FINDINGS OF FACT
All of the facts of this case have been stipulated and are so found. Petitioners are husband and wife and resided at Huntsville, Alabama at the time their petition in this case was filed.
During the years at issue petitioner John H. Lary ("Lary") owned and operated a sole proprietorship, Precious Objects, whose business was to trade such items as gold and silver coins, diamonds, jewelry and oriental rugs. With one exception, the inventory of Precious Objects was purchased with checks drawn on various commercial bank accounts maintained by Precious Objects or Lary. Lary recorded the cost of each of these items of inventory at the dollar amount of the check drawn for the purchase. The exception was the purchase of a strand of pearls on January 22, 1979 with silver dollars having a face value of $250.00; Lary included the cost of the pearls in inventory at the face amount of the silver coins exchanged for them.
Lary sold the items of inventory of Precious Objects in discrete transactions. He was paid in three different mediums of exchange: (1) Two sales were paid by checks drawn on commercial banks. Lary recorded as gross receipts from these sales the dollar amount of the checks received. (2) Two other sales were paid in foreign and miscellaneous domestic coins. Lary recorded as gross receipts from these sales a designated value for the coins received which is greatly below the fair market value of such coins. (3) All remaining sales were paid with Treasury gold and silver coins -- double eagle twenty-dollar gold coins, silver dollars, and fractional dollar coins. Lary recorded as gross receipts from these sales the face value of the gold and silver coins received.
The fair market value of the Treasury gold and silver coins received by Lary for the sale of inventory of Precious Objects, attributable to the gold or silver content of the coins plus any numismatic value, was at least equal to the sum of the checks drawn by Lary to purchase the items sold, plus Lary's selling expenses. Similarly, the fair market value of the foreign and miscellaneous coins received by Lary from two sales by Precious Objects is equal to the sum of the checks drawn by Lary to purchase the items sold, plus Lary's selling expenses.
Petitioners reported a loss from the operation of Precious Objects of $37,878.00 on their Federal income tax return for 1978 and a loss of $16,263.00 on their return for 1979. These reported losses represent petitioners' computation of the excess of cost of goods sold over gross receipts, plus deductions for business expenses of the sole proprietorship.
OPINION
Petitioners argue that Treasury gold and silver coins should, for Federal income tax purposes, be valued at their face value, while foreign coins, in general, are to be valued according to their precious metal content. Petitioners contend that, therefore, they incurred losses on the sales to the extent the cash paid for the items exceeds the face value of the Treasury gold and silver coins received from the sales.
Respondent argues that the Treasury gold and silver coins and foreign and miscellaneous coins received by petitioners have a fair market value far in excess of their face value. Respondent contends that for purposes of determining the amount realized from the sale pursuant to section 1001, Section 1001(b) states that the amount realized from the sale of property "shall be the sum of any money received plus the fair market value of the property (other than money) received." The issue we must decide in this case is whether the coins received by petitioners from sales by Precious Objects are classified as "money" or "property (other than money)" within the meaning of section 1001(b). If the coins are money, then their face value determines petitioners' gross receipts from sales by Precious Objects. If the coins are property, however, their fair market value determines gross receipts.
Coins which are not currently circulating legal tender are property to be valued at their fair market value for purposes of section 1001(b). , affg. . This result is unaffected by the fact that such coins may still be used as legal tender at their face value. When the fair market value of legal tender exceeds its face value, such legal tender is property other than money. (defining "property" for purposes of section 301(b)(1)(A)); see also .
Petitioners concede that the value of the coins received is far in excess of their face value, and that the fair market value of such coins is at least as great as the cost of the items sold by Precious Objects plus Lary's selling expenses. Lary actually benefited to the extent of their fair market value. Therefore, we conclude that the Treasury gold and silver coins and the foreign and miscellaneous coins received by petitioners from sales by Precious Objects are "property" within the meaning of section 1001(b), and are to be valued at their fair market value for purposes of section 1001. Petitioners thus did not suffer any loss from the operation of Precious Objects for either 1978 or 1979.
Petitioners argue that pursuant to the Constitution of the United States, Congress is empowered to coin money and to regulate the value of the money coined, independently of whatever market value such money might possess. Further, by statute gold and silver coins are legal tender at their face value, and therefore respondent is obligated to accept as the value of such coins the amounts designated as their tender value by Congress. We disagree. These arguments were considered and rejected in California Federal , and , which we follow. Where coins have a fair market value in excess of their face value, their potential use as legal tender is irrelevant. It would be anomalous to hold that petitioners, though obtaining the benefit of the fair market value of such coins, could reap the benefit of a deduction for a loss which in substance does not exist.
To reflect concessions by the parties,
Decision will be entered pursuant to Rule 155.