DocketNumber: Docket No. 32980
Citation Numbers: 20 T.C. 264, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 173
Judges: Raum
Filed Date: 4/30/1953
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*173
Webb Company, with both common and preferred stock outstanding, redeemed some of its preferred shares for cash and other assets for the purpose of distributing them as a dividend on the remaining preferred stock and did in fact promptly distribute such shares. There was no dispute that its accumulated earnings and profits were sufficient to support that distribution. Petitioner owned both preferred and common. The distribution changed his proportionate interest in the corporation as well as that of the other holders of the preferred.
*265 OPINION.
The respondent determined a deficiency in the amount of $ 16,801.68 in the income tax of the petitioner for the calendar year 1947. The only issue presented is whether certain stock dividends received by the petitioner in 1947 constitute income under
The facts have been stipulated and are*174 so found. The petitioner, a resident of Galax, Virginia, filed his income tax return for the calendar year 1947 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Virginia. In 1933, the petitioner became a stockholder in The Webb Furniture Company, Inc., a Virginia corporation (hereinafter referred to as the Webb Company). The petitioner has been a member of the board of directors of the Webb Company since August, 1932, and chairman of the board since November 1933. At various times he has also served as president, vice president, or treasurer of the Webb Company. On December 13, 1941, and at every annual meeting of the Webb Company's board of directors held through December 31, 1949, a resolution was passed to the effect that the petitioner as chairman of the board be given full authority to set all salaries and decide if a dividend or bonus was to be paid and the amount thereof.
The authorized capital stock of the Webb Company in 1947 consisted of 3,000 shares of no par value common stock and 3,000 shares of $ 100 par value preferred stock. *175 therefor, and 422 shares of the preferred stock by cancellation of the stock accounts of J. A. Messer, Jr., Kenneth G. Messer, and Duane E. Ward. *176 *266 Pursuant to two resolutions passed during the month of June 1947, the Webb Company issued, on June 30, 1947, 872 shares of its preferred stock to the preferred stockholders of record. Although the dividend was declared in two separate parts on different days in June 1947, the acquisition of the stock and its subsequent distribution pursuant to the two declarations were all part of a single transaction executed in accordance with a preexisting plan. *177 The petitioner, who before the dividend had owned 479 shares of the preferred stock, received 193 shares as his portion of this dividend. *267 1. It is important that the pertinent statutory provisions relating to the taxation of stock dividends be clearly understood. *180 In Shortly after the decision in *182 The new legislation eliminated the exemption and provided in substance that a stock dividend may be taxed to the extent that it constitutes "income to the shareholder within the meaning of the In applying the provisions of In the 2. We come to the application of the foregoing principles to the facts of this case. Immediately prior to the declarations of the dividends involved herein in June 1947 the corporation had outstanding 3,000 shares each of common and preferred. All of the common stockholders owned some preferred, but a number of the preferred stockholders owned no common. The percentage of common held by each stockholder was in no case the same as the percentage of his preferred. *270 Thus, the petitioner owned 71.6667 per cent of the common, but only 15.9667 per cent of the preferred. The 872 shares of preferred stock which were distributed as stock dividends were part of the 3,000 shares of outstanding preferred, and were reacquired for that purpose by the corporation. *186 to support a dividend equal in amount to the value of the 872 shares distributed. Upon completion of the distributions, each holder of preferred had acquired not only additional shares thus giving him greater*187 rights in relation to the corporate enterprise, but his percentage of ownership had increased. In the case of petitioner, the percentage of ownership of preferred rose from 15.9667 to 22.4. This is therefore not a case like Similarly this case is substantially different from 3. Petitioner argues that the dividend of 193 shares of preferred on his preferred did not result in the receipt of any income because the distribution of a total of 872 preferred shares put an additional burden of $ 87,200 (in par value) on the common stock, and as the owner of some 71 per cent of the common the greater part of that burden fell*190 upon him. Thus he contends that the transaction resulted in a loss to him rather than a gain. We think the contention is unsound. Petitioner misconceives the entire basis for the inclusion of corporate dividends in taxable income. The declaration and payment of a dividend is almost never an income producing event in the sense that the stockholder is enriched at that moment. To the extent that there is a distribution of corporate assets as a dividend such distribution frequently reduces the value of the stock. The point is that the stockholder is not taxed upon corporate earnings until there has been a distribution, and it is at that time that he must account tax-wise for those earnings, even though they may have been received by the corporation over a period of years, and even though the distribution itself may shrink the value of his stock. This is fundamental in the taxation of corporate dividends. The very act whereby corporate earnings are paid out reduces the assets of the corporation and is therefore likely to reduce the value of the stock. Had the corporation in this case distributed $ 87,200 in cash to the preferred stockholders, there could be no question that the*191 distribution, having been made from corporate earnings, would have been a taxable dividend, notwithstanding that such distribution would have reduced the *272 value of the common. The situation is no different where the distribution is made in property or even in stock if it otherwise qualifies as a taxable stock dividend under the Indeed, a further ground for supporting the Commissioner's determination is that the corporation acquired the 872 shares by paying $ 45,000 in cash and canceling $ 42,200 in accounts receivable; and since it acquired such shares for the purpose of distributing them as a stock dividend, the transaction must be considered as a whole. Had the corporation distributed such cash and accounts receivable to the preferred stockholders, it would certainly have been a taxable dividend, notwithstanding that the recipients might have purchased the 872 shares directly with the proceeds of such distribution. The effect of the transaction on the value of the common would be the same whether it took that form or the form actually employed in this case. The end result in either case would be the distribution of corporate earnings in such*192 manner as to constitute a taxable dividend. Cf. The parties have stipulated that the fair market value of the preferred stock was $ 80 per share. The deficiency was determined by the Commissioner on the basis of a fair market value of $ 100 per share. Accordingly, a recomputation is necessary. 1. The common stock was the only class having voting rights. The preferred stock had a cumulative annual dividend of 5 per cent payable semiannually, which was to be paid prior to any payment of dividends on the common stock. The preferred stock also had liquidating preferences to the extent of par value plus accrued dividends and was subject to redemption by the corporation at any time on the same basis.↩ 2. During the year 1945, 447 shares of preferred stock were regained by the corporation by payment of $ 100 per share to stockholders who were in no way connected with the Messer family. The shares were acquired for petitioner's account and were charged to "stock account -- J. A. Messer, Sr." on the corporation's books. On April 30, 1946, petitioner not having made any payments for those shares, relinquished his rights to them and they were sold to J. A. Messer, Jr., Kenneth G. Messer, and Duane E. Ward, all of whom were employees of the company. Arrangements were made for the shares to be paid for over a period of 10 years. The transaction was recorded on the company books as follows: These stock accounts were listed as "other assets" on the balance sheet of the corporation. As of June 1947, J. A. Messer, Jr., had made no payments on his stock account; K. G. Messer had paid for two shares; and D. E. Ward had paid for 23 shares. On June 17, 1947, the purchase agreements for the shares for which payment had not been received were canceled and the stock accounts therefor were eliminated.↩ 3. A dividend of 314 shares was declared on June 17, 1947, and a dividend of 558 shares was declared on June 30, 1947. Although the purchase agreements of J. A. Messer, Jr., K. G. Messer, and D. E. Ward were canceled on June 17, 1947, only J. A. Messer, Jr., and K. G. Messer returned to the corporation their certificates for 316 shares at that time. K. G. Messer received a new certificate representing the two shares for which he had paid. Galax Mirror Company, Inc., was a stockholder of record as of June 17, 1947, but since arrangements had been completed for the redemption of its 450 shares of preferred stock it was specifically excepted from the list of shareholders to whom the dividend was to be paid. A check for $ 45,000 was issued to Galax Mirror Company, Inc., on June 27, 1947, as payment for its 450 shares. And on June 30, 1947, Ward returned his certificate for 131 shares of preferred and received a new certificate for the 23 shares for which he had paid. The 558 shares thus reacquired were the shares which were referred to in the dividend declaration of June 30, 1947. The parties have, for convenience, treated the two declarations as comprising one dividend of 872 shares and we shall do likewise.↩ 4. The dividend was an extraordinary dividend and was not one to which the preferred shareholders were entitled by reason of the preferred stock provisions.↩ 5. The Galax Mirror Company, Inc., had acquired 1,000 shares of preferred stock of Webb Company in 1933 as payment of an open account indebtedness. Between 1934 and 1947, all but 450 of those shares had been redeemed by the Webb Company or transferred to other shareholders. The Galax Mirror Company, Inc., had an authorized capital of 1,000 shares of common stock. Immediately prior to June 17, 1947, the petitioner owned 500 of those shares; his wife owned 200 shares; and his children owned the balance.↩ 1. Dividend paid on 251 shares.↩ 2. Dividend paid on 260 shares.↩ 3. Dividend paid on 137 shares.↩ 4. No dividend paid on these shares.↩ 5. * * * * (f) Stock Dividends. -- (1) General rule. -- A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in its stock or in rights to acquire its stock shall not be treated as a dividend to the extent that it does not constitute income to the shareholder within the meaning of the The provisions as they were originally reported to and passed by the House in H. R. 12395, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., read as follows: (1) General Rule. -- A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in stock of the corporation or in rights to acquire stock of the corporation shall be treated as a taxable dividend to the extent that such distribution constitutes income to the shareholder within the meaning of the However, certain changes were made by the Senate in 6. Among the decisions limiting the effect of 7. The stipulated facts make it plain and we so find as an ultimate fact that the redemption of the 872 shares of stock and the declaration of the dividend were merely steps in the execution of a single plan. The Galax Mirror Company, Inc., a corporation controlled by petitioner, was specifically excluded from the first dividend declaration (see footnote 3, Cullinan v. Walker, Collector of Internal Revenue , 43 S. Ct. 495 ( 1923 ) Parker v. Motor Boat Sales, Inc. , 62 S. Ct. 221 ( 1942 ) Marr v. United States , 45 S. Ct. 575 ( 1925 ) Rockefeller v. United States , 42 S. Ct. 68 ( 1921 ) Helvering v. Gowran , 58 S. Ct. 154 ( 1937 ) Helvering v. Griffiths , 63 S. Ct. 636 ( 1943 ) United States v. Phellis , 42 S. Ct. 63 ( 1921 ) Koshland v. Helvering , 56 S. Ct. 767 ( 1936 ) Weiss v. Stearn , 44 S. Ct. 490 ( 1924 )Relationship to Stockholder petitioner Common stock John A. Messer, Sr Petitioner 2150 [71.6667%] Mrs. J. A. Messer, Sr Wife 200 Kenneth G. Messer Son 150 John A. Messer, Jr Son 150 Beatrice Messer Nunn Daughter 150 Gertrude Messer Cheek Daughter 150 J. A. Messer, III Grandson R. R. Nunn, Jr Grandson J. J. Nunn Grandson Judith Nunn Granddaughter Barbara Louise Cheek Granddaughter Mary A. Messer Granddaughter Douglas G. Messer Grandson Paul D. and Roberta Wilson. Samuel O. Boyer Duane E. Ward 50 Sam C. Hampton Galax Mirror Co., Inc. Preferred stock Preferred Preferred Stockholder before stock stock after dividend dividend dividend John A. Messer, Sr 479 [15.9667%] 193 672 [22.4%] Mrs. J. A. Messer, Sr 370 149 519 Kenneth G. Messer 407 351 John A. Messer, Jr 418 364 Beatrice Messer Nunn 234 94 328 Gertrude Messer Cheek 219 88 307 J. A. Messer, III 20 8 28 R. R. Nunn, Jr 20 8 28 J. J. Nunn 20 8 28 Judith Nunn 20 8 28 Barbara Louise Cheek 20 8 28 Mary A. Messer 20 8 28 Douglas G. Messer 20 8 28 Paul D. and Roberta 15 6 21 Wilson Samuel O. Boyer 17 6 23 Duane E. Ward 245 210 Sam C. Hampton 6 3 9 Galax Mirror Co., Inc. 450 0
Under our decisions the payment of a dividend of new common shares, conferring no different rights or interests than did the old, -- the new certificates, plus the old, representing the same proportionate interest in the net assets of the corporation*181 as did the old, -- does not constitute the receipt of income by the stockholder. On the other hand, where a stock dividend gives the stockholder an interest different from that which his former stock holdings represented he receives income. The latter type of dividend is taxable as income under the
See also Footnotes
J. A. Messer, Jr Stock Account $ 15,800 K. G. Messer Stock Account 15,800 D. E. Ward Stock Account 13,100 Stock Account J. A. Messer, Sr $ 44,700 Authorities (10)