Turnbull, Inc. v. Commissioner

42 T.C. 582, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 16, 1964
DocketDocket No. 1285-62
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 42 T.C. 582 (Turnbull, Inc. 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
Turnbull, Inc. v. Commissioner, 42 T.C. 582, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90 (tax 1964).

Opinion

STOTHEMENTAL OPINION

Dawson, Judge:

On December 24,1963, we filed our Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion (T.C. Memo. 1963-335) in this proceeding. Our findings of fact and opinion were later amended in certain respects by our order of February 13,1964.

On April 2, 1964, the petitioner filed its Motion to Vacate the Trial Court’s Opinion and on April 13,1964, filed its Motion to Amend Petitioner’s Motion to Vacate the Trial Court’s Opinion. Points and authorities were submitted in support of petitioner’s position that the Court erred in holding H. R. Henderson & Co. primarily liable for deficiencies in income tax for the taxable years 1954 and 1955, and that the petitioner, Turnbull, Inc., was liable as a transferee at law for the deficiencies determined against H. R. Henderson & Co.

On April 29,1964, the Court heard extensive oral arguments on the motions by counsel for both parties and took the matter under advisement.

After carefully considering the various points raised in petitioner’s motions, and respondent’s memorandum in opposition thereto, we have decided to set out our views in this supplemental opinion.

First, we have concluded that there is no merit to petitioner’s argument that the respondent failed to mention transferee liability at law in his statutory notice of deficiency or failed to plead it affirmatively in bis answer. The notice of petitioner’s liability as transferee, dated January 22,1962, provides, in part, as follows:

The above-stated amounts represent your liability as transferee of assets of H. R. Henderson & Co., (Dissolved) and affiliate, for the deficiencies in income tax due from that corporation for the taxable years ended December 31, 1954, and December 31, 1955, plus interest as provided by law.
The records of this office indicate that you are the surviving company of a merger agreement with H. R. Henderson & Co.
You have filed with this office an agreement that you are liable as transferee of the assets of H. R. Henderson & Co., and the above amounts represent your liability as transferee of the assets of H. R. Henderson & Co., Pinecrest Drive West, Marshall, Texas.

The affirmative allegations in respondent’s answer are sufficient to sustain, along with the evidence adduced, a finding of transferee liability. In paragraph 7 the respondent pleaded the merger agreement, the transfer of assets to petitioner leaving H. R. Henderson & Co. without assets of any value, and the termination of the separate corporate existence of Henderson as a result of the merger. Respondent need not specifically state, as petitioner contends, whether transferee liability is asserted at law or in equity. Francis E. Drake, 30 B.T.A. 475 (1934).

Likewise, the petitioner’s statement that the notice failed to assert any primary liability is incorrect. Although the notice was issued to Turnbull, Inc., as transferee, it states that H. R. Henderson & Co. is primarily liable for the determined deficiencies. The first sentence thereof reads:

It is determined that there is due from H. R. Henderson & Co., (Dissolved) and affiliated company, income tax deficiencies for the taxable years ended December 31, 1954, and December 31, 1955, in the aggregate amount of $157,-902.49, as shown in the attached statement.

This contention is not new. A similar argument was advanced in petitioner’s original brief (pp. 11-12) and in its reply brief (pp. A-7). In fact, in its original brief (p. 12) petitioner admitted to the extent H. R. Henderson & Co. was primarily liable, the notice asserting transferee liability against Turnbull, Inc., was proper. However, petitioner’s present approach is somewhat different. Previously it was contended that J. Gordon Turnbull, Inc., which survived the merger as Turnbull, Inc., was primarily liable because the income in question had been realized by the consolidated group from collections on accounts receivable due J. Gordon Turnbull, Inc. Now petitioner argues that the surviving corporation, Turnbull, Inc., is primarily liable, and in no way secondarily liable, because the statutory merger laws of Texas and Ohio provide that the creditors of the merged corporation may prosecute their claims against either the merged corporation or the surviving corporation. See Tex. Bus. Corp. Act Ann. art. 5.06 and Ohio General Corporation Law, Ohio Rev. Code Ann., sec. 1701-83.

Was there a transfer of assets from H. R. Henderson & Co. to the petitioner? We think there was. This is established by two documents in the record. Article XI of the merger agreement provides that all property of each constituent corporation shall vest in the surviving corporation, and that—

The corporate entity and separate existence of H. R. Henderson and Company, except insofar as the same may be continued by Statute, shall cease, and it shall be merged into the Surviving Corporation, in accordance with the provisions of this Joint Plan and Agreement of Merger.

Also, the transferee agreement (Form 2045) provides:

In consideration of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue not issuing a statutory notice of deficiency to and making an assessment against the above-named transferor corporation [H. R. Henderson & Co.], the undersign [Turn-bull, Inc.] admits that it is the transferee of assets received from said transferor corporation, and assumes and agrees to pay the amount of any and all Federal income, excess-profits, or profits taxes finally determined or adjudged as due and payable to the above-named transferor corporation for the taxable year (or years) ended 1954,1955 and 1956, to the extent of its liability at law or in equity, as a transferee within the meaning of Section 6901 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and corresponding provisions of prior internal revenue laws.

Logically there had to have been a transfer. Before the merger H. R. Henderson & Co. owned assets. After the merger these assets were vested in petitioner, the surviving corporation, and Henderson’s separate existence ceased. Even if, as petitioner now claims, Henderson retained some type of interest in the assets, the petitioner after the merger had acquired an interest in those assets that it had not enjoyed prior to the merger. In our opinion the vesting of such interest constitutes a transfer, notwithstanding State law, where, as here, it was agreed that there was a transfer of assets to petitioner.

It is obvious that a statutory merger places respondent in a rather difficult position with regard to the issuance of a proper deficiency notice. If he issues the notice to the transferor asserting direct and primary liability, he meets the objection that the corporation is no longer in existence. If a notice is issued to a merged transferor in reliance upon the provisions of statutory merger statutes of the various States, as petitioner now asserts would have been the proper procedure in this case, then respondent is forced to rely on the particular provisions of the law in each State, as well as such peculiar procedural problems as might arise under such law.

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Turnbull, Inc. v. Commissioner
42 T.C. 582 (U.S. Tax Court, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
42 T.C. 582, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnbull-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1964.