Timken v. Commissioner

6 T.C. 483, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 267
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1946
DocketDocket No. 6648
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 6 T.C. 483 (Timken 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
Timken v. Commissioner, 6 T.C. 483, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 267 (tax 1946).

Opinion

OPINION.

Disney, Judge:

This case involves income taxes for the calendar years 1940 and 1941, for which years, respectively, the Commissioner determined deficiencies of $1,102.88 and $5,102.86. Two questions are presented: (1) Whether, for 1940, the petitioner, transferee of certain corporate assets in liquidation, under agreement by her to pay any corporate debts, is entitled to deduct interest paid by her on a deficiency later assessed against the corporation, as to the period after transfer of corporate assets to her; and, (2) whether certain of the petitioner’s income, in 1941, was ordinary income or capital gain.

The facts have all been stipulated. We adopt the stipulation as our findings of fact. We will set forth here only such matters as examination of the issues requires.

The Question of Deduction of Interest.

The petitioner filed her income tax return for the taxable years with the collector for the eighteenth district of Ohio. She and her husband were the only stockholders of a corporation. They caused it to be liquidated and all assets distributed to them in proportion to their stock holdings, they agreeing in writing with the corporation as a part of the plan of liquidation to pay all corporate debts and obligations. (Though petitioner’s pro rata part of the assets was in fact distributed to a trust set up by her, the trust was revocable by petitioner, and she was sole beneficiary. For that reason, apparently, the parties have treated the matter as one involving a transfer to the petitioner and for that reason we too so treat it.) After such transfer of the assets to the petitioner, a deficit in income taxes was assessed against the corporation. The deficiency was thereupon paid, including interest, of which the petitioner’s portion for the period after liquidation of the corporation was $1,897.54. Deduction of such interest from petitioner’s income was disallowed, presenting the question here in issue.

The petitioner argues that the interest is deductible under Koppers Co., 3 T. C. 62; affd., 151 Fed. (2d) 267, sub nom. Commissioner v. Breyer. The respondent contends that deduction of the interest is not permissible, under Koch v. United States, 138 Fed. (2d) 850; Nunan v. Green, 146 Fed. (2d) 352, reversing 3 T. C. 74; Commissioner v. Henderson, 147 Fed. (2d) 619; and Commissioner v. Green, 148 Fed. (2d) 157.

The Koppers case is parallel in its facts to the instant matter. We adhered to the views expressed therein in Robert L. Smith, 6 T. C. 255. We hold that the respondent erred in disallowing the deduction of the interest paid.

The Question of Whether Income Was Ordinary or Capital Gain.

In the year 1941 the petitioner had certain income from payments made upon notes issued by a corporation in connection with the liquidation of a banking corporation, and we are to decide the question as to whether the amounts received are ordinary income, taxable in full, or are taxable as capital gain, subject to the limitations of section 117 of the Internal Revenue Code. Our conclusion must, therefore, it is clear, depend upon the facts involved. In brief, those facts so stipulated are so far as considered pertinent: When on June 15,1933, the Union Trust Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, was taken over for liquidation by the Superintendent of Banks of that state, petitioner had on deposit therein $269,976.46, for which amount she received a certificate of claim. In 1933 and 1934 liquidating dividends totaling 45 percent were paid on such claims to depositors and petitioner received $121,-489.41 on her claim. In her Federal income tax return for 1934 the petitioner claimed and was allowed a deduction, for partial bad debt, $51,295.53 as 19 percent of the face amount of her claim. In 1938 the bank was reorganized, and on January 6,1938, petitioner delivered to the Superintendent of Banks, in accordance with'the plan of reorganization, a consent and agreement, thereby electing and agreeing to accept in “final settlement and discharge” of her rights as holder of a certificate of claim, a payment of 35 percent of the face amount of her claim, and a “creditors note” of Union Properties, Inc., for the 20 percent remaining unpaid on her claim. She received payment of 35 percent, being $94,491.76 and a creditors note in the face amount of $53,995.29. Union Properties, Inc., was a corporation all the stock of which was owned by Union Bank of Commerce Co., the new bank resulting from the reorganization of Union Trust Co. Union Properties, Inc., under the plan, issued approximately $21,000,000 in creditors notes, and they have ever since that time been bought and sold by brokerage houses in Cleveland. In 1938 the Bureau of Internal Kevenue issued a ruling to the effect that depositors who had been allowed deduction for partial bad debt for 1933 and 1934 realized taxable income for 1938 as recovery of bad debt, measured by the excess of the sum of cash distributions plus market value of the note over the original deposit less the deduction previously allowed as bad debt. The revenue agent in charge at Cleveland advised in August 1938 that, for the purpose of computing gain or loss upon recoveries, the creditors notes had a value of $38.50 per $100 face value on May 16, 1938, the date of their issuance. At that rate petitioner’s creditors note had a fair market value of $20,788.19, and for the purpose of this case $20,788.19 is adopted by the parties as petitioner’s basis in her creditors note above described. Considering the amounts of cash received and the creditors note at a value of $20,788.19, petitioner in 1938 recovered $18,088.43 of the partial bad debt deduction of $51,295.53 allowed in 1934. In November 1938 petitioner purchased a creditors note of a face value of $3,176.60, at a cost of $1,493. Since that date Union Properties, Inc., has made four 25 percent payments on such creditors notes, in December 1939, June 1941, December 1942, and March 1943. Accordingly petitioner received, and applied in reduction of the bases on the two creditors notes, in each of the years 1939 and 1941, the sums of $13,498.82 (on the larger note) and $794.15 (on the smaller), resulting, prior to the payments in 1941, in the reduction of petitioner’s bases in the two notes to $7,289.37 and $698.85, respectively, and therefore resulting in gain to the petitioner, upon receipt of the payments in 1941, of $6,209.45 and $95.30 on the respective notes. Petitioner sold both notes in 1942. In her income tax return for 1941 she included 50 percent of such amounts of gain as taxable as long term capital gain. The Commissioner determined that the amounts were not long term capital gain, but taxable income under section 22 (a), Internal Eevenue Code.

The creditors notes (payable in 5 years extendible to 8 years by notice to holders of record) provided for payment of the face amount thereof, without interest; but under the plan of reorganization the holders had a right of participation proportionately in one-half of the net proceeds of the net assets of Union Properties, Inc. These assets had been a part of the assets of the former bank, and included, as secondary security for the payment of the creditors notes, the major portion of the stock of the new bank.

Notice of payments to be made on the notes was required to be given to the holders of record at their addresses as shown on the books of Union Properties, Inc., and such payments were to be endorsed on the notes, and, to the extent of such payments, the notes were to be considered paid or satisfied.

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Timken v. Commissioner
6 T.C. 483 (U.S. Tax Court, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 T.C. 483, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timken-v-commissioner-tax-1946.