Southern Bancorporation, Inc. v. United States

732 F.2d 374, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1158, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 23432
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 1984
Docket83-1838
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 732 F.2d 374 (Southern Bancorporation, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Bancorporation, Inc. v. United States, 732 F.2d 374, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1158, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 23432 (4th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

732 F.2d 374

84-1 USTC P 9396

SOUTHERN BANCORPORATION, INC. and Subsidiaries; World
Finance Corporation of Americus; Southern Bank and Trust
Company; Colonial Loan and Finance of Albany; Belvedere
Finance Company, Inc. of Anderson; World Finance
Corporation of Palestine and World Finance Corporation of
Texas City, Appellees,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Appellant.

No. 83-1838.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued Feb. 9, 1984.
Decided April 17, 1984.

Farley P. Katz, Tax Div., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C. (Henry Dargan McMaster, U.S. Atty., Glenn L. Archer, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Michael L. Paup, Jonathan S. Cohen, Tax Div., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., on brief), for appellant.

Robert H. Hishon, Atlanta, Ga. (M. Celeste Pickron, Bondurant, Miller, Hishon & Stephenson, Francis Marion, Anne S. Ellefson, Haynsworth, Perry, Bryant, Marion & Johnstone, Greenville, S.C., on brief), for appellees.

Before MURNAGHAN and CHAPMAN, Circuit Judges, and PECK,* Senior Circuit Judge.

MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:

The application of the Federal income tax laws may seem to some prosaic; nevertheless, the opportunities for ingenuity, even ingenuity approaching fraud, are many. Here we observe a failed effort, imaginative but unavailing, on a taxpayer's part.

The Southern Bank Corporation, Inc. together with its wholly-owned subsidiaries here involved (SBC) was one of several prospering financial institutions approached by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to participate in a bail-out for a competing financial giant, American Bank and Trust Company (American), which had fallen on evil days. The scheme envisaged to accomplish the desirable objective of avoiding a bank failure, with its inevitable disquieting consequences, invited bids for certain of the assets:

Assets to be Purchased by Assuming
Bank (All values approximate)
A.  Cash, cash items in process of collection,
   amounts due from Bank and
   securities (book values) ..................... $ 41,000,000
B. Loans--All loans except loans
   adversely classified by FDIC and all
   loans other than installment loans
   held at Orangeburg and Columbia
   branches ..................................... $ 38,000,000
C. Fixed Assets ................................. $  2,700,000
D. Other Assets (Accounts receivable,
   income earned, prepaid expenses,
   etc.) ........................................ $  1,500,000
                                                  ------------
TOTAL ........................................... $ 83,200,000

The loan portfolio did not include all loan items. There were certain exclusions, approximating $61,000,000, for those pieces in default or otherwise of questionable worth.

As assets covered by the sale were the sites of 29 branches of American, located in 20 different communities, to be transferred through assumption of leases or otherwise. With those assets would go along the opportunity to approach the employees of American theretofore working in those branches in order to continue the branches in business on a going-concern basis.

Also, the successful bidder, as a distinct part of the purchase price, was required to assume certain liabilities of American amounting to $136,000,000. The FDIC undertook to make up in cash the gap between assets and liabilities, after reduction by the amount offered by the successful bidder as a premium. As it turned out the liabilities assumed by SBC under its successful bid exceeded book value of the assets and the FDIC cash contribution by $5,560,000.1

The opportunities, formally at least, for valuing in order to compare the offers of the competing entities on a differing basis were, consequently, restricted to how much of the "price" would be assigned to the going-concern worth of the branches. That, in turn, would depend on the extent for a fit, i.e., on how far assumption of a branch would open up a new marketing area for the successful bidder not already served by its existing facilities. Ten of the American branches were located in communities in which American alone had offered banking services. SBC had had no branches in any of the 20 communities in which the actively operating businesses acquired from American were located.

The best offer received by the FDIC and the one accepted in September 1974 came from SBC. The premium, as already indicated, amounted to $5,560,000.

In computing the bid to make, SBC tested an approach involving a premium calculated as approximately 5% of American's total deposits of $112,000,000. SBC used the method because the Crocker National Bank in San Francisco recently had successfully bid 5% of the deposits of a failed bank to acquire it from the FDIC. SBC looked to whether a transaction so structured would be profitable. SBC determined that amortizing the premium over 40 years (i.e., $137,500 per year) would afford SBC an annual profit. On that basis the bid was firmed up and submitted.

It should be self-evident that computation of the premium by reference to the deposit base was but another way of expressing concern that the acquired former branches of American in which savings accounts and checking accounts were maintained by customers would continue to operate as part of SBC. It was the on-going use of that deposit base of $112,000,000, located in the 29 branches, as a source from which to make profitable loans which made the branches things of value to SBC. Hence, the value of the 29 branches, or, more especially, of the deposits of their customers, constituted a paramount consideration in SBC's calculation of the premium it would offer.2

When income tax time came around, SBC, aided and abetted by Peat, Marwick Mitchell & Co., reassigned values to the properties acquired, primarily to increase the values of the loan portfolio components by $4,993,9403 and to shrink the going-concern value, to $566,060 ($5,560,000--$4,993,940). Going-concern value was not an amortizable item.4

The techniques employed to achieve the upward reevaluation included classification of the installment loans as extremely high in quality, on the grounds that the FDIC had purified the portfolio by eliminating bad loans and the further grounds that SBC was spared the expenses of putting the loans, one by one, on its books. As for commercial loans, a sampling approach was employed (the sample included, of a total of 5000 loans, 162 chosen at random, and all over $50,000 in amount). SBC concluded that all loans in the sample were "excellent" (43%), "good" (54%), or "average" (1.597%). None was rated "fair" or "poor". Premiums of 15% were assigned to "excellent loans" and 5% to "good" loans.

The consolidated SBC income tax return prepared for 1974 sought amortization of the $4,993,940 to the extent of $589,241.

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Related

Southern Bancorporation, Inc. v. Commissioner
1986 T.C. Memo. 601 (U.S. Tax Court, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
732 F.2d 374, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1158, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 23432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-bancorporation-inc-v-united-states-ca4-1984.