DocketNumber: Docket No. 36015
Citation Numbers: 22 T.C. 1343, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 86
Judges: Baar,Withey
Filed Date: 9/30/1954
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
1. The unused excess profits credit of the petitioner for a taxable year beginning December 1, 1943, is to be computed on the prorated basis under both the 1943 and 1944 laws, as required by
2. Real estate acquired by a bank in foreclosures and by deeds in lieu thereof was held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of the petitioner's business and sales thereof in 1946 resulted in ordinary losses, rather than capital losses. The decision in
*1344 The respondent determined deficiencies in the income and excess profits taxes of the petitioner as follows:
Fiscal year ended November 30 | Tax | Deficiency |
1945 | Excess profits | $ 242,308.86 |
1946 | Excess profits | 56,734.54 |
1946 | Income | 10,573.95 |
Two *87 issues are presented for decision, namely:
(1) Should the unused excess profits credit of the petitioner for the fiscal year ended November 30, 1944, be determined on a prorated basis under the statutes applicable to 1943 and 1944, by the application of
(2) Were ordinary losses or capital losses incurred by the petitioner in its fiscal year 1946 as the result of sales of parcels of real estate acquired by foreclosure or by deed in lieu of foreclosure?
Other issues raised by the petition have been disposed of by stipulation or waiver.
The evidence was presented by a stipulation of facts, exhibits appended thereto, oral testimony, and exhibits introduced at the hearing.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The facts are found in accordance with the stipulation of facts, together with its appended exhibits, which are made a part hereof by this reference.
The petitioner, which was formerly known as the Girard Trust Company, is a corporation organized and doing business under the banking laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, with its principal place of business at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Its name *88 was changed to Girard Trust Corn Exchange Bank, pursuant to articles of merger filed in the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which became effective June 15, 1951.
During the years here in issue the petitioner kept its books and filed its Federal income tax returns on a cash basis and on the basis of a fiscal year ending November 30. The petitioner's income and excess profits tax returns for its fiscal years ended November 30, 1945, and November 30, 1946, were filed with the collector of internal revenue for the first district of Pennsylvania.
The respondent determined that for the fiscal year ended November 30, 1945, the petitioner was entitled to an unused excess profits credit carry-over of $ 174,573.78 from the fiscal year ended November 30, 1944, based on invested capital. It is now conceded that this amount should be increased by $ 19,292.93 to $ 193,866.71. Under the *1345 method of computation for which the petitioner contends, the unused credit would amount to $ 339,867.55.
For the fiscal year ended November 30, 1944, the petitioner's invested capital was $ 20,951,136.82 and its excess profits net income was $ 1,067,200.66.
The petitioner's normal tax *89 net income, surtax net income, net long-term capital gain, and adjusted excess profits net income for the year ended November 30, 1946, as determined in the deficiency notice, were arrived at by treating as a net long-term capital loss a net loss of $ 270,449.30 which was sustained by the petitioner in that year on sales of real estate.
The net loss of $ 270,499.30 is made up of a net loss of $ 270,580.05 on 23 sales of 52 tracts or parcels of real estate, included in 13 so-called properties, reduced by $ 130.75 for recoveries in that year on claims for deficiencies on account of real estate sold in prior taxable years.
All of the real estate of the petitioner sold in 1946 was acquired upon foreclosure of mortgages or by deeds in lieu of foreclosure. In six of the properties here involved, the petitioner owned a fractional interest.
Of the loss in question, $ 248,659.46 was sustained by the petitioner upon the sale of property referred to as Black Farm, which was wholly owned by the petitioner and concerning which additional facts are stated below.
The remaining $ 21,920.59 represents 9 items of losses, ranging from $ 77.56 to $ 22,002.11 and aggregating $ 52,490.27, minus 2 items of gain *90 in the amounts of $ 679.68 and $ 29,890. Another property was sold with no resulting gain or loss. Additional facts are stated below concerning certain properties to which the larger items relate.
Since 1931 the petitioner in its corporate capacity and in its capacity as fiduciary of estates and trusts foreclosed a number of mortgages on real estate and acquired a number of parcels of real estate on foreclosure and by deeds in lieu of foreclosure.
Throughout that period and during the years 1945 and 1946 the petitioner maintained a real estate and mortgage division which was operated as a separate division or unit of the bank, with a separate accounting division. The number of employees of the division varied during the period 1935-1946, from about 110 in 1935 to 40 in 1946, and was not less than 40 at any time in that period.
The petitioner's real estate and mortgage division is staffed and equipped to handle real estate activities including property management, sales, leases, and maintenance, and also appraisals, real estate and mortgage settlements, mortgage servicing, insurance, and real *1346 estate and mortgage accounting procedures. The real estate and mortgage division of the petitioner *91 has managed real estate owned by petitioner, real estate held by estates and trusts of which petitioner is fiduciary, and real estate owned by petitioner's customers.
The petitioner received fees and commissions for certain services performed for its customers by its real estate and mortgage division. Fees for such services are also reflected to a large extent in other fees which it receives, such as commissions as executor and trustee and fees as custodian and depositary.
The following is a statement of fees and commissions on rents and sales which were entered in petitioner's real estate commissions account in the fiscal years ended November 30, 1936, to November 30, 1946:
Fiscal year ended November 30 | On rents | On sales | Fees | Total |
1936 | $ 5,980.78 | $ 8,659.21 | $ 7,945.00 | $ 22,584.99 |
1937 | 8,572.28 | 4,600.99 | 2,570.00 | 15,743.27 |
1938 | 7,402.97 | 6,516.83 | 4,474.18 | 18,393.98 |
1939 | 6,161.89 | 5,246.18 | 2,096.75 | 13,504.82 |
1940 | 3,286.81 | 6,497.06 | 1,140.00 | 10,923.87 |
1941 | 5,259.60 | 11,142.02 | 2,229.08 | 18,630.70 |
1942 | 2,945.09 | 12,114.84 | 3,118.90 | 18,178.83 |
1943 | 4,301.06 | 10,670.34 | 1,673.57 | 16,644.97 |
1944 | 1,495.17 | 12,002.68 | 525.00 | 14,022.85 |
1945 | 904.08 | 13,565.17 | 995.00 | 15,464.25 |
1946 | 178.42 | 20,856.89 | 9,059.04 | 30,094.35 |
In each of the fiscal years ended November 30, 1935, *92 to November 30, 1946, the employees of petitioner's real estate organization have included 5 to 8 licensed real estate brokers and 5 to 12 licensed real estate salesmen.
The petitioner paid a mercantile license tax as a real estate broker or dealer to the city of Philadelphia every year that such tax was in force.
In each year since 1939 the petitioner has been a member of the Financial Division of the Philadelphia Real Estate Board, the Pennsylvania Real Estate Association, and the National Association of Real Estate Boards. It has also been a member of the Corporate Real Estate Association, the Mortgage Bankers Association, and the Pennsylvania Title Association. The officer in charge of petitioner's real estate and mortgage division was for 4 years the president of the Corporate Real Estate Association. Those organizations functioned for the purpose of the general betterment of the real estate business.
The following is a statement of mortgages on real estate foreclosed by petitioner during the period November 30, 1935, to November 30, 1946, which includes mortgages which the petitioner owned in whole or in part and mortgages owned wholly or in part by estates and trusts of which *93 the petitioner was acting as fiduciary: *1347
Number | Total principal | |
Fiscal year ended November 30 | of foreclosures | of mortgages |
1935 | 434 | $ 4,574,896.59 |
1936 | 263 | 2,400,997.34 |
1937 | 181 | 2,216,879.87 |
1938 | 174 | 1,917,922.17 |
1939 | 192 | 4,635,190.47 |
1940 | 135 | 1,630,108.40 |
1941 | 116 | 1,271,598.66 |
1942 | 158 | 2,069,071.00 |
1943 | 59 | 1,235,016.57 |
1944 | 25 | 621,640.21 |
1945 | 8 | 227,455.60 |
1946 | 3 | 35,044.66 |
The following is a statement of sales of real estate made by the petitioner's real estate organization during the fiscal years ended November 30, 1943, to November 30, 1946, inclusive, including properties owned wholly or in part by petitioner, those held in estates and trusts of which it was acting as fiduciary, and those in which the petitioner acted as agent for customers:
All properties sold | ||
Fiscal year ended | ||
November 30 | ||
Total | ||
number | Total proceeds | |
1943 | 739 | $ 6,464,414.29 |
1944 | 699 | 8,873,200.32 |
1945 | 613 | 7,328,344.35 |
1946 | 500 | 5,993,903.61 |
Properties sold which were owned by petitioner, | ||||
in whole or in part | ||||
Fiscal year ended | ||||
November 30 | Per cent of | Net proceeds | Per cent of | |
Number | total | of sales | total | |
(approximate) | (approximate) | |||
1943 | 23 | 3.1 | $ 169,557.46 | 2.62 |
1944 | 35 | 5.0 | 579,990.49 | 6.50 |
1945 | 22 | 3.6 | 196,360.68 | 2.60 |
1946 | 23 | 4.6 | 302,882.06 | 5.05 |
The principal activity of the real estate and mortgage division *94 of the petitioner was the management of property owned by customers and property held in trust by the petitioner as a fiduciary. The management of the property consisted of the collection of rents; payment of taxes, insurance, and other expenses; supervision of maintenance, repair, and improvement; general supervision of the property; and advising customers on mortgage and other problems.
During the years 1931 to 1946 the petitioner had under the management of its real estate and mortgage division the following minimum number of separate parcels of real estate, including properties owned outright by it, properties held in its estates and trusts, and properties managed for its customers:
1931 | 1,488 |
1932 | 2,375 |
1933 | 2,910 |
1934 | 3,650 |
1935 | 4,264 |
1936 | 4,548 |
1937 | 4,780 |
1938 | 4,955 |
1939 | 5,050 |
1940 | 4,863 |
1941 | 4,638 |
1942 | 4,062 |
1943 | 3,298 |
1944 | 2,510 |
1945 | 1,904 |
1946 | 1,421 |
*1348 Where the petitioner had real property to sell for its own account or for customers, its real estate and mortgage division made appraisals to determine the selling price. In an effort to dispose of real estate owned by it, the petitioner advertises in magazines, newspapers, and with brochures and other publications and makes a practice of circulating among *95 other brokers information about such properties. Petitioner has shared in the commissions upon sales by other brokers of properties of the petitioner's customers.
Parcels of real estate owned by petitioner in its corporate capacity and held by it for sale have usually been acquired as a result of foreclosures of mortgages and by deeds in lieu of foreclosure, and by taking over such parcels from estates and trusts for which petitioner has acted as fiduciary. Following the acquisition of such parcels of real estate, the petitioner has made extensive efforts to sell the properties.
The petitioner has made improvements to many of such properties. It has financed the construction of dwelling houses and commercial buildings on vacant land and has made improvements to buildings situated on property owned by it. In the case of certain parcels of vacant land so held by it, the petitioner has developed and improved the property by installing sewers and water pipes, paving streets, grading the land, and installing curbing, and it has plotted and subdivided property in lots and has financed the construction of dwelling houses on many of such lots.
The petitioner has not at any time held real estate *96 as an investment. Real estate which it has acquired upon foreclosures was held for sale as soon as possible at a fair price.
Certain properties not sold in this taxable year were rented while they were held for sale. Of the properties sold in this year which were wholly owned by the petitioner, none were rental or income producing properties. Five properties which were sold in this year and in which the petitioner owned a fractional interest were producing some rental income prior to the sale thereof, as follows:
Loss (or | Rental | |||
Property | Interest of petitioner | gain) of | per | |
petitioner | month North Broad Street | 1,800/250,000 (approximately | ||
0.72 per cent) | $ 239.96 | $ 1,618.34 | ||
Tredyffrin Country Club | 5,920.05/148,000 (approximately | |||
4.00 per cent) | (679.68) | 66.66 | ||
(Gain) | ||||
1604 Walnut Street | 5,800/150,000 (approximately | |||
3.70 per cent) | 1,617.73 | |||
Melrose Country Club | 5,301.87/218,450 (approximately | |||
2.43 per cent) | 450.00 | |||
King of Prussia Road | 48,500/190,000 (approximately | |||
25.53 per cent) | 22,002.11 | 40.00 |
Certain property which is referred to as Black Farm and is located in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, was acquired by the petitioner by foreclosure in 1935. It consisted *97 of 97.184 acres of unimproved land. *1349 During 1941 the petitioner plotted and subdivided 8.667 acres of this property into 24 lots. The remainder, 88.517 acres, was left unplotted and undivided, but plans for eventual subdivision had been prepared. The petitioner installed sewers and made other improvements on the subdivided portion at a cost of $ 6,880.73, and financed the construction of 10 dwelling houses at a cost of $ 106,959.12, under an arrangement for dividing the proceeds of sale between the builder and the petitioner. A brochure of information concerning this property was prepared and circulated by the petitioner. This property produced no rental income. From the time the property was acquired until it was finally disposed of the petitioner was continuously engaged in attempting to sell at a fair price both the lots and the unsubdivided portion. Twelve of these lots were sold through brokers during the years 1941 to 1945. One lot was sold in the fiscal year 1946. In another single transaction, the remaining 11 lots and the unplotted portion, or 88.517 acres, were also sold in the fiscal year 1946. The adjusted basis of the lots and the unplotted acres which were sold *98 in 1946 was $ 369,851.33, the petitioner's share of the aggregate net proceeds of the sales was $ 121,191.87, and the resulting loss of the petitioner was $ 248,659.46.
A loss of $ 22,002.11 was sustained by the petitioner in the fiscal year 1946 upon the sale of certain real estate located on King of Prussia Road, in Radnor, Pennsylvania. An interest of 48500/190000 in this property (about 25.53 per cent) was acquired by the petitioner by foreclosure of a mortgage in 1934. It consisted of about 198 acres of farm land and buildings and was rented at $ 40 per month at the time of the sale. The petitioner's adjusted basis was $ 31,691, and $ 9,688.89 was received as the proceeds of the sale.
The petitioner acquired 85.979 acres of land referred to as Chatham Village by foreclosure of mortgage in 1935. Petitioner plotted and subdivided the property and expended about $ 160,000 for sewers, water pipes, pavements, and other improvements. It also financed the construction of 181 dwelling houses on the property at a cost of about $ 780,000. The petitioner prepared and circulated several hundred copies of a brochure describing the property. Houses and lots were sold during the years 1935 *99 to 1949 through the sales organization of the corporation which constructed the houses and shared in the proceeds of sales. The employees of the petitioner did not participate to any material extent in the selling activities. This property produced no rental income. Three sales were made during the fiscal year ended November 30, 1946. The petitioner's adjusted basis of the parcels sold was $ 13,896.80, its share of the aggregate proceeds of sale was $ 1,997.80, and it sustained a resulting loss of $ 11,899.
The petitioner acquired 3 1/3 acres of unimproved property in Merion, Pennsylvania, by foreclosure of mortgage in 1933 or 1934. *1350 This property was replotted and subdivided into 22 lots. Improvements were made and $ 11,700 was advanced by the petitioner for the construction of 1 house. A brochure describing the property was prepared and circulated by the petitioner. The property produced no rental income. Lots were sold during the years 1934 to 1946, and in 2 sales made in 1946 the entire unsold portion, including all or parts of 13 lots, was sold for $ 17,222.35, at a loss of $ 8,577.65.
The petitioner acquired approximately 4 acres of unimproved land on Ryan Avenue, in Philadelphia, *100 Pennsylvania, by deed in lieu of foreclosure in 1941. The petitioner's adjusted basis was $ 16,665. In separate sales on June 7 and August 8, 1946, the property was sold for a total amount of $ 11,855. The property was never plotted or subdivided, and produced no rental income. The petitioner's resulting loss was $ 4,810.
A gain of $ 29,890 was realized by the petitioner on May 28, 1946, upon the sale of property in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, which it had acquired by foreclosure of mortgage in 1944 or 1945. It consisted of 51.401 acres of unimproved land, which was never plotted or subdivided, produced no rental income, and was sold in 1 transaction on May 28, 1946. The petitioner's adjusted basis was $ 65,000 and the proceeds of the sale amounted to $ 94,890.
The petitioner received $ 276.37, which was exactly the amount of its adjusted basis, for an interest of 5301.87/218450, approximately 2.43 per cent, in property known as Melrose Country Club, from 2 sales of residual portions of the property in the fiscal year 1946. At the time of the sales the property was rented at $ 450 per month.
At all times during the fiscal year ended November 30, 1946, and for many years prior thereto, *101 the petitioner was engaged in business as a bank or trust company. In the ordinary course of that business, upon the foreclosures of mortgages or in transactions in lieu thereof, the petitioner regularly acquired and thereafter held and sold real estate and interests therein. It did not purchase real estate for resale.
Each of the real estate properties mentioned above and every other real estate property owned in whole or in part by the petitioner and every other interest in real estate which was sold by the petitioner during the fiscal year ended November 30, 1946, and which was included among those upon the sale of which the petitioner sustained in the aggregate a net loss of $ 270,449.30 in that year, was held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of the trade or business of the petitioner.
OPINION.
The first issue for our decision is whether the petitioner must compute its excess profits credit for the year ending November 30, 1944, on a prorated basis whereby the statute in effect for *1351 the calendar year 1943 ("1943 law") should apply in proportion to the number of days of the fiscal year falling in 1943 and the statute in effect for the calendar year 1944 ("1944 *102 law") should apply in proportion to the number of days of the fiscal year falling in 1944.
The dispute between the parties grows out of the amendments made to
SEC. 201. TAXABLE YEARS TO WHICH AMENDMENTS APPLICABLE.
Except as otherwise expressly provided, the amendments made by this title shall be applicable only with respect to taxable years beginning after December 31, 1943.
An exception with respect to the computation of tax for fiscal years beginning in 1943 and ending in 1944, such as is here involved, was expressly made by adding to
According to the respondent's computation the petitioner's excess profits credit for the fiscal year ended November 30, 1944, which was based on invested capital under the provisions of
In our judgment the necessary interpretation of the statutory provisions to which we shall refer results in an exception "expressly provided," under which the 1943 amendment of
*1353 If it is true, as is argued by the petitioner, that Congress has not
Beyond question, the taxable year here involved did not begin after December 31, 1943. Superficially, therefore, the petitioner's contention that the amended statute has no application here would seem to be impregnable. Closer analysis, however, leads us to the contrary conclusion.
The excess profits credit prescribed by
It is therefore impossible to find any
This problem can be solved only by a construction which will find the essential meaning expressed in the particular words *110 used in the statute, in the light of the legislative purpose and intention as demonstrated by the background of the ambiguous provision and the context of the statute as a whole.
There can be no doubt of the general legislative purpose to treat fiscal years such as are here involved as if they were in part governed by one statute and in part governed by another, in proportion to the number of days falling within each of the two calendar years. The absence of any specific statutory provision governing the determination of the credit or the unused credit for a 1944 fiscal year may probably be attributed to oversight rather than design. Nevertheless, it must now be decided whether or not the language of the particular sections which are here controlling requires or permits the conclusion *1354 that
This result can be sustained only if
This is, of course, the position which the respondent urges in this case. It may be further clarified by the following figures:
Credit determined under "1943 law" | $ 1,407,068.21 | ||
31/366 thereof | $ 119,158.28 | ||
Credit determined under "1944 law" | 1,247,556.84 | ||
335/366 thereof | 1,141,889.73 | ||
"The credit" for the fiscal year: | |||
(1) As computed by proration, as above | 1,261,048.01 | ||
(2) As claimed by the petitioner (under "1943 law") | 1,407,068.21 | ||
(3) As determined (in effect) by the respondent: | |||
Excess profits net income | 1,067,200.66 | ||
Unused credit | 193,866.71 | ||
Total credit | $ 1,261,067.37 |
Since 2 different credits for the fiscal year 1944 must be used in the tax computation expressly prescribed by
It is true that nowhere in the statute is there any description of an excess profits credit for this fiscal year which meets the foregoing description of a "composite" credit. It is also true that the amount of such a composite credit has never been used by this taxpayer for any tax purpose nor by the respondent in his determination, and would not appear as such even in the tentative computations which would have been required if the taxpayer's excess profits net income for the fiscal year had been subject to tax. On the other hand it is equally clear that by means of the prescribed computations the excess profits tax liability for such a fiscal year is determined "as if" each of the 2 amounts of taxable income and credit and the various tax rates were *1355 reduced to composite figures, in proportion to the 2 periods of time. The only difference is that instead of reducing a number of factors to proportionate components *113 and employing a number of composites, the statute prescribes the use of the entire factors to arrive at 2 tentative tax results, which are then reduced in the same proportions and combined into a single composite.
In our opinion this is equivalent to an express provision to the effect that the excess profits credit for this fiscal year is the composite amount, and that only this composite can properly be used in the determination of the unused excess profits credit for the fiscal year 1944 which may be carried over to the fiscal year 1945.
Our conclusion is supported by the fact that the avowed purpose of Congress in enacting the excess profits tax provisions of the Revenue Act of 1943 was to produce additional revenues. See H. Rept. No. 871, 78th Cong., 1st Sess.,
It is inconceivable that Congress intended to discriminate between fiscal year and calendar year taxpayers, by allowing fiscal year taxpayers the benefit of a larger [unused] credit under the prior law. If the petitioner's contention were to be adopted, calendar year [1944] taxpayers would receive less [unused] credit under the new law than *114 would fiscal year taxpayers.
Petitioner argues that this conclusion is opposed to the statement in the cited report, that the effect of the 1943 legislation upon excess profits credit carry-overs was given "careful consideration" and would receive further study, but that the conclusion was that "it was not possible to suggest changes in these credits, carry-overs, and carry-backs at this time."
It is true that the effect of our decision will be that the excess profits credit carry-over of this petitioner will be reduced below the amount which it would have enjoyed had there been no enactment of the 1943 act. We do not believe, however, that this result is at all in conflict with the quoted statement of the legislative intention. The result here reached represents merely the logical application of the legislative action to a secondary consequence of the reduction of the excess profits credit. The quoted statement, in our opinion, did not indicate any legislative intention that the reduction in the credit should not correspondingly reduce the unused credit carry-over, but referred only to substantial or structural changes directly modifying the scheme of carrying over unused credits, *115 upon which action had been deferred.
Both parties claim support from the case of
The present question is perhaps more analogous to that decided by
The second issue concerns the character of a net loss sustained by the petitioner during its fiscal year 1946 from the sale of certain parcels of real estate. The nature of this loss depends upon the purpose for which the property was held by the petitioner.
The petitioner contends that the statutory limitations upon the deduction of capital losses are inapplicable because the real property sold was held by it primarily for sale to customers *117 in the ordinary course of its trade or business, and was therefore excluded from the statutory definition of "capital assets." *118 The respondent bases his opposing argument upon our holding in the case of
The position taken here by the petitioner is the same as that adopted by the respondent in
In the light of the decision in the
In the case of
We think it unreasonable to conclude that petitioner forbidden by state law *120 to carry on a real estate business, was actually engaged in that business and selling real estate to customers in the regular course thereof, merely because it had acquired and sold three parcels of real estate over a period of two years, the transaction in each instance being an incident to the collection or recovery of money loaned by it in the transaction of its regular banking business. We think that the three parcels of real estate here involved were capital assets in petitioner's hands within the purview of
By the decision in
We can not agree that any such rule was adopted by that case or should now be recognized. Later decisions compel the conclusion that the issue here presented is one *121 of fact, which can be decided only upon consideration of all the circumstances bearing upon the compliance with the statutory requirements.
The
The decision in
The petitioner originally became involved with the Rolla project in connection with its business of examining and insuring titles to real estate and acting as escrowee between lending institutions and builders. * * *
Upon a full consideration of all the facts and circumstances surrounding petitioner's activity in relation to the Rolla project, we are convinced that the properties came into petitioner's possession as a necessary incident to the conduct of its business and that they were held and completed primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of its business.
In any event, we think it is clear that the petitioner's activity in relation to the Rolla properties after it took title to them amounted to engaging in the real estate business. The facts that petitioner had no license to engage in the real estate business and that it apparently had not done so in the past are not determinative of the question of whether petitioner entered the real estate business when it acquired these properties. It took title to the properties, supervised *1359 the completion of construction, rented some of the houses, and ultimately sold them all. Petitioner did not merely hold the property for sale as an investment when it acquired them. It actively engaged in improving and completing them, in the meantime deriving such revenue from them as it could until it managed to complete and sell them to such purchasers as it could find. We conclude that petitioner was engaged in the real estate business in the fullest sense from the time it acquired the Rolla properties. Cf.
The present case cannot be disposed of *124 simply upon the narrow ground that the taxpayer is a bank or a lending institution selling property acquired by foreclosure or by deed in lieu of foreclosure. On the contrary, consideration must be given to other factors which have been recognized as significant. As stated in
There is no fixed formula or rule of thumb for determining whether property sold by the taxpayer was held by him primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business. Each case must, in the last analysis, rest upon its own facts. There are a number of helpful factors, however, to point the way, among which are the purposes for which the property was acquired, whether for sale or investment; and continuity and frequency of sales as opposed to isolated transactions. * * * [Citing and reviewing many decisions.]
Similar statements were made in the case of
In *125 the ordinary course of its business the petitioner frequently acquired real estate in foreclosure proceedings. The petitioner's sole objective with respect to this real estate, and its duty as a bank under the Pennsylvania statute, was to sell it as soon as possible at a fair price. To accomplish this result, the petitioner subdivided a large number of parcels into several hundreds of lots, laid out streets, put in pavements, sewers, and water pipes and in certain subdivisions financed the construction of a large number of dwelling houses, investing large amounts. It used the services of licensed real estate salesmen and brokers who were employed in its real estate and mortgage division. It circulated hundreds of brochures describing some of the properties which it was offering for sale. It listed such property with a number of brokers through multiple listing facilities and advertised extensively. The sales made by the petitioner in 1946 and prior years were numerous and the amounts realized were substantial, amounting in the fiscal year 1946 to $ 302,882.06. The purchasers were the "customers" of the petitioner. The activities of the petitioner were so extensive as to constitute *126 a business. The real *1360 estate was held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of that business.
In reaching this conclusion we have attached very little significance to the stipulated evidence concerning the extensive activities of the real estate and mortgage division of the petitioner. It clearly appears that the activities of the real estate and mortgage division were primarily concerned with the properties of customers of the bank and estates and trusts of which it was a fiduciary. Only an almost negligible portion of those activities concerned the properties of the bank. The character of the bank's dealings in the 13 properties here involved cannot be characterized by reference to the activities of the bank concerning the properties of its customers. With respect to these specific properties, however, and also as to other properties similarly held during prior years, there is abundant evidence of continuous and extensive activity which in our opinion amounted to the conduct of a trade or business, in which the bank was clearly engaged in selling real estate to its customers.
We do not decide that the petitioner was a "dealer in real estate" in the fiscal year ended *127 November 30, 1946. Although the petitioner urges and the respondent opposes such a conclusion, we do not consider it necessary to the decision of this case.
The issue is whether the real estate sold conformed to the statutory specification of "property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business." Without characterizing the business of the petitioner within any recognized category, we hold only that the real estate in question was held by the petitioner primarily for sale to its customers in the ordinary course of its trade or business as a bank engaged in acquiring real estate mortgages or making mortgage loans and attempting to realize upon the value of the security acquired upon foreclosure of such mortgages. As stated in
It is often stated that the words "to customers" and "ordinary" were inserted in
*1361 While the term "dealer" has not been authoritatively defined in this connection, it probably includes the requirement of buying as well as selling for purposes of profit. See the definition of a "dealer in securities" in Regulations 118, section 39.22 (c)-5, and prior regulations.
In this case the respondent strongly urges that since the petitioner never did purchase real estate to be sold at a profit, and under the banking law was prohibited from doing so, it necessarily was not a dealer and therefore is not entitled to the deductions claimed. In many cases, however, without discussion of this point, the deduction has been allowed where neither the property in question nor any other property had been purchased for resale, as by a dealer. It has been *129 emphasized, as in the case of
There may be a change of intent between the time of acquisition and the time of sale, and if property originally acquired for investment is held in the taxable year primarily for sale to customers in the regular course of trade or business, the gain realized in the taxable year is not subject to capital gain treatment. This conclusion is based on the language of
But compare
In
While the purpose for which the property was acquired is of some weight, the ultimate question is the purpose for which it was held.
Admittedly, Mauldin originally purchased the property for purposes *130 other than for sale in the ordinary course of trade or business. When, however, he subdivided and offered it for sale, he was undoubtedly engaged in the vocation of selling lots from this tract of land at least until 1940. * * *
To the same effect is
See also
The respondent relies upon the statutory prohibition against the purchase and sale of real estate by this petitioner under the banking *1362 laws of Pennsylvania, Purdon's Pennsylvania Statutes Annotated, 1939, title 7,
A. Except as otherwise provided in this act, a bank, a bank and trust company, or a trust company shall not purchase, own, or hold any real property, except as follows:
* * * *
(2) Such as it shall purchase *131 at sales under judgments, decrees, or mortgages held by it, or as it shall otherwise acquire in good faith in satisfaction of debts previously contracted to it, or in order to protect an interest it may otherwise have lawfully acquired in such property.
It is further provided that any such real estate shall not be owned or held "for a period longer than five years after the acquisition of such real property," except upon permission granted pursuant to application. The statute also states:
This section shall not be construed to prevent any bank, bank and trust company, or trust company from making improvements to properties owned, but not occupied by the bank, the bank and trust company, or the trust company, for the purposes of sale or lease.
The language of this statute seems clearly to sustain the contention of the petitioner that it permits the transactions here involved. Since it imposes upon the bank a positive duty to sell such property within a 5-year period, as extended, and expressly contemplates improvements for purposes of sale or lease, it clearly implies that the bank was authorized and obligated to make such sales only after taking all reasonable means of assuring the *132 realization of the reasonable value of the property.
It is stated in
The limitations upon the deduction of capital losses would be avoided in this case if the property sold should be regarded as "real property used in the trade or business of the taxpayer." Such property is excluded from the definition of capital assets in Code
The petitioner has not referred to
It may be noted that Code
In accordance with
The respondent's enumeration of such properties includes 3 from which some rental income was derived, as shown in our Findings *134 of Fact, being the properties there referred to as Tredyffrin Country Club, Melrose Country Club, and King of Prussia Road. In view of the small amount of the rental income and the small fractional interest of the petitioner therein, the respondent asserts that these properties must be regarded as "nonproductive."
From this category of nonproductive property held for investment, the respondent omits not only the North Broad Street and the 1604 Walnut Street properties, from which rental income was derived, as shown by our findings, but also the property referred to as Chatham Village, the property in Merion, and another property referred to as Mayfair which is not mentioned in our findings. According to the stipulation, these 3 properties were not "rental or income producing properties."
The respondent, therefore, seems to recognize that there are 5 properties which, being omitted from his enumeration of "nonproductive" properties "held for investment purposes," are governed by
The financing of loans and foreclosing of mortgages constitute an integral part of the banking business. In general and in the absence of any facts to the contrary (such as nonproductive property held after foreclosure for investment purposes), real property acquired by foreclosure should be considered as used in the trade or business of the lending institutions.
Under this view, and excluding the loss of $ 248,659.46 upon the Black Farm property, upon the remaining 7 properties the petitioner *1364 realized a net capital gain of $ 2,366.85. Our decision, however, does not to any extent rest upon this apparent concession by the respondent.
1. Third item is rental per year.↩
2. No gain or loss.↩
1. Internal Revenue Code of 1939.
(a) Imposition. -- * * * * (6) Taxable years beginning in 1943 and ending in 1944. -- In the case of a taxable year beginning in 1943 and ending in 1944, the tax shall be an amount equal to the sum of -- (A) that portion of a tentative tax, computed as if the law applicable to taxable years beginning on January 1, 1943, were applicable to such taxable year, which the number of days in such taxable year prior to January 1, 1944, bears to the total number of days in such taxable year, plus (B) that portion of a tentative tax, computed as if the law applicable to taxable years beginning on January 1, 1944, were applicable to such taxable year, which the number of days in such taxable year after December 31, 1943, bears to the total number of days in such taxable year. [As amended by Revenue Act of 1943,
2. "The petitioner's unused excess profits credit for the year ended in 1944, as defined in
"As applied to the petitioner, if there had been a tax payable for its fiscal year December 1, 1943 to November 30, 1944, the tax so imposed would have been 31/366ths of a tentative tax computed by the first method plus 335/366ths of a tentative tax computed by the second method. However, the statute does not provide for proration of any element other than the tentative taxes so computed. Since the petitioner had no tax to pay for that year, the proration provision has no application whatsoever. * * *
"Except as otherwise expressly provided, the 1943 amendments do not apply to a taxable year beginning prior to January 1, 1944. There is no express provision which authorizes the use of the 1943 amendment in computing the excess profits credit or the excess profits credit carry-over to the following year. The statute which provides for proration in computing tax imposed for a fiscal year beginning in 1943 and ending in 1944 does not authorize a proration for any other purpose. * * *
"The Revenue Act of 1943 does not contain any provision which purports to change the excess profits credit or the net income for a taxable year beginning in 1943 and ending in 1944. It follows, therefore, that the petitioner's excess profits credit, its excess profits net income and consequently its unused excess profits credit for the year ended in 1944 must be computed without regard to the 1943 amendment.
"In attempting to reduce the petitioner's excess profits credit carry-over by applying an amendment which relates solely to the imposition of the tax, the respondent distorts the plain language of the statute. * * *
"It would be a strange result here if an amendment relating solely to the imposition of the excess profits tax and contained in a section relating solely to such imposition should be found to apply to a wholly different section of the law, relating to the computation of the excess profits credit and the unused excess profits credit, which are specifically defined in unamended sections.
"Moreover, in cases where Congress intended that an amendment apply to the computation of the unused excess profits credit when a taxpayer was on a fiscal year basis, it used plain and specific language to accomplish those purposes. For example,
"It thus appears that when Congress intended that the computation of the unused excess profits credit for any fiscal year should be computed under provisions of the statute other than those in effect at the beginning of the year, it used clear language to accomplish that purpose. Congress did not so provide in the case of the computation of the unused excess profits for a taxable year beginning in 1943 and ending in 1944, and there is nothing to indicate that it so intended. Therefore, there is no support for the respondent's attempt in this case to reduce the petitioner's excess profits credit carry-over by a statute which was not in force at the beginning of the taxable year and which was not intended to apply to such carry-over." [Petitioner's brief.]
3. Internal Revenue Code of 1939.
(a) Definitions. -- As used in this chapter -- (1) Capital assets. -- The term "capital assets" means property held by the taxpayer (whether or not connected with his trade or business), but does not include stock in trade of the taxpayer or other property of a kind which would properly be included in the inventory of the taxpayer if on hand at the close of the taxable year, or property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business, or property, used in the trade or business, of a character which is subject to the allowance for depreciation provided in section 23 (l), or an obligation of the United States or any of its possessions, or of a State or Territory, or any political subdivision thereof, or of the District of Columbia, issued on or after March 1, 1941, on a discount basis and payable without interest at a fixed maturity date not exceeding one year from the date of issue, or real property used in the trade or business of the taxpayer; [As amended by Revenue Act of 1941, sec. 115 (b) and (c); Revenue Act of 1942, sec. 151 (a) and sec. 101.]