Judges: Mahoney, Yesawich
Filed Date: 11/4/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
OPINION OF THE COURT
The dispositive issue in this proceeding is whether respondent correctly determined that petitioner’s election to report a sale of stock on his 1972 State resident income tax return under the installment method was improper. Petitioner was the sole shareholder of Abbey Chop House, Inc., a corporation which operated a restaurant in a New York City hotel. Only 13 8/10 shares of stock had been issued by the corporation. On June 14, 1972, at a time when the restaurant was losing money and faced with labor problems, petitioner contracted with two individuals for the
Since the purchasers were not buying all of the corporate stock, petitioner chose not to evaluate corporate assets other than the leasehold although, concededly, such assets represented the corporation’s accumulated earnings and profits. Accordingly, the stock purchase agreement provided that the purchasers would cause the corporation to redeem the remaining 5 1/10 shares of stock owned by petitioner in exchange for all remaining assets of the corporation which were not desired by the purchasers. This redemption of the remaining 5 1/10 shares took place shortly after the closing on the stock purchase and the value of the assets transferred to petitioner on redemption was $185,343.
In preparing his 1972 State resident income tax return, petitioner reported the full extent of his gain on the redemption of the 5 1/10 shares of the corporation. With regard to the 8 7/10 shares sold, however, petitioner elected to report his gain under the installment method. Under the provisions of section 453 of the Internal Revenue Code in effect in 1972, such an election was permissible whenever the seller received 30% or less of the selling price during the year of sale (26 CFR 1.453-1 [c]). An election by a taxpayer to use the installment method allowed the profit on a sale to be prorated over the period in which payments are received and resulted in the taxpayer paying less tax in the year of sale. The New York State Income Tax Bureau, reasoning that the separate acts of stock sale and redemption were in reality parts of a single transaction whereby petitioner sold all of the corporation’s stock, denied petitioner’s election to report his gain under the installment method since he received over 30% of the total proceeds for the 13 8/10 shares in 1972, the year of sale. This conclusion resulted in a notice of deficiency
“A taxpayer may engineer his transactions to minimize taxes, but he cannot make a transaction appear to be what it is not” (Redwing Carriers v Tomlinson, 399 F2d 652, 659). Thus, as Judge Learned Hand wrote, “[t]he question always is whether the transaction under scrutiny is in fact what it appears to be in form” (Chisholm v Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 79 F2d 14, 15, cert den 296 US 641). Stated yet another way, the substance of a transaction controls, unless there is a legitimate business purpose for the use of a particular form (Gregory v Helvering, 293 US 465).
In our view, the part-sale, part-redemption transfers of stock were separate and distinct and not, as concluded by respondent, part of a single integrated transaction. We reach this legal conclusion based on respondent’s own findings of fact, which state that the sale and redemption “were intended to enable petitioner to remove his accumulated earnings (while receiving capital gains treatment) and to allow the purchasers of the restaurant business to buy only the leasehold right necessary to run the business but not the accumulated earnings and profits”. The legitimate business purpose served by this form of transaction was to enable the purchasers to buy only that portion of the corporate stock as represented those assets of the corporation they desired. The assets petitioner received on redemption were only those assets which the purchasers did not want to buy. Finally, as found by respondent, absolutely no part of the redemption proceeds came from the purchasers.
These factual findings clearly distinguish this proceeding from Farha v Commissioner of Internal Revenue (483 F2d 18, affg 58 USTC 526), a case relied on by respondent. In Farha, it was found as a matter of fact that the part-sale, part-redemption form used therein was artificial since the parties involved had contracted for the sale of all of the stock and all of the assets of the corporation. The redemp
Accordingly, respondent’s determination sustaining the notice of deficiency must be annulled, without costs, and the matter remitted to respondent for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith.