Norden-Ketay Corporation (Formerly Ketay Instrument Corporation) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

319 F.2d 902, 12 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5093, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4787
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1963
Docket330, Docket 28077
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 319 F.2d 902 (Norden-Ketay Corporation (Formerly Ketay Instrument Corporation) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) 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
Norden-Ketay Corporation (Formerly Ketay Instrument Corporation) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 319 F.2d 902, 12 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5093, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4787 (2d Cir. 1963).

Opinion

J. JOSEPH SMITH, Circuit Judge.

Prior to 1951, petitioner was an established Illinois corporation primarily engaged in the business of mining coal under the name Consolidated Coal Corporation. During 1950, overtures to Lehman Bros., a New York investment banking *904 firm, had been made on behalf of the owners of the principal block of stock, with a view towards sale of the .stock. Lehman Bros, located a buyer, the Ziegler Coal & Coke Company, which, however, as matters finally developed was interested only in purchasing the assets of Consolidated. The following transactions then took place: Lehman Bros, exercised the purchase options it had secured through an agent and became the owner of nearly 95% of the outstanding stock on February 28, 1951; on the same day Consolidated conveyed all its assets except cash and Treasury obligations to Ziegler in return for $3,900,000 cash and Ziegler’s promise to pay 50% of all amounts received over $800,000 for certain “disposable properties” conveyed by Consolidated which were to be sold. Immediately on receipt of the cash payment, the directors of Consolidated declared a partial liquidating dividend nearly equivalent to the amount of the payment. This, of course, went mainly to Lehman Bros. At the same time, Consolidated filed a statement of intent to dissolve with the Illinois Secretary of State. Consolidated had sustained a loss on the sale of the assets of $3,509,043.55 and a net operating loss of $3,466,387.52 for 1951.

Consolidated remained dormant throughout 1951 and early 1952, declaring a further dividend in partial liquidation during this period. In March of 1952, Ziegler liquidated Consolidated’s interest in the disposable properties for $250,000 cash, the agreement also requiring that Consolidated immediately take steps toward dissolution. Instead, the Consolidated directors began to search for some new field of endeavor which the corporation might enter. This quest culminated on April 6, 1953 in the purchase of the stock of three closely-held corporations, Ketay Manufacturing Corporation, Kinetix Instrument Company, and Ketay Research & Development Company (hereafter called the Ketay Companies), engaged in the manufacture and sale of precision electronic equipment. The total consideration was $2,275,000, later increased by $25,000, of which $100,000 was payable as a cash down payment and the balance in instalments over the next five years. The restrictive agreement with Ziegler was cancelled by mutual consent at about this time. Consolidated changed its name to Ketay Manufacturing Corporation, dissolved the three Ketay Companies, and took over their assets and management. The stockholders of the three companies were allowed to purchase newly issued Consolidated-Ketay stock, which they all did, and all of them remained as officers or directors of Consolidated-Ketay.

The corporation reported taxable income for 1954 from its electronics business of $1,007,623.38 before net operating loss deduction. It carried over a net operating loss from 1951 of $2,304,-125.58 which had resulted principally from the sale of the coal-mining assets. After deducting this loss, the corporation reported a net loss for 1954 of $1,-296,502.20. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, by his notice of deficiency, disallowed the claimed net operating loss deduction. Petitioner seeks review of the decision of the Tax Court sustaining the asserted deficiency.

The applicable law is to be found in the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. See I. R. C. of 1954 § 172(g)(1). The particular provision that governs is I. R. C. of 1939 § 122, and the leading interpretation of the provision is to be found in the opinion of the Supreme Court in Libson Shops v. Koehler, 353 U.S. 382, 77 S.Ct. 990, 1 L.Ed.2d 924 (1957). Application of the principles of that decision to the facts of the present case lead us to conclude that the decision of the Tax Court must be affirmed.

The precise question in Libs on Shops was whether “a corporation resulting from a merger of 17 separate incorporated businesses, which had filed separate income tax returns, may carry over and deduct the pre-merger net operating losses of three of its constituent corporations from the post-merger income attributable to the other businesses.” 353 U.S. at 382, 77 S.Ct. at 991. *905 Sixteen sales corporations had been merged into a management company without change in the actual business carried on by any of them. As the Supreme Court interpreted the statute, the legal problem upon which the case turned was the interpretation of the operative words “the taxpayer” in I. R. C. of 1939 § 122(b) (2) (C). 1 The purposes of the loss carry-over section, as revealed by the legislative history, yielded the solution :

“The requirement of a continuity of business enterprise as applied to this case is in accord with the legislative history of the carry-over and carry-back provisions. Those provisions were enacted to ameliorate the unduly drastic consequences of taxing income strictly on an annual basis. They were designed to permit a taxpayer to set off its lean years against its lush years, and to strike something like an average taxable income computed over a period longer than one year. There is, however, no indication in their legislative history that these provisions were designed to permit the averaging of the pre-merger losses of one business with the post-merger income of some other business which had been operated and taxed separately before the merger. What history there is suggests that Congress primarily was concerned with the fluctuating income of a single business.” (Citations omitted.) 353 U.S. at 386-387, 77 S.Ct. at 993.

The Court concluded that the carry-over was properly disallowed “since the income against which the offset is claimed was not produced by substantially the same businesses which incurred the losses.” 353 U.S. at 390, 77 S.Ct. at 994. To properly apply section 122 as it was interpreted in Libson Shops we must therefore ask whether there has been “continuity of business enterprise,” in effect, whether the same “business” that suffered a loss also reaped the gain against which it is to be offset.

The first and most obvious factor in this determination is the nature of the corporate activity which produced the losses and gains. Here, the losses resulted from the sale of coal-mining assets, or, more generally, from a lack of success in the business of mining coal. The gains were produced by manufacture and sale of electronic equipment. In between, the corporation was stripped of all operating assets for a considerable period of time. Were we to hold for the taxpayer, it would permit a continuously profitable electronics enterprise to avoid large payments of taxes merely because of the fortuitous joinder of its set of assets to the shell of a coal-mining corporation which had a loss history. This does not fit the concept of a single enterprise averaging income over good and bad. years to soften the impact of annual taxation which in Libson Shops the Supreme Court found to be the primary justification of the loss carry-over provision. But that decision did reserve the question whether a change in the character of the business of a single corporate entity might be enough, alone, to defeat the loss carry-over. 353 U.S. at 390 n. 9, 77 S.Ct. at 994.

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319 F.2d 902, 12 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5093, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norden-ketay-corporation-formerly-ketay-instrument-corporation-v-ca2-1963.