Peoples State Bank v. Commissioner

38 B.T.A. 857, 1938 BTA LEXIS 815
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 1938
DocketDocket No. 91697.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 B.T.A. 857 (Peoples State Bank v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples State Bank v. Commissioner, 38 B.T.A. 857, 1938 BTA LEXIS 815 (bta 1938).

Opinion

[861]*861OPINION.

Opper:

Petitioner, closed in 1932 because of insolvency, was reopened pursuant to Michigan law1 by virtue of a judicially approved agreement by the depositors to accept the proceeds of liquidation of certain segregated assets and the earnings of the bank for five years in satisfaction of approximately half of their deposits. These assets, of a book value equal to the allocated deposits, were held in what was designated a “Trust Fund”, but the bank retained full ownership powers over their liquidation and reserved the right with the consent of the state commissioner of banking to substitute for the segregated assets any of the retained assets which might become doubtful or undesirable. Any losses of the bank were to be charged against the so-called trust fund. At the end of the five-year liquida[862]*862tion period the fund was to be paid to the depositors up to the full amount of their deposits, together with 3 percent per annum interest, the excess, if any, to be retained by the bank. As it finally developed in 1938, at the end of the five-year period the depositors were paid less than 50 percent of their allocated deposits. A table summarizing the figures for the taxable year 1935 as given in the stipulation appears in the margin.2

We begin with the assumption that the bank and “trust fund” are taxable together as one entity3 because that position is agreed to by both parties 4 and therefore is not in issue.5 The dispute arises by reason of the treatment accorded by respondent to the various items of income and deduction. Principally these consist of income earned by the bank, income received from assets held in the trust fund, and losses incurred on bad debts, and from the sale of capital assets, held in the trust fund. Respondent has taxed petitioner on the two income items and refused to allow the deductions. Petitioner contends that it should be given the benefit of the loss deduction or, alternatively, be freed from liability to tax on the income items. In either event there would be no income subject to tax.6

[863]*863Eespondent suggests a third possibility, namely, that current income is taxable on an annual basis whether earned by the bank itself or by the assets in the trust fund, but that capital losses and bad debts of the trust fund must be held in abeyance for treatment as part of the completed transaction in the year when the entire arrangement is concluded. There may be other possible methods of dealing with the petitioner’s tax status, but none occurs to us, except that suggested by respondent, which would have the effect of charging petitioner with any taxable income in the instant proceeding. That being so, we expressly refrain from attempting to determine which treatment is properly applicable, if that advanced by the respondent is not.

Once it is conceded that the trust fund is the property of the bank and is to be taxed along with the bank’s income in the same way as any of its other property, some special circumstance must exist to justify a departure from the statutory direction that capital losses and bad debts may be deducted in the year when they materialize. Revenue Act of 1934, sec. 23 (f) and (k). The only grounds advanced for such an exception here are, first, that petitioner’s loss has been “compensated for”7 by the depositor’s agreement to accept the assets in settlement of their deposit liabilities8 and, second, that to permit deductions to this petitioner would result in a failure properly to reflect its income.9

As to the first ground urged by respondent, it was not the segregated assets alone which secured petitioner’s relief from liability, but these assets together with its agreement to devote its own income and that from the trust assets to the depositors. Thus, any benefit secured by it from the segregated assets was not the amount of the deposit liabilities forgiven, but this amount less the income it might earn during the operative period. If, as in the instant case, there is in a given year a net capital loss of say $21,000 and net income from bank and trust assets combined of $15,000, the decrease taking place as of the end of the tax year in the amount available to depositors is the difference between the two, namely, $6,000. This is the amount which, if no later change occurs, will represent liability forgiven. [864]*864If petitioner is charged with this amount in the current year, either as “compensation” for a loss or as income received, and also with its actual income of $15,000, the total is and necessarily must be exactly equal to the capital loss, since petitioner’s cost basis of the assets in the trust fund was the same as the deposit liabilities originally allocated thereto. Even if the “compensation” theory could be applied to such a case as this, a point which we do not decide, it follows that any “compensation” derived by petitioner in the tax year falls short of the loss suffered by it by exactly the amount of its current income, with the consequence that the income is offset by the remaining loss.

Respondent’s second contention is in turn based on the suggestion to which we have already referred, that the results of the liquidation must be known before it can be determined whether or not petitioner has actually suffered a loss. In the first place, it is by no means clear that each annual period can not be considered by itself so that income for each period may be properly computed without regard to the ultimate effect of the liquidation. The petitioner’s current income and the loss on assets sold in the tax year are known. The doubtful item, if there be one, is the amount of indebtedness which will ultimately be forgiven. Whether or not under some other circumstances a bank situated as was petitioner might obtain taxable income from the scaling down of its deposit liability we do not consider it necessary to determine, for in this instance the amount of liabilities forgiven was so indefinite that at most it could be charged to petitioner only to the extent that the transactions concluded prior to the end of the tax year resulted in such forgiveness. And even if we add to petitioner’s income the amount of indebtedness the release of which arises out of the transactions of that year, no income results since, as we have seen, the extent of the forgiveness exactly equals and must, on these facts, always exactly equal the difference between the capital losses and the income received.

On the other hand, the hypothesis that petitioner’s income can not properly be reflected until the liquidation is completed, seems to us to require postponement to the year of final liquidation not only of the capital items but also of current income. Petitioner’s income, the segregated assets, and the release of liability were all the subjects of one executory contract. At the time the agreement was made the amount of future income was “uncertain and indeterminable.” But until the entire transaction was closed that uncertain and indeterminable quantity was, as we have seen, as much a necessary factor in calculating the effect of the entire transaction upon petitioner’s situation as was the amount which would ultimately be realized from the assets themselves, the uncertain and indeterminable character of which causes respondent to urge postponement. Thus when re[865]

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Related

Peoples State Bank v. Commissioner
38 B.T.A. 857 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
38 B.T.A. 857, 1938 BTA LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-state-bank-v-commissioner-bta-1938.