Sumner E. And Barbara P. Brown v. The United States

396 F.2d 459, 184 Ct. Cl. 410, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1494, 1968 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 19
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 14, 1968
Docket35-65
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 396 F.2d 459 (Sumner E. And Barbara P. Brown v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sumner E. And Barbara P. Brown v. The United States, 396 F.2d 459, 184 Ct. Cl. 410, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1494, 1968 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 19 (cc 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

LARAMORE, Judge.

This case involves another aspect of the income tax consequences which have burgeoned from the transactions devised by Livingstone & Company (hereinafter referred to as Livingstone). The record before us is a stipulation of facts which, succinctly stated, discloses a typical “Livingstone” transaction.

Plaintiffs, Sumner E. and Barbara P. Brown, husband and wife, filed joint Federal personal income tax returns for the calendar years ending December 31, 1955 and December 31, 1956.

On November 16, 1954, Sumner E. Brown, hereinafter sometimes referred to as plaintiff, directed Livingstone to purchase $1,500,000 in United States Treasury Bonds, due May 15, 1957, with the interest coupons of May 15, 1955 *460 and November 15, 1955 detached. Livingstone confirmed the bond purchase at a price of 98%, making the total cost to plaintiff $1,475,625.

On the same day, November 16, plaintiff executed a 1-year note in the amount of $1,475,625 (the total cost of the bonds). The note had been given to him by Livingstone and was made payable to Gail Finance Corporation, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Finance. In addition, Livingstone gave plaintiff letters of instruction which directed Livingstone to deliver the bonds to Finance as security for the $1,475,625 note. Plaintiff signed and returned the letters and the note to Livingstone together with a $36,890.63 check dated December 8, 1954, payable to Finance, which represented one year of interest on the note at the rate of 2% percent per annum.

The note stated that plaintiff had deposited the bonds with Finance as collateral for the loan and that Finance had a lien against the bonds. No provision was made for reimbursement of prepaid interest in the event of a prepayment of principal. Plaintiff could not be required to furnish additional collateral at any time. Moreover, plaintiff was not personally liable for any of the principal indebtedness or interest in excess of the proceeds which might be obtained from the sale of the bonds. If the proceeds from the sale of the bonds exceeded the debt due Finance, that additional amount was payable to plaintiff. At no time did plaintiff actually obtain physical possession of any bonds. Finance was not affiliated with Livingstone by common ownership, but at all relevant times it received substantially all of its business from Livingstone. The stipulation, however, does not indicate whether Livingstone actually purchased any bonds or delivered the collateral to Finance.

On October 28, 1955, almost one year later, Livingstone sent plaintiff the documents required to close out the transaction. A confirmation slip dated November 15, 1955, stated that Livingstone had purchased the bonds from plaintiff at the price of lOO 1 /^ and that plaintiff had realized $1,503,750 from the sale. Plaintiff then signed a letter directing Finance to deliver the bonds to Livingstone and asking Livingstone to remit $1,475,625 directly to Finance.

To summarize the results of these transactions, plaintiff paid $36,890.63 in 1954 as “prepaid interest,” and in 1955 he received a long-term capital gain of $28,-125 (the proceeds of the sale of $1,503,-750, less the cost of the bonds of $1,475,-625). Plaintiff deducted the interest on his 1954 tax return and reported the long-term capital gain on his 1955 return.

On October 24, 1957, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue mailed a statutory notice of deficiency for the tax years 1953 and 1954 of $7,905.28 and $21,347.-76, respectively. In addition, he proposed an overassessment of $7,504.59 for the tax year 1955. The notice provided that the 1955 overassessment would be made the subject of a certificate for over assessment provided plaintiff fully protected himself against the statute of limitations by filing a protective claim for refund. Plaintiff, however, did not file a protective claim. 1

The Commissioner’s denial of plaintiff’s interest deduction, because it was not paid for the use of borrowed funds, created the $21,347.76 deficiency in 1954. Pursuant to an agreement of the parties, the Tax Court affirmed the Commissioner’s action by its order of August 29, 1962. Plaintiff no longer questions the propriety of an interest deduction.

The effect of that interest deduction denial, as summarized in the stipulation of facts, was to increase plaintiff’s out-of-pocket cost for the bonds by $36,890.63. Plaintiff’s total cost for the bonds was *461 increased to $1,512,515.68 (the note of $1,475,625 plus the prepaid interest of $36,890.63). The proceeds of sale, as explained above, were only $1,503,750. Plaintiff, therefore, claims an $8,765.63 long-term capital loss on the transaction. 2

Brown filed a refund claim on January 8, 1963 for $7,504.59 (1955) and $1,925.80 (1956) based on a reduction of his reported capital gains by the newly-created capital loss. 3 To date no action has been taken by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue on these claims. This suit resulted.

We are faced with the threshold question of whether the net out-of-pocket cost to plaintiff of $8,765.63 is a deductible capital loss. Only if it were deductible would we be required to determine the applicability of the mitigation provisions (sections 1311-1315) 4 upon which plaintiff relies to recover refunds for tax years which, at the time of this suit, were barred by the statute of limitations. We find, however, that the capital loss was not the result of a transaction entered into for profit, and therefore it is not deductible under section 165(c). 5

*462 I

Deductions for prepaid interest have been denied by an ever-increasing number of courts in a wide variety of Livingstone-type transactions that create simulated debts, paid for by personal notes and secured by the Treasury bonds or notes which have been purchased with the borrowed money. (Similar artificial debts have been created by the use of annuity contracts). The purported interest paid on these “debts” has been uniformly held non-deductible as interest expenses under section 163(a) 6 because it was not paid on a genuine commercial indebtedness. First Circuit: Sonnabend v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 267 F.2d 319 (1st Cir. 1959), (Treasury notes — § 23(b)) 7 ; Goodstein v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 267 F.2d 127 (1st Cir. 1959), (Treasury notes — § 23 (b)). Second Circuit: Becker v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 277 F.2d 146 (2d Cir. 1960), (Treasury notes — § 23(b)); Lynch v.

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396 F.2d 459, 184 Ct. Cl. 410, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1494, 1968 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumner-e-and-barbara-p-brown-v-the-united-states-cc-1968.