United States v. Mrs. Edna Britt

335 F.2d 907, 14 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5482, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4501
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1964
Docket20968_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 335 F.2d 907 (United States v. Mrs. Edna Britt) 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. Mrs. Edna Britt, 335 F.2d 907, 14 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5482, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4501 (5th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

POPE, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a dispute over the taxability as income of certain funds involved in small loan transactions in Mississippi. A deficiency letter had been issued to taxpayer, the deceased husband of plaintiff Edna Britt, and he had paid the deficiency. His widow sues to recover that amount.

The small loan business in Mississippi is regulated by the Small Loan Regulatory Act, Miss.Laws (1958), c. 170; 4A Miss.Laws Anno. Sec. 5591-01 et seq. (1962 Supp.). Three parties are involved in small loan transactions: the borrower; the broker, who arranged and guarantees the loan; and the lender, who puts up the money. Taxpayer was a broker. j

To understand clearly the dispute in this ease the facts of the transactions in which the broker taxpayer was engaged must be set forth in some detail. A prospective borrower would go to the broker’s office; the borrower would fill out a loan application and at the same time he would sign a note agreeing to pay back the loan plus interest and plus the broker’s fee if the loan is approved; the broker would then forward the application to the lender together with a statement of the amount of the loan applied for. Under his contract with the lender, the broker agreed to guarantee all loans made by the lender to the broker’s clients, and to ensure that he could fulfill this guaranty, the broker was required to keep on deposit with the lender an amount equal to 25 per cent of the loans outstanding to the broker’s clients. The broker could amass this fund in two ways: he could deposit the amount with the lender, or he could “deposit with the lender three per cent (3%) of the amount of each draft drawn by the Broker on the Lender on behalf of the Broker’s customers, which said three per cent (3%) shall be deposited in the guaranty fund * * *, and shall be so paid by the Broker as each draft is drawn on the Lender.” If the lender approved the loan, the broker was authorized to draw a draft on the lender for the amount of the loan less discount for interest and the three percent for reserve, mentioned above. The broker then gave the bor *909 rower the amount of the draft less his service fees. 1

The income claimed taxable here is made up of the aggregate of such reserve funds in the hands of the lender, (such as the $10.49 mentioned in the last footnote) . Whether these sums were taxable to the broker in the year in which they were thus deposited with the lender depends upon a determination as to the source of such funds — who paid them, and to whom or for whom they were paid.

The Government asserts that the real transaction here was one whereby the borrower, the broker’s customer, paid the broker a service fee, authorizing such fee to be withheld from the proceeds of the borrower’s note. Then, said the Government, a portion of that fee was deposited with the lender as a guaranty reserve, it being arranged by broker and lender, for their convenience, that this reserve reach the lender by permitting him to withhold it from the proceeds of the note, and hence it was deducted from the amount of the draft. Thus it is contended that the broker has assigned this portion of his fee from the borrower to the lender, to meet his obligation to keep up the guarantee fund. In substance it is said the borrower has paid this fee to the broker, who has simultaneously deposited it with the lender to meet his obligation respecting guarantee deposits.

Appellee Britt’s answer to this is a simple one. She says: “The reserve retained by the lender herein in 1958 was not taxable to the taxpayer-broker in 1958, as it was not received actually or constructively in that year.” This would have much force if the broker were employed or was to be paid by the lender. 2

The trial judge’s opinion accepted taxpayer’s version of the transactions here involved. He inferred from the facts, all of which were stipulated, that “the fund in question never was actually or constructively received by the taxpayer during the taxable year in suit, and that the taxpayer being on a cash basis never became liable to the United States for any taxes thereon.” 3

We conclude, on the basis of the contract between the parties here, and in the light of the Mississippi small loans statute which governed these transactions, that this trial court’s finding is *910 both clearly erroneous and in conflict with the controlling state statute.

The contract between the lender and the broker discloses that the fund in the reserve held by the lender was neither compensation payable by lender to broker nor a sum payable from lender for notes purchased or otherwise. The whole of the service fee (the $49.68 mentioned in footnote 1, supra) was payable by the borrower to the broker for services rendered borrower by the broker. This is in no respect altered by the fact that this sum came from the proceeds of the loan note. The contract expressly recites that the broker is engaged “in the business of soliciting loans of money for its clients of [sic] customers,” that a transaction such as here involved would be initiated “when the Broker has a customer desiring a loan,” and there follows “an application form filed by the customer or client of the Broker.” It recites that in collection of payments on the loan the broker “should be acting solely and only as the agent of the borrowers.” The borrowers are repeatedly referred to as “the Broker’s customers.” The contract expressly refers to two charges: “The Lender shall charge interest on such loans made to the customers of the Broker at the maximum rate permitted by Section 9 of [the Mississippi statute]”, and it was agreed that “the combined interest charged by Lender and brokerage fee charged by Broker shall not exceed the maximum under said Section 9.” Thus unquestionably the broker was acting solely on behalf of his customer or client, and as his agent, and the broker’s service fee was owed and payable to him by the borrower. In no sense was this service fee, or any of it, money payable by the lender. 4

That this contract followed and conformed precisely to the requirements of the Mississippi statutes is plain from an examination of its provisions and of the Mississippi decisions. The statutes here referred to, the Small Loan Regulatory Act, and the Small Loan Privilege Act, were adopted in 1958. They appear as 4A Miss.Stats.Anno. (1962 Supp.) Secs. 5591-01 to 5591-44, Title 21, Chap. 8. (These sections are commonly referred to as Sections 1 to 44 inclusive.) The contract, previously mentioned, expressly recites that the parties contemplate doing business pursuant to these statutes. Under them a lender and a broker must each procure licenses and furnish bonds. “No licensee shall do a business of both handling loans and lending money.” (Sec. 13.) The licensee for “handling loans” is one who does so “for a borrower for a fee, commission or charge paid by the borrower, and who arranges, negotiates, obtains or procures a loan of money for the borrower.” (Sec.

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Related

Sebring v. Commissioner
93 T.C. No. 20 (U.S. Tax Court, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
335 F.2d 907, 14 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5482, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mrs-edna-britt-ca5-1964.