Lydiade Investment Trust v. United States

289 F. Supp. 507, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5488, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11935
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedAugust 1, 1968
DocketNo. 67 C 51(1)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 289 F. Supp. 507 (Lydiade Investment Trust v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lydiade Investment Trust v. United States, 289 F. Supp. 507, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5488, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11935 (E.D. Mo. 1968).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

HARPER, Chief Judge.

This is an action for recovery of corporate income and personal holding company taxes paid by the plaintiff, Lydiade Investment Trust. The Commissioner found deficiencies for the years 1960 and 1961 resulting from his determination that certain amounts received in those years were interest income, offset in part by his allowance of certain payments made by the plaintiff as interest expense. The plaintiff declared and holders, thereby reducing the personal holding company tax deficiencies, and paid the remaining personal holding company and corporate income tax deficiencies to the District Director in St. Louis, Missouri. Thereafter timely claims for refunds were filed and disallowed in full by the District Director, and this suit was timely commenced. The jurisdiction of this court is based on 28 U.S.C.A. § 1346(a) (1).

The facts are largely undisputed since the parties have stipulated many of them and much of the evidence is documentary.

When he died on April 14, 1954, G. A. Buder left outstanding fourteen promissory notes having an aggregate principal amount of $210,000.00, for which he had pledged as collateral certain securities. The notes had been placed with a num[509]*509ber of different banks by St. Louis Livestock Loan Company. After G. A. Bud-er’s death, Livestock, for the purpose of saving the banks any inconvenience, took up each of the notes at maturity, paying the holder the face amount of the particular instrument. Livestock then filed a claim against the Estate of G. A. Buder, which was allowed by the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis on October 5, 1954, as a secured, fifth-class claim, the aggregate amount with interest from the various maturity dates then totalling $212,683.37. On the same day Livestock arranged a loan with Mutual Bank and Trust Company for the amount of the claim, thereby restoring to itself the funds it had put up on the fourteen notes. It gave Mutual its note and executed an assignment of the claim together with the original fourteen notes and the collateral securing those notes.

On February 18, 1955, the Estate paid Livestock the sum of $25,033.70, of which $3,012.99 was interest from October 5, 1954, the date of allowance of the claim, the remainder going to reduce the principal amount of the claim to $190,-662.66. On October 24, 1955, the Estate made another payment in the amount of $4,884.25, covering interest from February 18 to October 17. Although the stipulation does not specifically so state, It would appear that such interest was equal to the sum of monthly interest installments previously paid by Livestock (this was the nature of subsequent payments made to the plaintiff), and the excess was passed on to the bank reducing the principal amount of the loan to what is stated to be the new principal amount of the claim.

In November of 1955, Livestock approached G. A. Buder, Jr., seeking a change in the arrangement since the outstanding note had the effect of restricting its credit. G. A. Buder, Jr., was the executor of his father’s estate and was also president of the plaintiff, Lydiade Investment Trust, a corporation with a small number of stockholders who corresponded to the residuary beneficiaries under G. A. Buder’s will. A new arrangement was put into effect on November 17th whereby Lydiade took the place of Livestock, substituting its note for the principal balance of $190,662.66 for Livestock’s note and taking from Livestock an assignment of the latter’s interest in the claim against the Estate subject to the prior assignment to Mutual. On the same day, plaintiff gave Livestock a check for $558.93 representing the interest for the final period of October 17 to November 17,1955.

The new arrangement remained in effect until February 18, 1960. The note signed by the plaintiff shows that interest was due monthly and the plaintiff’s check stubs indicate that it was so paid throughout this period. In addition, the plaintiff made a principal payment of $662.66 on January 17, 1958, thereby reducing the amount of the loan to an even $190,000.00. The stipulation states that “[s]uch repayment on account of principal was made to plaintiff by the Estate of G. A. Buder on July 29, 1960.” At the same time, the Estate also paid Lydiade an additional $26,234.77, which is stated to be an amount equal to the total of the plaintiff’s interest payments from October 17, 1955, to December 31, 1958. Further payments of $24,725.02 and $5,035.01 were made in 1961, according to the stipulation representing the plaintiff’s total payments for the period from January 1, 1959, to May 31, 1961, and from June 1, 1961, to November 30, 1961.

Sometime prior to February 18, 1960, the bank, which as the result of a merger had become Security-Mutual Bank and Trust Company, advised the plaintiff that the arrangement as it stood was no longer satisfactory due to the age of the transaction and the fact that the Estate had never been settled. The plaintiff agreed to a change whereby the Estate would be removed from the picture, and on February 18th it executed and delivered to Security-Mutual a new note for $190,000.00 with securities belonging to it and to G. A. Buder, Jr., personally as collateral. At the same time Security-Mutual gave the plaintiff [510]*510a release with respect to all of its interest in the claim and delivered to it the original fourteen notes and the collateral pledged with them.

The plaintiff was on the cash basis during all of the period in question. It deducted none of the regular interest payments it made pursuant to the notes executed by it. The problem it now faces is that in 1964 the Commissioner determined deficiencies against it resulting from its receipt of the corresponding amounts from the Estate in 1960 and 1961, and at that time deductions for the interest payments made on the notes in the years 1955 through 1959 were no longer available on account of the statute of limitations. The plaintiff argues that the monthly interest payments to Mutual represented advances to the Estate paid to Mutual on its behalf, and that consequently the corresponding total amounts later received from the Estate were merely repayment. The core of this argument is that the Estate was the real debtor with respect to the loan from Mutual. The government contends that the Estate had no obligation to Mutual, that instead there were two separate debts, and that as Mutual’s obligor and the Estate’s obligee the plaintiff both paid and received interest.

The government relies primarily on the form of the transaction, emphasizing that the note of November 17, 1955, was signed by G. A. Buder, Jr., for the plaintiff and does not mention the Estate as a party, and that the claim was assigned for the express purpose of enabling Mutual to hold it as collateral for loans to Livestock, such arrangement being continued when the plaintiff took Livestock’s place. The plaintiff stresses that it received none of the proceeds from the loan and had no profit from the transaction, and that the manifest purpose was to enable the Estate to avoid an immediate liquidation of assets. It notes that a guarantor or surety ordinarily cannot deduct interest. Eskimo Pie Corp. v. Commissioner, 4 T.C. 669, aff’d 153 F.2d 301 (3rd Cir. 1946); 2 P-H Federal Taxes 13,037 (1968). However, in the government’s view the purpose and the ultimate beneficiary are irrelevant since the parties could accomplish the same result, obtaining credit for the Estate, either by means of a direct loan with a guarantee or by using the device of two separate loans.

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Related

Buder v. United States
332 F. Supp. 345 (E.D. Missouri, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 F. Supp. 507, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5488, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lydiade-investment-trust-v-united-states-moed-1968.