National Investors Corporation v. Hoey

144 F.2d 466, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1219, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2856
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 1944
Docket384
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 144 F.2d 466 (National Investors Corporation v. Hoey) 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 Investors Corporation v. Hoey, 144 F.2d 466, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1219, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2856 (2d Cir. 1944).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The defendant appeals from a judgment against her for corporate income and excess profit taxes alleged to have been wrongfully collected by her testator from the plaintiff, for the year 1935. The case was tried to a judge on stipulated facts; the substance of which was as follows. The plaintiff, a New York corporation whose principal business was that of “an investment trust,” in 1931 caused a corporation known as the National Investors Fund, Inc., to be organized under the laws of Delaware. This company issued no shares until December 17, 1934, had no assets or liabilities, and conducted no business. The plaintiff was the owner of a number of shares of common stock and “warrants for the purchase of shares” in three of its subsidiaries, called the Second, Third and Fourth National Investors Corporations. The plaintiff wished to unite itself and these four subsidiaries into a single corporation, and, as a preliminary step, on December 17, 1934, it transferred its holdings in the three subsidiaries to the Investors Fund in exchange for ten shares of tha-t company’s stock. The transferee received in May and in August of 1935 dividends, aggregating about $19,000, from the transferred shares, which sum, less $10 for the Delaware franchise tax, it declared and paid as dividends upon the ten shares held by the plaintiff. It also declared and issued to the plaintiff a stock dividend of 100% (10 shares) on December 7, 1935. Thus on that day the Investors Fund had issued twenty shares of its own stock to the plaintiff in exchange for the assets of the plaintiff’s three subsidiaries which on December 17, 1934, the day of their transfer, had been worth $4,660,233.40.

The proposal to unite into a single corporation the plaintiff and the Second, Third and Fourth National Investors Corporations, was submitted to the stockholders on December 20, 1934; but after extended *467 consideration, the shareholders rejected it, and the “Plan,” as it was called, was abandoned. The plaintiff then decided to liquidate the Investors Fund, and began to do so on December 21, 1935, by surrendering two of the twenty shares of that company in exchange for one-tenth of the assets it had transferred on December 17, 1934. The value of the transferred assets had on that day fallen to $2,361,681.30; but it limited itself in 1935 to the realization of only one-tenth of its loss, because it wished to realize in that year only so much as it could use to set off its gains from other sources. In January, 1936, it surrendered the other eighteen shares for the remaining assets of the Investors Fund, and thus completed the liquidation of that company. The issue is whether the plaintiff should be allowed as a deduction from its 1935 income the difference between the value, on December 17, 1934 — $466,023.34—of one-tenth of the shares transferred to Investors Fund and the value on December 21, 1935 — $236,168.-13. The Commissioner refused to allow the deduction and the plaintiff paid to the defendant’s testator the tax imposed upon its income, as so computed.

This result depends upon whether, in the situation just disclosed, we should recognize transactions of sale or exchange between a corporation and its sole shareholder; and our decision turns upon three decisions of the Supreme Court: Burnet v. Commonwealth Improvement Company, 287 U.S. 415, 53 S.Ct. 198, 77 L.Ed. 399; Higgins v. Smith, 308 U.S. 473, 60 S.Ct. 355, 84 L.Ed. 406, and Moline Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner, 319 U.S. 436, 63 S.Ct. 1132, 87 L.Ed. 1499. In the first of these the question was whether it was proper to tax a corporation for profits upon transactions between itself and a decedent’s estate which owned all its shares. The court merely declared that, since a corporation was for most purposes recognized as a separate jural person, and since the situation was not one of the exceptions where the “corporate form” should be “disregarded,” it should be taxed upon its gains, regardless of the fact that no living person had gained or lost a cent. When Higgins v. Smith, supra, was before us (Smith v. Higgins, 2 Cir., 102 F.2d 456) we assumed that this rule held good in a case where the Commissioner had refused to allow a deduction to the sole shareholder of losses sustained in transactions between him and his corporation. In this we were in error, however, for the Supreme Court held that, although the Treasury might insist upon the separate personality of the corporation when it chose, it might also disregard it, when it chose. It explained Burnet v. Commonwealth Improvement Co., supra, 287 U.S. 415, 53 S.Ct. 198, 77 L.Ed. 399, by saying that “a taxpayer is free to adopt such organization of his affairs as he may choose and having elected to do some business as a corporation, he must accept the tax disadvantages.

“On the other hand, the Government may not be required to acquiesce in the taxpayer’s election, of that form for doing business which is most advantageous to him. The Government may look at actualities and upon determination that the form employed of doing business or carrying out the tax event is unreal or a sham may sustain or disregard the effect of the fiction as best serves the purposes of the tax statute. * * * it is command of income and its benefits which marks the real owner of property.” [308 U.S. 473, 60 S.Ct. 358, 84 L.Ed. 406.] This language we later interpreted as meaning that “the Treasury may take a taxpayer at his word, so to say; when that serves its purpose, it may treat the corporation as a separate person from himself; but that is a rule which works only in the Treasury’s own favor; it cannot be used to deplete the revenue.” United States v. Morris & Essex R. Co., 2 Cir., 135 F.2d 711, 713. Again we were wrong; we neglected to observe that the corporate “form” must be “unreal or a sham,” before the Treasury may disregard it; we had taken too literally the concluding language that it was the “command of income and its benefits which marks the real owner of property.”

This error was made plain in the third decision of the Supreme Court — Moline Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra, 319 U.S. 436, 63 S.Ct. 1132, 87 L.Ed. 1499. In that case the question was whether the corporation might insist upon the Treasury’s including capital gains within the gross income of its sole shareholder, and the court decided that it might not. That was the same situation as existed in Burnet v. Commonwealth Improvement Co., supra, 287 U.S. 415, 53 S.Ct. 198, 77 L.Ed. 399. The gloss then put upon Higgins v. Smith, supra, was deliberate and is authoritative: it was that, whatever the purpose of organizing the corporation, “so long as that purpose is the equivalent of *468

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144 F.2d 466, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1219, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 2856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-investors-corporation-v-hoey-ca2-1944.