United States v. Curtis L. Parker and Martha Parker

376 F.2d 402
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1967
Docket23296
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 376 F.2d 402 (United States v. Curtis L. Parker and Martha Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Curtis L. Parker and Martha Parker, 376 F.2d 402 (5th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

The protesting and unhappy taxpayers, Curtis L. Parker and his wife, Martha, owned a wholesale and retail oil and gasoline business. On April 1, 1959, Parker and B. K. Eaves, a longtime employee, formed a Louisiana corporation incorporating Parker’s business. The corporation had an authorized capital stock of 1,000 shares.

Parker subscribed to 800 shares and paid for them by transferring to the corporation certain property valued at $93,-400.00 to be used in the corporation’s business. Eaves subscribed to the remaining 200 shares. He paid $7,500.00 cash and agreed to pay the balance of $23,350.00 over a period of 5 years.

At the first meeting of the corporation’s board of directors a resolution was passed accepting Eaves’s subscription. He was issued stock certificates for the amount of stock paid for at that time (64.239 shares), and the board of directors resolved that the remainder of Eaves’s stock certificates would be issued as their purchase price was paid. The Articles of Incorporation included a provision stating that none of the stock of the corporation might be transferred unless the stock were first offered to the corporation at the same price offered by the proposed transferee. (If the corporation did not accept the offer, another stockholder could.)

Parker and Eaves also entered into a stockholders’ agreement 1 which provided *405 that whenever Eaves’s employment should terminate for any reason, including death, his shares would then be purchased by Parker at a price to be governed by the fair market value per share of the corporation’s assets, specifically excluding good will “or any other intangible asset.” The value per share was set at $116.75 for the first year of the corporation’s existence (until April 1, 1960), and thereafter the price was to be set by agreement between Parker and Eaves, with arbitration if they could not agree.

The face of all stock certificates issued to Parker and Eaves carried notice of the restriction on sale created by the Articles of Incorporation. Only the stock certificates issued to Eaves carried a legend that they were subject to the Eaves-Parker buy-and-sell agreement.

Also, at the first meeting of the board of directors, Parker sold to the corporation certain other assets which were de-preciable property (such as motor vehicles, furniture and fixtures, and other equipment which Parker had apparently used in the business before the incorporation) worth $95,738.70. The corporation was to pay for this property in ten annual installments with interest of 5 per cent. Parker elected to treat the sale as a capital transaction, and reported the gain from it as long term capital gain. IRC § 1231.

The present suit arises because the Internal Revenue Service treated the gain as ordinary income under IRC § 1239, 2 based upon the contention that the taxpayers owned more than 80 per cent “in value” of all outstanding stock of the corporation at the time of sale. The Service assessed deficiencies for the calendar years 1959, 1960, and 1961. Taxpayers paid the assessments under protest and sued in district court for a refund. 28 U.S.C.A. § 1346(a). The district court granted summary judgment for the taxpayers, and the government appeals. We reverse.

The government makes two contentions on appeal: first, that the taxpayers owned more than 80 per cent of the outstanding stock because Eaves, at the time of sale, had “outstanding” only those shares which he had paid for and had actually been issued to him and had a mere contract to purchase the remainder. Second, the government argues that even if the full 20 per cent of the shares allotted to Eaves was “outstanding” at the time of the sale, “the restrictions placed upon those shares and their inherent limitations made them worth less per share than Parker’s.” We disagree with the first of the government’s contentions, but agree with the second.

I.

The government-argues that Eaves had a mere contract to purchase stock from the corporation, and that therefore the only “outstanding” stock which he owned at the relevant time was the 64.239 shares for which he had paid and for *406 which certificates had been issued to him. It relies on 5 LSA-R.S. § 12:15, subd. A.

“A. No allotment of shares of a corporation shall be made except:
(1) Pursuant to a subscription received therefor; or
(2) Pursuant to the declaration of a stock dividend; or
(3) Pursuant to purchase on payment therefor.”

The government insists that because Eaves had not paid for 135.761 shares, he failed to own them under § 12:15, subd. A(3). The government here fails to recognize that § 12:15, subd. A sets out three ways to become a shareholder. While Eaves did not qualify under § 12:15, subd. A(3), he did qualify under § 12:15, subd. A(l). The record shows that Eaves had subscribed for all of the 200 shares and that the corporation had accepted the subscription. 3 It is only where there is no subscription that payment is a condition precedent to becoming an allottee.

The government next argues that because the 135.761 shares had been “allotted” but not “issued”, they were not “outstanding” shares within IRC § 1239. Shares are not “issued” by the corporation until they are fully paid for. 4 But 5 LSA-R.S. § 12:1, subd. N says in part:

“ ‘Shareholder’ means one who owns one or more shares. A subscriber becomes a shareholder upon the allotment of shares to him.”

A comment by the chairman of the committee which drafted the Louisiana Act says in part:

“The subscriber’s obligation to pay the subscription price and the procedures which the corporation law establishes for enforcing this obligation lend support to the argument that a binding subscription to shares grants the subscriber the rights of a shareholder * * Dunbar and Nabors, The Louisiana Business Corporation Law, printed at 5 LSA-R.S. xxxi, xlv.

Further, the Commissioners’ Note to § 20 of the Model Act makes it clear that an allottee is a shareholder:

“To express what the corporation does when it makes a subscriber a shareholder, the word ‘allot,’ which is used in the British statutes, has been adopted. Subscriptions are accepted by the allotment of shares to the subscribers; when the shares have been paid for, a certificate is issued.
****** “There is, however, no policy which would prevent one from being a shareholder subject to the obligation of paying for his shares in instalments. In fact, the prevailing practice permits shares to be paid for in instalments without preventing a subscriber from being a shareholder until he has paid the last instalment. Under the present scheme, the subscriber becomes a shareholder when shares are allotted to him in response to his application, but a certificate cannot be issued to *407

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Bluebook (online)
376 F.2d 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-curtis-l-parker-and-martha-parker-ca5-1967.