Selected American Shares, Inc. v. United States

196 F.2d 473
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 1952
Docket10496
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 196 F.2d 473 (Selected American Shares, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Selected American Shares, Inc. v. United States, 196 F.2d 473 (7th Cir. 1952).

Opinions

LINDLEY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff’s suit to recover additional stamp taxes assessed against it, paid under protest, having resulted in judgment for plaintiff, the government appeals. The facts were stipulated; the only controversy is as to their proper construction and the conclusions of law to be drawn therefrom.

[474]*474Plaintiff is a diversified management investment company which buys and sells, for investment purposes, shares of corporate capital stock, bonds and similar securities. In accord with its charter and by-laws and certain statutes and regulations intended to protect the interests of stockholders of such corporations, plaintiff deposits physically all its securities with, the Manufacturers Trust Company for safe-keeping. It does not purchase shares in its own name but directs its broker to buy them for it in the name of Porter & Company, a copartnership consisting of employees of its managing agents, as its nominee. This practice is utilized in order to make transfers of its securities less complicated than they Would be if plaintiff had the certificates registered in its name. Thus, any member of the copartnership can, with his signature guaranteed by plaintiff, assign a certificate of stock without further formality, whereas if the security should be issued directly to the plaintiff corporation, any assignment executed by its duly authorized officer would have to be accompanied by satisfactory documentary evidence of the authority of the signatory. It is undisputed that the sole purpose of buying in the name of a nominee is to promote the convenience of plaintiff. Thus Porter & Company becomes a mere conduit; it buys securities for plaintiff through brokers, not in plaintiff’s name but in its own name, although is has no beneficial interest in the securities. When the broker receives the stock in Porter’s name, obviously a transfer has been made and a tax becomes due, which in this case has been paid and is not now in controversy.

The broker, having secured the certificate of stock in the name of Porter & Company, receives from plaintiff a blank assignment signed by the nominee, authorizing transfer to any other person. Under (his instructions from plaintiff, the broker thereupon delivers the certificate, accompanied, by the assignment, to the Manufacturers Trust Company, who takes and holds the security for plaintiff, and pays the broker therefor from plaintiff’s funds kept by it for that purpose. All securities remain with the custodian until plaintiff determines to sell them, whereupon the trust company, at plaintiff’s instructions, delivers the stock certificate and the blank assignment to the vendee.

As we have said, plaintiff admittedly owed and paid the stamp taxes due and payable because of the original transfer to Porter & Company. The commissioner assessed an additional stamp tax on the theory that plaintiff, by directing the broker to issue the security to Porter, instead of having it issued to itself, as it was entitled to have done, as beneficial owner, by virtue of having furnished the consideration therefor, had thereby effectuated a transfer to its nominee of its right to receive the stock, and that issuance of the stock to Porter & Company, in pursuance of this direction from plaintiff, constituted a transfer of the right to -receive the stock from plaintiff to Porter. A second additional stamp tax was assessed upon the theory that when the broker took the certificate issued to Porter, accompanied by the latter’s blank assignment, to the custodian, there was thereby effectuated a transfer of the right to receive the stock from the nominee to the custodian. As we shall see later, the correct • theory in this respect, we think, is that the last mentioned transfer is not to the custodian, who merely receives the physical possession of the security but, in fact and law, a retransfer of the shares from the nominee to plaintiff, inasmuch as the custodian is merely the alter ego of plaintiff and receives no legal title.

The District Court did not accede to either theory. It concluded, upon the facts presented, that Porter & Company did not receive and had no right to receive any securities registered in its name; that, inasmuch as no certificates were physically delivered to Porter & Company and as the latter made assignments in -blank and delivered them with the certificates to plaintiff, without gaining possession of the shares, actual legal title was never transferred to it and no taxable transfer to it occurred. The court further concluded that, inasmuch as the trust company had no right, title or interest in any of plaintiff’s securities except to safe-keep them, the delivery to it did not constitute a transfer within the statute. The government challenges the correctness of each of these conclusions.

[475]*475Section 1802(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 1802, imposes a stamp tax “On all * * * deliveries of, or transfers of legal title to any of the shares or certificates mentioned or described in subsection (a), or to rights to * * * receive such shares or certificates”. Under it a taxable transfer has been effected whenever “made upon or shown by the books of the corporation * * *, or by any assignment in blank, or by any delivery, or by any paper or agreement or memorandum or other evidence of transfer * * * (whether entitling the holder in any manner to the benefit of such share, certificate, interest, or rights, or not), * * *.” Sub^ section (a) provides for a tax “On each original issue, * * * of shares or certificates of stock, or of profits, or of interest in property or accumulations, by any corporation, or by any investment trust or similar organization (or by any person on behalf of such investment trust or similar organization) holding or dealing in any of the instruments mentioned or described in this subsection or section 1801 * * *.”

The Supreme Court, in RaybestosManhattan Co. v. United States, 296 U.S. 60, 56 S.Ct. 63, 64, 80 L.Ed. 44, said: “The stock transfer tax is a revenue measure exclusively. Its language discloses the general purpose to tax every transaction whereby the right to be or become a shareholder of a corporation or to receive any certificate of any interest in its property is surrendered by one and vested in another. * * * The subject of the tax * * * embraces transfers of rights to subscribe for or receive shares or certificates whether made upon the books of the corporation ‘or by any paper, agreement, or memorandum or other evidence of transfer. * * ’ ” In that case two corporations entering into a consolidation transferred and assigned all their assets to a newly organized company and arranged that the stock in the new corporation to be delivered in consideration of the receipt of the assets of the two consolidating should be issued not to them but to their shareholders. The court held that the rights of the two corporations to receive their shares had been transferred by them to their stockholders and that thereby they had incurred liability for the tax upon such transfers. The court said: “The new shares could not lawfully be issued to any other than the grantor corporation without its authority, * * *.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hess v. Commissioner
1980 T.C. Memo. 187 (U.S. Tax Court, 1980)
Silvey v. Commissioner
1976 T.C. Memo. 401 (U.S. Tax Court, 1976)
Chas. Schaefer & Son, Inc. v. Commissioner
20 T.C. 558 (U.S. Tax Court, 1953)
Selected American Shares, Inc. v. United States
196 F.2d 473 (Seventh Circuit, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 F.2d 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/selected-american-shares-inc-v-united-states-ca7-1952.