Rolfs v. Commissioner

58 T.C. 360, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 22, 1972
DocketDocket Nos. 5618-70, 5708-70
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 T.C. 360 (Rolfs 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
Rolfs v. Commissioner, 58 T.C. 360, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118 (tax 1972).

Opinion

OPINION

Tietjens, J.udge:

In these consolidated cases the Commissioner determined deficiencies in the income tax of petitioners herein as follows:

Petitioner ' Docket No. 1 Year Deficiency'
John H. Rolfs-i_______ 5618-70 1965 $2,375. 00
Maxwell A. Arnold, Jr., and Patricia Arnold-_ 5708-70 1965 4,452.13

John H. .Rolfs filed an individual Federal income tax return for-1965 with the.district director of internal revenue in San Francisco,.Calif. He resided in Sausalito, Calif., at the time.of filing the petition herein. Maxwell A. Arnold, Jr., and Patricia Arnold have, at all pertinent times been husband and wife residing at Menlo Park, Calif. They filed a joint Federal income tax return for 1965 with the district director in San Francisco. Patricia Arnold is a party because she signed the joint return. Any reference to “petitioners” hereafter will refer to John Rolfs and Maxwell Arnold only.

The facts are fully stipulated and submitted with joint exhibits, and the legal issues are the same in both dockets. The Commissioner’s sole determination in each is that petitioners should have included as compensation the amounts realized upon the sale of stock they had previously acquired through the exercise of statutory restricted stock options. The petitioners reported the amounts as long-term capital gain in their respective returns, and they challenge the entire deficiencies. The issue is whether the shares were transferred to petitioners more than 6 months before petitioners disposed óf them by sale.

Petitioners’ common employer, Guild, Bascom & Bonfigli, Inc. (GB&B), an advertising agency incorporated in California, established on July 23,1963, effective July 1,1963, a restricted stock option plan called the 1963 Employees’ Stock Purchase Plan. The objective of the plan was to permit employees who had completed a minimum of 1 year of service to become shareholders or to increase their shareholdings as the case may be, and the petitioners, both of whom worked for GB&B since the early 1950’s, were eligible to participate.

Letters dated July 22,1963, were sent to eligible employees informing' them of the stock options granted pursuant to the plan. Originally the options had to be exercised before December 31,1963, but the deadline was extended, and petitioners timely exercised their respective options on April 30, 1964. The option price was $81 per share, a figure which equaled the fair market value of the stock on the date the options were granted. Each employee was entitled under the 1963 plan to purchase up to 200 shares, and was required to designate the number of whole shares desired when he exercised the option. On the date of exercise, Rolfs executed a promissory note pursuant to one of several acceptable means of payment, for the price of 95 shares plus 4-percent interest. Arnold gave a note for the purchase of 200 shares the same day. Under the plan cash payment had to be completed or a promissory note taken up no later than June 30, 1965, and on that date Arnold paid $16,200 with interest and thereupon received a certificate for 200 shares of GB&B stock bearing that date. Rolfs tendered $7,695 with interest in satisfaction of his note on the previous May 1,1965, and received a certificate dated April 30,1965.

Taking into account the facts already recited, the fact that petitioners did not individually own more than 10 percent of the GB&B voting-stock on the option date of grant, and the fact that under the terms of the plan the options themselves were nontransferable, there is no doubt that tbe options exercised by the petitioners were “restricted stock options” within the meaning of section 424 (b), I.R..C. 1954.1 Also, of the three sections describing qualified stock options, sections 422-424, only section 424 could apply in view of the pre-1964 vintage of the GB&B plan.

Late in August 1965, GB&B, acting as agent for the shareholders through its three senior partners, commenced negotiations with the Delaware corporation Dancer-Fitzgerald-Sample, Inc., for the cash purchase of all the outstanding GB&B common stock. An understanding was reached and all the GB&B stockholders sold their entire holdings for an agreed price of $181 per share. Accordingly, Rolfs realized $17,195 and Arnold realized $36,200 on the stock they had acquired originally through the 1963 stock purchase plan.

This case is not one to 'be decided under the case law concerning nonstatutory stock options such as those dealt with in Commissioner v. LoBue, 351 U.S. 243 (1956). The Commissioner does not argue that petitioners received compensation from GB&B at the time they exercised the options, although this would have been the case if the requirements of section 424 (a) or (b) had not been satisfied generally. Sec. 421(a). However, section 421(b) specifically provides inter alia that failure to satisfy section 424(a) solely because of any of the holding-period requirements of section 424(a) (1) will cause the op-tionee to realize income in the year the stock was disposed of.2 The term “disposition” is defined by section 425 (c) and embraces the sale herein.

The parties do not dispute that the date of the sale of all the GB&B stock by its shareholders was October 14, 1965. Since the date of the granting of the options was July 1,1963, petitioners satisfied the first prong of section 424(a) (1) because the disposition of their stock occurred later than 2 years after that date. The parties do disagree ;as to the exact date on which the shares were transferred to petitioners for purposes of the ensuing statutory language “nor within 6 months after the transfer of such share.” To compute the period during which the petitioners actually held the stock, we include the day on which the stock was sold and exclude the day on which it was transferred to them. E. T. Weir, 10 T.C. 996 (1948), affirmed per curiam 173 F. 2d 222 (C.A. 3, 1949); Harriet M. Hooper, 26 B.T.A. 758 (1932). Beckoning 'backwards from the date of disposition, it follows that the date of transfer to petitioners must have fallen on or before April 13, 1965, if they are to be entitled to favorable capital gains treatment. Petitioners bear the burden of proving that the transfer occurred as early as that. George J. Becker, 46 T.C. 613, 620 (1966), reversed on another ground 378 F. 2d 767 (C.A. 3, 1967); Rule 32, Tax Court Buies of Practice.

Although there is no definition of the term “transfer” in the statute, section 1.421-1 (f), Income Tax Regs.,3 which was cited in the closely analogous case Swenson v. Commissioner, 309 F. 2d 672, 674 (C.A. 8, 1962), reversing 37 T.C. 124 (1961), supplies one. We think we will be following the law as it now stands if we simply apply the regulation, the language of which demands only “transfer of ownership” or “transfer of substantially all the rights of ownership.” 4 In this connection we further note that since our reversal in Swenson we have abandoned the contention we made in that case that the time of occurrence of tbe transfer is a question of State contract law. See Ted F. Merrill, 40 T.C. 66, 77 (1963), affirmed per curiam 336 F. 2d 771 (C.A. 9, 1964).

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Rolfs v. Commissioner
58 T.C. 360 (U.S. Tax Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
58 T.C. 360, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolfs-v-commissioner-tax-1972.