DocketNumber: Docket No. 3852-76
Citation Numbers: 67 T.C. 1043, 1977 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130
Judges: Tannenwald,Drennen,Fay,Goffe,Dawson,Wiles,Wilbur,Fay,Irwin
Filed Date: 3/30/1977
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*130 Petitioner, a personal holding company, paid deficiency dividends partly in cash and partly in other property which had a fair market value in excess of its adjusted basis in petitioner's hands.
*1043 OPINION
Respondent determined the following deficiencies representing personal holding company taxes asserted to be due from petitioner:
Year | Deficiency |
1972 | $ 12,504.18 |
1973 | 58,740.42 |
*135 This matter is before the Court on petitioner's motion for judgment on the pleadings. Respondent has admitted all facts alleged in the petition. A hearing on petitioner's motion was conducted by Special Trial Judge Lehman C. Aarons and the Court has had the benefit of his analysis in reaching its decision.
*1044 Petitioner is a corporation organized under the laws of Ohio, with its principal office in Akron, Ohio, at the time of the filing of the petition herein. It timely filed Federal income tax returns for the calendar years in question with the Internal Revenue Service Center at Cincinnati, Ohio.
On November 19, 1974, there was a determination, within the meaning of
Petitioner claimed a deficiency dividend deduction against its personal holding company income under
If a dividend is paid in property (other than money) the amount of the dividends paid deduction with respect to such property shall be the adjusted basis of the property in the hands of the distributing corporation at the time of the distribution. * * *
The sole issue before us is the validity of the foregoing regulation. It is a case of first impression for this Court, although the identical issue has been the subject of conflicting decisions by two Courts of Appeals. *137
*138
Treasury regulations must be sustained unless unreasonable and plainly inconsistent with the revenue statutes and * * * they constitute contemporaneous construction by those charged with administration of these statutes which should not be overruled except for weighty reasons. * * * [
Examining the statutory framework, we find that section 541 imposes a special tax on "undistributed personal holding company income (as defined by section 545)." Because a substantial purpose of this tax is to preclude the sheltering of substantial investment income in a corporate entity without distribution thereof to the individual shareholders (see, generally, Bittker & Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, par. 8.20 (3d ed. 1971)), section 545 defines undistributed personal holding company income as a corporation's taxable income after certain adjustments. Included in such adjustments is a deduction for "dividends paid * * * as defined in section 561." Similarly,
(a) General Rule. -- For purposes of this part, the term "dividend" shall, except as otherwise provided in this section, include only dividends described in
Thus, even after undistributed personal holding company income has been determined, the corporate taxpayer can reduce or eliminate the sting of its tax liability in respect *1046 thereof by distributing a "deficiency dividend" as defined in
Neither section 561 (together with its definitional followup in
*141
We think neither
The addition of this provision to the revenue laws had
*1048 Dividends in Kind. -- If a dividend is paid in property other than money * * * the amount*143 with respect thereto which shall be used in computing the basic surtax credit shall be the adjusted basis of the property in the hands of the corporation at the time of the payment, or the fair market value of the property at the time of payment, whichever is the lower.
Contemporaneously,
Further, prior to 1942, Congress enacted
It is thus apparent that, from 1942 until 1954,
The question, therefore, is whether the fact that these two latter sections did not find an in haec verba place in the 1954 revision sufficiently reveals a legislative intention to overturn the previously existing rule. We think not. Indeed, what little evidence is contained in that history points in the opposite direction. Thus, in discussing
Subsection (a) provides that the term "dividend" for purposes of this part shall include, except as otherwise provided in this section, only those dividends described in
*1049 The Senate Finance Committee made an almost identical statement (S. Rept. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. 325 (1954)):
This section conforms to
Subsection (a) provides that the term "dividend" for purposes of this part shall include, except as otherwise provided in this section, only those dividends described in
Because
Moreover, such change or elimination would have been a substantial departure from the prior treatment of personal holding companies. At least where the adjusted basis of distributed property is less than its fair market value at the time of distribution, personal holding companies would have been treated far more generously than in the past and the aggregate tax bite could have been sharply reduced by making deficiency dividends in kind. Certainly, Congress has not otherwise indicated its intent to extend such generous treatment to personal holding companies.
A further indication of the consistency of the "adjusted basis" rule with the current statutory pattern*147 is the "consent dividend" provision contained in section 565. Under that provision, Congress has indeed prescribed a way in which a *1050 personal holding company may retain its realized earnings and still escape the impact of the penalty tax. But, under the consent dividend procedure, the shareholder pays the full tax at the individual level and ends up with nothing in his pocket other than a receipt for a capital contribution in the amount of the dividend that he did not in fact receive. The disposition sought by the petitioner here, if finally sanctioned by the courts, would enable a personal holding company (such as a family investment company) to retain its realized earnings in a far less painful manner, i.e., by actually distributing its appreciated securities and still having its retained earnings as working capital for further investments -- without paying the penalty tax. Such a result should not prevail unless clearly mandated by the statute.
Thus, we are satisfied that
We are unimpressed by the argument, essentially grounded on policy considerations, that so long as the distributee is taxed on the full value of the distribution, the distributing corporation should be allowed a deduction for the same amount. This argument was available prior to 1954 and yet for more than a decade Congress saw fit to measure the deduction in terms of the distributing corporation's investment rather than the distributee's taxable receipt. Indeed, there*150 is a discernible rationale that this was done to effectuate a countervailing policy of taxing or forcing distribution of
In sum, we are confronted with a situation where the Code is silent in terms of a specific direction in respect of the issue before us and the legislative history is at most ambiguous. Respondent's regulations represent a contemporaneous construction of the 1954 Code; they have been in effect since 1958 *151 and are substantially a continuation of prior law.
Our conclusion does not, however, dictate that petitioner's motion should not be granted. An appeal from our decision herein lies to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals and that court has already decided the issue involved herein and invalidated respondent's regulation.
In accordance with the foregoing, petitioner's motion for judgment on the pleadings will be granted.
Drennen,
*1053 Goffe,
The majority, following
*155 The present personal holding company tax and the accumulated earnings tax are codified in part I, subchapter G of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, entitled Corporations Used to Avoid Income Tax on Shareholders. The dividends-paid deduction, with which we are concerned here, and the dividends-paid deduction used in computing "accumulated taxable income" for the accumulated earnings tax are both determined under section 561 of the Code. The codification under such common heading and use of the same section (561) for the dividends-paid deduction is not accidental. The two penalty taxes were enacted to prevent individuals in high surtax brackets from shielding their personal income from higher individual rates through the use of a corporate device *1054 which enabled taxation of that income at the flat corporate rates. The accumulated earnings tax, enacted in the Revenue Act of 1921, required a finding of a tax-avoidance purpose in the accumulation; thus it was inadequate to attack the "incorporated pocketbooks." Congress responded in 1934 with the personal holding company tax. Clearly, therefore, the purpose of the personal holding company tax was to strengthen the means *156 of taxing certain undistributed corporate earnings at rates above the corporate tax rates.
Essentially this method of tax avoidance does not effect a complete avoidance of tax on the part of the individual stockholder, but merely a postponement or deferment of part of the tax. For, if the holding company should distribute its earnings or surplus in future years, the stockholder would then have to pay a surtax on the dividends that he received. However, a complete or partial avoidance of tax may ensue upon the happening of any of the following events:
1. If the corporation should spread the distribution of its annual income over a series of years, a real saving in tax would accrue to the stockholder from the mere fact that his distributive share of the income would fall in the lower surtax brackets.
2. If the corporation should time the distribution of its income*157 so that it is made during a year when the stockholder has personal losses or other deductions to offset against the dividend received, a real saving in tax would result.
3. If there should be a reduction in tax rates upon individual incomes during any future year, the distribution of the corporate income in such year would result in an actual saving to the stockholder.
4. If the corporation should incur any losses on its investments or otherwise, which deplete the earnings or surplus accumulated during preceding years, there will be an avoidance of tax, for the Government will be deprived of the surtax which the stockholder would have had to pay, had the corporation made a distribution of its annual income in the year when the same was earned. * * *
When the personal holding company tax was enacted in the Revenue Act of 1934, two deductions were allowed from "adjusted net income": (1) An arbitrary allowance of 10 *1055 percent to allow the corporation a reserve for*158 contingencies and (2) a deduction for dividends paid to
In 1936, an undistributed profits surtax on all corporations was enacted. The House version of the bill eliminated the personal holding company tax and in the House version
Case No. 4
Corporation A owns all the stock of Corporation B. Corporation B has a surplus of $ 1,000,000 and included among its assets are distillers' warehouse receipts, which cost it $ 100,000, but which are now worth $ 500,000. It is desired to sell*159 these warehouse receipts without the payment of any tax. This can be done in the following manner:
Corporation B distributes the warehouse receipts to Corporation A by declaring a dividend in kind. This being a dividend from one corporation to another, corporation A pays no tax upon its receipt.
The cost basis for these warehouse receipts in A's hands is now $ 500,000. A sells the warehouse receipts for $ 500,000 (its costs basis) and, therefore, pays no tax on the sale. [Report, Ways and Means Subcommittee, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., H. Rept. Dec. 4, 1933, at 40.]
See Broenen & Preston, "Undistributed PHC Income: The Sixth Circuit in H. Wetter Mfg. Co. Is Historically Sound,"
When the bill which became the Revenue Act of 1936 reached the Senate, the personal holding company tax was restored and
To hold that
The precise question of distribution of property which has depreciated in value was before this Court in
We think the Congressional reports from which we have quoted show that it was the intent of Congress that
In
"But the report continues: 'The stockholders will, of course, be subject to the graduated surtaxes upon such distributions', which demonstrates that the distributions referred to were those on which the stockholders would be taxable."
We went on to hold in that case that, of a distribution of $ 42,375 which the taxpayer made to its stockholders in the taxable year 1934, only $ 26,258.97 could be deducted in computing the taxpayer's "undistributed adjusted net income" under section 351(b) because only that amount was a taxable dividend to the stockholders.
In the instant case, regardless of the cost of the stock which petitioner distributed to its stockholders in 1934 and regardless of the way it entered it on its books, only $ 1,068.33 can be taxed to the stockholders, and we hold that is all that petitioner can deduct as "dividends paid" in computing its "undistributed adjusted net income." Petitioner argues that it could have sold the stock to outsiders for $ 1,068.33 and distributed that*164 amount of cash to its stockholders and in that way could have realized a loss of the difference between its adjusted cost and the selling price and could have deducted this loss on its income tax return and the same tax result would have been attained as petitioner contends for in the present proceeding. Perhaps that is true, but it takes no argument to establish the proposition that tax consequences are frequently very different on one state of facts from what they are on another state of facts. So it is in the instant case.
Congress has prescribed how a personal holding company shall be taxed and what deductions it shall receive in determining its "undistributed adjusted net income" and we must give effect to those provisions even though the taxpayer personal holding company might have avoided the surtax if it had handled its transactions in some other way. [
*1058 In affirming our decision the 10th Circuit specifically agreed with our analysis that the amount of the dividends-paid deduction should coincide with the amount reported by the shareholders as dividends.
The reason for the allowance of the dividend*165 deduction is that the shareholder, provided he receives income in the requisite amount, is subject to graduated surtaxes on the dividends distributed to him, and it would be unfair also to subject dividends to a surtax against the corporation.
In
Finally, the Court of Appeals in
It is clear, therefore, *167 that we interpreted the 1934 Act to mean that the amount of the dividends-paid deduction should equal the amount of the dividend reported by the shareholders and that the limitation on the dividends-paid deduction to the fair market value or basis, whichever is lower, was never intended to apply to the personal holding company tax. If any conclusion can be reached as to why Congress deleted the limitation when it enacted the 1954 Code, it is probably because it never should have been applied to the personal holding company tax. Accordingly, I agree with the result reached by the Sixth Circuit in
Wilbur,
The majority discusses no exigencies requiring that we include gratuitous essays in our opinions volunteering our views on the validity or invalidity of the regulations. Whatever value may accrue from this practice is far outweighed by the disadvantages of locking ourselves into a position on an important issue not really addressed by the adversary process in the proceedings before this Court.
1. Unless otherwise stated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the taxable years in issue.↩
2. The issue involved herein is also pending in the Fifth Circuit. See
3. The former section speaks of a deduction for "the sum" of various dividends; the latter speaks of a deduction for "the amount of deficiency dividends."↩
4. The pertinent portions of
(a) General Rule. -- For the purposes of this subtitle, the term "dividend" means any distribution of property made by a corporation to its shareholders -- (1) out of its earnings and profits accumulated after February 28, 1913, or (2) out of its earnings and profits of the taxable year (computed as of the close of the taxable year without diminution by reason of any distributions made during the taxable year), without regard to the amount of the earnings and profits at the time the distribution was made.
(b) Special Rules. -- * * * (2) Distributions by personal holding companies. -- (A) In the case of a corporation which -- (i) under the law applicable to the taxable year in which the distribution is made, is a personal holding company (as defined in (ii) for the taxable year in respect of which the distribution is made under the term "dividend" also means any distribution of property (whether or not a dividend as defined in subsection (a)) made by the corporation to its shareholders, to the extent of its undistributed personal holding company income (determined under section 545 without regard to distributions under this paragraph) for such year.↩
5. See n. 2
6.
(a) General Rule. -- Except as otherwise provided in this section, on the distribution of property by a corporation with respect to its stock, the earnings and profits of the corporation (to the extent thereof) shall be decreased by the sum of -- (1) the amount of money, (2) the principal amount of the obligations of such corporation, and (3) the adjusted basis of the other property, so distributed.↩
7.
8. Where fair market value exceeds adjusted basis, the regulations adopt the old rule. Where fair market value is less than adjusted basis, respondent would allow a larger deduction than that permitted under prior law.↩
4. Report of the Ways and Means Committee of the House, H. Rep. No. 704, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 11, 12 (1939-1 Cum. Bull., Part 2, 554, 563); Report of the Senate Committee on Finance, S. Rep. No. 558, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 13-15 (1939-1 Cum. Bull., Part 2, 586, 596).↩
United States v. Cartwright , 93 S. Ct. 1713 ( 1973 )
Jack E. Golsen and Sylvia H. Golsen v. Commissioner of ... , 445 F.2d 985 ( 1971 )
Of Course, Inc., (Formerly: The Isaac Hamburger & Sons ... , 499 F.2d 754 ( 1974 )
Arthur S. Fulman v. United States , 545 F.2d 268 ( 1976 )
Sanford Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Rev. , 106 F.2d 882 ( 1939 )
Ivan Allen Co. v. United States , 95 S. Ct. 2501 ( 1975 )
The H. Wetter Manufacturing Company v. United States , 458 F.2d 1033 ( 1972 )
Commissioner v. South Texas Lumber Co. , 68 S. Ct. 695 ( 1948 )