Jeannette Lenkin v. District of Columbia, Morris Pollin v. District of Columbia

461 F.2d 1215, 149 U.S. App. D.C. 129, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 11248
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1972
Docket21573, 21755
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 461 F.2d 1215 (Jeannette Lenkin v. District of Columbia, Morris Pollin v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeannette Lenkin v. District of Columbia, Morris Pollin v. District of Columbia, 461 F.2d 1215, 149 U.S. App. D.C. 129, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 11248 (D.C. Cir. 1972).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

These two cases, consolidated in this court, present similar fact patterns and similar issues for our consideration. In each, the assets of a dissolved corporation, consisting chiefly of an apartment building, were distributed, subject to outstanding corporate debts, to its stockholders who promptly discharged the indebtedness and continued, through the medium of a newly-formed partnership, the preexisting corporate business of operating the facility. In each, deductions for depreciation on the apartment property, taken on partnership returns filed under the District of Columbia Income and Franchise Tax Act of 1947, 1 were administratively disallowed, almost totally, as resting upon an improper depreciation basis. In one case, the property’s alleged fair market value on liquidation and, in the other, what essentially was its book value at that point, were rejected as appropriate bases; in both, the depreciation base administratively substituted excluded the amount of corporate indebtedness existing at the time of liquidation. The courts whose reviews preceded ours have substantially upheld the administrative determinations.

So, once again, we are called upon to construe provisions of the Income and Franchise Tax Act, but perhaps for the very last time. During the pendency of this appeal, 2 the Act was amended to important respects 3 and the problems now posed will not recur. 4 During the same period, the course of judicial review of District Tax assessments was legislatively altered, 5 and such reviews no longer come to this court. 6 Since, however, these changes are inapplicable to the litigation at hand, 7 we proceed to our task.

I

While factually these cases share much in common, there are differences which must be accounted for in any decision of the questions raised. Our review accordingly begins with a summary of the relevant developments in each.

The Lenkin Case

Lencshire House, Inc., a Maryland corporation, was organized on March 21, 1949, and for the next 15 years it ran an apartment building in the District of Columbia. On March 24, 1964, the corporation dissolved and Lencshire House Company, a partnership, was formed. The partners were the corporation’s three stockholders at dissolution, and their interests in the partnership coincided with their shareholdings at that time. The corporate assets were distributed, subject to the corporate liabilities, to the stockholders, who took conveyance *1218 of the apartment property as tenants in common and thereafter continued its operation as partners. 8

On liquidation, the corporation had assets of $756,892.31 and liabilities of $809,751.83, and so a net deficit of $51,859.52. 9 The principal asset was the apartment property, which had book valuations of $42,529.04 for land and, for building and maintenance equipment, $1,070,640.38 less a depreciation reserve of $448,772.29, or a depreciable net of *1219 $621,868.09. 10 The corporation’s books also recorded paid-in surplus of $1,-500.00 — the shareholders’ capital stock investment — which, in conjunction with an accrued deficit of $64,997.78 as reduced by undistributed profits of $11,638.26 to $53,359.52, produced the net deficit of $51,859.52 referred to. 11 The corporation’s main liability was a balance of $795,948.76, principal and accrued interest, on a corporate promissory note secured by the lien of a first deed of trust on the apartment premises. 12 That indebtedness remained outstanding when the corporation dissolved and the conveyance of that property occurred. 13 Thereafter, the partners obtained refinancing and paid the note in full.

On their franchise tax returns for the taxable periods ending at the close of calendar years 1964 and 1965, 14 the partners listed deductions for depreciation on the apartment property. The deductions were predicated upon a fair market valuation of $966,273.37 at inception of the partnership, of whifch $884,742.45 was allocated to improvements. The District’s assessing authorities disallowed the deductions, practically in their entirety, 15 on the theory that property received as a dividend — ostensibly the apartment property — could not enter the depreciation base, 16 and assessed tax deficiencies accordingly. On appeal therefrom, 17 the District of Columbia Tax Court 18 sustained the assessment with but a very minor adjustment. 19 The matter is here on the taxpayers’ petition for review. 20

The Pollin Case

Crestwood Apartment Corporation, a Delaware entity, owned and operated an apartment building in the District from its inception in 1950 until its dissolution on January 2, 1962. On the latter date, its assets were $1,679,222.26, including the apartment property valued on the corporation’s books at $1,630,848.12 net of depreciation, 21 and its liabilities were $1,576,763.37, of which $1,763.37 was the residue of the corporation’s accounts payable and $1,575,000.00 was the unpaid principal balance of an unsecured *1220 corporate note. 22 Net worth was then $102,458.89, of which $1,200.00 was paid-in surplus — the capital stock investment —and $101,258.89 was earned surplus. 23

After dissolution, the corporate assets were distributed ratably to the stockholders, 24 who immediately formed a partnership, Crestwood Apartment Company, and continued the operation of the apartment building. Appellants, the distributees, have maintained throughout that on distribution they assumed the corporation’s liabilities proportionately to their stockholdings, and that the distribution and assumption were in complete cancellation and redemption of their stock. 25 In any event, it appears without controversy that the distribu-tees, within a matter of days after distribution, paid the corporation’s note and accounts payable in full.

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Bluebook (online)
461 F.2d 1215, 149 U.S. App. D.C. 129, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 11248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeannette-lenkin-v-district-of-columbia-morris-pollin-v-district-of-cadc-1972.