DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 3014-69, 3015-69
Judges: Tietjens,Dawson
Filed Date: 5/15/1972
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*123
No gain was recognized upon the exchange of a
*311 OPINION
In these consolidated cases the Commissioner determined income tax deficiencies as follow:
Docket No. | Year | Deficiency |
3014-69 | 1963 | $ 3,095.29 |
1964 | 8,356.77 | |
3015-69 | 1963 | 21,318.53 |
1964 | 7,330.18 |
The facts were stipulated and are so found, but we refer below only to those facts pertinent to the remaining contested issue, namely, whether certain transfers of partial partnership interests for interests in another partnership are exchanges on which no gain shall be recognized under
In 1963, the father and the son were equal partners in the California partnership of Rollin E. Meyer & Son, and on December 31, 1963, each exchanged portions of their partnership interests pursuant to separate written agreements bearing that date for part interests in the Hillgate Manor Apartments, a California limited partnership, as indicated below:
Interest surrendered | Interest received | Long-term | |||
capital | |||||
Percent | Percent | Fair market | gain | ||
share | Basis | share | value | realized | |
Meyer, Jr | 33.232 | $ 66,518.00 | 20 | $ 160,299.20 | $ 93,781.20 |
Meyer, Sr | 24.924 | 64,808.88 | 15 | 120,224.77 | 55,415.89 |
*126 Meyer, Sr.'s new 15-percent interest in the Hillgate partnership was that of a limited partner. No "boot" was received by Meyer, Sr., or by his son in either of the transactions.
Meyer, Jr., exchanged interests with the Meyer and Young Building Corp., a California corporation and a 20-percent general partner of Hillgate. Meyer, Sr., traded for the entire interests of three individuals, Aldean Meyer Haeder, Laura Meyer Van Camp, and William H. Young, each 5-percent limited partners of Hillgate. Both of the written agreements recited that the adjusted book values (after depreciation but before deductions for encumbrances) of the Hillgate and Rollin E. Meyer & Son partnerships were $ 800,000 and $ 365,000, respectively.
The Rollin E. Meyer & Son partnership was formed in 1948 and conducted business in California for more than 6 months after the December 31, 1963, exchange. Meyer, Sr., and Meyer, Jr., were the only partners from the inception of the partnership until the date of the exchange. The Hillgate partnership was formed in March 1961 and is still in existence. During 1963 and afterwards both partnerships had as their principal activities the ownership and operation of rental*127 apartments in and about San Francisco.
Petitioners contend that the two exchanges were tax-free under
The Commissioner contends that both of the exchanges are excepted from nonrecognition because the partnership interests which were exchanged are choses in action, a type of property excluded by the parenthetical clause in
Through his first contention the Commissioner has set for himself the considerable task of demonstrating the congruence of the legal meanings of the terms "partnership interest" and "choses in action" under California law.
Shortly after the original version of section 202(c)(1) of the Revenue Act of 1921 (the predecessor of
We are not dealing with trading in investment securities or similar intangibles. The transactions of December 31, 1963, were exchanges of proprietary (partnership) interests in one small business solely for proprietary (partnership) interests in a second small business, before and after which both businesses were going concerns engaged in the same principal activity. *130 *314 The Commissioner does not contend that the interest Meyer, Jr., surrendered and the interest he received were not property of a like kind. We are confident that Meyer, Jr.'s exchange is within the purview of
But the exchange by Meyer, Sr., of his general partnership interest for a limited partnership interest presents a closer question.
The State of California has adopted the Uniform Partnership Act and the Uniform Limited Partnership Act, and both laws were in effect at all times pertinent to this case. The differences in the characteristics of the interest of a general partner and that of a limited partner are considerable. The familiar notions that a limited partner, unlike a general partner, is not personally liable for partnership debts and that he is entitled to priority in liquidation are the law in California.
The variousness of the natures of the general and the limited partnership interest is substantial enough to warrant invocation of the principle calling for strict construction of the exceptions to the rule that where gain is involved it will be recognized and taxed when it is realized.
Our decision herein is confined to a situation where both partnerships owned the same type of underlying assets -- in this case, rental real estate. We also wish to emphasize that the parties have simply stipulated that the partnership interests involved were "general" or "limited." *132 We express no opinion as to what our views would be if other types of underlying assets were involved, if there were variations in the businesses of the partnerships, or if we had before us the details of the particular undertakings by the partners and were in a position to determine whether such stipulated descriptive terms were accurate.
*315 Dawson,
In this case the majority opinion specifically points out that what is of crucial importance to its finding that an exchange of one general partnership interest for another such interest qualifies as a "like kind" exchange under 1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. (a) Nonrecognition of Gain or Loss From Exchanges Solely in Kind. -- No gain or loss shall be recognized if property held for productive use in trade or business or for investment (not including stock in trade or other property held primarily for sale, nor stocks, bonds, notes, 2. See also Holmes, Federal Taxes 528 (1923 ed.), describing use of the 1921 Act provision to avoid tax on the reinvestment of funds in stocks and bonds. 3 Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation, sec. 20.21, p. 75, fn. 92.↩ 3. See also 1. It should be noted that although the regulations provide that an exchange of different classes of property does not qualify for nonrecognition-of-gain treatment, Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary (1963 ed.) defines class as "a division or rating based on grade or quality."↩ 2. Had Meyer, Sr., formed a corporation to which he transferred his general partnership interest and then had that corporation exchange part of its general partnership interest for a general partnership interest in Hillgate, under the majority's holding in this case, such an exchange should qualify for nonrecognition-of-gain treatment. As a result of the above transaction, Meyer, Sr., could end up with limited liability as a shareholder of the new corporation, could effect a tax-free exchange of the partnership interests, and might be able to retain the tax benefits of partnership status by having the new corporation make an election under subch. S to be taxed as an electing small business corporation, so long as no more than 20 percent of that corporation's gross receipts come from rental or other types of passive investment income. Sec. 1372(e)(5).↩ 3. Compare Footnotes