Putnam v. United States

149 F.2d 721, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1455, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4244
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 25, 1945
Docket4023
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 149 F.2d 721 (Putnam v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. United States, 149 F.2d 721, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1455, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4244 (1st Cir. 1945).

Opinion

MAHONEY, Circuit Judge.

This was an action to recover income taxes. The question presented is whether all the dividends received by the taxpayer in 1935 from Package Machinery Company were paid out of earnings or profits so as to be taxable under § 115(a) and (b) of the Revenue Act of 1934, 1 or whether a part of the amount received is not taxable because it represents a return of capital rather than the distribution of earnings or profits. The solution of this question in turn depends on whether the transaction in which Package Machinery Company acquired all the assets of another company in exchange for its stock was a tax-free reorganization under § 112 of the Revenue Act of 1928. 2

The facts were stipulated and may be summarized as follows:

*723 On June 1, 1928, Ferguson and Haas, Inc., a New York corporation (hereinafter called “New York”), had an earned surplus of $72,401.24. Its stock was owned equally by Edward Haas and Milford B. Ferguson. On June 19, 1928, New York transferred all its assets, subject to its liabilities, as of May 31, 1928, to Ferguson and Haas, Inc., a Delaware corporation organized May 26, 1928 (hereinafter called “Delaware”), in exchange for 50 shares of its stock, which were issued directly to Haas and Ferguson, 25 shares each. On the same day, as of May 31, 1928, Delaware acquired all the assets of the partnership of Ferguson and Haas and all patents and patent rights owned by Haas and Ferguson individually, in exchange for 50 shares of its stock, which were issued to- Haas and Ferguson, 25 shares each. The total number of shares issued by Delaware was 100, and Haas and Ferguson each owned 50 shares.

Also on June 19, 1928, as of June 1, 1928, Package Machinery Company, a Massachusetts corporation (hereinafter called “Package”) acquired all the assets of Delaware in exchange for 864 shares of its preferred stock and 1000 shares of its common stock, which were issued directly to Haas and Ferguson in equal amounts. The preferred shares came from treasury stock and the common shares were new issued. The net tangibles of *724 Delaware were acquired in exchange for the treasury preferred stock, and the good will and patents were acquired in exchange for the common stock.

Delaware served as a conduit for the acquisition by Package of the assets and business of New York, the business of the partnership, and the patents and patent rights of Haas and Ferguson as individuals. Delaware had no assets except those which it acquired in exchange for its stock and which it immediately transferred to Package. It served no business purpose save in connection with that one transaction. Neither Delaware nor its stockholders, Haas and Ferguson, treated the transaction as a taxable exchange. They treated it as a statutory reorganization from which no profit was recognizable for tax purposes, and no one paid any income taxes as a result of that transaction.

On December 31, 1934, Package had an earned surplus accumulated since February 28, 1913, of $21,790.27, exclusive of Delaware’s accumulated earnings of $72,-401.24, which it had taken over from New York. During 1935 Package paid out dividends of $90,639.00, of which the taxpayer received $16,312.81. In his income tax return for 1935 he included as taxable dividends only such amounts as had been paid from the earnings or profits of Package itself. The Commissioner included the full $16,191.51. If the earned surplus of Delaware is properly a part of the earned surplus of Package, the surplus of Package available for taxable dividends on December 31, 1934 was $94,191.51, and the Commissioner’s determination would be correct.

The District Court was of the opinion that the earned surplus of Delaware became earned surplus in the hands of Package, which on distribution to the stockholders of the latter, was taxable income to them. The court noted that Package paid for the assets of Delaware with treasury preferred and newly issued common stock and held that that transaction was a merger of the two corporations within the meaning of § 112(!) (1) of the Revenue Act of 1928, and that, as such, no gain or loss was to be recognized for tax purposes.

Section 112(i) (1) defines the term “reorganization” as including: “(A) A merger or consolidation (including the acquisition by one corporation of * * * substantially all the properties of another corporation),” and § 112(b) (4) dealing with the recognition of gain or loss on such exchanges between corporations provides : “No gain or loss shall be recognized if a corporation a party to a reorganization exchanges property, in pursuance of the plan of reorganization, solely for stock or securities in another corporation a party to the reorganization.”

In this case Package acquired all the assets of Delaware in exchange for stock, and it is conceded that there was a statutory reorganization in form. The taxpayer contends, however, that there was none in substance on the theory that Delaware was a sham corporation within the meaning of Gregory v. Helvering, 1934, 293 U.S. 465, 55 S.Ct. 266, 267, 79 L.Ed. 596, 97 A.L.R. 1355. In that case the taxpayer owned all the shares of the A corporation, among whose assets were shares of the B corporation. They could be sold at a large profit, but if that was done directly A would have to pay a normal tax on the gain and the taxpayer to touch his profit would have to do so in the form of dividends on which there would be a surtax. For the sole purpose of avoiding all taxes, he organized corporation C, to which A transferred its B shares in consideration of the issuance of all C’s shares to the taxpayer. Thereupon C was wound up; the taxpayer got the B shares as a liquidating dividend and sold them. The court found no reorganization within the intent of the statute and said that it was “simply an operation having no business or corporate purpose — a mere device which put on the form of a corporate reorganization as a disguise for concealing its real character, and the sole object and accomplishment of which was the consummation of a preconceived plan, not to reorganize a business or any part of a business) but to transfer a parcel of corporate shares to the petitioner.”

Cf. Electrical Securities Corporation v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 1937, 92 F.2d 593. The taxpayer in this case argues that the purpose in setting up Delaware was to avoid the taxable gain or loss that would have to be recognized if the assets of the partnership and the patents owned by Haas and Ferguson individually were transferred directly to Package and that they erroneously treated the organization of Delaware as a non-taxable reorganiza *725 tion under § 112(b) (5). 3 He concedes that the steps taken were within the statutory definition and that if Delaware had continued to own them that reorganization would be nontaxable, but he insists that since Delaware was merely a conduit into Package and not formed for any other business purpose, there is no tax-free reorganization here, since the sole purpose was to disguise as a reorganization a preconceived plan to evade taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
149 F.2d 721, 33 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1455, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-united-states-ca1-1945.