New Jersey Title Guarantee & Trust Co. v. Commissioner

13 T.C. 674, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 48
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1949
DocketDocket No. 101988
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 T.C. 674 (New Jersey Title Guarantee & Trust 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 Title Guarantee & Trust Co. v. Commissioner, 13 T.C. 674, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 48 (tax 1949).

Opinions

OPINION.

Hablan, Judge-.

Bespondent mailed to the Bank of Lafayette, % petitioner, Jersey City, New Jersey (the Bank of Lafayette having been merged with petitioner December 9, 1931, and lost its separate identity) notice of deficiency in income tax for the calendar year 1930 in the amount of $150, as transferee of assets of the New York Mutual Telegraph Co., New York, New York. The sole issue is whether or not petitioner, an insolvent state bank, is exempt from transferee liability under section 3798 of the Internal Kevenue Code. The facts have been stipulated.

For many years prior to February 14,1939, petitioner was engaged in a general banking business in Hudson County, New Jersey, a substantial part of which business consisted of receiving deposits and making loans and discounts. On that date Louis A. Beilly, then Commissioner of Banking and Insurance of the State of New Jersey, took possession of the property and business of petitioner for the purpose of liquidating it. Among the assets so taken over were 100 shares of stock of the New York Mutual Telegraph Co. standing in the name of the Bank of Lafayette.

Petitioner is still being liquidated, and as of this date there have been paid to its depositors and creditors out of the assets of the company so far liquidated 15 liquidating dividends, totaling 72% per cent of the respective claims of the depositors and creditors. The remaining unliquidated assets of petitioner are insufficient for the full payment of its depositors.

Petitioner is a transferee of the New York Mutual Telegraph Co. That relationship grows out of an agreement dated March 17, 1883, entered into between the Mutual Union Telegraph Co. (predecessor of the New York Mutual Telegraph Co.), as lessor, and the Western Union Telegraph Co., as lessee, whereby the former leased to the latter for a term of 99 years from the 15th day of February 1883, its entire telegraph system and all of its property, to manage, operate, and maintain the same for its, the Western Union Telegraph Co.’s, own profit and at its own cost and risk of profit or loss. In return the Western Union Telegraph Co. agreed to pay as rental to the Mutual Union Telegraph Co., until January 1, 1885, the sum of $150,000 per annum, and thereafter during the term of the agreement to the stockholders of the Mutual Union Telegraph Co., or its successor company, pro rata according to the stockholdings, the sum of $150,000 per annum, no part of which sum was by said agreement after January 1, 1885, payable to the Mutual Union Telegraph Co., nor was any part thereof by said agreement thereafter during said term subject to the control or contract of the Mutual Union Telegraph Co. The agreement is still in full force and effect.

Since the inception of the lease agreement, the Western Union Telegraph Co. has continually used, operated, enjoyed, and maintained the leased property and the New York Mutual Telegraph Co. has not possessed or operated the same.

During the taxable year 1930 the Western Union Telegraph Co. paid the said sum of $150,000 directly to the stockholders of the New York Mutual Telegraph Co. During that year the Bank of Lafayette held and owned 100 shares of the par value of $25 each out of the total of 100,000 shares of capital stock of $2,500,000 par value of the New York Mutual Telegraph Co., and by reason thereof was entitled to receive and did receive from the Western Union Telegraph Co., pursuant to the agreement aforesaid, $1.50 per share in respect of the 100 shares held and owned by it, or the sum of $150.

Respondent duly assessed against the New York Mutual Telegraph Co. income tax for the calendar year 1930, but the same is still due, owing, and unpaid, because the New York Mutual Telegraph Co. has been and is still without property in its possession out of which any liability for its income tax for 1930 might be satisfied. On January 31,1940, respondent mailed, as noted above, to the Bank of Lafayette, transferee, % petitioner, notice of deficiency proposed to be assessed for the aforesaid income tax liability of the New York Mutual Telegraph Co., to the extent of the $150 received during 1930.

Any sum or sums paid by petitioner in satisfaction of said transferee liability will diminish its assets which are available for payment to its depositors, and it has no other funds or sources out of which payment of said deficiency assessment can be made.

Petitioner contends that it is exempt from transferee liability under section 3798 of the Internal Revenue Code. Respondent maintains that it is not. Petitioner concedes that it is liable as transferee in the amount determined by respondent, plus interest as provided by law, if our decision is that it is not entitled to the exemption conferred by section 3798. That section provides, in so far as material herein, as follows:

SEO. 3798 [reenacting section 22 of the Act of March 1, 1879, as amended by section 818 of the Revenue Act of 1938 and section 406 of the Revenue Act of 1939], EXEMPTION OP INSOLVENT BANKS PROM TAX.
(a) Whenever and after any bank or trust company, a substantial portion of the business of which consists of receiving deposits and making loans and discounts, has ceased to do business by reason of insolvency or bankruptcy, no tax shall be assessed or collected, or paid into the Treasury of the United States on account of such bank, or trust company, which shall diminish the assets thereof necessary for the full ¡payment of all its depositors; and such tax shall be abated irom such national banks as are found by the Comptroller of the Currency to be insolvent; and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, when the facts shall appear to him, is authorized to remit so much of the said tax against any such insolvent banks and trust companies organized under State law as shall be found to affect the claims of their depositors.

There is no dispute that petitioner is an insolvent bank within the meaning of section 3798, nor, as has been stipulated, that the payment of the transferee liability of $150 will diminish the assets of petitioner available for payment of its depositors. The sole question is whether payment of this liability will be the payment of a tax “on account of” petitioner within the meaning and intent of the act. Petitioner argues that section 3798 is sufficiently broad to exempt an insolvent bank from payment of a tax due by another. Respondent’s position is that the act is limited in its application to cases involving taxes directly imposed upon a bank, and that it has no application to a case such as this one, which involves the liability of stockholder-transferee of the assets of a corporation for the latter’s; unpaid Federal income tax.

Section 311 (a) (1) of the Revenue Act of 1928,1 under which respondent asserted transferee liability against petitioner herein, provides a remedy for the collection of income tax in situations in which the taxpayer has transferred or disposed of his assets, leaving him unable to meet his liability. The provision was first introduced as section 280 of the Revenue Act of 1926. Prior to that time the Government’s chief remedy was, to quote from the portion of the report of the Senate Finance Committee pertaining to section 280 (p.

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Bluebook (online)
13 T.C. 674, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-jersey-title-guarantee-trust-co-v-commissioner-tax-1949.