Poczatek v. Commissioner

71 T.C. 371, 1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1978
DocketDocket No. 4438-72
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 71 T.C. 371 (Poczatek 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
Poczatek v. Commissioner, 71 T.C. 371, 1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11 (tax 1978).

Opinion

Goffe, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioner’s Federal income tax as follows:

Addition to tax
Year Deficiency sec. 6651(a)1
1965 . $120.00
1966. 141.81 $141.53
1967. 460.24
1968. 3,168.20

Due to concessions, the only issue for our decision is whether Regina A. Poczatek is taxable on the gain resulting from the sale of her stock during 1968 by United States Trust Co. when the proceeds of the sale were applied against a loan made by petitioner.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and together with the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated by this reference.

Mrs. Regina A. Poczatek, herein petitioner, resided at Chelsea, Mass., when she filed her petition in the instant case. She filed her individual Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1965,1966,1967, and 1968 with the District Director of Internal Revenue at Boston, Mass., after she discovered that her husband, Mr. Albert Poczatek, deceased, failed to file joint Federal income tax returns for those years. She and her husband were married during the taxable year 1965 and remained married until his death in 1969.

On July 13, 1965, petitioner, at the request of her husband, executed a short term note in the amount of $18,500 to the United States Trust Co., herein the bank, which was due on November 15,1965. The loan was secured by collateral of her 400 shares of Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. stock and 200 shares of Bethlehem Steel Corp. stock. In addition, petitioner executed irrevocable stock powers with respect to the pledged stock. Petitioner had received the Goodyear stock by gift from her father in May 1958.

Petitioner received the net proceeds of the loan ($18,146.70) from the bank in the form of two checks, both payable to her for $500 and $17,646.70. Petitioner deposited the check in the amount of $500 in a joint checking account she and her husband established with the bank. She endorsed the second check to her husband who used the money to purchase a building from his father who conveyed it to petitioner’s husband. Petitioner’s husband subsequently sold the building but the record does not indicate what happened to the proceeds from the sale.

When the note became due on November 15,1965, petitioner’s husband renewed the loan for another 4-month period by forging petitioner’s signature to the renewal note. From March 15,1966, to December 19,1968, petitioner’s husband renewed the loan on 12 separate occasions, each time forging petitioner’s signature to the renewal notes. During July 1966 he added his own name as comaker and in May 1967 increased the amount of the loan to $25,000.

On December 16,1968, the bank sold 300 shares of petitioner’s Goodyear stock, which had a basis to petitioner of $265, pursuant to a sell order executed by petitioner’s husband by forging petitioner’s signature. The bank applied the proceeds from the sale ($17,587.26) to the loan. Following this transaction, petitioner’s husband borrowed additional amounts of $11,000 and $5,000 on December 17, 1968, and December 19, 1968, respectively, by executing notes in his own name and forging petitioner’s signature. The remaining stock pledged by petitioner as collateral for the original note was pledged as collateral for the renewal notes.

Petitioner was not familiar with her husband’s business affairs but she presumed that on November 15,1965, when the original note was due, her pledged stock was released by the bank and placed in her safety deposit box. She received dividends on her Goodyear stock until part of it was sold and never suspected that her husband was forging her signature on notes and pledging her stock.

Petitioner never authorized her husband to sign her name to any note to renew the note she executed on July 13, 1965. In addition, petitioner never authorized the bank or her husband to sell the 300 shares of Goodyear stock sold by the bank in 1968.

Petitioner filed suit against the bank alleging that she was not legally indebted to the bank and that the bank wrongfully converted her Goodyear stock. The bank answered petitioner’s allegations by pleading an offset, claiming that petitioner owed the bank $23,412.74 plus interest from March 17,1969. Presumably this amount represented the unpaid balance of loans made to petitioner’s husband in December 1968. On January 10,1974, we entered an order postponing our decision until the final disposition of petitioner’s lawsuit which was pending before the Superior Court of Suffolk County, Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Subsequent to our order, the parties settled the lawsuit and the bank agreed to pay $17,500 to petitioner for conversion of her stock. An agreed judgment was entered on June 8,1978, with the Superior Court of Suffolk County.

The Commissioner, in his statutory notice of deficiency, determined that petitioner realized a net long-term capital gain in the amount of $17,737 from the sale of her 300 shares of Goodyear stock. Petitioner did not report this gain on her Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1968.

OPINION

The sole issue for our decision is whether petitioner is taxable on the gain realized from the sale of her stock in 1968 by the bank when the proceeds of the sale were applied against a loan made by petitioner but extended by her husband without her knowledge. In 1965, petitioner executed a note in the amount of $18,500 to the United States Trust Co. which was due on November 15, 1965. She pledged corporate stock to the bank as collateral for the loan which included 400 shares of Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. Petitioner also executed stock powers covering the pledged stock. The bank paid the net proceeds of the loan in two checks payable to petitioner for $500 and $17,646.70. Petitioner deposited the check for $500 in a checking account which was held jointly with her husband and endorsed the second check ($17,646.70) to her husband who used the funds to purchase a building from his father. When the note became due, petitioner’s husband forged petitioner’s signature to a renewal note without her knowledge or permission. When the renewal note became due, petitioner’s husband continued to renew the note as he had done in November 1965. In July 1966, he added his name to the renewal note as comaker and in May 1967 he increased the amount of the loan from $18,500 to $25,000. On December 6, 1968, petitioner’s husband forged petitioner’s signature on a sell order which authorized the bank to sell 300 shares of Goodyear stock. The bank sold the stock and applied the proceeds from the sale ($17,587.26) to the loan. Following this transaction, petitioner’s husband borrowed additional amounts of $11,000 and $5,000 from the bank on December 17, 1968, and December 19, 1968, by executing new notes in his name and by forging petitioner’s signature. The remaining stock originally pledged by petitioner remained in possession of the bank as collateral for the new notes.

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Poczatek v. Commissioner
71 T.C. 371 (U.S. Tax Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
71 T.C. 371, 1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poczatek-v-commissioner-tax-1978.