John v. Rowan v. United States

219 F.2d 51
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 1955
Docket15167_1
StatusPublished
Cited by118 cases

This text of 219 F.2d 51 (John v. Rowan v. United States) 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.

Bluebook
John v. Rowan v. United States, 219 F.2d 51 (5th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by Rowan and wife and Hope and wife against the United States in four separate suits which were consolidated for trial and on this appeal. They were suits for refund of taxes brought under Title 28 U.S.C.A. § 1346 (a) (1). Each claim was for less than $10,000 and the trial court had jurisdiction.

The sole question before the Court for decision is whether the Comissioner of Internal Revenue has the power and right to treat advances made by plaintiffs to their wholly owned corporation for operating purposes as contributions to capital, in order to deny to the taxpayers the right to deduct their losses on liquidation as short term capital losses.

*52 This case might posed of by the trial court on plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. We think this not such a case as would require the court to proceed to trial on the facts because they were difficult or complicated or because the legal question required further factual basis. 1

Plaintiffs alleged that during the month of December, 1947, each couple of husband and wife suffered a net loss of $50,944.28 upon the dissolution of Rowan & Hope, Inc., $48,651.79 of which was attributable to stock owned less than six months, and $2,292.49 to stock held over six months. Plaintiffs alleged that each husband and wife deducted one-half each of $48,651.79 from his or her net capital gains, which were in excess of the net capital losses, but that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue treated the losses as long term capital losses and assessed additional taxes against plaintiffs. They paid, filed timely claims for refund and sued after six months without action by the Commissioner.

The United States by answer admitted that plaintiffs claimed the losses but denied that they were properly attributable to stock owned less than six months.

Plaintiffs filed motions for summary judgments, accompanied by affidavits which showed that on December 12, 1947 each couple purchased 955 shares of the capital stock of Rowan & Hope, Inc., paying $95,500 in cash therefor,

and stating that each couple had purchased 45 shares for $4,500 cash many years previously. That on December 27, 1947 Rowan & Hope, Inc. was dissolved and each couple received a liquidating dividend of $49,055.72, suffering a loss of $50,944.28; that plaintiffs filed their income tax returns claiming their losses as stated above.

The United States filed its reply to the motions for summary judgment, stating that “there is a material issue of fact” and attached an affidavit of Revenue Agent Victor L. Manning and prayed that the motion be denied. Bearing in mind that under the proceedings for summary judgment the defendant is required to controvert any statements made by the motion, pleadings or affidavits filed in support, it is appropriate to state here that if the facts alleged in the affidavits by plaintiffs as to the acquisition of the stock and the loss on dissolution were not controverted then plaintiffs would be entitled to a judgment since these assertions would justify the treatment of the loss as a short term capital loss, as contended by the plaintiffs.

Since the failure of the Government to raise a substantial issue of fact justifying a contrary result is the basis of our decision here, the material part of the Manning affidavit is printed in the margin. 2

*53 Both the Government and the taxpayers argue that the real question here is whether the advances made by the taxpayers to the corporation were loans, as contended by the taxpayers, or part of the corporation’s capital as claimed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; if they were loans and if they became worthless as non-business bad debts in 1947, they would be treated for tax purposes as short term capital losses under Section 23(k) (4) of the Internal Revenue Code, 3 and the action taken shortly prior to dissolution, which the Commissioner says was a void and meaningless transaction, would be entirely unimportant. For in that aspect of the affair, the loss would be available to plaintiffs as a short term capital loss whether the new purchase of capital stock was recognized for tax purposes or not. This appears to be conceded by both parties.

Now, what does the Government’s affidavit have to say with respect to this basic question? It says the plaintiffs were sole owners of the corporation; that it was organized in 1930 with $9,000 capital stock for the purposes of drilling oil wells for plaintiffs and others; it operated at substantial losses for all but four years; that working capital (not, it will be noted, purchase of capital assets) was provided by advances by the partnership, Rowan & Hope; these advances were substantial beginning in

1941, at the end of which year they equalled approximately $125,000; and “the corporation continued to owe that amount to the partnership until the corporation was liquidated on December 27, 1947.” That approximately 20 days before liquidation an additional 1910 shares of capital stock were duly authorized by the corporation and these shares were purchased and paid for by the taxpayers, thus making outstanding, fully paid, capital stock of $200,000; that on December 27, 1947, the corporation was liquidated resulting in the “payment of the debts due the partnership out of the capital.”

The affidavit then draws the conclusion that the stock issued on December 12th was not issued for a business purpose but was issued to connect (sic, probably intended to be “convert”) plaintiffs’ long term capital loss into a short term loss in order to evade taxation.

Construing this affidavit and all of its factual statements most strongly against petitioners, it is nevertheless apparent that it does not present any issue of fact that would warrant the Court in submitting to a jury, or to decide itself in the absence of a jury, any substantive question that could affect the legal determination as to the rights of the parties.

By reference to appellee’s brief, and only by such reference, does it become apparent what is meant by Manning’s *54 reference to “tax evasion,” which are the magic words by which the Government sought to present an issue of fact. The Government’s case is bottomed on the simple but unacceptable proposition that from the bare fact that the sole stockholders of a corporation advanced funds for its operations until for the last 16 years it owed them approximately $125,-000 until this debt was paid off in liquidation, it can be inferred that the amount advanced was capital instead of a loan.

Recognizing fully that the Government is not bound in its tax collecting activities by the terminology used by taxpayers if such terminology is actually used to disguise something quite different, 4

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