DocketNumber: Docket No. 77165.
Citation Numbers: 1937 BTA LEXIS 823, 35 B.T.A. 876
Judges: Fossan
Filed Date: 4/16/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*823 Petitioner, a national bank, paid $10,000 under an agreement whereby additional capital was raised and paid over to an out of town bank in consideration for the latter taking over the assets and assuming all the liabilities of a local state bank which was about to be closed by the state banking authorities.
(1) That petitioner's contract was a valid exercise of its incidental powers as a national bank.
(2) That, since the expenditure was made to protect petitioner's business, its depositors, and its stockholders, it is an ordinary and necessary expense within the meaning of section 23(a), Revenue Act of 1928.
35 B.T.A. 876">*876 OPINION.
VAN FOSSAN: This proceeding involves a deficiency of $869.33 in income taxes for the calendar year 1931. The question presented is whether the taxpayer is entitled to a $10,000 deduction, being the amount paid by petitioner to a second bank in consideration of such bank assuming the liabilities of a certain trust company, for the alleged purpose of protecting petitioner against losses that would have resulted1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*824 if the trust company had been involuntarily closed.
Throughout the calendar year 1931 petitioner conducted a banking business in Skowhegan, Maine. During the early part of 1931 the Skowhegan Trust Co. and the Skowhegan Savings Bank were 35 B.T.A. 876">*877 also engaged in the banking business in Skowhegan. The three banks had approximately 14,000 depositors and combined assets aggregating approximately $10,000,000.
At March 31, 1931, the national bank examiner determined that the securities owned by petitioner had a value $51,962 below their book value, and later, on August 31, 1931, he determined that petitioner's securities were $87,521 below their book value.
On or about May 1, 1931, the Skowhegan Trust Co. was in serious financial difficulty, a situation that was brought to the attention of petitioner's officers by the state banking commissioner. The Trust Co.'s capital stock was $50,000 and it needed $73,500 of new funds to make it solvent. At or about that time the officers of the Trust Co. approached petitioner to see if a merger could be effected, but petitioner rejected the proposal.
Shortly thereafter the banking commissioner approached the petitioner and the Skowhegan1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*825 Savings Bank a second time, urging the importance of immediate action and advising that unless the added capital was available within two or three days the Trust Co. would be closed.
On May 1, 1931, the Augusta Trust Co. of Augusta, Maine, was operating nine branches. It agreed to take over the assets of the Skowhegan Trust Co., subject to liabilities, other than to stockholders, provided it received $73,500 under a certain agreement dated May 2, 1931, the terms of which are hereinafter set forth.
With this information petitioner's board of directors, at a special meeting on May 2, 1931, obligated the bank to pay $10,000 to the Augusta Trust Co. The resolution stated that the petitioner, certain named individuals, and the Skowhegan Savings Bank "severally covenant and agree" to pay Augusta Trust Co. the amounts set opposite their names in consideration for the latter assuming all the liabilities of the Skowhegan Trust Co., except its liabilities on capital stock or to stockholders as such.
As of the same date, May 2, 1931, petitioner and the Skowhegan Savings Bank each obligated itself for $10,000, and the named individuals obligated themselves to pay the sums set opposite1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*826 their names, provided the Augusta Trust Co. assumed the liabilities as aforesaid. The opening paragraph of the agreement states that "Whereas it would be detrimental to the best interests" of the petitioner "and would depreciate the value of its assets and the securities of its loans for the Skowhegan Trust Company, * * * to go into voluntary liquidation, and whereas such action was eminent
35 B.T.A. 876">*878 Among the parties obligating themselves to pay specified sums to the Augusta Trust Co. under the above agreement were four stockholders of the petitioner, three individuals, and the Skowhegan Savings Bank. The three individuals obligated themselves to pay $35,000.
On May 7, 1931, petitioner paid the Augusta Trust Co. $10,000 by draft drawn on the National Shawmut Bank of Boston. This payment was charged on petitioner's books to its profit and loss account.
The Augusta Trust Co. acquired the assets and assumed the liabilities of the Skowhegan Trust1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*827 Co. on June 15, 1931, and thereafter it operated the same as a branch.
During the taxable year petitioner's outstanding capital stock amounted to $150,000. Its surplus and undivided profits account at May 7, 1931, amounted to $501,935.97. It paid semiannual dividends on its stock of 5 percent each on May 1 and November 1, 1931.
Petitioner had no financial interest in the Skowhegan Trust Co. at any time during 1931. No agreement was made respecting the repayment of the $10,000 paid to the Augusta Trust Co., and the repayment thereof was not expected.
On its income tax return for the calendar year 1931 petitioner treated this $10,000 payment as a deduction from its gross income, reporting a net income for the year of $244.40. The respondent disallowed the deduction for the reason "that a contribution to competitive business in order to save it from bankruptcy and thereby avoid a run on taxpayer's business does not constitute an ordinary and necessary expense of doing business, * * *."
In his brief respondent contends that the law applicable to national banks, Revised Statutes 5136, and the Revenue Act of 1928, must be construed together; that, when so construed, the evidence1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*828 must show that in paying the $10,000 petitioner lawfully exercised an incidental power granted to it under the National Banking Act; that the exercise of such incidental power was imperative and necessary to the conduct of its banking business; that the power was exercised by its board of directors or duly authorized agents subject to law; and that the $10,000 expenditure was an ordinary and necessary expense within the purview of the 1928 Act, paid by petitioner in 1931.
Stated differently, respondent's first contention regarding this issue is that petitioner exceeded its corporate powers in entering into the contract and in making the disbursement. If respondent is correct in this contention the contract was
Section 5136 of the Revised Statutes,
Can it be said that the payment here involved was made in the exercise of an incidental power of the petitioner? The question is clear-cut. The right of the bank1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*831 to make the payment was duly considered, passed upon, and authorized by petitioner's board of directors. The directors were faced with a situation which was, in their opinion, desperate. In their judgment irreparable loss faced the bank, its stockholders, and its depositors unless quick and positive action was taken. Securities owned by the bank were $51,000 below their book value and declining. The closing of one bank in the community by the state banking authorities might shatter public confidence and cause a run on the community's two remaining banks. The imminence of heavy cash withdrawals by frightened and panic-stricken depositors would necessitate large amounts of cash on hand. Assets would have to be sacrificed, and the bank would inevitably suffer losses therefrom. We are of the opinion that judicial notice can be taken of the fact that banks, thoroughly sound financially, can not withstand the continuous and insistent 35 B.T.A. 876">*880 withdrawals of cash by their depositors without sustaining a loss, and that this is particularly true in periods of depression when public confidence is at its lowest ebb. In the opinion of the directors, unless action was taken petitioner1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*832 faced the alternative of possible ruin or, at the least, losses in excess of the $10,000 expenditure here involved.
We have carefully, but unsuccessfully, searched the decided cases for situations four-square to the facts herein. Respondent suggests that the instant case presents a situation closely akin to that in which one bank undertakes to guarantee the payment of debts of another.
The general rule undoubtedly is that a national bank may not lend its credit to another by becoming surety, endorser, or guarantor.
It does not follow, however, that a bank can not, under any circumstances, enter1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*833 into a contract of guaranty. On the contrary, it may so contract if the guaranty is for its own benefit and is incidental to the banking business.
Furthermore, a national bank can validly contract to take over the assets and assume the liabilities of another bank in the exercise of its ordinary powers as a banking corporation.
The petitioner here did not take over the assets or assume the liabilities of another bank, nor did it guarantee the debts of Skowhegan Trust. 1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*834 It agreed to and did furnish $10,000 of the additional capital demanded of Skowhegan Trust by the state banking authorities. Part of the consideration received by petitioner for this expenditure was the agreement by Augusta Trust that it would take over the assets and assume the liabilities of Skowhegan Trust. Under the doctrine of
35 B.T.A. 876">*881 The directors realized the embarrassing and possibly disastrous consequences which would flow from a failure of the Skowhegan Trust Co. to open its doors. As a matter of self-preservation of their own institution, this contract offered the most satisfactory solution of a serious problem. In any event petitioner stood to loss as a result of banking conditions in Skowhegan. The directors selected the avenue of escape which appeared to offer the minimum loss. It is difficult to see from this record how any other alternative could have better safeguarded1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*835 petitioner's own depositors and stockholders. We are satisfied that where circumstances force a bank to act for its own self-protection, the power to so act will be found in the incidental powers necessary to carry on the business of banking.
Prior to the banking crisis of 1933 many of the stronger banks of the country were forced to aid weaker members in order to protect their own interests. In
The right of self-preservation applies to banks as well as to business corporations and individuals generally. When a crisis arises in which to protect its own depositors and stockholders against loss, a guaranty by one bank of the deposits of another is essential, the law does not withhold that power. It is not necessary that1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*836 the bank be faced with actual ruin; it is sufficient that danger, real and immediate, of substantial loss to its depositors is present, and that the risk assumed is not out of proportion to the damage threatened, and not out of harmony with the capital structure and the financial condition of the banks involved. In this, as in so many other legal situations, the rule of reason applies. Where those charged with the management of a bank act in good faith and deliberately, with an eye to its own interests and welfare, the exercise of the power here invoked will be upheld.
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Around July, 1932, business was at its lowest ebb. The banking structure was highly sensitive to the marked depression which existed. The Harriman Bank was relatively a small bank to be sure, but the slightest spark may result in a widespread conflagration difficult to control. No bank is immune when confidence is generally disturbed, and particularly when lack of confidence assumes the form of a heedless "run" on another member bank. The danger of heavy withdrawals of deposits forces a bank to provide itself with large amounts of cash; assets must be sacrified at the very time when prices are lowest. 1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*837 the failure of a single bank may have repercussions which make themselves felt throughout the financial structure. Statistics, however respectable, may often be deceptive. Subsequent events demonstrated that there was some rational basis at least for the fears that were entertained concerning the effect of a failure of the Harriman Bank on the depositors and stockholders of other clearing house banks. If, in such a situation action to prevent 35 B.T.A. 876">*882 the failure of a member bank is taken by other member banks in the exercise of fair and honest judgment at the time, for the purpose of preserving the security and integrity of their own institutions, such action, within reasonable limitations, is not an invalid exercise of corporate power.
It is difficult for the human mind to carry itself back in point of time uninfluenced by subsequent events. With the danger past and memory short the defendants now plead that they lacked the power to do what banks throughout the country have often found it necessary to do. They plead that the law has denied them the power to conserve their own imperiled interests. The practice of the clearing house banks in this city to participate in1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*838 "rescue parties" was clearly established by the evidence. The form such action assumed at various times was different from that taken in this case, but the ultimate object was the same.
See also the decisions in
Unquestionably, the action of petitioner and the other parties to the agreement of May 2, 1931, was beneficial to the then depositors of the Skowhegan Trust Co. and to the credit structure and general welfare of the community. We can not say from the record that the state banking authorities actually approved the contract, but it is a fact that the contract was carried out. This would justify an inference that the state authorities approved the contract, particularly in view of their insistence that steps be taken which would make it unnecessary for the state to close the Skowhegan Trust Co. Where this situation exists it would seem that, unless the contract is prohibited by law, it should stand. 1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*839
Respondent insists that the contract is prohibited by law and is invalid. He relies upon
We have been unable to find any other court following this decision of the Indiana Appellate Court. There is a very recent decision by the supreme Court of Maine (March 6, 1936) regarding state banks, which seems to be in accord with the principle of the Indiana decision,
In the Indiana decision the court found that the state statutes had been ignored and disregarded. It found that the banks had bound themselves to pay an
35 B.T.A. 876">*884 Our research convinces us that no hard and fast rule can be laid down as to when a contract is beyond the incidental powers of a national bank. Each proceeding must, in the last analysis, be bottomed upon its own facts. The legal principles can be ascertained from the statutes and the decided cases; their application is the province1937 BTA LEXIS 823">*843 of the court. In the present situation we may well paraphrase the language of the Supreme Court in
Having determined that the contract was
In the
This Board and the courts have repeatedly allowed deductions where the disbursement was made to protect or promote the tax-payer's 35 B.T.A. 876">*885 business.
In the following cases the courts have refused to allow the deduction claimed as an ordinary and necessary expense: Voluntary assumption of debts of predecessors,
Considering the facts and circumstances under which this expenditure was made, we are of the opinion that the expense grew directly out of and proximately resulted from petitioner's banking business.
Reviewed by the Board.
1.
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Third. To make contracts.
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Seventh. To exercise by its board of directors, or duly authorized officers or agents, subject to law, all such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the business of banking; by discounting and negotiating promissory notes, drafts, bills of exchange, and other evidences of debt; by receiving deposits; by buying and selling exchange, coin, and bullion; by loaning money on personal security; and by obtaining, issuing, and circulating notes according to the provisions of this chapter. ↩
2. SEC. 23. DEDUCTIONS FROM GROSS INCOME.
In computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions:
(a)
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(f)
Dewey Column & Monumental Works v. Ryan , 206 Iowa 1100 ( 1928 )
Kornhauser v. United States , 48 S. Ct. 219 ( 1928 )
McCormick v. Market Bank , 17 S. Ct. 433 ( 1897 )
Central Transportation Co. v. Pullman's Palace Car Co. , 11 S. Ct. 478 ( 1891 )
People's Bank v. National Bank , 25 L. Ed. 907 ( 1880 )
Welch v. Helvering , 54 S. Ct. 8 ( 1933 )
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Pottorff , 54 S. Ct. 416 ( 1934 )
Wyman v. Wallace , 26 S. Ct. 495 ( 1906 )
First State Bank & Trust Co. Ex Rel. Benson v. First ... , 193 Minn. 414 ( 1935 )
California Bank v. Kennedy , 17 S. Ct. 831 ( 1897 )
Logan County National Bank v. Townsend , 11 S. Ct. 496 ( 1891 )