Helvering v. Wilmington Trust Co.

124 F.2d 156, 28 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 624, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2450
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 3, 1941
Docket7662
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 124 F.2d 156 (Helvering v. Wilmington Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helvering v. Wilmington Trust Co., 124 F.2d 156, 28 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 624, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2450 (3d Cir. 1941).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

Taxpayer maintained several security accounts with her brokers. In computing her income tax for 1934 and 1935 taxpayer deducted the sums charged as dividends to her short account from the dividend credits on her long accounts. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed a deficiency for the amount of the deduction on the theory that the accounts were separate. The Board of Tax Appeals refused to uphold the deficiency because it viewed the separation of taxpayer’s accounts into long and short accounts as a mere bookkeeping device. It also held that if it were wrong in this respect, taxpayer might still deduct as ordinary and necessary business expenses the dividends charged on the short account.

In two previous cases 1 we have decided that short sales occurred where methods similar to taxpayer’s had been employed. We can find no basis for distinguishing these decisions. Quite clearly taxpayer treated the sales as short sales. The transactions were so entered upon her books. ■ Gains or losses were not reported at the moment of sales, as would be done if a long sale were contemplated. Instead the profit or loss entry was not made until the covering transaction was completed. The certificates of stock actually used were in no way designated as belonging to taxpayer. Where dispositions of long stock occur, the proceeds are credited to the seller and are immediately available without restriction. Here, however, the money was. withheld for no reason other than such a practice is consistent with a short sale.

In arriving at its conclusion that the dispositions were not intended to be short sales, the Board relied upon the testimony of certain employees of taxpayer’s broker. Considering the statements of these men in the light of their duties, the findings are unsupported. The particular function of a stock-clerk must be appraised in weighing his testimony and if a customer’s long account had sufficient number of shares, deliveries were made out of that stock. As a stock-clerk he was concerned only with the net position of the broker. From his testimony it cannot be said that the broker did not use borrowed stock to make deliveries on short sales. Nor can his testimony have any bearing upon taxpayer’s intention other' than through his admission that the sales were treated as short sales for bookkeeping-purposes. A dividend-clerk testified that he collected dividends only on the amount that the long stock exceeded the short. His. concern with taxpayer’s net position was. because it was his function to collect an amount equivalent to dividends on the broker’s net holdings from the broker’s correspondent in New York, who in turn would collect dividends from the corporation. But this evidence does not refute the actual entries in the customer’s ledger crediting dividends on the long accounts and charging dividends on the short. Nor can any more be said for the testimony of a margin- *158 clerk who stated that none of the sales tickets bore the words “short sales.” The absence of this designation is not determinative since it does not appear that sales concededly short were so labeled.

The correct resolvement of the Board’s alternative holding is difficult. The Board found that the taxpayer, a housewife, had an office at her home where she employed a broker’s customer’s man as secretary and bookkeeper. She spent an average of an hour a day there. From that office she studied stock market reports and periodicals and on the basis presumably of these studies bought and sold large blocks of stock. These purchases and sales amounted to over 338,000 shares in 1932, 101,000 shares in 1933, 33,635 shares in 1934 and 53,000 shares in 1935. This led it to the conclusion that she was “carrying on any trade or business” and so entitled to a deduction for “all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred.” 2

It is apparent that there are two conceptions possible as to, first, the meaning of the words “trade or business” and, second, the character of the determination that such meaning has been achieved. As to the former, the question is really whether the word “trade” dominates the word “business” or vice versa. From the dictionary it will be noticed that the terms are somewhat interchangeable. 3 Legally, business has been defined as activity 4 for profit 5 or as activity for profit by service to the general public. Mr. Justice Frankfurter has given this last definition expression in his concurring opinion in Deputy v. DuPont: “* * * To avail of the deductions allowed by § 23(a), it is not enough to incur expenses in the active concern over one’s own financial interest. * * carrying on any trade or business’, within the contemplation of § 23(a), involves holding (one’s self out to others as engaged in the selling.of goods or services. This the taxpayer did not do. Expenses for transactions not connected with trade or business, such as an expense for handling personal investments, are not deductible. * * *” 308 U.S. 488, 499, 60 S.Ct. 363, 369, 84 L.Ed. 416. 6 We confess that the conception of the learned Justice above quoted appeals to us. It has its analogy in the interpretation of the “Commercant" 7 of the Bankruptcy Codes of the civil law countries and the trader of our 8 and the early English 9 bankruptcy laws. In a footnote to the leading textbook on French bankruptcy, we find a summary of certain decisions factually directly applicable to the principal case. The note reads: “So one who engages in stock exchange operations not constituting the practice of a profession is not a merchant and cannot be accordingly declared a bankrupt.” Translation: Lyon-Caen. and Renault, 10 7 Traite de Droit Commercial, note 5, p. 49. After all, the deduction is an act of grace. If carrying on a trade or *159 business were taken to mean any activity for profit the deduction would be broader than intended. It would be permissible wherever amounts were expended in any attempt to produce income, rather than just where the expenditures were for a trade or business.

Although we have expressed this preference for Mr. Justice Frankfurter’s view, it is only fair to note that two later cases in the United States Supreme Court leave the question in some confusion. In Higgins v. Commissioner, 11 a unanimous court speaking through Mr. Justice Reed, who concurred in Mr. Justice Frankfurter’s opinion, from which we have quoted, affirms the Board of Tax Appeals, 39 B.T.A. 1005, and the Circuit Court of Appeals, 2 Cir., 111 F.2d 795, both of which judicial bodies had relied entirely on the “extent, continuity, variety and regularity” theory of private investment transactions. In United States v. Pyne, 12 Mr.

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124 F.2d 156, 28 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 624, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helvering-v-wilmington-trust-co-ca3-1941.