New Jersey Mortg. & Title Co. v. Commissioner

3 T.C. 1277, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 63
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 28, 1944
DocketDocket No. 109011
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 T.C. 1277 (New Jersey Mortg. & Title Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Jersey Mortg. & Title Co. v. Commissioner, 3 T.C. 1277, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 63 (tax 1944).

Opinion

OPINION.

Keen, Judge'.

The critical question now before us in this case is whether the reorganization or exchange between the Mortgage Co. and petitioner comes within the provisions of the statute providing that gain or loss resulting therefrom should not be recognized for tax purposes. Respondent now says it does not. This question was raised by respondent affirmatively, after the deficiency was determined, by his answer to the amended petition. Petitioner now contends that it does. If petitioner’s contention is correct, its basis as to the property acquired by the reorganization will be the same as that of its predecessor corporation. See sec. 113 (a) (6), Revenue Act of 1934.1

The Guarantee Mortgage & Title Co. (herinafter called “the old corporation”) was in default on due and unpaid interest on its guaranteed mortgages and bonds and on those of its wholly owned subsidiary on May 31,1935, in the sum of $315,815; and it had cash on hand of only $80,699.53, as alleged in the petition which it filed in the Chancery Court of New Jersey on June 17, 1935, for its reorganization or rehabilitation as an insurance company. This petition was filed by the corporation upon authorization of its board of directors. No proceeding was instituted by its bondholders. The court, having taken jurisdiction of the action filed by the corporation, issued a decree on May 12, 1937, approving a plan of reorganization, pursuant to which the assets of the old corporation were conveyed to the petitioner corporation by the old corporation, its subsidiary corporation, the trustee in the rehabilitation proceedings, and the trustee or depository of certain of its assets. The old corporation’s bondholders of all kinds exchanged their bonds in the principal amount of $2,348,893 for bonds of the New Jersey Mortgage & Title Co., the petitioner, which had been organized on May 20, 1936. These bonds bore interest from October 1, 1936, and were of equal face value with the old bonds. In addition, the old bondholders received preferred voting stock of petitioner, $1 par value, in the sum of $236,878, for arrears of interest on the old bonds to the date in 1935 when the reorganization proceedings were begun; and also received as bondholders of petitioner cash in the sum of $24,017.48 in payment of interest of one percent on petitioner's bonds for the 6-month period from the date of issuance to March 31, 1937. The stockholders of the old corporation received shares of petitioner’s voting common stock, par value of $25, equal in number to those held in the old corporation, which had had, however, a par value of $100.

The reorganization provisions of the Revenue Acts of 1984, 1936, and 1938, as amended by section 213 (g) (1), Revenue Act of 1939,2 provide for two situations under subsection .(B). The first provision of clause (B) provides for the “acquisition by one corporation, in exchange solely for all or a part of its voting stock, of substantially all the properties of another corporation,” with a proviso of construction of the word “solely” added to the effect that “the assumption by the acquiring corporation of a liability of the other, or the fact that property acquired is subject to a liability” shall be disregarded. In the instant case petitioner acquired all of the property of the old corporation from the old corporation or persons acting on its behalf.

It becomes pertinent to inquire in the instant case, therefore, whether there was any payment by the new corporation which would take it out of the strictly limited category of reorganization exchanges allowable by the statute of property “solely for * * * stock.” As the Supreme Court said in the Southwest Consolidated Corporation case, supra, “ ‘solely’ leaves no leeway.”

Respondent argues that the exchange was not “solely for * * * stock” since under the plan petitioner took the assets of its predecessor subject to unsecured debts and assumed to pay all accounts payable of the old company which were unpaid on June 17, 1935, when the petition in the Chancery Court was filed, and actually did pay these unr secured creditors of the old corporation $38,598.94 under the plan approved by the decree. It is obvious, however, that payment of such obligations of the predecessor corporation is only a discharge of a liability antedating the plan, and that these obligations were not changed in nature and amount by the plan or by any court decree. It is clearly distinguishable from the indebtedness of old bondholders paid in cash in the Southwest Consolidated Corporation case, supra. In that case the lien of the bonds was removed from the debtor’s property by the decree of the Court ordering a judicial sale as a step in the reorganization and the rights of the nonparticipating bondholders who received the cash payment were limited and defined by the same decree. In this case the obligations assumed and paid by petitioner were the obligations of the old corporation and were assumed and paid by it as such without any change as to nature or amount.

Respondent also argues in like tenor that the payment of one percent interest to the new bondholders on the new bonds of petitioner arose out of the reorganization plan and was an inducement to the exchange. Whatever effect it may have had as an inducement, it was not an obligation of the old corporation liquidated by cash nor did it represent any part of the quid pro quo the property of the old corporation was transferred. It was a payment on the obligations of the new corporation, and might as well have been made at the end of the first six months or later. Nor need the payment of taxes and expenses of the reorganization be considered as any bar. Claridge Apartments Co., 1 T. C. 163; reversed on another issue, 138 Fed. (2d) 962.

More serious is the contention that the issuance of the new bonds, although identical in principal amount with the old, did not constitute an assumption of the old corporation’s debt within the rule of the Southwest Consolidated Corporation case, supra, since they were not payable in the same terms and were, in effect, “income bonds” since interest on them was payable in excess of 2 percent only when it could be justified by the corporation’s earnings. The new bonds were of a single issue, bore 5 percent interest, but payable in excess of 2 percent only on the conditions just stated, ran for 10 years from the maturity date of the old bonds, and replaced 23 separate issues of the old corporation, which, no doubt, varied in term and possibly also in interest rate. The record does not show their precise tenor, but we may assume differences between the new and the old, and must assume a difference of term of 10 years in favor of the old bonds on the facts stipulated. We are of the opinion that this mollification of the terms-of the bonded indebtedness as to interest rate and maturity is immaterial, and that the controlling fact is that the bonds of the new corporation were substituted for the bonds of the old corporation in the exact amount of the principal of the indebtedness. See Harden F. Taylor, 43 B. T. A. 563; affd., 128 Fed. (2d) 885 (C. C. A., 2d Cir.); Louis E. Stoddard, Jr., 47 B. T. A. 584, reversed on another issue, 141 Fed. (2d) 76. We conclude that the issuance of the new bonds constituted an assumption of the old corporation’s debt.

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Related

New Jersey Mortg. & Title Co. v. Commissioner
3 T.C. 1277 (U.S. Tax Court, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
3 T.C. 1277, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-jersey-mortg-title-co-v-commissioner-tax-1944.