Industrial Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

206 F.2d 229, 44 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 260, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4242
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 1953
Docket4701
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 206 F.2d 229 (Industrial Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 206 F.2d 229, 44 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 260, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4242 (1st Cir. 1953).

Opinion

HARTIGAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition under 26 U.S.C. §§ 1141, 1142, for review of a decision by the Tax Court entered on June 18, 1952, determining a deficiency of $55,561.94 against the taxpayer for the year 1943, based on the disallowance of a claimed deduction of $324,698.41 for a secured debt contracted in 1929 which allegedly became totally worthless upon final liquidation of the collateral in 1943. The petitioner, Industrial Trust Company, a Rhode Island banking corporation, contends that the Tax Court erred in holding that the taxpayer became owner of the security prior to 1943. .

On January 2, 1929, the taxpayer loaned $850,000 to Dutee W. Flint Oil Co., Inc., (hereinafter referred to as Flint Co.), also a Rhode Island corporation, taking a demand note secured by the delivery of 23,-583 shares of common stock of Standard Oil Company of New York as collateral. Standard Oil Company merged and reorganized over a number of years until ultimately the original pledged stock was represented by an equal number of shares of Socony-Vacuum Oil Company, Inc. but this is not significant. The note * authorized public or private sale of the collateral upon default, without notice, and purchase by the holder of the note. This collateral had a market value of over a million dollars at the time of the loan, but during 1929 this value declined substantially. Sometime in 1930 Flint Co. ceased to do business and, upon winding up its affairs, proved to be insolvent. The taxpayer never received any payments of principal, and interest on the note was continuously in default from *231 October, 1929. Interest payments were credited on the note from lime to time by means of the dividends paid on the pledged stock, which were delivered to the bank by Dutee W. Flint until April 6, 1932, and which, after that date, were collected through the nominee of the bank.

On April 6, 1932, with the consent of the pledgor Flint Co., the pledgee hank transferred the pledged stock to its nominee, Rowe & Co., a partnership consisting of certain employees of the bank’s trust department. The bank records show that Rowe & Co. held the stock in decreasing amounts, in the name of “D. W. Flint Oil Company, Inc., loan department safekeeping account, dividends to loan department,” until March 19, 1943. There was testimony that this partnership was used solely to hold securities and other properties received by the bank as fiduciary, in order to facilitate sale. A trust account was maintained for the stock and the taxpayer’s trust department accounted to the taxpayer’s loan department which credited interest with dividends received and turned over by Rowe & Co.

On November 20, 1933, the existence of Flint Co. was terminated under the laws of Rhode Island and by the end of that year, the pledged stock was worth less than $400,000. The taxpayer charged off, and took as a 1933 deduction for a partially worthless bad debt, the amount of $125,000 on the $850,000 loan. Subsequently, in 1934, the Federal Reserve Examiner disapproved this partial charge-off and required the taxpayer to charge off on its books the excess of the loan above the market value of the stock. The taxpayer took no deduction for this additional charge-off in its 1934 tax return.

On October 24, 1936, the bank commenced liquidation of the pledged stock, under direction of the taxpayer’s president, who tried to time sales with market conditions. Proceeds from sales were credited against the loan by the loan department.

In 1940, the loan stood on the taxpayer’s books at $143,756.83, which was still more than the value of the remaining collateral, so pursuant to instructions of the Federal Reserve Examiner, the bank charged off $49,256.83, deducting this amount in its 1940 tax return. On November 14, 1942, the Federal Reserve Examiner directed the bank to transfer the stock to its investment portfolio and after selling another 3,000 shares, the remaining balance of 9,000 shares was transferred on March 19, 1943, from the taxpayer’s trust department to its investment portfolio. At this time, the bank credited the loan with the market value of tlie 9,000 shares and closed out the Flint Co. account in the trust department and the loan department.

Upon the completion of this transaction, the bank claimed as a bad debt deduction the balance on the original amount of the loan remaining after subtracting the proceeds from sales of the collateral between 1936 and 1943 and previous bad debt deductions taken in the tax returns of 1933 and 1940. These two previous deductions for partial worthlessness totalled $174,256.-83 and sales of the security realized a total of $351,044.76, leaving a balance of $324,-698.41 owed to the bank on the demand note. The Tax Court held substantially that this balance was not deductible in 1943 because tlie conduct of the taxpayer bank, despite complete records to the contrary, showed a dominion over the collateral which was more consistent with ownership than with a debtor-creditor relationship prior to 1943.

The taxpayer contends that this was erroneous, in view of our holding in a somewhat similar situation, in Old Colony Trust Associates v. Hassett, 1 Cir., 1945, 150 F.2d 179. In that case on July 26, 1932, the taxpayer bank loaned a large sum of money to a practically insolvent Boston bank, taking a demand note secured by collateral which had a market value substantially less than the amount of the loan. The taxpayer carried the collateral on its books as pledgee and shortly after the loan was made, the debtor bank ceased to do business and transferred all of its assets, including its right of redemption on the pledged stock, to a new bank which was organized to take over its business. This new bank assumed all the obligations of the debtor bank except the note. Therefore in 1934 the tax *232 payer bank commenced to sell the pledged stock. When the last sale of the stock was made in 1936, the taxpayer claimed a bad debt deduction, which the Commissioner disallowed. The district court upheld the Commissioner. We reversed, holding that the transaction was a loan, not a sale, as the Commissioner contended, and therefore that the bad debt deduction on the secured loan was properly taken on the final sale of the security.

In the Old Colony case, the disputed legal effect of the transaction rested primarily on the conduct of the parties at the inception of their dealings with each other, but here we are concerned with the conduct of an acknowledged creditor which the Tax Court held to have become owner of its collatéral in less than the fourteen years that it was reflected on the books as collateral. As was pointed out in Old Colony, supra, 150 F.2d at page 182, bank records are only evidential, so although the taxpayer’s records in this case clearly indicate that it did not foreclose the security or become owner prior to 1943, that is not conclusive. If other circumstances contradict the bank records, the finding of the Tax Court may be affirmed.

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206 F.2d 229, 44 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 260, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-trust-co-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca1-1953.