Simms Oil Co. v. Commissioner

74 F.2d 561, 14 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 871, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3470
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1935
DocketNo. 19
StatusPublished

This text of 74 F.2d 561 (Simms Oil Co. v. Commissioner) 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
Simms Oil Co. v. Commissioner, 74 F.2d 561, 14 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 871, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3470 (2d Cir. 1935).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Judge.

Three unrelated questions are presented for review. They will be considered separately and the essential facts as to each stated in connection with the point discussed.

E. F. Simms, a man interested in the oil business in Texas, in 1919' bought a considerable number of leases on what it was hoped would prove to be profitable oil-bearing land scattered through twenty counties in Texas. All hut one were adjoining counties. The general location of the land was favorable and the time auspicious for a development not only of oil production but of a stock holding and stock selling scheme which would [562]*562bring in a large amount of money from the public. Simms paid $972,012.94 for the leases. He then discussed finances and development with a Mr. Bronner, who brought him in touch with men of finance in New York City. Arrangements, it is now unnecessary to relate in extended detail, were finally made which led to the organization of the petitioner, Simms Oil Company, a Texas corporation having 10,000 shares of capital stock of a par value of $100 per share, and to the organization of Simms Petroleum Company, a Delaware corporation with a capital stock of 500,-000 shares of no par value. The Simms leases were assigned in 1919 to the petitioner for all of its stock except six qualifying shares of directors. Then Simms transferred all of the petitioner’s stock which he had received in exchange for the leases to Simms Petroleum Company for 280,990 shares of its stock. Out of this block of stock so received he had agreed to, and did, transfer to Mr. Bronner, his associate in the venture, 56,000 shares, leaving 224,990 shares as the consideration finally received by Simms for his leases. The stock of Simms Petroleum Company was listed on the New York Curb Exchange and large amounts were sold to the public. During the summer of 1919, a pool in this stock was operated by Simms and his associates and later a second pool was organized. The stock was thus sold on the market at prices ranging from $28.50 to $73.50 per share. None of the stock of the petitioner was sold.

In 1923 some of the leases were found to be worthless, and they were abandoned. So, too, some were abandoned in 1925 for the same reason. Part of the losses so claimed to have been sustained in 1923 were carried over and deducted from income in 1925 by the petitioner in a consolidated income and profits tax return it filed as a member of an affiliated group of corporations. All of the losses so claimed to have been suffered in 1925 were also deducted, leaving no tax du?. The percentage of the losses sustained in 1923 and 1925 were stipulated, but the amount in each year is disputed. The Commissioner refused to accept the cost of the leases as claimed by the petitioner and determined a deficiency based upon a lower basis. The Board of Tax Appeals found the cost of the leases to petitioner to be the same as their cost to Simms, and this finding is now claimed to have been arbitrarily made without due regard to the evidence. Accordingly, the first issue is whether or not the Board based its finding of cost upon substantial evidence. We think it did. While it is apparent that the cost of the leases to Simms was not necessarily the cost to the petitioner and that the petitioner’s cost was the fair market value of its stock at the time the stock was exchanged for the leases provided that stock then had a fair market value, the fact is that none of the petitioner’s stock was sold and no fair market value was shown. An attempt has been made to persuade us that, because the petitioner’s stock was immediately exchanged for stock in the holding company, Simms Petroleum Company, which has been plausibly computed to have had a fair market value of $5,624,750, the petitioner’s stock was actually worth that. It is likewise urged upon us that, because the petitioner’s stock had a par value of $10,-000,000 and all but six shares of it was issued in exchange for the leases which were taken as payment in full for the stock which had to be issued fully paid for under the laws of Texas, the leases actually cost the petitioner $9,999,400’, though this theory of cost seems to have been advanced only as a makeweight to help establish the contention that the leases must have cost the petitioner more than the amount the Board found. The cost now seriously urged is the claimed fair market value of the Simms Petroleum Company stock which was exchanged for the petitioner’s stock.

We need not do more than point out that the Board was not required to accept any such theoretical value for the petitioner’s stock. It was essential to the plan for a market operation in the holding company’s stock to have the petitioner’s stock transferred to the holding company and to have the holding company thus control the Simms leases. But to say that, when the petitioner’s stock was issued for the leases, it had a fair market value in excess of the actual value of the leases loses sight of realities. The acquisition of the leases was an absolute necessity in carrying out the stock selling operation contemplated and subsequently indulged in. Any valúe the 'petitioner’s stock may subsequently have had in excess of the value of the leases has not been so conclusively proved to have existed at the time it was issued that other evidence of value before the Board could not overcome it. There was other evidence.

Mr. Simms became involved in disputes with his associates because of some claimed secret profits made by him and by them in the conduct of the operations, and he also had litigation with the government regarding taxes assessed against him as a result of income received in connection with these transactions. It was stipulated that, so far as mate[563]*563rial and relevant, the evidence introduced in the case of E. F. Simms v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue before the Board should be treated as in this case. While the right to object to any portion of it was reserved to both parties, that right was not exercised. This evidence shows that witnesses qualified to express opinions on the subject placed the value of the leases when acquired by the petitioner at an amount ranging from less to more than Simms paid for them. In view of this evidence, it is reasonable to believe that they were worth, when the petitioner acquired them, at least what Simms paid for them, but no more. We therefore are bound to accept the Board’s finding that the value of the petitioner’s stock used to pay for the leases was the same as the value of the assets underlying the stock immediately after the leases were transferred to it, since there was substantial evidence to support the finding. The losses deductible in 3925 then become simply a matter of computation from facts either stipulated or properly found, and the Board’s decision on this issue is affirmed.

The second issue related to a deduction • claimed in the return for 1925 based on a loss alleged to have been sustained by the petitioner in 1923 as a result of its purchase from Simms Petroleum Company of the capital stock of Rowe Oil Corporation.

In 1923, Simms Petroleum Company not only owned, a few qualifying shares being ignored, all of the stock of the petitioner, but also owned all of the stock of Rowe Oil Corporation, an operating company. This stock of Rowe had been acquired by Simms Petroleum Company in part in December, 1919, and in part in December, 1920. Payment for it had been made in part in cash and in part in stock of Simms Petroleum Company. Rowe Oil Corporation was financially unsuccessful.

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Bluebook (online)
74 F.2d 561, 14 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 871, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simms-oil-co-v-commissioner-ca2-1935.