Nordberg v. Commissioner

79 T.C. No. 41, 79 T.C. 655, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 30
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1982
DocketDocket No. 17754-80
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 79 T.C. No. 41 (Nordberg 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
Nordberg v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. No. 41, 79 T.C. 655, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 30 (tax 1982).

Opinion

Raum, Judge:

The Commissioner determined an income tax deficiency of $4,396.29 against petitioners Paul and Debra Nordberg for the taxable year ended December 31, 1978. Petitioners, in addition to disputing the deficiency, claim an overpayment of $5,186.26 in income taxes paid for 1978.1 In respect of both the deficiency and the asserted overpayment, the only issue for decision is whether $100,000 received by Paul Nordberg in 1978 was a loan or was a partial payment on certain notes in which he held an interest, resulting in the receipt of taxable gain to the extent that the amount received exceeded his basis in those notes.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts and attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.

Petitioners, husband and wife, filed a joint Federal income tax return for 1978. At the time their petition was filed, they resided in Auburn, Mass. Since Debra Nordberg is a petitioner herein only by virtue of having filed a joint return for 1978, Paul Nordberg will sometimes hereinafter be referred to as petitioner.

This case grows out of the notorious salad oil scandal which surfaced in 1963. It involved a corporation controlled by a person named D’Angelis, which had borrowed some $125 million on the security of warehouse receipts for salad oil issued by a subsidiary of the American Express Co. It turned out that some $128 million worth of salad oil purportedly in the tanks was "missing.” Mr. D’Angelis was convicted of criminal offenses relating thereto; and the creditors were left with claims against Mr. D’Angelis and his corporation that were virtually worthless. One of those creditors was Scarburgh Co., Inc. (Scarburgh), a privately owned commercial finance company which had made loans of about $24 million on the security of the salad oil warehouse receipts. Scarburgh in turn had borrowed large amounts of money (some $24 million) from banks putting up as security these very warehouse receipts. It was also indebted to certain unsecured creditors. After the scandal broke, Scarburgh ceased being an operating company, and instead was engaged in efforts to settle not only the claims which it had against others (particularly the American Express Co. and its subsidiary, as well as three insurance companies) but also the claims which its own creditors had against Scarburgh itself.

Scarburgh’s own creditors included not only the banks which had made loans to it on the basis of the warehouse receipts as collateral (the secured creditors), but also certain unsecured creditors, notably, six financial institutions which had purchased a $4 million issue of Scarburgh’s six-percent subordinated notes in 1962 (the subordinated notes). It also had a potential unsecured liability of $925,041.72 to the Chase Manhattan Bank (Chase Manhattan) in respect of a claim under a guarantee of certain loans and advances made by Chase Manhattan to a third party. The record does not disclose whether, or to what extent, there had been a default or defaults by that third party, the primary debtor, or whether or to what extent Scarburgh may have had defenses against such claim. To the extent that Chase Manhattan’s $925,041.72 claim under the guarantee was enforceable, it was senior to the rights of the holders of the subordinated notes.

By September 9, 1966, an understanding had been reached between the American Express Co. and its subsidiary, on the one hand, and Scarburgh and Scarburgh’s secured creditors as to the amount that the American Express Co. would pay in respect of the worthless warehouse receipts.2 In addition, Scarburgh had either come to an agreement, or expected to come to an agreement, with two of the three insurance companies in respect of reimbursement for a portion of the loss sustained by reason of the salad oil fraud. On September 9, 1966, Scarburgh entered into a complicated agreement with its creditors concerning the priority of payment of their respective claims. The funds to be received from the American Express Co. and the insurance companies, in addition to other possible assets of Scarburgh, were to be sources for payments to Scarburgh’s creditors.

To the extent relevant herein, the September 9, 1966, agreement in essence provided that payments, as specified in the agreement, would be made first to "the banks” (the secured creditors). Second in priority was the $925,041.72 unsecured claim "allegedly owing” to Chase Manhattan, and third in priority was the principal amount of the subordinated notes. The $4 million total principal amount of the subordinated notes outstanding was divided among six institutions as follows:

State Mutual Life Assurance
Co. of America . $750,000
Paul Revere Life Insurance Co . 1,000,000
Bessemer Securities Corp . 500,000
George Putnam Fund of Boston . 750,000
Country Life Insurance Co . 500,000
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co . 500,000
4,000,000

By 1972, Scarburgh had settled most of its claims against the American Express Co. and two of the insurance companies. Its only remaining claim of any substance still being pursued was against the third insurance company, the American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Co. (AMMI), in the amount of approximately $28 million. Although Scarburgh had made substantial payments to its secured creditors (the banks), it had made no payments to Chase Manhattan or the holders of the subordinated notes.

Petitioner Paul Nordberg was a high school student when the salad oil scandal became public in 1963. He later went to Dartmouth College as an undergraduate and thereafter obtained a graduate degree in business administration from Dartmouth. After completing his graduate work, he became (around 1972 or 1973) an employee in the investment department of State Mutual Life Assurance Co. of America (State Mutual), a life insurance company based in Worcester, Mass. Like the other five holders of Scarburgh’s subordinated notes, State Mutual had not received any payments on its $750,000 of notes. In 1975, State Mutual decided to dispose of the notes. In the latter part of 1975 petitioner arranged for a friend, Joseph P. Doherty, an "administrative assistant” to a Congressman, to purchase the $750,000 of notes from State Mutual for the token amount of about $100. On April 1,1977, petitioner, who was then in the process of terminating his employment with State Mutual, purchased two-thirds of Mr. Doherty’s notes (in the face amount of $500,000) for $10,000. The latter amount represented about two-thirds of the legal fees which Mr. Doherty had incurred in respect of the notes. Petitioner subsequently, by May 1978, had in addition expended $11,382.84 in legal fees related to this investment, giving a basis of $21,382.84 in the notes. Mr. Doherty remained the record holder of the entire $750,000 of notes, but it was clearly understood that petitioner had a two-thirds interest therein. Petitioner had meanwhile become an "administrative assistant” to a Congressman, but the record does not disclose whether it was the same Congressman for whom Mr. Doherty had worked.

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Bluebook (online)
79 T.C. No. 41, 79 T.C. 655, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nordberg-v-commissioner-tax-1982.