Seas Shipping Company, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

371 F.2d 528, 19 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 595, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7761
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1967
Docket30392_1
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 371 F.2d 528 (Seas Shipping Company, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seas Shipping Company, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 371 F.2d 528, 19 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 595, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7761 (2d Cir. 1967).

Opinions

[529]*529ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:

On March 1, 1957, the taxpayer, Seas Shipping Company, Inc., sold ten ships to Moore-McCormack Lines, Inc. [hereafter Mooremac] for $5,466,668 in cash and notes and 300,000 shares of Moore-mac stock. In computing the amount realized from the sale, the taxpayer assigned a fair market value of $19.90 per share to the Mooremac stock. Mooremac resold two of the ships during 1957; and in computing its cost basis relative to the capital gains on the sales of the ships, Mooremac placed a value of $30 per share on the stock. The Commissioner determined deficiencies in the 1957 returns of both the taxpayer and Mooremac, both of whom appealed, and in due course the two matters were heard and decided by the Tax Court. The commissioner did not assert any particular value for the Mooremac stock but took the position that the value had to be the same in both cases. The Tax Court handed down two separate decisions and found as a fact in each case that the value of the stock was $30 per share.1 The taxpayer has petitioned this court for review of the judgment against it. We affirm.

The Tax Court found that the sale of the ships was an arm’s length transaction between knowledgeable parties and therefore appraised the stock by equating its value (plus cash and notes) with the value of the ten ships. To a very large extent it relied upon the evidence of the worth of the ships which it found in the sales contract itself. Although the taxpayer and Mooremac had put no total sales price in the contract, that instrument contained a list of individual dollar values for each ship; these values governed the parties’ escrow arrangement, the possibility of force majeure, and the removal of ships from the transaction at Mooremac’s option. Independent appraisers testified that the 1957 fair market value of the individual ships was as high or higher than the values listed in the contract. When Mooremac resold two of the ships during 1957, it received more than the values listed in the contract; and when the taxpayer sold two other ships, which had been removed from the transaction with Mooremac, it received more for each ship than the values earlier listed in the contract for the same vessels. The Tax Court, therefore, added together the individual ship values listed in the contract, subtracted the amount of cash and notes, and equated the result— $9,000,000 — with the total value of the 300,000 shares.

While under the circumstances of this case the Tax Court’s adoption of this method of valuation — the equation of - two sides of a barter- — is not clearly erroneous, it is a means which should be used only under certain limited conditions. The authority for it comes almost exclusively from cases involving valuation of property for which there is little or no market; 2 for example, the leading case of United States v. Davis, 370 U.S. 65, 82 S.Ct. 1190, 8 L.Ed.2d 335 (1962) involved the purchase by a taxpayer of his ex-wife’s inchoate marital rights in his property. There are obvious dangers in evaluating the consideration involved in one side of a barter by determining the worth of the consideration on the other side. In the first place, the two sides of the barter may, for various reasons, not be equal in value. Secondly, the barter-equation method is in the nature of a bootstrap operation since there is usually no [530]*530logical reason to start with one side rather than the other. The Tax Court might have valued the Mooremac stock first by looking to its trading price on the New York Stock Exchange and then used that figure to compute the fair market value of the ten ships. Thirdly, the evidence on the value of one side of a barter may be no more reliable than that on the value of the other side. The determination of value by this means is particularly complex in a case such as this where the consideration moving from the seller, for example the ships transferred by Seas Shipping, became a part of the assets of Mooremac, the corporate purchaser, in which, as part of the transaction, the seller, Seas Shipping, became a 13% owner. There is nothing to indicate that the Tax Court gave any consideration to this factor.

Although there was a market for Mooremac shares on the New York Stock Exchange which the Government’s stock valuation experts considered satisfactory for establishing fair market value, the Tax Court rejected these sales as having no determinative weight in proving the value of the shares. During 1957 they were traded on the New York Stock Exchange at an average price of $22.81; the total trading volume for the year was 166.000 shares, and the annual high was $25.25. If the taxpayer had resold its 300.000 shares at once, it probably would have received less than the trading price for small volumes — a phenomenon known as “blockage” — since 300,000 shares did not represent a controlling interest. It is for this reason that the taxpayer contends that the correct fair market value of the shares was $19.90.3 The Tax Court, however, rejected the use of the trading price and blockage as determinants on the ground that an annual market of 166,-000 shares was too “thin” to fix the value of a block of 300,000 shares. The court reasoned that a block of that size was worth much more than the sum of the trading prices of 300,000 individual shares because that number of shares constituted a 13% ownership in a successful corporation and was the largest block held by any Mooremac shareholder. The court also thought that the value of the shares to taxpayer was enhanced by virtue of a contemporaneous voting trust agreement which it made with certain Mooremac shareholders by which the taxpayer received control of two directorships on Mooremac’s board of ten for a period of five years in return for its promise to vote its shares for the other eight in support of directors selected by the other parties to the agreement. In addition, Mooremac had agreed to continue, under the same name, the shipping line previously operated by the taxpayer and to hire certain of the taxpayer’s employees.4 Finally the court noted that the book value of Mooremac shares during 1957 was in excess of $39.

The Tax Court also attached evidential weight, as admissions by Seas Shipping, to a report made by Mooremac to its shareholders, which was part of the stipulated evidence in the present case, in which Mooremac stated that its stock was worth $30 a share. The court similarly treated (1) a representation made by Mooremac to the New York Stock Exchange that the stock transferred to Seas Shipping had a value of $30 a share; and (2) a statement made by Mooremac in a letter to Seas Shipping which referred to the price of the ships in dollars only. These last two items are not in the evidence nor do they show up [531]*531anywhere in the record of this case. It appears that they were arbitrarily lifted, together with numerous other findings, out of the companion case of Moore-Mc-Cormack Lines Inc. v. C. I. R., 44 T.C. 745 (1965), in which counsel for Seas Shipping participated for limited purposes not related to these statements by Mooremac, but in which Seas Shipping was not a party, and incorporated these findings by reference in the present case. This was unsupported by a stipulation of the parties and was done sua sponte by the Tax Court itself.5 This free-wheeling handling of the cases has resulted in an incomplete and somewhat disorderly record on review of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
371 F.2d 528, 19 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 595, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seas-shipping-company-inc-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1967.