Security Sav. & Commercial Bank v. Commissioner

29 B.T.A. 176, 1933 BTA LEXIS 965
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1933
DocketDocket No. 59523.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 B.T.A. 176 (Security Sav. & Commercial Bank 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
Security Sav. & Commercial Bank v. Commissioner, 29 B.T.A. 176, 1933 BTA LEXIS 965 (bta 1933).

Opinion

OPINION.

Van Fossan:

This proceeding involves the redetermination of deficiencies in income tax for the years 1927 and 1928 amounting to $4,364.85 and $85.94, respectively. The issue presented relates to the respondent’s refusal to allow as a deduction from gross income in 1927 the sum of $31,580 claimed by the petitioner as a loss sustained through the purchase and liquidation of 2,000 shares of .Central Savings Bank stock. The petitioner has abandoned all other issues raised by the pleadings. The facts were stipulated and are substantially as follows:

The petitioner is a corporation, incorporated under the laws of the State of West Virginia, and during the year 1927 was engaged in the banking business in Washington, D.C. On June 14, 1927, Julius I. Peyser, petitioner’s president, obtained an option from [177]*177Francis M. Savage, the then president of the Central Savings Bank, a corporation incorporated April 30, 1925, under the laws of the District of Columbia and engaged in the banking business therein, for the acquisition by purchase of 1,001 shares of the capital stock of the latter named bank at $140 per share. A special meeting of the board of directors of the petitioner was held on June 24, 1927, at the request of its president, for the purpose of considering the question of exercising the option and, subject to the approval of the Comptroller of the Currency, establishing a branch of the petitioner bank on the premises occupied by the Central Savings Bank. The board of directors of the petitioner bank thereupon voted to accept an assignment of the option; to authorize the vice president of the petitioner to apply to the Comptroller of the Currency for authority to establish a branch bank at the address of the Central Savings Bank; to take over, upon the Comptroller’s approval, and convert the assets and liabilities of the Central Savings Bank to the use of the petitioner; to proceed to the operation of a branch bank at the location of the Central Savings Bank. The petitioner’s vice president was authorized to vote the stock of the Central Savings Bank for the purpose of liquidating that bank and canceling its charter. Thereafter authority to establish and operate a branch bank was applied for and granted.

On June 25, 1927, a contract was entered into between the petitioner, on the one hand, and Francis M. Savage and other stockholders of the Central Savings Bank, on the other, by which such stockholders agreed to sell to the petitioner 1,701 shares of the capital stock of the Central Savings Bank at the price of $140 per share. By June 30, 1927, the petitioner had acquired such a number of additional shares of the stock of the Central Savings Bank that on that date it owned 1,839 shares of such stock, for all of which the petitioner paid $140 per share. By the contract of June 25, 1927, between the petitioner and the stockholders of the Central Savings Bank it was agreed, among other things, that before making final payment for the stock, representatives and agents of the petitioner might inspect the books and records of the Central Savings Bank, and such representatives and agents did so inspect them and appraised the Central Savings Bank’s assets and liabilities before the purchase of its stock was completed.

At a meeting of the board of directors of the Central Savings Bank held on June 30,1927, the then acting directors of that bank resigned and were replaced by nominees of the petitioner. The then president, vice president and treasurer of the Central Savings Bank also resigned and the vacancies were filled by the election of representatives and nominees of the petitioner bank. On the same day, [178]*178with the approval of its stockholders, the Central Savings Bank entered into an agreement with the petitioner by which the former bank sold and delivered to the petitioner all of its “ notes, ledgers and other accounts, choses in action, bills receivable, real estate and any and all other assets, real, personal and mixed of every nature, kind and character whatsoever * * On the same day also, namely, June 30,1927, the stockholders of the Central Savings Bank directed and empowered the newly elected officers to apply to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia for a decree of dissolution.

On June 30, 1927, the date of the acquisition by the petitioner bank of all of the assets of the Central Savings Bank the balance sheet of the latter bank was as follows:

Central Savings Bank
STATEMENT AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE 30TH, 1927
Assets
Cash, and Cash Items_ $85, 912. 72
Bonds_ 92,214. 06
Real Estate Loans- 574, 583. 25
Loans and Discounts_ 152, 768.66
Eurniture and Fixtures_ 10', 000. 00
Interest accrued on Bonds- $1, 989. 57
Interest accrued on Real estate loans but not collected- 9, 347. 20
Commissions accrued on Savings life Insurance- 256. 78
Demand Loans Interest- 1, 835.14
- 13, 428.69
$928,907.38
LiamhUes
200, 000'. 00 Capital Stock-
50, 000.00 Surplus_
6.07 Profit and Loss-
Savings Deposits_614, 781. 96
Christmas Savings Club_ 46, 964. po
Time Deposits_ 5, 500. 00
Cashier’s checks- 7,080.35
674,326.31
4, 575. 00 Reserve for Interest-
$928, 907.38

Between July 1 and October 18, 1927, the petitioner acquired the remaining outstanding 161 shares of capital stock of the Central Savings Bank for $140 per share. By such acquisitions the petitioner became the owner of all of the capital stock of the Central Savings Bank, namely, 2,000 shares. On November 9,1927, at a special meeting of the stockholders of the Central Savings Bank, a resolution was adopted authorizing and directing the payment of a final liquidating dividend of $124.21 on each of the 2,000 shares of stock outstanding, or a total dividend of $248,420.

[179]*179On November 17, 1927, the petitioner bank received the sum of $248,420 as a final liquidating dividend voted by the directors of the Central Savings Bank on November 9, 1927. By this payment the Central Savings Bank divested itself of all its assets and no further distribution to stockholders was ever made by it.

Subsequent to June 80, 1927, no business was transacted by the Central Savings Bank. After that date the petitioner, having taken possession of all the assets of the Central Savings Bank and also of the banking house occupied by that bank located at 710 Fourteenth Street, NW., conducted a branch banking business at that location for a period of 10 months. Thereafter the petitioner moved its branch bank to 1518 K Street, NW.

A consolidated income tax return was never filed on behalf of the petitioner and the Central Savings Bank.

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Related

Ulman v. Commissioner
46 B.T.A. 517 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1942)
Security Sav. & Commercial Bank v. Commissioner
29 B.T.A. 176 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
29 B.T.A. 176, 1933 BTA LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-sav-commercial-bank-v-commissioner-bta-1933.