Texas-Empire Pipe Line Co. v. Commissioner

42 B.T.A. 368, 1940 BTA LEXIS 1010
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1940
DocketDocket No. 78604.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 B.T.A. 368 (Texas-Empire Pipe Line Co. 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
Texas-Empire Pipe Line Co. v. Commissioner, 42 B.T.A. 368, 1940 BTA LEXIS 1010 (bta 1940).

Opinion

[376]*376OPINION.

I&RN:

Since the second question, whether the dividend distributed on November 30, 1932, the day before the liquidation of petitioner’s subsidiary, was a liquidating dividend, as respondent contends, or an ordinary one does not require extended consideration, we shall dispose of it now. If we should find it a liquidating dividend, it must [377]*377be treated like the distribution admittedly made in liquidation of the corporation on December 1,1932. Section L15 (a) and (c), Eeve-nut Act of 1932, set out in the margin,1 is here involved.

The petitioner coni ends that llie November dividend was paid in accordance with a long established practice of its subsidiary to pay out all its earnings and profits every, quarter or half year. The dates of payment of these dividends and the company’s minutes authorizing the payments have ben set out fully in the findings. The revenue agent thought that the regularity of distribution indicated a general practice and that this last dividend was herefore not taxable, and the Interstate Commerce Commission likewise treated it as an ordinary dividend.

Eespondent relies on the presumptive correctness of his determination and on the Fifth Circuit Court’s decision in Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Commissioner, 63 Fed. (2d) 619, affirming 22 B. T. A. 541. Needless to say, we are not bound by the revenue agent’s opinion or by the Interstate Commerce Commission’s treatment of the dividend. In the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank case, the taxpayer received from a national bank $1,000,000 ostensibly as an ordinary dividend on December 30,1920. On December 21 the directors of the taxpayer had voted to liquidate the national bank, and on December 30 they had authorized the purchase of all assets and the assumption of liabilities of the national bank. On December 31, the day after the dividend in question was voted and paid to the taxpayer, the directors of the national bank voted to liquidate by transferring all its assets to the taxpayer. The national bank had previously, in the same year, declared and paid dividends in July and December. The two banks had interlocking directorates and the taxpayer owned 95 percent of the stock of the national bank. The court pointed out that the fact that the distribution was wholly from surplus and not from capital was not decisive, but merely evidential. The distributions in Hellmich v. Hellman, [378]*378276 U. S. 233, and Tootle v. Commissioner, 58 Fed. (2d) 576, where they were wholly from profits were, nevertheless, held liquidating dividends., As was said by the Supreme Court in Hellmich v. Hellman, supra, an ordinary dividend is “a distribution made by a going corporation to its shareholders in the ordinary course of business”, and in the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank case the Circuit Court thought that a distribution by a national bank of its entire surplus, 200 percent, was hardly compatible with it continuing in business. The final convincing fact was the arrangement made by the national bank’s 95 percent shareholder, the taxpayer, to buy the bank’s assets and to liquidate its stock at the very same time that the national bank should declare and pay its dividend; a fact which, said the court, “leaves no doubt that it had been determined in advance, and that the $1,000,000 authorized to be turned over on December 30th was but a step in the final liquidation accomplished on December 31st.”

The facts in the instant case are strikingly similar. Petitioner’s insistence that its subsidiary was making a regular distribution of current earnings is unconvincing in the circumstances. Its distributions had all been made for the three years last past at the end of each quarter of the calendar year, so that if petitioner’s theory be allowed, it would not sustain the ordinary dividend character of a distribution on November 30 which -would normally have been made only on December 31. The petitioner contends that liquidation here followed the dividend of November 30, and so it did, but by only one day. There is nothing to indicate that the petitioner on November 30 intended to keep its subsidiary in operation and then changed its mind on the morrow; and, in the absence of such evidence, we must assume that dissolution was in contemplation on the eve of its being put into effect, and this assumption leads inevitably to the conclusion that dividend and dissolution were part and parcel of the same' plan. We think that the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank case is controlling here, and hold accordingly.

We turn now to the question whether petitioner realized a gain, as respondent contends, or suffered a loss on the liquidation of its Illinois subsidiary. The essential question of the case, since the cost of the subsidiary’s assets is stipulated, is the fair market value of the assets on distribution to petitioner. There is a preliminary legal question, however, which we must dispose of first, for if petitioner’s contention with regard to it is sound, we need not proceed further.

Petitioner contends that its relation to its wholly owned subsidiary was substantially that subsisting between the taxpayer and its wholly owned subsidiary in Southern Pacific Railroad Co. v. Lowe, 247 U. S. [379]*379330, and that in determining the tax consequences of the transactions between it and its subsidiary the separate corporate entity of the latter must be ignored and disregarded. In that case, where a large surplus had been accumulated by the subsidiary before March 1, 1913, the first effective date of the new Federal income tax, and the parent corporation caused its subsidiary to declare a dividend from this surplus and to pay it by a credit against the taxpayer’s indebtedness to the subsidiary, the Supreme Court held that the dividend was not taxable to the parent corporation, basing its conclusion upon the fact that the income “in mere form only, bore the appearance of income accruing after that date [March 1, 1913], while, in truth and in substance, it accrued before; and upon the fact that the Central Pacific and the Southern Pacific were in substance identical because of the complete ownership and control which the latter possessed over the former, as stockholder and in other capacities.” The matter was treated as a “paper transaction”; and, so far as the dividends represented surplus of the Central Pacific accumulated before January 1, 1913, “They were not taxable as income of the Southern Pacific within the intent and meaning of the Act of 1913.” The Court was careful to point out in conclusion that “the case turns upon its very peculiar facts, and is distinguishable from others in which the identity of a controlling stockholder with his corporation has been raised. Pullman Car Co. v. Missouri Pacific Co., 155 U. S. 587; Peterson v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry., 205 U. S. 364, 391.” Again, six months later, in December 1918, the Supreme Court reaffirmed in somewhat similar circumstances the same principle in Gulf Oil Corporation v. Lewellyn, 248 U. S. 71. There the taxpayer was a holding company owning substantially all the stock in the other corporations concerned, and decided in January 1913 to take over the previously accumulated earnings and surplus.

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Texas-Empire Pipe Line Co. v. Commissioner
42 B.T.A. 368 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
42 B.T.A. 368, 1940 BTA LEXIS 1010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-empire-pipe-line-co-v-commissioner-bta-1940.