Southwest Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner

38 T.C. 97, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 153
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 20, 1962
DocketDocket Nos. 76036, 76037, 76038, 76039, 76040, 76149
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 T.C. 97 (Southwest Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwest Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner, 38 T.C. 97, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 153 (tax 1962).

Opinion

OPINION.

Turner, Judge:

Under section 337 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954,5 no gain or loss is to be recognized from the sale or exchange of property by a corporation, if on or after June 22, 1954, it adopts a plan of complete liquidation and all of the assets of the corporation are distributed in complete liquidation within the 12 months’ period beginning on the date of the adoption of the plan, provided that the property is not stock in trade or of a kind which would properly be included in the inventory of the corporation, or installment obligations acquired on the sale of such stock in trade or property subject to inventory. In subsection (c) (1) (A)5 of section 337, it is provided, however, that section 337 shall not apply to any sale or exchange made by a collapsible corporation as defined in section 341(b) of the Code.

Based upon the plan of complete liquidation adopted on July 23, 1956, and the distribution by Southwest of all its assets by November 13, 1956, Southwest, claiming that the provisions of section 337 were applicable to the sale of its properties on October 1, 1956, reported no gain from such sale in its return for its final taxable period ended November 14,1956. The respondent in his determination of deficiency determined that Southwest was a collapsible corporation within the meaning of section 341 (b) of the Code and that the gain realized on the sale of the corporate properties is to be recognized as taxable income for such period.

According to section 341(b),6 a collapsible corporation means a corporation formed or availed of principally for the manufacture, construction, or production of property, or for the purchase of property, with a view to the sale or exchange of the stock of the corporation by its shareholders, or a distribution by the corporation to its shareholders, before realization by the corporation of a substantial part of the taxable income to be derived from the property manufactured, constructed, or purchased, and with a view to the realization by the shareholders of gain attributable to such property. For the purposes of section 341, property covered by the said section means property held for less than 3 years which is property used in the corporation’s trade or business, as defined in section 1231(b) of the Code, but without regard to any holding period therein provided. By subsection (d) (3) of section 341, it is provided that section 341 does not apply to gain realized by a shareholder with respect to his stock in a collapsible corporation if realized after the expiration of 3 years following the completion of such manufacture, construction, production, or purchase of the property.

It is the position of the petitioners that Southwest was not a collapsible corporation within the meaning of section 341 (b), and that the provisions of section 337 apply. The respondent did not determine and he makes no claim here that section 337 is not applicable, provided Southwest was not a collapsible corporation within the meaning of section 341 (b).

For determining whether Southwest was a collapsible corporation under section 341 (b), the question, of course, is whether it was formed or availed of for the purchase of the properties later sold by it to Security, with a view to a distribution to its shareholders before Southwest realized a substantial part of the taxable income to be derived from the properties purchased and with a view to the realization by the shareholders of gain attributable to the properties.

The respondent based his determination, and now rests his contention on the proposition that Southwest was formed and availed of for the purchase and resale of the Medico-Dental properties, and not for the purpose of owning and holding the properties for the production of income therefrom. In support of this contention, he argues that the need of Security Bank for a new main office was fully known to Sutherland, Black, and Margolis at the time Southwest was organized and the property was purchased; that the resale of the property by Southwest, if not the motivating factor in the organization of Southwest and its purchase of the properties, was contemplated unconditionally, conditionally, or as a recognized possibility, which fact brings Southwest within the meaning of the income tax regulations and the provisions of section 341 (b).

Section 1.341-2(a) (2) of the Income Tax Regulations does carry the provision recited. In section 1.341-2(a) (3), however, it is provided that a corporation is “formed or availed of with a view to the action described in section 341(b) if the requisite view existed at any time during the * * * purchase referred to in that section.” The provision is followed, however, by the further provision that “if the sale, exchange, or distribution is attributable solely to circumstances which arose after the * * * purchase (other than circumstances which reasonably could be anticipated at the time of such * * * purchase), the corporation shall, in the absence of compelling facts to the contrary, be considered not to have been so formed or availed of.” On the other hand, if the sale, exchange, or distribution is attributable to circumstances present at the time of purchase, the corporation absent compelling facts to the contrary is, according to the regulations, considered to have been so formed or availed of.

While it is true that Security Bank had, at the time Southwest was organized and purchased the Medico-Dental properties, outgrown its existing facilities for its main office and the acquisition of suitable property therefor in the near future was a recognized necessity, we are wholly satisfied from the evidence that, insofar as Security Bank was concerned, it had no thought or intention of locating in or near the site of the Medico-Dental properties. Testifying to that effect were various officers and directors of Security Bank, who unlike Sutherland and Black had no connection with or interest in Southwest. Their testimony in that respect was definite and quite convincing.

It was not until a year or more after the organization of Southwest and the purchase by it of the Medico-Dental properties that Security Bank began to give any thought or consideration to a location beyond the Broadway area. Furthermore, there is no question that the sale by Southwest of its properties to the bank when the matter was finally brought up early in 1956, was met with strong resistance on the part of Black, Margolis, and Sutherland.

Sutherland, Black, and Margolis all three testified categorically that the organization of Southwest and its purchase of the Medico-Dental properties was with a view to the continued ownership of the properties by Southwest for the production of operating income therefrom and there was no thought, purpose, or intent to resell. There is no claim on the part of the respondent that the corporation was thinly capitalized and it was the thought of Black in particular and Margolis that the properties could be operated after their purchase so as to produce sufficient income from rents to liquidate over a long term the indebtedness placed against it in connection with the purchase and thus result in unencumbered ownership of the property by Southwest.

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Related

Southwest Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner
38 T.C. 97 (U.S. Tax Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 T.C. 97, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-properties-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1962.