Jeffries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
This text of 158 F.2d 225 (Jeffries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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In 1940, petitioner was the owner of half the stock, and president, of Girard Realty Co. In that year, pursuant to an arrangement made between her and the owners of the other half of the stock, the corporation transferred to petitioner one-half of its lands and property, and petitioner surrendered to the corporation for cancellation her one-half of the stock: Considering the properly received by her in exchange for the stock as received in a complete liquidation of the corporation and her gain therefrom long term capital gain, petitioner returned it that way. The commissioner determined that there was not a complete but a partial liquidation that, therefore, her gain was, under Internal Revenue Code, Sec. 115(c) and (i),1 and Treasury Regulations No. 103, Sec. 19.115-5(c),2 short term capital gain and [226]*226all of it must be taken into account in computing her net income.
The Tax Court, four judges dissenting, sustained the commissioner’s determination, and petitioner is here insisting that court and commissioner are wrong.
We do not think so. Whether a transaction or result is taxable and what the tax is is not a matter to be determined in law upon considerations of general justice or equity. It is a matter of statutes and valid regulations, and what they mean. Neither is it to be determined in fact upon considerations of what was intended to be done. Rather it is to be determined by what was done. Because the statutes and regulations read as they do. and the facts are' what they are, it will not avail petitioner to point (1) to the fact that she all along intended to bring about a complete liquidation, and that she regarded the course taken as bringing this about; and (2) to the tax hardships she is being subjected to for a'mere mistake in method if the method adopted is found to be a mistaken one. Neither will it avail her to point to the fact that Congress in 1942, recognizing the inequities of Section 115 (c) repealed the provision taxing a partial liquidation as a short term gain, without making the repeal retroactive. Taxation deals not with what was attempted to be done but with what was done. The evidence is explicit and without dispute that as originally planned there was to be a complete liquidation and that, the owners of the other half objecting to this, and insisting on retaining the corporation and their stock in it, the plan actually carried out was substituted for the one petitioner had proposed.
The record thus establishing without dispute that, in the language of the regulation, there was a complete cancellation “of a part of the corporate stock * * * by the complete retirement of gny part of the stock, whether or not pro rata among the shareholders”, the commissioner was right in determining, the tax court was right in affirming his determination, that petitioner’s gain was, and must be reported as, a short term capital gain. The judgment of the Tax Court is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
158 F.2d 225, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 497, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffries-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1946.