National City Bank of New York v. Helvering

98 F.2d 93, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 673, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3159
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1938
Docket188
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 98 F.2d 93 (National City Bank of New York v. Helvering) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National City Bank of New York v. Helvering, 98 F.2d 93, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 673, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3159 (2d Cir. 1938).

Opinion

*94 L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This case arises on a petition to review an order of the Board of Tax Appeals, assessing an income tax deficiency for each of the years 1922 and 1923 against the petitioner, as executor of James E. O’Neil. The facts are as follows. During the years 1921, 1922 and 1923 O’Neil was president and general manager of the Prairie Oil and Gas Company. He resigned on September 11, 1923, left for France in December of that year, and so far as the record shows, did not return until some time during the year 1928; he died on August 21, 1931, a resident of the city of New York. In 1921 two Texas oil companies, controlled by one, Humphreys, owned large oil fields which Humphreys wished to exploit. O’Neil, oneBlackmer, and Stewart, president of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, went over these fields, and about the middle of November, Blackmer brought in Sinclair, president of the Sinclair defining Co., whom he told that he had already arranged to buy 30,000,000 barrels of oil from Humphreys. On the 16th and 17th, O’Neil, Stewart, Sinclair, Blackmer and Humphreys agreed upon a price of $1.75 to the Prairie, Sinclair and Standard Oil Companies; and Blackmer and Humphreys agreed privately upon a price of $1.50 a barrel between themselves. Blackmer told the other three that their companies must buy from the Continental Trading Co., Ltd., a Canadian company, organized on the 16th by a Toronto barrister, named Osier. They agreed: one contract was made by which Humphreys’ companies were to sell 33,000,000 barrels to the Continental Co. at $1.50 a barrel.; another, by which the Continental Co. was to sell to the Prairie and Sinclair companies the same oil at $1.75. (The Standard Oil Co. shared in this contract with the Sinclair Co.) These contracts were later ratified by the Standard Oil Co., Jhe Prairie Co. and the Sinclair Co., all of which knew of the difference in price between the two contracts. Apparently at about the same time Sinclair told Blackmer that he would expect some part of that difference for himself, and on the 26th, Osier told Stewart that he also might have a share. Stewart thereupon executed a declaration of trust to his company of any interest that he might receive; informed one of its officers, and put the instrument in his safe deposit box. It does not aopear when O’Neil decided to take a part, but he must have done so, for he, Blackmer, Sinclair and Stewart divided the difference between themselves in substantially equal proportions, and all kept any knowledge of it from their companies, except as we have just stated as to Stewart. A pipe line was laid and the oil began to run in January of 1922; large profits resulted, amounting during the year 1922 and up to June, 1923 to over three million dollars. As the money came in, Osier bought Liberty Bonds with it which he distributed among the four:. $727,000 each to O’Neil and Blackmer; $759,500 to Stewart; and $750,-000 to Sinclair. (O’Neil received $441,-000 in 1922 and $286,000 in 1923, the last delivery was probably on June 15th). It does not definitely appear what O’Neil did with his bonds until the end of 1923; except that he clipped all the' coupons for 1922 and 1923; and in August, 1922 and June, 1923 cashed them on at least $162,-000 of the bonds and deposited the proceeds in his bank. He apparently mixed them with a number of other "bonds and may never have reduced the entire batch below those which he received; all we know is that he used at least $31,000 of those coming from the Continental Company for his own purposes in 1924.

A committee of the Senate began to investigate the whole transaction in May of 1923: this apparently frightened those in control of the Continental Co., for on May 26th they sold the contract to the Prairie and Sinclair companies for $400,-000, although only one third of the oil had at the time been delivered and the sum was totally inadequate. Shortly before O’Neil left for France in December, 1923, he delivered to his son three or four packages of bonds telling him that among them were $727,000, the property of the Prairie Co., which his son was to deliver to it in case of his death, or during his life upon his written order. In May, 1925, while in Canada, he had an interview with his former secretary, Kountz, and Fitzpatrick, the chairman of the Prairie Company’s board of directors, and its attorney, Flannelly. He told them of the bonds and that he had always intended to keep them apart and give them to the Prairie Co.; that he had never returned them as part of his income, and had clipped the coupons by mistake. He gave no explanation of his failure ,to inform the company earlier, except that there were other persons con *95 cerned who might be injured by the disclosure. Thereupon he gave Kountz an order upon his son for $800,000 in Liberty bonds, adding $73,000 for the coupons he had disposed of, and on this order the son delivered that number to the Prairie company.

O’Neil filed income tax returns on June 8th, 1923, and on June 9, 1924; neither one included the bonds, nor did Stewart, Blackmer and Sinclair include theirs in their returns. However, on February 23, 1928, Blackmer’s attorney told the taxing officials of those which Blackmer had received, and the Commissioner thereupon assessed him; and on August 26, 1929 posted a letter to O’Neil proposing to assess him also. The deficiency notice was sent to his executor on July 11, 1934.

The taxpayer raises three objections: (1) that O’Neil never regarded the bonds as his own, but held them always as agent or trustee for his company; (2) that even though he had taken and held them as his own, they were not his property; and as constructive trustee he could not be taxed upon them; (3) that assuming that he could be taxed, he did not so understand it, and therefore did not file fraudulent returns within the meaning of the statute. As to the first point, if O’Neil always meant to hold the bonds as agent for his company, he went about it in a curiously indirect and covert way, for there was no apparent reason why he should not have turned them over at once. Stewart did mean to take them only as trustee, and he at once divested himself of any interest in them, while continuing to protect the others concerned. Why could not O’Neil have done the same thing? It was not even necessary to inform another officer of his company; an effective trust could have been set up through a third person who would have kept his confidence. The transaction on its face had every earmark of the usual illicit bonus or commission, and there is not a shred of evidence that he ever intended anything else until December, 1923: if there had been, it would be hard to reconcile it with clipping the’ coupons and depositing more than a fifth of them to his own account. The declaration and delivery to his son in December, 1923, had no legal effect, and nobody suggests that it had; it is put forward as evidence of the intent with which he had originally received the bonds, like the eventual restitution in May, 1925. There is however no reason so to construe it. In the first place it was altogether inadequate as restitution; he parted with no control, at most it was an expression of pious desire to be realized in the future. But even if it were more, it could hardly throw any light upon the intent with which he had received the bonds of 1922, because there was another adequate, and very different, motive for it. When the Senate committee began to unearth the affair in May, 1923, as we have said, all those concerned at once took fright and cancelled the arrangement.

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Bluebook (online)
98 F.2d 93, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 673, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-city-bank-of-new-york-v-helvering-ca2-1938.