Morainville v. Commissioner

46 B.T.A. 753, 1942 BTA LEXIS 822
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedMarch 26, 1942
DocketDocket Nos. 102140, 102141.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 B.T.A. 753 (Morainville 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
Morainville v. Commissioner, 46 B.T.A. 753, 1942 BTA LEXIS 822 (bta 1942).

Opinion

[756]*756OPINION.

Steeni-iagen :

1. The petitioners seek to avoid the deficiency and to establish error of .their own returns and consequent overpayment, upon the ground primarily that in carrying out its “Plan for the Rearrangement of Capitalization” the Hey wood-Wakefield Co. accomplished a statutory reorganization and that the receipt by them in 1936 and 1937 of series B shares was therefore tax free.

Without discussion, it may be adopted as true that there was a recapitalization, and that this was a statutory reorganization, as provided in section 112 (g) (1) (D), Revenue Act of 1936. But not every receipt by a shareholder as a direct or collateral incident of a reorganization is tax free; only such are tax free as are covered by the express terms of the statute. This must be obvious; for a dividend in unlike shares or in bonds is a recapitalization, but no one would contend that the receiving shareholder may therefore omit the dividend from his income.

The petitioners argue that to them the result of the rearrangement was the substitution of six shares of series B first preferred and 75 cents cash for each share of second preferred. This, they say, is an exchange described in section 112 (b) (3),1 and they refer to the doctrine that a stock dividend is not taxable if it works no change in the corporate entity or in the stockholder’s proportional interest. They conceive of the cash dividend, the one share dividend of 1936, the one share dividend of 1937, and the exchange of 1937 as together constituting an integrated recapitalization; and upon that postulate they urge that the two shares received by express dividend are not taxable. They raise no question as to the propriety of treating the cash dividend as taxable, and the Commissioner has not disputed the nontaxability of the four shares received in exchange; only the taxability of the two share dividends is in issue.

In ascertaining the character of the steps of the plan and performance, it is of the utmost importance that its terms should be read rather than the narrative description which was sent to the stockholders with the plan itself; for it is the plan itself which was put in operation and determines the legal effect. The “Plan [757]*757for the Rearrangement of Capitalization”, dated October 23, 1936, provides as to the existing second preferred stock, as follows:

The Plan further contemplates that a stock dividend of two shares of $25 par value Series B First Preferred Stock be declared on each share of Second Preferred Stock outstanding and, also, a cash dividend of $0.75.
A holder of Second Preferred Stock will, also, be offered four shares of Series B First Preferred Stock in exchange for a share of Second Preferred Stock.
In assenting to the Plan the holder of Second Perferred Stock will agree to accept the stock and cash dividend in full satisfaction of arrears in dividends accumulated to December 1, 1936, and further agrees to exchange his Second Preferred Stock for Series B First Preferred Stock at the ratio of four shares of Series B First Preferred to one share of Second Preferred.

This is a clear provision for dividends of cash and two shares in satisfaction of the existing arrears on second preferred shares which had theretofore been recited as $50.75 per share, and for an exchange of one second preferred share for four new series B shares. The provision was carried out to the letter.

No significance can, therefore, be given to the fact that, in sending the plan to the shareholders and urging them to assent, the president of the corporation undertook to give them a condensed statement of its effect upon them in which he said:

Second Pkefeeeed Stock
Tbe Folders of Second Preferred Stock will receive for each share of stock and its accumulated dividend rights six shares of Series B 5% Cumulative First Preferred Stock, $25 par value, and Seventy-five Cents in cash.

In general parlance this is a correct statement, but it can not be taken as proof that the plan was for an integrated exchange rather than for dividends in discharge of the arrears and an exchange of one for four; even though to a shareholder who had assented the ultimate effect may have been the same. Estate of C. T. Grant, 36 B. T. A. 1233, 1246; H. Y. McCord, 31 B. T. A. 342; Edison Securities Corporation, 29 B. T. A. 483; affirmed on this point, 78 Fed. (2d) 85.

Petitioners cite Commissioner v. Kolb, 100 Fed. (2d) 920; Helvering v. Leary, 93 Fed. (2d) 826; Helvering v. Schoellkopf, 100 Fed. (2d) 415; Commissioner v. Whitaker, 101 Fed. (2d) 640; and Commissioner v. Food Industries, Inc., 101 Fed. (2d) 748. Those opinions are distinguishable. Preferred dividends in arrears were discharged by the issuance of new stock in a reorganization. The issuance of the shares, although in satisfaction of the arrears, was not pursuant to the declaration of a dividend. It was held that it could not be treated as a dividend and was not taxable as such to the receiving shareholders. It was clearly intimated, however, that if the shares had been issued in payment of a previously declared dividend it would have been taxable as such. This intimation was fortified by the [758]*758holding in each of the opinions that the cash dividend of 50 cents, which was paid pursuant to an express dividend declaration, was taxable as a dividend even though it was an incidental part of the general reorganization. The latter holding requires the decision here that each of the dividends of 75 cents and of one series B share in 1936 and one in 1937 which were paid pursuant to an express dividend declaration, is taxable as such. This view has been more recently followed in South Atlantic Steamship Lines, 42 B. T. A. 705; Skenandoa Rayon Corporation, 42 B. T. A. 1287; affd., 122 Fed. (2d) 268; certiorari denied, December 22, 1941; J. Weingarten, Inc., 44 B. T. A. 798; on review, C. C. A., 5th Cir.; and Humphryes Manufacturing Co., 45 B. T. A. 114. The petitioners treated these dividends as such in their returns, and there is no reason why this should be changed.'

Petitioners, although arguing that the entire arrangement was an integrated reorganization, argue also that since the entire six shares and cash -which they received represented the same interest in the corporation as was represented by their former holding of second preferred, the theory of a true nontaxable stock dividend is applicable. The argument necessarily falls with the rejection of the conception of unification, since it can not be said that the entire six shares took the place of the original one share as the result of either a stock dividend or an exchange. After the dividends of each of the two shares, the shareholders continued to hold their original second preferred shares and thus they were in a position of having the new and different series B shares added to the second preferred shares already held. Certainly during the period of this holding the second preferred shareholders were in no position to argue that the share dividends brought them no change of interest. The nontaxable stock dividend theory is inapplicable.

2. The petitioners on their returns used a value of $20.50 a share for the dividend of 1936 and of $14.50 a share for the dividend of 1937.

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Morainville v. Commissioner
46 B.T.A. 753 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
46 B.T.A. 753, 1942 BTA LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morainville-v-commissioner-bta-1942.