Pelton Steel Casting Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

251 F.2d 278, 1 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 542, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5758
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1958
Docket12107
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 251 F.2d 278 (Pelton Steel Casting Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pelton Steel Casting Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 251 F.2d 278, 1 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 542, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5758 (7th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

FINNEGAN, Circuit Judge.

Section 102(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, as amended, 55 Stat. 687, 26 U.S.C. § 102 (1952 ed.) imposed a surtax on corporations improperly accumulating surplus. The respondent Commissioner decided that Pelton Steel Casting Co., petitioner, was availed of in 1946 for the purpose of preventing the imposition of such surtax upon its shareholders by accumulating the corporate earnings and profits instep of dividing or distributing them. That determination of the Commissioner covered fiscal years ending November 30, 1945 and November 30, 1946; penalty tax for 1945 was $12,214.22 and for 1946, $69,746.66. The Commissioner conceded there was no deficiency for the year 1945. We have before us for review the Tax Court’s lengthy opinion, reported as Pelton Steel Casting Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 1957, 28 T.C. 153, approving the 1946 penalty tax, and resting in considerable part on stipulated facts. Detailing of the operative facts is obviated by their presentation in the opinion issued by the Tax Court, and for that reason we merely describe the factual situation.

During its fiscal year 1946 Pelton had earnings and profits of $209,731.58 and its common stock was held, in these proportions, by: Ehne — 60%, Fawick— 20% and, Slichter — 20%. When Ehne and Fawick informed Slichter of their mutual desire to sell Pelton, Slichter decided to avert an outside sale. After Slichter consulted a banker and lawyer the three stockholders agreed on November 11, 1946, that the corporation would buy up and redeem 80% of the common stock held by Ehne and Fawick at their price of $1,200,000 (this being 80% of $1,500,000, the selling price of the Pelton assets when offered to outsiders). Under the plan Ehne and Fawick were to receive $800,000 in cash and $400,000 in Pelton preferred stock. That cash flowed from two sources: (1) $300,000 was Pelton’s own money and, (2) $500,000 was borrowed by Pelton on a 10-year agreement, dated April 17, 1947, under which an insurance company covered $300,000 to mature in the last six years, and Pelton’s bank covered $200,000 to mature during the first four years. This loan, secured by a mortgage on Pelton’s plant, was made May 31, 1947, the date when Slichter became the sole common stockholder as the result of the sale-redemption arrangement of 80% of the outstanding common stock held by Ehne and Fawick. Ehne’s preferred stock, newly issued to him under the above plan, was immediately purchased by Slichter who gave Ehne a 20-year installment note.

Financiers planning Pelton’s purchase of the common stock advised against declaration and payment of dividends during 1946. Again, to repeat for emphasis, it is the Tax Court’s opinion which contains recitals of pertinent facts and reproduces the relevant financial statements. On the other hand, this record clearly establishes Pelton as a closely *280 held Corporation whose three director-stockholders did not receive 1946 dividends.

An interesting sidelight here comes from the Tax Court opinion:

“The respective amounts of the personal income tax actually paid by A. J. Ehne for 1946 and the estimated amount of tax for which he would have been liable had all of the 1946 earnings and profits (209,731.58) been distributed in the form of a dividend in that year and had his 60 per cent thereof (some $126,-000) in addition to his other income for that year ($47,063.93, per his tax return) been taxed to' him at ordinary income rates, are as follows:

Actual Estimated Estimated difference

$22,786.73 $124,955.96 $102,169.23

“The tax paid by A. J. Ehne in 1947 on the $603,571 gain realized under the plan on the retirement of his interest in petitioner under the elective alternative tax rates in effect was approximately $150,-000. * * *"

The inference, of course, is that instead of dividing all or a portion of the 1946 earnings and profits,-totaling $209,-731.58, Ehne, Fawick and Slichter countenanced that accumulation and then plowed these earnings into redemption of the common stock. Such an inference is within respectable bounds of reasoning on the evidence before us. On the other hand, Pelton strives to cancel out that inference, and indeed any violation of § 102, by pressing on us, as it did the Tax Court, Slichter’s undiminished efforts to preserve Pelton’s independent existence. In short, the evidence shows that Slichter envisaged Ehne and Fawick selling Pelton to a corporate cannibal; consequently, complete control through the reorganization plan, already described, of Pelton by Slichter loomed up as the only salvation. That reorganization was rejected by the Tax Court on the grounds that it was not promoted for a valid business purpose.

Clearly the batch of ideas sponsored on Pelton’s behalf fails in hurdling this passage in § 102, as amended: “There shall be levied, collected and paid for each taxable year * * * upon the net income of every corporation * * if such corporation * * * is * * availed of for the purpose of preventing the imposition of the surtax upon its shareholders * * * through the medium of permitting earnings or profits to accumulate instead of being divided or distributed * * Obviously, the fact an accumulation existed, in Pelton’s case, is uncontroverted, and its appeal simply urges that the accumulation was not the type or class penalized by § 102.

Regardless of how Pelton’s propositions raised in this appeal are analyzed they recur to the basic theme of “reasonable business needs.” But what Chief Judge Magruder wrote for the court, about Helvering v. Chicago Stock Yards Co., 1943, 318 U.S. 693, 63 S.Ct. 843, 87 L.Ed. 1086 in the course of the opinion 1 reported as Latchis Theatres of Keene v. Commissioner, 1 Cir., 1954, 214 F.2d 834, 835 is both incisive and relevant here. * * when the record contained substantial evidence to support the ultimate inference by the Board of Tax Appeals that corporate profits had been accumulated for the forbidden purpose,, the reviewing court had better not disturb the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals (now the Tax Court of the-United States); it had better forego any finicky refinements in an examination of the subsidiary steps, the mental processes, by which the Board of Tax Appeals arrived at its ultimate finding of' fact. Since then, by the 1948 amendment to § 1141(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, 62 Stat. 991 [26 U.S.C.A. § 1141(a)], the scope of our review of findings of the Tax Court has been made the-same as our review of findings of the-district courts in civil actions tried with *281 out a jury; that is, the Tax Court’s findings of fact cannot be set aside ‘unless clearly erroneous’.”

Dill Manufacturing Co. v. Commissioner, 1939, 39 BTA 1023 and Gazette Publishing Co. v. Self, D.C.Ark.1952, 103 F.Supp. 779 are the two main props erected by Pelton’s counsel when contending that the reorganization plan was a valid business purpose outside the ambit of § 102.

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Bluebook (online)
251 F.2d 278, 1 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 542, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pelton-steel-casting-co-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca7-1958.