was a fundamental of the plan by which Mr. Mallinckrodt senior accomplished the investment of his large capital in income producing property, that amounts equal to the investment in the property and the interests thereon should be kept impounded in trust in the form of debts due from the corporation and in funds received from the corporation and at all times kept available in the hands of the trustees to sustain and protect the investment. He imposed the duty on the trust to execute that part of the plan, and the trust became burdened with the legal obligation (enforceable by the Jane corporation) to keep the debt owing to the trust from the corporation and the amounts the trust received from the corporation impounded in trust for the whole term stipulated in the trust indenture.

There is a rare sense in which it may be said that a trust neither gains nor loses by its transactions; only its beneficiaries profit from the advantages it gains or suffer from the detriments. But as an entity for income taxation its transactions must be viewed like those of other taxpayers. Its transactions from which pecuniary advantages accrue to it constitute consideration moving to it, and its transactions by which it surrenders its property or the debts owing to it constitute consideration moving from it. Otherwise there would be no yardstick to measure the tax *938 able income of a trust. In this case, of course, valuable consideration moved from the trust to the Jane Holding Corporation in the transactions of 1933 when the trust surrendered to the corporation $2,890,349.-85 of debt then owing by the corporation to the trust. That much is not debatable, but we think it is equally clear that the corporation also relinquished to the trust a very substantial pecuniary interest which prevented the cancellation transactions from being gratuitous.

Before the transactions the trust was under the legal obligation, undertaken for the benefit of the corporation and enforceable by it, to keep an estate amounting in moneys and securities to several million dollars impounded in trust indefinitely, short of the statute against perpetuities, or until the trust collected debts owing to it from the corporation which at the time of the forgiveness transaction amounted to $2,890,-349.85. After the transaction the trust was relieved entirely from those legal obligations towards the corporation and it had its assets, amounting to fully twice the amount of the corporate debt which it forgave, free to distribute to the other and ultimate objects of the trustor’s bounty.

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Bluebook (online)
109 F.2d 933, 24 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 426, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helvering-v-jane-holding-corporation-ca8-1940.