T. H. Symington & Son, Inc. v. Commissioner

35 B.T.A. 711, 1937 BTA LEXIS 842
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedMarch 26, 1937
DocketDocket Nos. 48786, 48789, 48890, 62161, 62228, 62229, 62234.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 35 B.T.A. 711 (T. H. Symington & Son, Inc. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T. H. Symington & Son, Inc. v. Commissioner, 35 B.T.A. 711, 1937 BTA LEXIS 842 (bta 1937).

Opinion

[736]*736 OPINION.

Black :

1. The question presented by this issue is whether or not Magothy realized a gain of $39,085 in 1924 upon the redemption in that year of 10,000 preferred shares in the Locke Insulator Corporation. Magothy reported that amount of gain in its 1925 return, but the respondent determined that the gain was income for 1924. The petitioner now contends that no gain was realized in the transaction, though it does not dispute that, if any taxable gain did result, it was income for 1924. The amount received by Magothy is not in controversy, but the cost of the redeemed shares is. The facts pertaining to the issue are set forth in paragraph (68) of our findings.

The shares in question were part of the assets acquired by the Magothy Corporation in 1924 from the Delaware company, the facts of which are set forth in paragraphs (10) to (24), inclusive, of our findings. As consideration for all of the assets so acquired, Magothy paid $500,000 and assumed all of the Delaware company’s liabilities, except such as were assumed by the Maryland company, also a party to the transaction, including the liability to retire the outstanding-preferred shares and bonds of the Delaware company. The transfer of such of the assets of the Delaware company as were acquired [737]*737by Magothy was effected on December 17, 1924. The parties agree that the transaction constituted an outright purchase by Magothy and not a statutory reorganization within the meaning of the applicable revenue acts. The shares were redeemed on December 30, 1924. As the shares had not been transferred to Magothy on the books of the Locke Insulator Corporation, payment of the redemption price was made by the Locke Insulator Corporation to the Delaware company, which in turn made payment thereof to the Chase National Bank, to be applied in reduction of the loan obtained by Donald Symington, referred to in paragraph (18) of our findings, for the benefit of Magothy. In that respect it must be presumed that the Delaware company acted in accord with instructions of Magothy, since the proceeds of the redemption were the property of Magothy and not of the Delaware company.

The foregoing facts disclose a completed redemption in 1924 of the Locke Insulator preferred shares for cash. It follows that any gain upon the exchange was realized in 1924 and is taxable as income for that year; and this we understand is not now disputed by the petitioner. The petitioner argues, however, that “the entire transaction must be viewed as a purchase by Magothy for the sum of $500,000 of wdiatever assets remained after the liquidation of all liabilities, and any assets which w’ere liquidated during the course of the general liquidation did not give rise to any profit or loss but merely tended to increase or reduce the cost to Magothy of the assets finally taken over.” Stating the proposition more simply and in terms of its ultimate effect, it is that the liabilities of the Delaware company assumed by the Magothy Corporation should be offset against the proceeds from dispositions of the acquired assets and none of such proceeds subjected to tax, and that the excess of such proceeds over the assumed liabilities should be added to the remaining assets and the total thereof regarded as having been purchased for $500,000. This we think is not a correct theory of income taxation. Not only does it resort to the use of improper bases for computing gains and losses upon the dispositions of assets made in the period of liquidation of the assumed liabilities, but the logical result of their use is to project realized gains into the computation of net income of later accounting periods when they were not realized. “It is well settled that where property is acquired en bloc or en masse and subsequently sold in lots or parcels, a computation of gain or loss must be made upon each separate sale and the result reported in the tax return and not held in abeyance or suspense until the entire cost of the property is recovered.” Baneitaly Corporation, 34 B. T. A. 494, and cases cited therein. The rule is applicable to the redemption of the Locke Insulator shares in this case, and the [738]*738gain or loss upon that redemption must be computed upon the cost basis for those shares and recognized in computing net income for 1924.

In computing the gain to Magothy upon the redemption, the respondent used a cost basis of $1,000,000, which was the par value of the shares. Petitioner contends that the cost of the said shares was not less than $1,039,850, the amount received in the redemption thereof.

Magothy agreed to pay a stated consideration for the acquired assets — $500,000 in cash and payment of such of the liabilities of the Delaware company as were not assumed by the Maryland company. Each of the acquired assets must bear its fair share of the cost represented by that consideration, and, when determined, that share is the basis for computing gain or loss upon any later disposition of that particular asset. Based upon asset and liability values on the books of the Delaware company, the total consideration paid by Magothy exceeded the book value of assets by $260,286.90. The respondent found the excess to be $290,346.19, but that included items that did not appear on the Delaware company’s books, and he ascribed the whole amount of that excess as cost of the shares in the Symington Corporation, which were acquired from the Delaware company at the. same time as the shares in the Locke Insulator Corporation and which were carried on the books of the Delaware company at $1,000. The question is whether or not any part of that excess may be ascribed as cost of the Locke Insulator preferred shares, and we are unable to answer that because of the lack of sufficient evidentiary facts upon which to base a conclusion.

The petitioner contends that $39,085 of the excess should be allocated to the redeemed shares, fixing the cost of those shares at $1,039,850. Its sole justification for this is the fact that the shares' were actually redeemed on December 30, 1924, 13 days after their acquisition by Magothy, for $1,067,500. However, the situations were different on the two dates. On December 30, 1924, the shares were called for redemption at 105 percent of par, plus accrued dividends, and there was an accrued liability on the part of the Locke Insulator Corporation to pay the redemption price thereof. On December 17, 1934, the date of acquisition, the shares had not been called, and there is nothing in the record that indicates that their call was even contemplated at that time. There is no direct evidence as to the fair market value of the shares on that date. The share certificates are not in evidence, so that we know nothing about the terms of issue, the dividend rate, or when and how the shares were redeemable. We have no evidence as to the financial status of the Locke Insulator Corporation, the value of the assets represented by [739]*739these shares, the corporate earnings, or the dividend history in respect of these shares. In short, we have no evidence upon which we can make an independent determination of their fair market value at the date of acquisition. We have no evidence which would justify us in overturning the cost of $1,000,000 allocated by the respondent to these shares.

On this issue the respondent’s determination is sustained.

2.

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T. H. Symington & Son, Inc. v. Commissioner
35 B.T.A. 711 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
35 B.T.A. 711, 1937 BTA LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-h-symington-son-inc-v-commissioner-bta-1937.