Wilbur Sec. Co. v. Commissioner

31 T.C. 938, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 248
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1959
DocketDocket No. 68408
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 31 T.C. 938 (Wilbur Sec. Co. 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
Wilbur Sec. Co. v. Commissioner, 31 T.C. 938, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 248 (tax 1959).

Opinion

Train, Judge:

Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner’s income taxes as follows:

Year Deficiency

1953_1_$13, 957.26

1954_ 17,254.17

1955_ 17, 254.18

The issues are (1) whether the amounts outstanding in petitioner’s bills payable account, upon which disbursements as interest expense were made during the years involved, constitute bona fide indebtedness of the corporation or whether, in reality, such amoimts constitute equity capital invested in petitioner’s business; and (2) whether petitioner failed to report interest income in the amount of $840 on its income and excess profits tax return for 1953.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are hereby found as stipulated.

Petitioner, the Wilbur Security Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, is a Washington corporation with its principal office located in the city of Wilbur, Washington. Its corporation income and excess profits tax return for the calendar year 1953 and its corporation income tax returns for the calendar years 1954 and 1955 were timely filed with the district director of internal revenue at Tacoma, Washington.

In 1915, the city of Wilbur, Washington, a small community of less than 1,100 population, was serviced by a single bank, the Wilbur State Bank, hereinafter referred to as the bank. The stockholders of tbe bank bad a large amount of money on deposit witb tbe bank. Tbe stockholders considered tbat tbe existence of sucb large deposits might attract other banking concerns to the city of Wilbur. To forestall such competition from developing, the stockholders of the bank formed the company on March 18, 1915. A further purpose of the formation of the company was to provide an entity which would serve and hold such of the bank’s customers as required long-term loans that the bank, under existing restrictions, could not carry.

As originally constituted, the company’s articles of incorporation provided in part as follows:

ARTICLE TWO.
The objects for which this corporation are formed are:
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3. To charge and collect interest upon money loaned, invested or otherwise handled by it, and to derive profit upon any and all transactions by it, and to collect any share of any profit, result or property involved in any contract or transaction relating to its business.
* * * * * * *
5. In all ways in its own right, to purchase, acquire, manage, develope, operate, improve, change, exchange, mortgage, lease, pledge, hypothecate, sell and dispose or [sic] properties and interests of all kinds, whether real, personal or mixed and wheresoever situate.
6. To take, acquire, purchase, own, sell, lease, exchange, pledge, mortgage, hypothecate, grant, improve and otherwise deal in real estate, townsites and divisions, lots or subdivisions thereof, and to issue evidences of interest, title, or right in any such property, either in its own right or its rights under contract.
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9. To borrow or raise money upon all bonds, warrants, debentures, investment certificates and other negotiable or transferable instruments, or otherwise, as directed by the board of trustees.
10. To lend money or other property on its own account and to receive notes, obligations and evidences therefor, and conveyances, hypothecations and pledges as security for its repayment or redelivery of the same.
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ARTICLE THREE.
The capital stock of this corporation shall be Twenty-five thousand ($25,000.00) Dollars, divided into Two Hundred Fifty (250) shares of the par value of One hundred ($100.00) dollars per share.
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ARTICLE SIX.
The number of trustees of this corporation shall be five and the names and residences of the first trustees who shall manage the affairs of the corporation until the 1st day of July 1915, are J. McPherson, E. L. Farnsworth, Chas. Hudkins, G. Thompson, and E. H. Oswalt, all of Wilbur, Lincoln County, state of Washington.
ARTICLE SEVEN.
The capital stock of this corporation may be transferred without restriction to any person already a stockholder therein, but shall not be transferable to any person or party not a stockholder of this company without the affirmative vote, approving such transfer, of at least two-thirds of the capital stock of this company, at a regular or special stockholders’ meeting called for that purpose. In case any stockholder desires to sell all or part of the stock held by him to a person not already a stockholder of this company, he shall notify the secretary of this company in writing, stating the amount of stock he desires to sell and the price asked, and shall attach his stock certificate to such notice and give the name and address of the prospective purchaser, the secretary shall then notify all of the other stockholders of this company, and such stockholders shall have an option on said stock at the price asked for thirty days following such notice. If none of said stockholders shall exercise their right of option at or before the expiration of said thirty days, the secretary of this company shall call a stockholders meeting in the manner provided in the by-laws for the purpose of voting upon such prospective purchaser and in case he shall be elected to become a stockholder of this corporation, the president and secretary thereof shall endorse upon such certificate of stock, under the seal of this corporation, using the form given in Article Eight herein, the fact that such prospective purchaser, naming him, has been duly elected to become a stockholder of this company, and such certificate shall then be returned. In case such prospective purchaser shall not be elected as herein provided, then said certificate shall be returned without such indorsement.
ARTICLE BIGHT.
On every certificate of stock issued by this company, the following provision shall be printed thereon, to wit:
According to Article VII of the Articles of Incorporation of this company and an agreement entered into between the holder of this certificate and all the other stockholders of this company, this certificate is not transferable until the stockholders of this company have been given an option for thirty days for the purchase thereof and such option expired, nor can this certificate be transferred, except to the stockholders of this company, without the consent of at least two-thirds of the capital stock voted in this company, which consent shall be endorsed hereon and signed by the president and secretary of this corporation, naming the person to whom same may be transferred, and bearing the corporate seal.

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Bluebook (online)
31 T.C. 938, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbur-sec-co-v-commissioner-tax-1959.