Raskob v. Commissioner

37 B.T.A. 1283, 1938 BTA LEXIS 935
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1938
DocketDocket No. 69673.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 B.T.A. 1283 (Raskob 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
Raskob v. Commissioner, 37 B.T.A. 1283, 1938 BTA LEXIS 935 (bta 1938).

Opinion

Disney:

The original petition and original answer put in issue only questions involved in a deficiency of Federal income tax for the year 1929 in the sum of $15,977.61. Thereafter, respondent filed amended answer, claiming increased deficiency of $1,026,340.40; thereafter, petitioner filed amended petition asserting errors additional to those asserted in the original petition. The proceeding came on for hearing on May 26, 1937. The filing of briefs was completed on January 27, 1938. Some issues have been abandoned, and others disposed of by stipulation, and decision thereon will be entered under Rule 50, so that only the controverted issues need be discussed herein. These consist of (1) an issue as to the deduction of losses from sales of stock; (2) an issue as to losses claimed in Copper Stocks Trading Account; and (3) an issue as to income from the Simms Petroleum Co. Syndicate. Each issue when stated will be followed by findings of fact and opinion thereon.

[1284]*1284 Issue as to Deduction of Losses on Sales of Stock.

This issue involves losses on sales of stock made by the petitioner to Pierre S. du Pont, petitioner in Docket No. 69674, as a part of cross sales to each other in the year 1929. Petitioner in his income tax return for 1929 claimed with respect to this issue a deduction of $4,375,523.51 for alleged losses on the sale of certain stocks. This claim was not disallowed in the determination of deficiency by the respondent, but respondent allowed a further deduction in the amount of $80,434.03 on account of certain adjustments. Both of - these amounts the respondent by his answer to amended petition alleges to have been erroneously allowed as deductions and asks that the deficiency be increased accordingly.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

This issue is common to this proceeding and to the proceeding in Docket No. 69674, Pierre S. du Pont, and, the evidence being the same in both proceedings on this issue, by virtue of consolidation of the two proceedings as to this issue by agreement of counsel at hearing, the findings of fact set forth in proceeding No. 69674 are made the findings of fact herein by reference.

OPINION.

The question on this issue being common with the same issue in Pierre S. du Pont, 37 B. T. A. 1198, in which opinion has this day been rendered, for the reasons therein set forth we hold that the respondent erred in allowing the deductions claimed by petitioner for :said alleged stock losses as adjusted, in the amount of $4,455,957.54.

Issue as to Loss Claimed in Coffer Stocks Trading Account.

The issue here is as to computation of losses claimed by reason of participation in and termination of Copper Stocks Trading Account, involving the question as to the nature of such trading account or ■syndicate.

The facts on this issue are stipulated, except entries made by a broker in an account to reflect Baskob’s participation in the trading account, which are embodied in Exhibit E-5. There is no dispute as to the amounts shown in such exhibit. The stipulation- and exhibit are therefore adopted by reference as our findings of fact on [1285]*1285this issue, and the facts will be set forth herein only so far as necessary for consideration of the issue.

On or about March 27, 1929, petitioner invested $2,000,000 in Copper Stocks Trading Account, which he had entered on or about March 19, 1929. On May 23, 1929, he received, after termination of the trading account on May 21, 1929, 7,066 shares of stock in the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. and on May 24, 1929, received $801,290.89 in cash. The stock had a fair market value when received of $731,331. The losses from sales by the trading account of copper stocks, interest paid, interest received, and taxable dividends received on the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. stocks, attributable to petitioner’s proportionate interest in the trading account, were as follows:

Losses from sales_$373, 730.14
Interest paid- 15,778.89
Interest received_ 12, 988.65
Taxable dividends_ 13, 238.35

The petitioner did not report in his Federal income tax return for 1929 any of these items on account of the operations of the trading account. He did not claim any loss, and respondent in determining the deficiency did not allow any deduction on account of operations of the trading account.

Petitioner’s contention is, in effect, first, that the trading account was a taxable entity and not a partnership or joint venture, and that therefore his tax position is determined upon liquidation thereof, in which he then suffered a deductible loss; and, in the alternative, that if the trading account was not a taxable entity, he suffered individual losses in its operations, plus certain losses by the liquidation of the account.

For convenience in consideration, the instrument creating the Copper Stocks Trading Account is set forth in the margin.1

[1286]*1286Each case of this character must be decided upon its own facts. The test is pragmatic. Morrissey v. Commissioner, 296 U. S. 344. The account here under consideration carries features tending both to affirm and contradict the idea of legal entity as distinguished from that of partnership or joint venture on the part of the individuals. Among the characteristics determinative of this question, as set forth by the Supreme Court, are centralized management of business, assignability of interest, ’ continuity of organization independent of the individual participation, and limited liability and association of parties in a business enterprise for gain. Morrissey v. Commisioner, supra; Helvering v. Coleman-Gilbert Associates, 296 U. S. 369. The Copper Stocks Trading Account was under the control of managers, who, for the account, had uncontrolled discretion to [1287]*1287buy, sell, and trade in copper stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange, to borrow money for and pledge the assets of the account, to compel compliance with the obligation of a participant, and to sell his rights, interest and obligation for noncompliance (he to be liable for any deficiency to the extent of his pro rata, and to receive any excess of sales price over same). Some indication of individual control does appear in the provision that a participant could take up against payment his proportion of any stocks in the hands of the managers, but only with the consent of the managers, and only for carrying purposes. We hold that centralized management inhered in this organization. Provision was expressly made against partnership between participants or with the managers. This trading account was not a partnership; it was a business enterprise and not a mere trust.

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Related

Raskob v. Commissioner
37 B.T.A. 1283 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
37 B.T.A. 1283, 1938 BTA LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raskob-v-commissioner-bta-1938.