Peoples National Bank v. United States

141 F. Supp. 506
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 27, 1956
DocketCiv. A. No. 395
StatusPublished

This text of 141 F. Supp. 506 (Peoples National Bank v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples National Bank v. United States, 141 F. Supp. 506 (W.D. Va. 1956).

Opinion

PAUL, Chief Judge.

This is an action for the recovery of income taxes collected from the plaintiff for the calendar years 1949 and 1950, in the respective sums of $1,235.17 and $5,-434.98.

The plaintiff, which will hereinafter be referred to as the bank or the taxpayer, is a national banking association which has its principal office in the city of Charlottesville, Virginia. Among the customers of the bank over a period of years has been the Crozet Cold Storage Corporation, whose plant is located at the town of Crozet, some 12 or 14 miles from Charlottesville. During the period 1933 to 1935 the bank had acquired 140 shares of the common stock of the Cold Storage Corporation. This appears to have been [507]*507acquired from time to time from various individuals who had pledged the stock as collateral on loans or had turned it over to the bank in payment of indebtedness to the bank. The total cost to the bank of these 140 shares was $12,770.

. In 1948 the Cold Storage Corporation, being short of capital, decided to raise additional funds through an issue of preferred stock which it offered to sell to its common stockholders. The latter, however, did not take up the entire issue of preferred; and the bank, to which the Cold Storage Corporation was heavily indebted at the time, agreed to accept 400 shares of the preferred stock in payment of $38,280 of the indebtedness owed to it by the Cold Storage Corporation. Therefore at the beginning of the year 1949 the bank owned 140 shares of the common stock of the Cold Storage Corporation, acquired at a cost of $12,770, and 400 shares of the preferred stock which had cost the bank $38,280.

On an examination of the bank made in February, 1949, by a federal bank examiner he was of opinion that the common stock of the Cold Storage Corporation (which the bank had held for some •15 or 16 years) was worthless and directed that it be written down to a nominal value of $1.

In October, 1949, another examination of the bank was made and at that time the examiner, after reviewing the financial status of the Cold Storage Corporation and noting that its operations continued at a loss, appraised the 400 shares of preferred stock as of no value and directed that this stock, which was carried on the books at a valuation of $38,280, be written off as a total loss. The sum of these write-offs was $51,049 ($12,769 on the common stock and $38,280 on the preferred). The stock, though charged off as an asset, remained in the bank’s possession.

In filing its tax return for 1949 the bank erroneously added this amount to its reserve for bad debts. When agents of the Bureau of Internal Revenue.finally audited this return, which apparently •was some time subsequent to March 15, 1951, they held that this was not a proper addition to the reserve for bad debts and disallowed it. The bank then claimed that it was entitled to a deduction for the charge-off of this stock as a capital loss. Due to provisions of the income tax law, which need not be here gone into, the taxpayer could not charge off the entire loss for the year 1949, with the result that only $4,940.60 was claimed as a deduction for the year 1949. By the carry-over provisions of the law the taxpayer claimed a further deduction for the year 1950 in the amount of $21,739.92. Based on these claimed deductions the bank filed its claim for refund for overpayment of taxes in the amount of $1,-253.17 for the taxable year 1949 and for $5,434.98 for the year 1950 — the amounts sued for in this action.

To avoid confusion it should be borne in mind that it was not until sometime after March 15,1951, that the Bureau notified the bank that the alleged loss on the stock could not be added to the reserve for bad debts. The returns for both 1949 and 1950 had, of course, been filed prior to that time. Consequently it was sometime after both of these returns had been filed that the bank first made its claim of a deduction based on treating the loss on the stock as a capital loss, and it was in November, 1951, that it filed its claim for refund for the years 1949 and 1950 based on this theory. This lag in time was due to the lapse in time between the filing of a return and the time when the Bureau of Internal Revenue got around to reviewing it. When the claims for refund were filed (in November, 1951) they were finally rejected at some later date. It may be said parenthetically that the court understands that the taxpayer has filed similar claims for refunds for several subsequent years to which, if its position be correct, it would be entitled to under the carry-over provisions of the law. However, no claims for the years other than 1949 and 1950 are involved in this case.

In the meantime, in December, 1949, the taxpayer donated to the University [508]*508of Virginia Development Fund 105 shares of the 400 shares of preferred stock of the Cold Storage Corporation which it had in its possession. It did not take a deduction for this contribution in the tax return for that year. Again, in December, 1950, the bank made another donation to the University of Virginia Development Fund of 100 shares of the preferred stock of the Cold Storage Corporation and in its tax return for 1950 claimed a deduction therefor in the amount of $9,850, at a valuation of $98.-50 a share. On January 10, 1951, the taxpayer filed a claim for a refund of taxes based on the 105 shares of stock which it had donated in December, 1949, but for which it had taken no deduction in its return for that year. To this 105 shares of stock it attributed a value of $9,975, or $95 a share. In each instance the taxpayer stated that the amount of the claimed deduction was based on valuation of the stock by local brokerage houses at the times of the respective gifts. In both instances the deductions were allowed in the amounts claimed. It further appears that in its returns for each of the taxable years 1951, 1952, 1953 the taxpayer has claimed deductions for varying amounts of this same stock given to the same donee; and that all of these deductions have been allowed. Beginning with the tax year 1949 and running through the next four years the bank has given to the Development Fund a total of 341 shares of this stock for which it has been allowed deductions aggregating $33,257. We have here an unusual situation. In October, 1949, one arm of the Treasury Department, the office of the Comptroller, compelled the bank to charge off this stock as a total loss; while as of a date two months later and extending over several years thereafter another arm of the Treasury treated the stock as having a value very close to par for purposes of donations. Stating this anomaly otherwise, we find that the taxpayer who has claimed and received the benefit of a high valuation on the Stock now sues for refunds based on the theory that the stock was worthless.

We must first inquire into the effect of the action of the examiner in directing the bank to charge off this stock. Government counsel contend with some earnestness that the taxpayer has not shown that the charge-off was directed because of a finding that the stock was worthless, and suggests that it was for other reasons. However, I think the evidence leads to the conclusion that the write-off was directed only because the stock was considered by the examiner as of no value. It is true that there is no substantial evidence showing an actual lack of any value. But it is clear, I think, that the reason for the examiner’s action was his opinion that the stock was worthless.

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141 F. Supp. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-national-bank-v-united-states-vawd-1956.