Mather v. Commissioner

149 F.2d 393, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1378, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4253
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1945
DocketNos. 9914, 9915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 149 F.2d 393 (Mather v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mather v. Commissioner, 149 F.2d 393, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1378, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4253 (6th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

SIMONS, Circuit Judge.

The common question in the two appeals is whether the petitioners were entitled to a bad debt deduction on their income taxes for 1939, the petitioners being the residuary legatees of Samuel Mather, deceased, who was, at the time of death, contingently liable upon accommodation endorsements. The Commissioner disallowed the deductions and asserted deficiencies which the tax court redetermined.

Prior to June 1, 1931, Robert H. Bishop, Jr., the husband of Mather’s daughter, Constance, became financially involved. Mather loaned Bishop securities to protect his account with a brokerage firm, but the account still being short and the brokers threatening to liquidate the collateral, Mather arranged for a loan from the Guardian Trust Company of Cleveland, Ohio, in the sum of $3,566,000, evidenced by the joint and several note of Mather and Bishop dated June 1, 1931, and secured by collateral belonging to Bishop, his wife, and Mather. With the proceeds of the loan Bishop’s debts were paid. Mather died testate on October 18, 1931, and no payment having been made on the principal of the note a claim was filed by Guardian and allowed against the Mather estate in the face amount of the note. At the time of Mather’s death, Bishop was insolvent, and has been so ever since. In computing the value of the Mather estate for estate tax purposes, the estate was, after some controversy, allowed a deduction for the amount of the joint note plus accrued in[395]*395terest less the value of the securities pledged by Bishop and his wife.

In order to avoid a disastrous liquidation of the Mather estate, in a period of deflated security values, and to provide for the distribution of assets to the legatees under Mather’s will, a corporation styled “Samuel Mather Estate, Inc.,” was created and a contract executed by all interested parties, providing for the acquisition of the estate’s assets by the corporation subject to all its debts and liabilities. The corporation jointly with Bishop, issued Series “A” collateral trust notes in an aggregate amount equal to the balance due on the joint note of Bishop and Mather. It also issued Series “B” collateral trust notes, sufficient to settle the unsecured obligations of the estate. The corporation’s assets were deposited and pledged with a trustee under a trust indenture to secure the payment of the notes, Mather’s executors transferred to the corporation all the property and assets of the estate in a tax-free exchange whereby they received the corporation’s stock which was distributed to the various legatees under the Mather will, in proportion to their interest in the estate. The corporation assumed all of the debts of the estate, including its obligation on the joint note. Included in the assets of the estate transferred to the corporation were the securities which had been ■ pledged for its payment subject to the lien thereon. The corporation’s Series “A” trust notes were delivered to the holders of the joint note as additional evidence of indebtedness, the holders agreeing to make no demand for payment unless the trust notes fell into default. Series “B” notes were delivered to unsecured creditors and accepted by them in full payment of their claims.

Coincident with the transfer of the estate assets to the corporation, an agreement was made by and between the executors of the estate, the corporation, Bishop, and his wife, wherein Bishop acknowledged and agreed that the joint note had been executed by Mather as an accommodation to him; that he was indebted to the executors for the interest and principal which up to that time they had paid on the joint note; and that he would thereafter be indebted to the corporation in this sum plus all further payments which the corporation might make either on the joint note or the Series “A” trust notes issued by him jointly with the corporation. The executors, by the same instrument, assigned their claim against Bishop to the corporation, and Bishop’s wife agreed that her securities, pledged to secure the joint note, might be applied toward its payment.

In December, 1938, a plan of complete liquidation of the corporation was effectuated to take advantage of the provisions of § 112(b) (7) of the Revenue Act of 1938, 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Acts, at page 1041, The petitioners received their pro rata share of the assets of the corporation in kind, subject to all existing liens thereon, in complete cancellation and redemption of their stock in the corporation. Along with other common stockholders, they agreed to assume the payment of the corporation’s debts in proportion to their stock holdings, but only out of the assets transferred to them in exchange for their stock or other property into which such assets might be converted. Among such debts was an unpaid balance due on the joint note of Mather and Bishop in the sum of $1,-403,715.22. Mrs. Bishop’s collateral was sold and applied in reduction of this balance, and during the taxable year the petitioners paid their share of what remained owing on the joint note. The fair market value of the corporation assets received by the petitioners upon its liquidation, was many times their share of the indebtedness assumed, greatly in excess of the fair market value of their share in Mather’s estate at the date of death, and the aggregate value of the assets distributed by the corporation to its stockholders less the debts assumed by them in excess of the net estate of Mather upon the value of which the federal estate tax was based.

The petitioners contend that Mather was simply an accommodation maker of the joint note executed by himself and Bishop; that as such he had an inchoate right to recover from Bishop any amount which he might be required to pay thereon; that the petitioners succeeded to that right; that it was brought to fruition by the payments made by them in 1939; and that Bishop being then insolvent, they became, immediately upon payment, entitled to a bad debt deduction. As to the steps in this rationalization, short of its final conclusion, there is no controversy. The tax court assumed that the legal relationship which arose as between Mather and Bishop, was that Bishop was accommodated by Mather and that the latter had a right over against Bishop immediately upon, but not until his response under the note. It also assumed [396]*396that when the note was given Bishop was solvent, and it found, as a fact, that Mather did not make a gift to Bishop as a consequence of the transaction. It concluded, however, that notwithstanding the rather elaborate and unusual method adopted and carried out in connection with the payment of Mather’s debts and the distribution of his estate, the petitioners may claim no position other than that of residuary legatees of the estate, and do not stand in the place and stead of Mather. Their status is not analogous to that of an assignee succeeding to the rights of his assignor and subject to his liability. Residuary legatees have no interest in a decedent’s estate other than the right to receive their allotted interest therein after the payment of all charges imposed by law and by the testator in the way of specific bequests and annuities, and that among the charges imposed by the law are the debts of the testator to which his whole estate must respond under applicable Ohio law. The duty to discharge such debts rests upon the executor. Had Mather’s estate been administered in the customary manner the petitioners would have made no payments upon the joint note, for the indebtedness would have been discharged before any rights in the estate had ripened in their behalf and before receipt of their distributive shares.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 F.2d 393, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1378, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mather-v-commissioner-ca6-1945.