ZIMMERMANN v. COMMISSIONER

36 B.T.A. 279, 1937 BTA LEXIS 735
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJuly 13, 1937
DocketDocket Nos. 82491, 82488.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 B.T.A. 279 (ZIMMERMANN v. COMMISSIONER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ZIMMERMANN v. COMMISSIONER, 36 B.T.A. 279, 1937 BTA LEXIS 735 (bta 1937).

Opinion

[284]*284OPINION.

Miller:

These cases present for our consideration a familiar device for tax avoidance, now prohibited by section 24 (a) (6) of [285]*285the Revenue Act of 1934,1 namely, the transfer of securities by one spouse to the other, to establish capital losses for deduction from income.

As the transactions involved in each of the two cases occurred prior to the enactment of the 1934 Act, our decision turns upon the question whether these transfers constituted bona-fide sales. That question turns upon the further question whether the seller, in each case, parted, finally with all title and right of every kind in and to the securities transferred or whether he remained in a position of control thereof. Commissioner v. Behan, 90 Fed. (2d) 609.

Although it has been said in a number of cases that transfers between members of the same family should be subjected to searching scrutiny, the object of the scrutiny is to determine whether the actual formalities of a sale have been observed, and this Board and the courts have recognized the validity of husband-and-wife sales made to realize tax losses in numerous cases. Andrew J. Peters, 28 B. T. A. 976; appeal dismissed, 69 Fed. (2d) 999; Benjamin T. Burton, 28 B. T. A. 1242; Joseph E. Uihlein, 30 B. T. A. 399; affd., 82 Fed. (2d) 944; Charles F. Fawsett, 31 B. T. A. 139; Franh M. Arguimbau, 31 B. T. A. 604; Edmund S. Twining, 32 B. T. A. 600; affd., 83 Fed. (2d) 954, certiorari denied, 299 U. S. 578; Thomas W. Behan, 32 B. T. A. 1088; affd., Commissioner v. Behan supra; Du Bois Young, 34 B. T. A. 648.

In the instant cases the petitioners, husband and wife, acted pursuant to the advice of counsel throughout. The record reveals a scrupulous compliance with the law as stated in the decisions of the Board, and of the courts. Cf. Charles E. Mitchell, 32 B. T. A. 1093, at p. 1130.

The sales were made in all cases at the fair market price, through a broker. Commissioner v. Behan, supra; Du Bois Young, supra; Edmund S. Twining, supra. Commissions were charged to the seller and the buyer and the tax was charged to the seller. Commissioner v. Behan, supra; Edmund S. Twining, supra. The petitioners maintained separate brokerage accounts, and upon the execution of each [286]*286order their separate accounts were charged and the usual broker’s memorandum was sent to each. Charles F. Fawsett, supra. The transactions were treated as sales and purchases in .each case upon the individual books of account of both seller and buyer. Joseph E. Uihlein, supra.

Each petitioner was financially able to buy and pay for all purchases made. Commissioner v. Behan, supra; Du Bois Young, supra; Charles F. Fawsett, supra; Edmund 3. Twining, supra; Andrew J. Peters, supra.

There was no agreement or understanding between the petitioners that the purchaser would hold the transferred securities for the other, or that the purchase price would be returned to the purchaser; or that the purchaser would repurchase or reacquire the securities sold. Du Bois Young, supra; Edmund S. Twining, supra; Joseph E. Uihlein, supra.

There was, in fact, no reacquisition of. any of the securities sold, by either purchaser, but instead such securities were, in each instance, retained as a part of the separate estate of the purchaser or sold to strangers. Du Bois Young, supra; Joseph E. Uihlem, supra; Edmund S. Twining, supra.

Dividends and interest received by the respective petitioners upon securities so purchased and held were returned in their income tax returns for subsequent years. Thomas W. Behan, supra.

The fact that there were simultaneous sales—husband to wife and wife to husband—each selling different securities to the other, but all in the same transaction, arranged by counsel for petitioners and consummated by the joint action of petitioners, petitioners’ secretary, petitioners’ counsel and petitioners’ broker, did not cause the sales to be any the less bona fide. The question is whether “the seller each time followed a usual procedure in making absolute bona fide sales of such property which would serve to fix any losses so that they would be realized , and so deductible from gross income under section 23 of the Revenue Act of 1928, subdivision (e) (1), (2) * * *."Commissioner v. Behan, supra. In both the Behan case and the Fawsett case similar situations existed, and in each case the sales were held to be bona fide.

Respondent contends that the sales were not bona fide because the purchase price of the securities purchased by Sarah Zimmermann was paid, in part at least, by John Zimmermann from fund? realized by him from the sale of the same securities.

This contention is based, apparently, upon the fact that on May 15, 1933, Zimmermann deposited in an individual and joint account of himself and his wife the sum of $16,804.20, following which, on May 17, 1933, he drew against the same account a check in the amount of $17,000, which was credited to Sarah Zimmermann’s [287]*287brokerage account. These transactions took place nearly five months after the sales of securities under consideration. The evidence shows, that Sarah Zimmermann’s credit with her brokers was good at all times; that her dealings were protected by adequate collateral, and, as a matter of fact, her debit balance with her brokers was wiped out shortly after by sales of securities and a credit balance of approximately $20,000 was paid over to her by them. Moreover, Sarah Zimmermann had actually drawn a check in the amount of $17,000 on the same account and for the same purpose, but for some reason it was not available at her husband’s office when he was ready to send it to the brokers office, so he drew another in the same amount. The amount of $17,000 was, comparatively, only a small part of the total price of the securities purchased by Sarah Zimmermann.

Even if we treat the $17,000 as John Zimmermann’s, throughout the transaction, the result is the same, for the Board has sustained sales in which the wife’s purchase money was the gift of the husband. Cf. Commissioner v. Behan, supra; Arguimbau v. Commissioner, supra. But under all the circumstances of separate accounts here present, we need not go so far. The Board has also upheld as bona fide sales made and purchases effected with funds kept in a joint account of husband and wife. Carl P. Dennett, 30 B. T. A. 49.

The situation in this case comes clearly within the test applied by the court in Commissioner v. Behan, supra, where it said:

What makes weight in favor of the Commissioner’s contention that gifts were the only results of the transactions are such inferences as might be drawn from the fact that the respondents were married and because of that relationship and the fact that each helped the other finance purchases the financial well being of one might inure to the benefit of the other. Yet it was shown that each was financially able to buy and pay for all purchases made leaving their mutual financial assistance but a convenience; not a necessity without which the purchases were impossible.

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Related

Pleasants v. United States
22 F. Supp. 964 (Court of Claims, 1938)
ZIMMERMANN v. COMMISSIONER
36 B.T.A. 279 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
36 B.T.A. 279, 1937 BTA LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmermann-v-commissioner-bta-1937.