Kirby v. Commissioner

35 B.T.A. 578, 1937 BTA LEXIS 857
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedMarch 9, 1937
DocketDocket No. 73753.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 B.T.A. 578 (Kirby 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
Kirby v. Commissioner, 35 B.T.A. 578, 1937 BTA LEXIS 857 (bta 1937).

Opinion

[592]*592OPINION.

Disnex :

1. The record indicates that prior to 1927 the prospect of realizing something on the claim for damages filed with the Mexican Government was not hopeless or without reason. Not until in that year did prosecution of said claim and all operations of the Buena Fe Mining Co. cease. Not until then did the company stop paying taxes on its Mexican property and abandon it. Then and not till then did its stock become worthless.

It is shown by the agreed stipulation that prior to May 26, 1912, the date when insurrectos damaged properties of Buena Fe M-miug Co., John H. Kirby had loaned and advanced to the company sums [593]*593aggregating at that date in ■ excess of repayments the sum of $'77,447.63 and that net advances made by Kirby to the company after May 26, 1912, to and including December 22, 1926, amounted to the sum of 69,737.11, making total net advances of $147,184.74. This amount Kirby charged off in 1927 as a bad or worthless debt and the respondent in determining petitioner’s taxable income for 1927 disallowed any deduction for the account so charged off.

In the light of the record herein, we are of the opinion and hold that John H. Kirby was justified in charging off as a bad debt in 1927 said sum of $147,184.74 and the respondent in determining petitioner’s taxable income for 1927 erred in not allowing as a deduction one-half of that amount.

It is agreed and stipulated that prior to May 26, 1912, John H. Kirby had loaned and advanced to the Kirby Development Co. sums aggregating at that date' a net balance of $18,166.23 and thereafter, to and including March 14, 1927, made additional advances amounting to $436.44, or a total at March 14, 1927, of $18,602.67, which amount Kirby charged off in 1927 as a bad debt or account.

In determining petitioner’s taxable income for 1927, the respondent disallowed any deduction for said account, and in our opinion, and we so hold, he did not commit any error.

The evidence relative to the property in Mexico of the Kirby Development Co. is not the same as that concerning the Buena Fe Mining Co. What damage, if any, was done its property by Mexican insurrectos on May 26, 1912, or any other time is not alleged nor shown. Its property is not shown to have been abandoned or become of little or no value, nor its stock to have become worthless in 1927, and the evidence as presented in the record does not warrant a charge-off as a worthless account or debt of the $18,602.67 as such. The respondent is sustained as to the Kirby Development Co. stock.

The agreed stipulation shows that the Buena Fe Mining Co. stock involved was acquired prior to May 26, 1912, by John H. Kirby at a cost of $82,393.30 and that the Kirby Development Co. stock was also acquired by Kirby prior to that date and at a cost of $25,000, and that both stocks were at all times material in this proceeding community property of petitioner and her husband, John H. Kirby.

As above indicated, the record shows that the stock of the Buena Fe Mining Co. became worthless in 1927, but fails, in our opinion, to show that the stock of the Kirby Development Co. also became worthless in that year. We, therefore, hold that the petitioner, in her 1927 income tax return, is entitled tó a deduction of one-half the cost of the Buena Fe Mining Co. stock, but that in her 1927 income tax return she is not entitled to any deduction on account of the cost of the Kirby Development Co. stock, the record not showing that it became worthless in 1927.

[594]*5942. The Southern Tariff Association was a voluntary association, the purposes and efforts of which are duly set forth in our findings of fact.

The advances made to the association by John H, Kirby and disallowed as deductions by the respondent were made without promise of repayment and with knowledge on his. part of the financial condition of the association. No evidence indicates that he was requested by the association to advance or loan money or pay expenses, except that the advances by payment of bills in 1928 were at the request of officers of the association. The association never authorized the procurement of loans from him. We can discern no obligation to repay in these transactions. Therefore, they are not deductible as bad debts. J. S. Cullinan, 19 B. T. A. 930. They partake of the nature of contributions or donations rather than of debt. The amounts claimed included unnamed amounts of voluntary contributions by Kirby. Viewed as contributions, the amounts are not within any statutory classification of allowable deductions.

The activities of the association were for the purpose of procuring the repeal of a statute of the United States and contributions for such a purpose are not allowable as deductions from gross income. Mrs. William P. Kyne, 35 B. T. A. 202; Adler Co., 10 B. T. A. 849; Sunset Scavenger Co. v. Helvering, 84 Fed. (2d) 453. We therefore conclude and hold that, whether regarded as advances or as contributions, the amounts in question are not deductible.

3. Whether the petitioner realized a taxable gain in each of the years 1927,1928, and 1929 as a result of sales in those years of bonds of the Kirby Lumber Co., is submitted for our determination on facts which have been stipulated and are set out in our findings of fact.

It is shown that the Kirby Lumber Co.’s preferred stock had a March 1, 1913, value of not less than $100 per share (exclusive of unpaid dividends and premium) which was its cost to Kirby when acquired by him prior to 1913.

The accumulated unpaid dividends in 1923 of $126 a share plus a $5 per share premium aggregated $6,550,000, and the undistributed earnings accumulated since February 28, 1913, aggregated only $2,064,373.54, or the equivalent of a dividend of $41.28 a share, and in their returns for 1923 John H. Kirby and petitioner included as taxable dividends $41.28 of each $231 (face value) of bonds received by Kirby in exchange for preferred stock, dividends, and premiums thereon. The retirement of the preferred stock and receipt of bonds therefor in 1923, as stated, were pursuant to a plan adopted by the stockholders and directors of the Kirby Lumber Co. The payment of the dividend of $126 per share had been duly ordered and authorized by the directors of the company.

[595]*595The respondent in his deficiency notice determined that the value of the bonds in question in 1923 was 83 percent of par and that on such basis a profit, rather than a loss, resulted from the sale of said bonds in each of the years in issue. But in our opinion, and we so hold, this exchange of stock for bonds was an exchange, to the extent that the bonds at face value were received to balance the par value of the preferred stock, in a recapitalization and therefore a reorganization, in which neither gain nor loss was recognized, within the provisions of the Revenue Act of 1926, section 203 (b) (2)1 (and section 112 (b) (3) of the 1928 Act, identical therewith), and section 203 (h) (1) (C), Act of 19262 (identical with section 112 (i) (1) (C) of the 1928 Act). Clearly, the Kirby Lumber Co. was a party to a reorganization under section 203 (h) (2), Act of 1926,3 and section 112 (i) (2) of the 1928 Act. In this connection, see 375 Park Avenue Corporation, 23 B. T. A. 969; H. E. Muchnic, Administrator, 29 B. T. A. 163; Walter F. Haass, 29 B. T. A.

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Related

Reading & Bates Corp. v. United States
40 Fed. Cl. 737 (Federal Claims, 1998)
Kirby v. Commissioner
35 B.T.A. 578 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
35 B.T.A. 578, 1937 BTA LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-v-commissioner-bta-1937.