Tidwell v. Berke

532 S.W.2d 254, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 611
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 532 S.W.2d 254 (Tidwell v. Berke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tidwell v. Berke, 532 S.W.2d 254, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 611 (Tenn. 1975).

Opinions

OPINION

HARBISON, Justice.

This suit was instituted by appellee, Harry Berke, for a declaratory judgment and for recovery of certain corporate excise taxes assessed against him and paid under protest. The Chancellor allowed recovery of the taxes with interest, and the Commissioner of Revenue has appealed.

There is little controversy about the facts of the case. The issues involved, however, are of great importance in the administration of the Tennessee corporate excise tax law, and also to taxpayers who may be involved in corporate liquidations, because of certain differences which exist between the state law and the present federal income tax law and regulations governing corporate liquidations.

Prior to January 24, 1969, appellee Harry Berke and defendant below Thomas J. Northcutt were the sole stockholders of a Tennessee corporation, Brainerd Village, Inc. That corporation owned as its principal asset a shopping center, and the corporation was engaged in no other business enterprises than the ownership and operation of this center.

Prior to January 24, 1969, according to the testimony of Mr. Berke, certain proposals had been made to the officers and stockholders concerning the acquisition of the shopping center. A meeting of stockholders was held on January 24, 1969, according to minutes filed in the record, at which time an agent of the proposed purchaser of the center was present. He presented an offer of purchase which had previously been transmitted, and, according to the minutes, certain variations in the terms of the original proposals were discussed, although there was no change in the total sales price. The minutes recited that Mr. Northcutt presented a proposed contract of sale, “but because there were several provisions which the corporation could not agree to, the contract was not approved, and request for changes will be made prior to the closing of the sale.”

The minutes then recite:

“It was agreed that the Corporation would, subject to last minute decisions at the time of the closing of the sale, transfer all of its assets to the Stockholders according to its liquidation plan and that the Stockholders would then convey title to the Shopping Center to the purchasers since the realty is the principal asset of the corporation. It was then proposed that after all the assets were transferred to the Stockholders that Harry Berke and Tom Northcutt would and did agree to permit the Corporation to act as their agents for the sole purpose of transferring title to the realty as agent for the Stockholders. It was agreed that if the sale is made it should be effective as of the close of the business day, January 31, 1969, and that Thomas J. Northcutt and Harry Berke would both personally supervise the terms and provisions of the closing in order to protect the interests of the Corporation and Stockholders.”

The minutes further recite that:

“A Plan of Liquidation was prepared with the assistance of Dixie Lewis, Certified Public Accountant, a copy of which is hereto attached to the Minutes, and made a part thereof. It was agreed that the United States Treasury Department Revenue Form 966 entitled CORPORATE DISSOLUTION OR LIQUIDATION should be mailed to the Internal Revenue Service within thirty (30) days from January 31, 1969, as suggested by the Auditor.”

[256]*256Mr. Berke testified that a further meeting of stockholders was held on Monday, January 27, 1969, and these minutes were also filed in the record. It is stated that the meeting was called “for the purpose of discussing final plans for the sale by the Stockholders of the Stockholders interest in the Corporation pursuant to the plan of liquidation filed with the Federal Internal Revenue Service on January .24, .1969.”

The minutes recite that it was agreed that the stockholders “should sell their assets in the corporation to the purchasers.” The minutes then recite that in view of the total amount of the consideration for the sale, the corporation would act as agent for the stockholders “in order to avoid the almost prohibitive expense of recording one deed by the corporation to the Stockholders and then the Stockholders, in turn, executing and recording another deed to the ultimate purchasers.” The minutes recite that the corporation agreed that it would act solely as “Agent for the Stockholders and all assets received by the corporation would be received by it as Agents for the Stockholders, and distributed to the Stockholders as per liquidation plan of January 24,1969.”

The plan of liquidation itself is dated February 1,1969, signed by the secretary of the corporation, and the accountant who prepared it testified that it was actually prepared after the two stockholders’ meetings above referred to, and that while he did not attend the meetings, he had the minutes of the two meetings before him when he prepared the plan.

The plan is a brief and simple one, providing for cessation of business on January 31, 1969, collection of all debts due the corporation and payment of all liabilities except those to be assumed by the purchaser of the building. The plan recites:

“Upon completion of, or provision for, payment of all liabilities, the remaining cash shall be distributed to the stockholders, pro rata, as a liquidating dividend.”

The plan provides that long-term notes might be distributed to the stockholders in lieu of cash, and it concludes with this provision:

“When, all assets have been converted to cash or notes and all liabilities have been paid, final distribution will be made to the stockholders in exchange for the cancellation and retirement of their stock.”

This plan was actually transmitted by the accountant to the Director of the Internal Revenue Service on February 19, 1969, together with Form 966, reciting adoption of the plan on January 24, 1969 and a copy of a resolution purportedly passed by the stockholders on January 24, 1969, adopting the plan of liquidation. The text of the resolution itself does not appear in the minutes of the meeting of January 24 or the meeting of January 27.

A deed to the real estate, held by the corporation was executed by the corporation on January 31, 1969 and recorded promptly thereafter. The deed is executed in the corporate name by Thomas J. North-cutt as President and Harry Berke as Secretary, and it contains the usual corporate form of acknowledgment by these officers, reciting that the deed was executed on behalf of the corporation by authority of its Board of Directors.

The form submitted to the Internal Revenue in February 1969 recites that the corporation had one hundred shares of ten-dollar par stock outstanding, and there are filed in the record two stock certificates, both owned by Mr. Berke at the time of the events here in question, each certificate in the amount of twenty-five shares. There is nothing in the record to indicate that Mr. Northcutt ever at any time surrendered his certificates, nor is the absence of his certificates otherwise explained in the record. Endorsed on the back of each of the two certificates of Mr. Berke, under date of January 27, 1969, is a statement that the shares were surrendered “By agreement between the corporation and the stockholders and pursuant to the plan of liquidation adopted by resolution dated 1/24/69 and to [257]*257the agreement and resolution as set out in the minutes of the corporation dated 1/24/69 and 1/27/69 . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
532 S.W.2d 254, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tidwell-v-berke-tenn-1975.