DocketNumber: Docket No. 76712.
Judges: Murdock
Filed Date: 11/26/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
*735 Where a taxpayer makes short sales of stock and thereafter covers such sales by delivering shares out of a quantity of the same stock which he has held for more than two years at the date of the short sale, section 23(s) of the Revenue Act of 1932, providing that gains or losses from short sales of stocks shall be considered as gains or losses from sales or exchanges of stocks which are not capital assets, applies and the entire gain is taxable as ordinary income.
*557 OPINION.
MURDOCK: The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $715.77 in the income tax of John Farr, deceased, for the year 1932. This proceeding was instituted by the executor. His assignments of error attack the action of the Commissioner in taxing the entire amoutn of gain from the disposition of 1,280 shares of Central Aguirre Associates stock as ordinary income subject to normal tax and surtax, instead of taxing all, or a part, of the gain as capital gain. The facts have been stipulated.
The decedent, on January 1, 1931, was the owner of 9,500 shares of stock of Central*736 Aguirre Associates. He had held those shares at that time for more than two years. He "sold short" 1,280 shares of Central Aguirre Associates at various times during the year 1931 for a total consideration or price of $25,613.80. He "covered the short sales" on March 22, 1932, by delivering 1,280 of the shares which he had held for more than two years on January 1, 1931. The shares used to cover had cost him $8,320. The Commissioner, in determining the deficiency for 1932, computed a profit of $13,980.59 from the sale of the Central Aguirre Associates stock and taxed it as ordinary income subject to normal tax and surtax.
The parties agree that the gain is taxable in 1932. Cf.
*558 Section 101 of the Revenue Act of 1932 provides a special method of taxing capital net gains. It defines "capital gain" and "capital loss" as the gain or loss from "the sale or exchange of capital assets." "'Capital assets' means property held by the taxpayer for more than two years." The gain in question would clearly be a capital gain under those provisions, if they stood alone, since the shares which the decedent disposed of had been held for more than two years even before he made the "short sales." The question arises because of the provisions of section 23(s). Those provisions, as well as the provisions of section 23(r) which may have some bearing upon the question, are as follows:
SEC. 23. DEDUCTIONS FROM GROSS INCOME.
In computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions:
* * *
(r) LIMITATION ON STOCK LOSSES. - (1) Losses from sales or exchanges of stocks and bonds (as defined in subsection (t) of this section) which are not capital assets (as defined in section 101) shall be allowed only to the extent of the gains from such sales or exchanges (including gains which may be derived by a taxpayer from the retirement*738 of his own obligations).
* * *
(s) SAME - SHORT SALES. - For the purposes of this title, gains or losses (A) from short sales of stocks and bonds, or (B) attributable to privileges or options to buy or sell such stocks and bonds, or (C) from sales or exchanges of such privileges or options, shall be considered as gains or losses from sales or exchanges of stocks or bonds which are not capital assets.
The Commissioner stated in the notice of deficiency that "the Bureau is adhering to the principle laid down in Income Tax Ruling 2683, wherein it is held that the gain or loss from short sales 'is to be treated as resulting from sales of securities which were not capital assets, in accordance with section 23(s) of the Revenue Act of 1932, regardless of the fact that the securities which were later delivered may have been held more than two years'." Counsel for the Commissioner stated at the hearing that the Bureau was considering whether or not it would reverse its ruling as set forth in
The question is whether the petitioner realized any gain from a short sale of stock within the meaning of the phrase "short sales" as used in section 23(s). The first step is to determine what is meant by "short sales." Congress did not define the term and, therefore, must have intended it to have its usual and generally understood meaning.
A short sale is defined by J. Edward Meeker, economist to the New York Stock Exchange, in his work on "Short Selling", published in 1932, as a sale which creates a debt in terms of goods. He classifies in three groups the principal purposes for which the device*743 is generally used in connection with securities. He places in one class the short sales made to obtain speculative profits. Persons who employ the device for this purpose make a short sale in the expectation that later they will be able to close the transaction by a covering purchase at a lesser price. Such persons in exchange parlance are called "bears." The short sale device is employed as a temporary facility in another class of cases. An investor, owning securities and desiring to make an outright sale of some of the securities which he owns, may not have his certificates available for delivery in accordance with the rules of the exchange. For example, the certificates may be held at some point distant from New York, the owner may be away from home, or, due to mergers, consolidations, stock dividends, changes in par value, and the like, the certificates may not be available for prompt delivery. Therefore, the short sale device is employed in order to effect a sale at market and yet permit a later delivery of certificates by the seller. In the third class are short sales made for the purpose of "hedging." These are called also "sales against the box." They occur when an owner*744 of stock resorts to a short sale in order to avoid the risk of future price fluctuations. He owns sufficient securities to make delivery, but chooses to make a short sale involving the borrowing of shares for delivery, rather than to sell and make delivery of the shares which he owns. The owner of a large block of stock, which gives him a measure of control over the affairs of the corporation, may desire to take advantage of the current market price and yet retain his control in the corporation. He can accomplish his purpose by making a short sale. Later, if the stock declines, he can make a covering purchase and realize a profit, or, if the stock advances, he can make delivery of his own stock and lose control, or make a covering purchase and sustain a loss. Hedging is also resorted to by the "odd lot dealers" on the floor of the exchange in order to avoid the risk of owning a large block of stock. It is also adopted by professional speculators who seek to profit by buying in the cheaper and *561 selling in the dearer market, where the same security is listed on two different exchanges. As authorities for the statements in this paragraph see Short Selling (1932), Meeker; *745 The Work of the Stock Exchange (1922), Meeker; Short Selling (1933), Owen Taylor; Short Selling, For and Against (1932), Whitney and Perkins.
Thus, a short sale may be made, not only by one who does not own any securities of the kind which he sells, but also by one who actually owns securities of the kind he sells. Short sales must frequently be made by brokers who are not informed whether or not their principal is the owner of shares which he could sell and deliver if he so desired. One of the chief differences between a regular sale and a "short sale" is that, in the former, the seller delivers his own shares to the purchaser and thus closes the transaction, while in the latter, he delivers "borrowed" shares and the transaction is not closed so far as the seller is concerned until he delivers shares to repay the "loan." If the shares sold are not furnished by the seller at the time of the sale but are supplied by the broker, the transaction is a short sale and sets in motion the short sale process. The fact that a transaction is a short sale must appear prior to the time when the broker must make delivery in accordance with the rules of the exchange. A transaction, which at*746 that time, or earlier, is made as a short sale, forever remains a short sale, regardless of the manner in which it is closed, that is, regardless of whether it is closed by a covering purchase or by the delivery of shares which the seller has owned for some time.
The Supreme Court in the
As the phrase indicates, a short sale is a contract for the sale of shares which the seller does not own or the certificates for which are not within his control so as to be available for delivery at the time when, under the rules of the Exchange, delivery must be made.
A short sale has been similarly described by other courts and financial writers. See authorities above cited. The argument is advanced that the sale made by Farr was not a short sale within the above definition. The Court in the
The gain or loss from a short sale is ascertained by matching the short sale price against the cost or other basis of the stock used to close the transaction.
There remains for consideration the question of*749 whether Congress intended section 23(s) to apply in all cases where gain or loss was realized from a short sale of stock or bonds or whether it intended the provision merely as a supplement to subsection (r). Counsel call attention to the caption of section 23, to the caption of subsection (s), and to the following language appearing in both Committee Reports:
Subsection (s) requires that gains or losses from short sales of stocks and bonds, or from privileges or options to buy such securities, shall be treated as gains or losses from the sale or exchange of stocks and bonds held for less than two years. Your committee is of the opinion that there should be no distinction between such transactions and other sales or exchanges of stocks and bonds. Accordingly, the limitation on stock losses is extended to this type of transactions.
See H. Rept. No. 708, p. 13, and S. Rept. No. 665, p. 19, 72nd Cong., 1st sess. They argue from the foregoing that Congress merely *563 intended to make sure that short sales would be treated as sales, rather than as any other kind of transactions,
Congress has said in subsection (s), "For the purposes of this title" gains or losses from short sales of stock shall be considered as gains or losses from the sales or exchanges of stocks which are not capital assets. The words quoted are not ambiguous and should be given the effect which their*751 use so clearly implies. They must mean for all purposes of "Title I - Income Tax." They stand in sharp contrast to words used elsewhere in section 23, where Congress intended a greater restriction upon the application of other subsections. For example, in subsection (c) Congress said: "For the purpose of this subsection." If subsection (s) were to be interpreted in the way the petitioner contends, the words "For the purposes of this title", which Congress actually used, would have to be read, "For the purposes of determining the limitations provided in subsection (r) of this section." Subsection (s) can not be limited in its application as the petitioner contends without doing violence to the text of the provision.
It is argued with some force that this produces a strange result. Perhaps it does. But results no less strange would result from the petitioner's interpretation. As he would interpret the provision, where a taxpayer had gains from short sales which were closed by the delivery of stock held for more than two years at the time of the sale, the gains would be subject to tax under section 101, whereas, if a taxpayer had gains of that kind and also losses from short sales*752 of any kind, the gains, to the extent of the losses, would be taxed as ordinary income and the remaining gains would be taxed either as ordinary income or as capital gain. Thus the question is not solved by considering the results of the different interpretations.
*564 A choice between the plain words of the text of the provision, on the one hand, and the caption and legislative history of the provision, on the other, must be made. Where words in the caption and body of a statutory provision differ in meaning, the latter will prevail.
Reviewed by the Board.
1. It is, however, possible to cover a short sale before the time for delivery. ↩
2. The Supreme Court, in