Jackson v. Commissioner

40 B.T.A. 1094, 1939 BTA LEXIS 751
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 1939
DocketDocket Nos. 91780-91789, 95796-95798, 96225-96226, 96592.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 B.T.A. 1094 (Jackson 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
Jackson v. Commissioner, 40 B.T.A. 1094, 1939 BTA LEXIS 751 (bta 1939).

Opinion

OPINION.

Leech:

These consolidated proceedings seek redetermination of deficiencies in income tax as follows:

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The common issue is whether, under section 165 of the Eevenue Act of 1934, the excess of the value of certain stock in the Carborundum Co. upon the dates of its distribution pursuant to a trust agreement, over the amounts paid in by petitioners, is properly includable in petitioners’ income. The parties have submitted the proceedings on a stipulation of facts to which exhibits are attached and both the stipulation and exhibits are incorporated herein as our findings of fact.

All’ of the petitioners are employees of the Carborundum Co., a corporation. On September 18, 1928, the board of directors of the Carborundum Co. resolved to increase the company’s capitalization from 500,000 shares to 525,000 shares. The stated capital applicable to the increase was to be $1,250,000; but the shares were to be without par value. This action was approved at a special meeting of the stockholders of the company on September 11, 1928. On the same day the board of directors met and resolved that, of the 25,000 shares authorized to be issued, 12,500 shares should be sold at $50 a share and that the remaining 12,500 shares should remain unissued for the present. It was further resolved that the officers of the Carborundum Co. be authorized to execute a certain trust agreement involving the sale of 12,500 shares of the Carborundum Co. to trustees at $50 per share.

[1096]*1096This trust agreement was executed on November 28, 1928, between the Carborundum Co., Power City Bank as lienor, and three trustees. The trustees were Frank J. Tone, George B. Bayner, and Frank H. Manley, all of them stockholders of the Carborundum Co. The preamble of the agreement recited that the Carborundum Co., hereinafter referred to as “the company”, desired to create a trust in 12,500 shares of the company’s capital stock “as a part of a profit-sharing plan for the exclusive benefit of some of the employees of the company, or of its subsidiaries, to which plan contributions are to be made by such employees for the purpose of distributing to such employees the earnings and principal of the fund to be accumulated by the trust.” In the operative part of the agreement, the trustees agreed to receive and accept the 12,500 shares of the company’s stock as and when issued to them in trust, and to hold the same and receive the dividends thereon for the benefit of the company’s employees pursuant to a plan which was then set forth in the body of the trust instrument. This plan was embodied in a letter set out in the trust instrument. The substance of the letter was that the stock was to be offered to certain employees at $50 per share and to be paid for by them in small monthly installments in limited maximum amounts.

It was further provided in the trust instrument that whenever an employee should fully pay up the balance owing on the stock which he desired to purchase under the plan, the trustees would obtain the stock which he was purchasing and would thereupon distribute it to him or to his personal representatives if he were dead. If one of the participants should cease to be employed by the company or if he desired to withdraw from the plan, the trustees would thereupon refund to him the amount of all payments already credited against the purchase price. The participants were to pay interest on the unpaid balance of the purchase price, plus the proportionate part of the trustees’ actual expenses allocable to each of them. The trustees were authorized to pledge the entire block of 12,500 shares with the lienor to secure the repayment of amounts borrowed by the trustees from the lienor to cover the unpaid balances due to participants on their purchases of stock under the plan. The trustees were further authorized to vote the stock held by them under the trust and to otherwise deal with it as if they were absolute owners.

Eighty-one employees of the company and its subsidiaries executed the “offer to purchase stock.”

When the trustees received offers to purchase stock, they borrowed money from the Power City Bank (lienor under the trust agreement) in an amount sufficient, when added to the initial payments of the participants, to purchase the required number of shares of stock from the company at $50 per share. The company thereupon issued the stock [1097]*1097and credited $20, for each share so issued, to its capital stock account and the remainder of the proceeds for each share, $30, to its paid-in surplus account. A total of 9,265 shares out of the 12,500 shares made available under the plan were purchased from the company, the balance remaining unissued. When the purchase price of the stock, interest payable, and expenses had been paid, by deducting amounts necessary from the salary of the purchaser together with dividends paid on the stock, the stock certificate covering the number of shares purchased was delivered. When an employee requested release from his offer to purchase stock, his payments were ordinarily refunded. The offers to purchase stock by petitioners, the number of shares they contracted to buy, the initial payment per share, the deduction per share from salary, the date of distribution of the stock, the number of shares distributed, payments by the petitioners, the dividends credited, and the interest and transfer tax charged, the fair market value of the stock received by the petitioners at all dates material thereto in 1934 and 1935, are stipulated.

All of the petitioners, with the exception of Hutchins, Allen, Buell, and Jackson, in making their respective Federal income tax returns, included in income on account of the distribution of this stock, only the dividends declared thereon and credited on the purchase price thereof. Hutchins failed to include dividends so declared and credited, to the extent of $600. Buell, Allen, atad Jackson failed to report any amount on account of dividends declared or credited. The parties have also stipulated that the dividends declared on the stock distributed pursuant to the agreement and which were credited on the purchase price thereof are properly includable in income in the year in which distribution of the stock was made.

The Carborundum Co. and its subsidiaries claim no deductions in their respective corporate Federal income tax returns for the years 1934 and 1935 for compensation paid to petitioners on account of the dividends declared and credited upon the purchase price of their stock, or for the difference between the purchase price of $50 per share and the fair market value of the stock purchased by petitioners and distributed to them in the years 1934 and 1935. The company, however, has filed claims for refund, which are still pending, asking refunds on the ground that the company should have taken such deductions.

During the taxable years here involved, the company paid bonuses in cash in addition to stated wages and salaries. In 1934, a total of $23,665.44 was so paid, and in 1935 a total of $36,796.35 was so paid.

Bespondent seeks to tax petitioners on the difference between the value of the Carborundum Co. stock when distributed to them and the amounts paid in by the petitioners in order to acquire the stock. He predicates his action on section 165 of the Bevenue Act of 1934, which [1098]*1098is set out in the margin.2

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Related

Alldis v. Commissioner
46 B.T.A. 1171 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1942)
Jackson v. Commissioner
40 B.T.A. 1094 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 B.T.A. 1094, 1939 BTA LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-commissioner-bta-1939.