Walter Alexander Co. v. Tax Commission

254 N.W. 544, 215 Wis. 293, 1934 Wisc. LEXIS 201
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 254 N.W. 544 (Walter Alexander Co. v. Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walter Alexander Co. v. Tax Commission, 254 N.W. 544, 215 Wis. 293, 1934 Wisc. LEXIS 201 (Wis. 1934).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

This appeal relates to two items assessed by the Wisconsin Tax Commission, for the purpose of taxation, as’income of the appellant Walter Alexander Company in the years 1927 and 1928. One of those items is for $475,084.91, which the commission concluded was an unreported profit that had been realized by appellant October, 1927. In 1920, appellant was organized by Walter Alexander and his four children as a Wisconsin corporation, to hold and deal in securities and investments. Those five members of the Alexander family subscribed for $1,000,000 of capital stock, for which they turned over to appellant securities valued at their cost of $4,000,000. That gave the corporation a paid-in surplus of $3,000,000. Included in those securities were five hundred and fifty-six shares of the stock of the Wisconsin Valley Electric Company, which in 1920 were valued at $71,335. Subsequently appellant bought four hundred and three shares of that stock for $48,160.09, and thus increased the total value of its holdings of that stock to $119,495.09. On October 20, 1925, appellant entered into an agreement with most of the other stockholders of the Wisconsin Valley Electric Company, under which they deposited all of their holdings of that stock in trust with seven trustees, who were authorized to dispose thereof for the benefit of the depositors. Walter Alexander, who was then the president of the appellant corporation, was one of those trustees. On June 7, 1927, at special meetings [296]*296of the stockholders and of the directors of appellant, motions were adopted that the,—

“959 shares of common stock of the Wisconsin Valley Electric Company which stands on the records of this corporation at $119,495.09, be distributed to stockholders of record of June 7, 1927, as a partial liquidation of this corporation; that such distribution in partial liquidation is one of a series of distributions which will eventually result in the complete cancellation or redemption of all of the stock .of this company outstanding.”

On that date the estate of Walter Alexander held three thousand seven hundred and fifty shares and each of his four children held one thousand five hundred sixty-two and one-half shares of the stock of appellant, and, immediately after the adoption of those motions, the certificate, which the trustees who were holding that Wisconsin Valley Electric Company stock in trust, had issued to appellant for the nine hundred and fifty-nine shares to evidence the.deposit thereof, was surrendered to the trustees in exchange for a separate certificate for each of appellant’s stockholders for his respective portion of that stock. On the other hand, on the books of account of appellant that distribution of the nine hundred and fifty-nine shares was charged at their cost of $119,495.09 against the “Paid-in Surplus” account. In the year 1928 charges were likewise made against that “Paid-in Surplus” account which reduced that. paid-in surplus to $1,186,114.73.

On June 11, 1927, the trustees entered into a contract with H. M. Byllesby & Company, under which the latter was given an option to purchase the stock of the Wisconsin Valley Electric Company, then on deposit with the trustees, at a price which ultimately netted $594,580 for the nine hundred and fifty-nine shares which appellant’s stockholders owned. That contract was subject to approval by the Railroad Commission of Wisconsin and also subject to certain investigations which were to be made. Payment was to be made on [297]*297July 25, 1927. H. M. Byllesby & Company duly exercised that option and paid the purchase-price to the trustees, who in turn paid the $594,580, which they received on account of the nine hundred and fifty-nine shares originally deposited by appellant, directly to the five stockholders of appellant. As a result of thát sale by the trustees to H. M. Byllesby & Company, the five stockholders received $475,084.91 in excess of the sum of $119,495.09, which was the original cost of those shares to appellant. No report of that profit, for purposes of taxation as income in this state, was ever made •by appellant or any of its stockholders, and it appears that two of the latter were non-residents of this state at the time of the hearing before the Tax Commission in 1932.

On the other hand, there was evidence that', although appellant had received $895,000 in 1928 on the sale of other securities, it had paid to its stockholders in cash, as dividends, only $165,000 in 1928. In view of that evidence the Tax Commission concluded that on June 7, 1927, when appellant distributed to its stockholders its Wisconsin Valley Electric Company stock, on which that profit of $475,084.91 was realized, there existed no bona fide intention to liquidate, and that therefore that stock was not distributed in liquidation. .

However that may be, the evidence establishes conclusively that on June 7, 1927, those nine hundred and fifty-nine shares were actually distributed as a dividend to appellant’s stockholders. Even if that distribution was not made with the intention to liquidate, there was, nevertheless, an authorized, lawful, and executed distribution thereof as a dividend pursuant to and in accordance with appropriate corporate action. In view of the facts and circumstances that transaction on June 7, 1927, was neither a sale of thát stock to appellant’s stockholders, nor a transfer thereof to them in payment of any existing indebtedness owing by appellant to its stockholders. On the other hand, appellant never re[298]*298ceived any part of the proceeds or profits finally realized by the distributees of that stock on the ultimate purchase and payment therefor by H. M. Byllesby & Company on October 19, 1927. Likewise, appellant was never given or entitled to any credit for either those proceeds or those profits, in discharge of any existing legal obligation on its part to its stockholders. Consequently, that transaction cannot possibly be reconstructed so as to admit of the conclusion that the distribution on June 7, 1927, constituted a sale by the appellant to its stockholders, with a resulting profit of which appellant was deprived by some such subterfuge as was resorted to by the corporation and its stockholders who were involved in the case of Cliffs Chemical Co. v. Tax Comm. 193 Wis. 295, 214 N. W. 447.

In that case there was no actual distribution of the corporation’s assets to its stockholders as a lawful dividend. The transactions then under consideration were in form and in fact sales of all of the corporation’s products to its stockholders in proportion to their respective holdings, at the actual cost thereof. Thus by preconcerted acts of the stockholders and their corporation, the latter was wholly deprived of the profits which it could have made, and which were in fact realized by its stockholders on their purchases from the corporation. It was not only conceded that the transactions were actually sales, and had been so entered on the corporate books, but it was also admitted that the corporation had in 1917 made the change in its methods as to its earnings for the very purpose of evading federal income taxes. Under those circumstances the manner in which that corporation conducted its business, by selling its products at less than the fair price which could have been otherwise obtained therefor, and thereby prevented itself from realizing the customary profits, was so obviously designed for the direct and exclusive benefit of its stockholders and the evasion of income taxes, that it was held proper for the Tax Commission, [299]

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Bluebook (online)
254 N.W. 544, 215 Wis. 293, 1934 Wisc. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-alexander-co-v-tax-commission-wis-1934.