Trading Associates Corp. v. Magruder

30 F. Supp. 978, 24 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 348, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3676
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJanuary 8, 1940
DocketNo. 300
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 F. Supp. 978 (Trading Associates Corp. v. Magruder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trading Associates Corp. v. Magruder, 30 F. Supp. 978, 24 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 348, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3676 (D. Md. 1940).

Opinion

COLEMAN, District Judge.

This is a suit to recover additional income taxes assessed for the year 1935 against the plaintiff, as a personal holding company, in the amount of $6,906.47, under Section 351(b) 1, of the Revenue Act of 1934, 26 U.S.C.A. § 331(b) (1), and paid by the plaintiff under protest. This Section of the Act reads as follows: “(1) The term ‘personal holding company’ means any corporation (other than a corporation exempt from taxation under section ■ 101 [103], and other than a bank or trust company incorporated under the laws of the United States or of any State or Territory, a substantial part of whose business is the receipt of deposits, and other than a life-insurance company or surety company) if—(A) at least 8Ó per centum of its gross income ■ for the taxable year is derived from royalties, dividends,’ interest, annuities, and (except in the case of regular dealers in stock or securities) gains from the sale of stock or securities, and (B) at any time during the last half of the taxable year more than 50 per centum in value of its outstanding stock is owned, directly or indirectly, by or for not more than five individuals. * * * ”

The sole question before the court is whether the plaintiff 'was a “regular dealer in stock or securities” at the time the tax was levied. If it was, it is to be excepted from the provisions of the Act, because, as stipulated in the present case, although it was within the definition of the Act as to ownership of its stock, 80 per cent of the plaintiffs gross incorpe for the particular taxable year was not derived from the sources stipulated in the Act, if there be excepted the “gains from the .sale of stock or securities” by the company.

The words “regular dealers in stock or securities”, contained in the Act are not therein defined, nor does it appear that this part of the Act has ever been construed by any reported decision. However, a regulation of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, No. 86, Article 351-352 (5), in effect at the time of the assessment, defines this term as follows: “The term ‘regular dealers in stock or securities’ means corporations with an established place of business regularly engaged in the purchase of stock or securities, and their resale to customers. A corporation which is a regular dealer in stock or securities but which buys or sells or holds stock or securities for investment or speculation is not a dealer with respect to such stock or securities.” This regulation was amended in 1937, .and now appears as regulation 94, Article 351-352, as follows: “The term ‘regular dealers in stock or securities’ means corporations with an established place of business regularly engaged in the purchase of stock or securities and their resale to customers. ■ Such corporations are not dealers with respect to stock or securities held for speculation or investment.” Little importance attaches to this slight amendment. It merely clarifies the last sentence of the earlier regulation, which was reasonably clear.

It is axiomatic that regulations of an administrative body do not control, if they are not in conformity with a proper interpretation of the law which they purport to construe. In other words, such regulations are not to be given the force of law unless they really carry out the intent of the legislative body, as expressed in the law itself. However, it is believed that the regulation in effect in 1935 does correctly state what is to be taken as the reasonable interpretation of the words “regular dealers in stock and securities”, as contained in the law.

The following facts, stipulated in the present controversy, are material to the precise issue. The plaintiff company was incorporated under the laws of Delaware in 1931 with very broad charter powers, which authorize it, among other things, to deal in securities of all kinds. As of December 31, 1935, the total number of plaintiff company’s shares of stock outstanding was 5,082, and as of the same date the amount paid for these shares appeáred on plaintiff’s books to be as follows: Paid-in capital, $50,820; paid-in capital surplus, $76,491. During the year ended December 31, 1935, plaintiff made all of its purchases and sales through a brokerage firm known as .Belden & Company, and employed no salesmen to consummate these sales. In the year 1935, plaintiff company made 371 separate purchases of securities totaling $1,215,636.42, and 343 separate sales of securities totaling $1,201,810.28. The cost of the securities sold in the year 1935 was $1,136,525.65, and the profit realized on the sales in that year was $65,284.63. Of [980]*980the 343 sales transactions, 35 transactions, in the aggregate amount of $100,547.30, were short sales of securities, all of which were covered during that year.

In this same year 1935, the plaintiff company’s income from dividends was $2,-015.02, and from interest, $1,931.16. It had no other income in that year except the sum of $24.70, representing premium on the loan of stock. The aggregate value, at cost, of securities held by plaintiff company at the close of the year 1935 was $165,559.34. All of the securities owned by the plaintiff company as of January 1, 1935, were sold or exchanged during the year 1935, except 300 shares of General Aviation Corporation stock, which had been acquired in December, 1934, and which were of no value as of December 31, 1935. The plaintiff company declared and paid a dividend in the year 1935 in the aggregate amount of $25,410. As of .October 1, 1935, its outstanding stock consisted of 5,082 shares of the par value of $10 a share, held by nineteen persons, of which 2,832 shares were held by or for five individuals,—thus coming within the provisions of Section 351 of the Revenue Act of 1934,—and the remaining 2,250 shares were held by fourteen different persons.

Summarizing the contention of counsel for the plaintiff company, it may be stated to be substantially this: that in the present Act, by using the words “regular dealers in stock or securities”, it was never intended to embrace thereunder persons who got together in a bona fide way for the purpose of dealing in securities, as the present shareholders did, and where their business is an operating one, that is, operating in the sense of buying and selling securities of various kinds, even though their sole purpose in so doing was one of speculation for their own ultimate profit, and even though they actually handled no sales or purchases for persons other than themselves, although there is some testimony in the case that they might have done it.

This contention, it seems to the Court, is not tenable in view of the fact that the Court finds no ambiguity in the words in question. When one speaks of “a regular dealer,” such implies one who holds himself out to accommodate any customer, new or old,—i.e., the public generally,—who might apply for services in connection with the particular type of business. Therefore, the-regulation of the Treasury Department is a substantially accurate statement of what must have been intended by Congress when it put this exception in the Act.

Without quoting, or attempting to analyze, in detail, the statements of the drafters of the law, which were made at the time the Act was under consideration in Congress, suffice it to say that there is nothing in the language employed which calls for a different interpretation. It is true that income from real estate,—rents,—was intentionally excluded, but that proves nothing for the purposes of the present inquiry.

It is pertinent to point out that a similar phrase, “dealer in securities”, was contained in Section 118 of the Revenue Act of 1928, 26 U.S.C.A.

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Related

Trading Associates Corp. v. Magruder
112 F.2d 779 (Fourth Circuit, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Supp. 978, 24 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 348, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trading-associates-corp-v-magruder-mdd-1940.