Wilson v. Commissioner

10 T.C. 251, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 271
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1948
DocketDocket Nos. 11852, 11853
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 10 T.C. 251 (Wilson 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
Wilson v. Commissioner, 10 T.C. 251, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 271 (tax 1948).

Opinion

OPINION.

Johnson, Judge:

1. Petitioner assails the determination that withdrawals of $47,500 (stipulated, however, to be $45,000) in 1939 and of $16,000 in 1940 were dividends paid to him by the corporation and not loans, as he contends. He stresses in support of his view the informal understanding between his brother and himself when their mother’s gift of cash was contributed to paid-in surplus; the charging of the withdrawals to their personal accounts; the crediting of them to the corporation’s accounts receivable; and some repayments made by each shareholder. By section 115 (a) of the Internal Kevenue Code a dividend is defined to be any distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders out of earnings or profits, and by 115 (b) “every distribution is made out of earnings or profits to the extent thereof.” Hence petitioner’s withdrawals are to be deemed dividend distributions, as determined, unless he can affirmatively establish their character as loans, and since the corporation was wholly owned by the two with-drawers, their control invites a special scrutiny. Ben R. Meyer, 45 B. T. A. 228.

We are of opinion that the evidence indicates dividends rather than loans. While true that the absence of notes, the failure to pay interest, and the lack of a written agreement are not of themselves conclusive of this view, it is equally true that the recording of withdrawals in accounts receivable and the credits entered in such accounts are likewise inadequate to establish loans. The issue must be decided upon an examination of all the pertinent facts found, and when they are examined, the emerging picture is that of two brothers, always closely associated in business, who own and completely control a corporation to which they jointly contributed.over a million dollars in cash as paid-in surplus and from which they drew money at will, making occasional returns of lesser amounts credited to their accounts. The ceiling for such withdrawals and the obligation to repay them on call, being un-evidenced by written agreement or corporate resolution, could have been changed by an oral understanding between the brothers as easily and as informally as it was made. Such a vague arrangement is not determinative for tax purposes; and, as the corporation had earnings and profits in 1939 and 1940, we hold that the withdrawals were dividend distributions to the extent thereof. Ben R. Meyer, supra; James J. Gravley, 44 B. T. A. 722; Moses W. Faitoute, 38 B. T. A. 32; Roy J. Kinnear, 36 B. T. A. 153; dismissed (C. C. A., 9th Cir.), 95 Fed. (2d) 997; George P. Marshall, 32 B. T. A. 956; M. Jackson Crispin, 32 B. T. A. 151. Petitioner cites Weaver v. Commissioner (C. C. A., 9th Cir.), 58 Fed. (2d) 755, as to the contrary, but we perceive a material distinction in that the $100,000 which was therein contributed to a corporation by its several shareholders under an oral understanding that it would be returned, was simultaneously repaid to all in the exact amount of each one’s contribution.

The Commissioner’s determination that the withdrawals were dividends is sustained as to $45,000 in 1939 and $16,000 in 1940.

2. The corporation paid $12,000 to petitioner and $18,000 to F. A. Wilson in 1938 as salary and so paid to each $8,000 in 1939,1940, and 1942, and $6,000 in 1941. Under the view that the services of each were worth no more than $3,000 in each year, the Commissioner disallowed to the corporation the deduction of the excess paid above that amount and treated such excess as dividends, not salary, in determining petitioner’s tax for each of those years. Both determinations are assailed.

To justify the salary paid, petitioner and his brother testified that each devoted an average of 35 hours a week to business of the corporation. As the corporation, ceased to deal in lumber in 1938, such services were limited to care of investments, maintenance of the schooners, and efforts to sell or lease them. There is also testimony that a search was made for a lumber supply with which to revive the corporation’s lumber business, but this purpose seems hardly consonant with the transfer of its retail business to petitioner in 1938 and efforts to dispose of the schooners which had been used in that business. While the investment portfolio had a market value in excess of $800,000 during the years in controversy, the witnesses mentioned in general terms only “slight changes in holdings” and the purchase of stock with the proceeds of some matured bonds. They stressed the need for following market reports closely, work on income tax matters, and attention to the schooners (which, however, were not in operation or even seaworthy) and their repeated but unsuccessful efforts to sell or lease them. They also stressed that no salaries were paid them prior to 1936, but such prior years are not in controversy.

We are not persuaded that the value and extent of the brothers’ services to the corporation were as great as they asserted. Petitioner was operating a lumber business of his own, from which he reported a gross annual income of from $127,000 to $187,000, and F. A. Wilson, a member of the San Francisco Stock Exchange, was operating a brokerage firm. Under such circumstances, it is not reasonable to suppose that their principal activities were connected with affairs of a personal holding company, which held only securities and “laid up” lumber boats, and their testimony confirms rather than rebuts this view. Neither could cite any steady corporate business, but referred vaguely to occasional need for attention to the boats, occasional efforts to sell or lease them, to tax work, and to “slight changes” in investments. On these facts, we deem an annual salary of $6,000 for each reasonable and reverse the Commissioner’s determination to this extent. Cf. Wagegro Corporation, 38 B. T. A. 1225.

3. Petitioner was a trader in securities, and, having borrowed shares from a broker to maintain a “short” position, he paid the lender $3,900 in 1939, $4,150 in 1940, and $4,400 in 1941 as the equivalent of dividends on such shares. He also paid a premium or fee of $20 in 1939 and $339.85 in 1941. The Commissioner determined that “amounts of $3,900.00, $4,150.00 and $4,736.00” paid as dividends on borrowed stock were “not allowable as deductions from gross income, but are held to be a part of the cost of stock purchased to cover the short sales.” Petitioner assails this determination as error, and we agree. Amounts so paid “were not incurred as an incident to either the acquisition or the sale of the property involved, but were more in the nature of carrying charges incurred during the progress of the deal,” and they are deductible. Commissioner v. Wiesler (C. C. A., 6th Cir.), 161 Fed. (2d) 997; affirming 6 T. C. 1148; certiorari denied, 332 U. S. 842; Commissioner v. Wilson (C. C. A., 9th Cir.), 163 Fed. (2d) 680; certiorari denied, 332 U. S. 842.

4. In determining the corporation’s personal holding company surtax for the years 1938-1942, the Commissioner disallowed as deductions the amounts representing depreciation and expenses connected with the two schooners, although such amounts were deducted in his determination of the corporation’s income tax. The corporation, assails the disallowance and respondent defends his action on the ground that the schooners were not property of the kind required by section 505 (b), Internaí Revenue Code, to support the deduction.

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Bluebook (online)
10 T.C. 251, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-commissioner-tax-1948.