Wisconsin Memorial Park Co. v. Commissioner

28 T.C. 390, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 187
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 20, 1957
DocketDocket No. 46140
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 T.C. 390 (Wisconsin Memorial Park 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
Wisconsin Memorial Park Co. v. Commissioner, 28 T.C. 390, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 187 (tax 1957).

Opinion

Fisher, Judge:

These proceedings involve the following deficiencies in petitioner’s taxes determined by respondent:

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The following questions are presented by these proceedings:

1. Whether respondent properly determined that certain amounts of interest expense accrued annually by petitioner on its books could not be taker as deductions from gross income on its tax returns.

2. Wliethi r, as a result, respondent properly disallowed a deduction of a claimed net operating loss carryover for one of petitioner’s fiscal years.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

All facts í ipulated herein are incorporated by this reference.

The petiti mer was incorporated pursuant to Wisconsin law on May 2, 1929. At all times thereafter it has had an authorized capital of 25,000 shares of common stock, par value $1 per share, and 15,000 shares of preferred stock, par value $1 per share. The petitioner, since its organization, has been engaged in the business of owning and operating a cemetery known as Wisconsin Memorial Park located in the town of Brookfield, Waukesha County, Wisconsin, about 12 miles northwest of downtown Milwaukee.

At the time of its organization petitioner issued to Kurtis B. Froed-tert (hereinafter referred to as Froedtert) 15,000 shares of preferred stock and 24,998 shares of common stock in consideration for a 100-acre tract of land. Thereafter 14,950 shares of Froedtert’s preferred stock were transferred in small amounts as bonuses to purchasers of cemetery lots, Froedtert retaining the remaining 50 shares. By December 8, 1934, 210 shares of the preferred stock had been reacquired by him. Of the 24,998 shares of common stock originally issued to Froedtert, 4,997 shares were assigned on or before January 29, 1930, to various directors of petitioner, unrelated to Froedtert, leaving 20,001 shares of common stock which were owned by Froedtert on April 19, 1933.

It does not appear that Froedtert was an officer of petitioner during the course of any of the following material events herein. Henry S. Wright was, for a time, petitioner’s president (at least between 1934 and 1940) and was followed in office, upon his retirement, by Henry T. Ott. Various others apparently unrelated to Froedtert held petitioner’s different offices from time to time. One such was F. W. Breidster, who was petitioner’s vice president in and around 1934.

In 1930 Froedtert guaranteed a note or notes of petitioner to the First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee evidencing a loan from that bank to petitioner in the face amount of $250,000. On April 19, 1933, as security for this guaranty, Froedtert transferred his 20,001 shares of petitioner’s common stock in trust to himself, Henry S. Wright, and E. P. Ormsby, as voting trustees, subject to a previous pledge of such shares to the First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee, further securing the guaranty.

The voting trust agreement contained, among other things, the following provisions:

3. Any dividends received by the Trustees on account of the stock standing in their name shall be paid by them to said Froedtert, his heirs and assigns, upon receipt thereof.
4. The Trustees shall vote upon said shares of stock at all meetings of the company, annual or special, upon any resolution, matter or business that may be submitted to any such meeting, and they shall possess in that respect the same powers as though they were the owners of the equitable as well as the legal title to said stock. The Trustees may act at any such meeting by proxy or agent and appoint such proxy in writing.
5. The action of a majority of the Trustees expressed from time to time at a meeting or by writing without a meeting shall constitute the action of the Trustees and have the same effect as if assented to by all.
6. The Trustees may cause to be transferred to any person one (1) share of stock for the purpose of qualifying such person as a director of Wisconsin Memorial Park Company, and cause a certificate of stock evidencing the share so transferred to be issued in the name of such person and provide for the deposit and pledge of such share of stock with said Bank as Collateral security.
7. In the event of the death, resignation or inability of any trustee to act, a successor trustee may be appointed by an instrument in writing subscribed by the remaining trustees, and in the event of failure of the Trustees to agree upon a successor trustee then and in that event such successor trustee shall be appointed by the vote of the remaining Trustees together with the vote of a representative of said Bank, and such appointment may be made by the action of any two (2) persons by whom such appointment may be made.
8. Upon the termination of the term of this trust the Trustees shall transfer all their right, title and interest in and to the shares of stock of Wisconsin Memorial Park Company which are the subject of this trust to said Froedtert.
9. The trustees [sic! hereunder shall terminate on the 19th day of April, 1938, or at such earlier time as the Trustees or a majority of them may determine.
10. The terms of said trust may be amended or modified by the Trustees with the consent of said Froedtert; provided however, that no amendment or modification may be made which shall in any wise impair the rights of the Bank as pledgee of the shares of stock held by the Trustees.

No transfer of stock to the voting trustees was recorded in stock transfer books of petitioner.

On June 21, 1934, Froedtert, who was then being pressed by the bank on his guaranty of the petitioner’s indebtedness, purchased the bank’s claim against the petitioner which then equaled $249,866.75 including interest. At the same time, he took an assignment of all collateral which had been pledged to the bank. At this time the petitioner also owed Froedtert additional sums on other loans and advances. After the acquisition of the bank’s claim Froedtert’s total claim against the petitioner was approximately $400,000.

By a document dated December 8, 1934 (hereinafter called the agreement), Froedtert canceled all of petitioner’s indebtedness to him in excess of $200,606.44, and, on behalf of petitioner, delivered all the shares of common and preferred stock of petitioner standing in his name on its books to Henry S. Wright, as trustee, as security for the indebtedness of $200,606.44 due by petitioner to him, declaring that he had “quit-claimed and assigned” all of his right, title, and interest in said stock to the company. The other parties to the agreement executed on December 8, 1934, were Dr. Henry A. Pfeifer, Milford A. Breidster, and Fred W. Breidster. Dr. Pfeifer and the Breidsters had been co-guarantors with Froedtert of petitioner’s obligations to First Wisconsin National Bank and were made parties to the agreement of December 8, 1934, in order to preserve Froed-tert’s right to have the collateral which they furnished the bank in connection with their guaranty continue as additional security for the remaining indebtedness to Froedtert.

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Related

Island Gas, Inc. v. Commissioner
30 T.C. 787 (U.S. Tax Court, 1958)
Wisconsin Memorial Park Co. v. Commissioner
28 T.C. 390 (U.S. Tax Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 T.C. 390, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisconsin-memorial-park-co-v-commissioner-tax-1957.