DocketNumber: Docket No. 7698-77, 7722-77.
Filed Date: 8/9/1979
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
Before liquidating Brookridge adopted a plan of complete liquidation under
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
STERRETT,
FINDINGS OF FACT
The cases before us were consolidated for purposes of trial, briefing, and opinion by joint motion of the parties granted by the Court on October 2, 1978. The facts were fully stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioners, John L. and Edna A. Bear, husband and wife, resided in Shawnee Mission, Kansas at the time their petitions herein were filed. At all times relevant hereto Brookridge, a Kansas corporation, also had an address in Shawnee Mission, Kansas. During the taxable periods in issue each petitioner owned personally 39.5 percent of the stock of Brookridge.
Brookridge filed a United States corporate income tax return, on an accrual basis of accounting, for its short taxable period ended October 31, 1973 with the Austin Service Center, Austin, Texas. On January 14, 1974 Brookridge filed an application for tentative refund stemming from the carryback of a net operating loss from its October 31, 1973 return to its 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*225 1970 taxable year return. This application was accepted on May 25, 1974.
Sometime prior to its liquidation Brookridge purchased and subdivided for resale a tract of land in Overland Park, Kansas. Brookridge subdivided this parcel into 120 lots. The development was called Brookridge Estates. On October 13, 1972 Brookridge adopted a plan of complete liquidation and dissolution under
On October 16, 1972 Brookridge entered into a contract with Pacesetter Homes Company (Pacesetter), an unrelated third party, with respect to these 38 lots. The relevant portions of this contract are set forth below:
The Seller [Brookridge] hereby agrees to sell and the Buyer [Pacesetter] hereby agrees to purchase, upon the terms and conditions provided for herein, certain lots in the Brookridge Estates Subdivision, * * * for the sum of Three Hundred Seventy Thousand Nine Hundred Twenty-five Dollars ($370,925.00), which the Buyer agrees to pay as follows: Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) at the signing of this contract, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged by the Seller as part of the consideration 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*226 of the sale and shall apply to the purchase of the first ten (10) lots, along with a non-interest bearing note in the amount of Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000.00), which shall apply to the purchase of the last three (3) lots, which shall be no later than October 15, 1974.
The purchase of the first ten (10) lots shall be completed on or before ninety (90) days from the date of this contract. Five (5) additional lots shall be paid for no later than nine (9) months from the date of the signing of this contract, and five (5) additional lots shall be paid for at intervals not to exceed ninety (90) days thereafter. Delivery of the deed of any of the lots prior to the above described schedule, shall require payment in full for said lot at the time of delivery of the deed. Buyer shall select the lost it wishes to purchase as it progresses with the project. Prior to the closing of this entire transaction, if any extension of time for closing is requested by the Buyer and granted by the Seller, Buyer agrees to pay the Seller 7% interest on any money that might be due and payable and the tax pro-ration for the lots delivered after said extension of time shall be based on the original scheduled 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*227 date of closing for said lots.
The Seller shall pay all installments of special assessments and general taxes for the year 1973 and all prior years. Special assessment installments and general taxes for the current calendar year during which any lot is deeded shall be prorated between the Buyer and the Seller as of the date of the delivery of the deed and shall be computed on the amount of the annual installment of special assessments and general taxes for the previous year. * * *
The Seller shall furnish abstracts for each lot sold. In the event the Buyer wishes to have the abstract delivered prior to the delivery of the deed for said lot, it shall notify the Seller fifteen (15) days prior to the closing date of said lot. * * * The buyer shall have ten (10) days after such delivery of the abstract to examine it. If there are objections to the title, the buyer shall specify the objections in writing to the Seller. The Seller shall have any defects in the title corrected and shown on the abstract within thirty (30) days from the date of delivery of such objections.
In lieu of correcting such objections, the Seller may furnish the Buyer with an Owner's Indemnity Title Insurance 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*228 Policy in the amount of the purchase price from the St. Paul Title Company of Kansas, Inc., who is authorized to insure titles in this state, insuring a merchantable fee simple title in the buyer as of the date of recording the deed. Seller shall have thirty (30) days from the date the Buyer has specified the objections in writing, to deliver said policy.
* * *
In the event this contract is not lived up to, then at the option of the Seller, any money paid in cash and on deposit with the Seller shall be forfeited and the Twenty Thousand Dollar ($20,000.00) note shall immediately become due and payable.
Between October 16, 1972 and October 1, 1973 legal title to 22 of the remaining 38 lots in Brookridge Estates was transferred under the terms of this contract. 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*229 from Brookridge, their fair market values (i.e. contract price), and dates deeded to Pacesetter or Pacesetter's assignee are set out below:
Block | Fair Market | ||
No. | Lot No. | Value | Date Deeded |
1 | 22 | $10,000 | 9-06-74 |
1 | 23 | 9,500 | 9-06-74 |
1 | 24 | 10,000 | 4-12-74 |
1 | 25 | 10,000 | 2-04-74 |
1 | 29 | 10,000 | 4-12-74 |
1 | 30 | 9,000 | 9-06-74 |
2 | 14 | 9,000 | 2-27-74 |
3 | 15 | 7,400 | 9-06-74 |
5 | 17 | 9,000 | 9-06-74 |
6 | 1 | 8,200 | 1-15-74 |
6 | 12 | 8,600 | 12-13-73 |
8 | 1 | 10,000 | 4-74 (date unavailable) |
8 | 23 | 10,300 | 7-24-74 |
9 | 1 | 14,000 | 9-06-74 |
10 | 14 | 10,375 | 2-04-74 |
11 | 16 | 8,500 | 1-15-74 |
Upon conveyance of legal title to the last of the 16 lots held by Bear & Bear Associates, i.e. sometime on or about September 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*230 6, 1974, the $20,000 note referred to in the real estate contract was returned to Pacesetter.
OPINION
The only issue for our decision is whether or not the above quoted contract worked a sale or exchange of substantially all of Brookridge's inventory property to one person in one transaction within 12 months of the date of adoption of Brookridge's
Respondent argues that petitioners must fail herein because their transferor, Brookridge, did not convey its inventory property to Pacesetter in a bulk sale constituting "one transaction." He argues, rather, that the real estate contract called for the seriatim purchase by Pacesetter of Brookridge's lots and that, therefore, the transaction was not a "closed" one for tax purposes within the required 12 months after October 13, 1972. Petitioners argue that, while the language of the real estate contract is "ambiguous and inartistic", its form should not be allowed to prevail over its substance. The substance of the transaction, argue petitioners, is that the real estate contract constituted a bulk sale by Brookridge of substantially all its inventory assets to Pacesetter in a closed transaction within the 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*233 meaning of
The question of when a sale or exchange is complete is one of fact to be resolved from a consideration of all the surrounding facts and circumstances of the sale.
We cannot accept petitioners' thesis that the October 16, 1972 contract was a "contract for deed", causing equitable title to pass to the vendee and thereby satisfying the
The contract is clear in providing that legal title to the various lots would be held by Brookridge or its assignees until each lot was "purchased". Delivery of any lot's deed, and hence its legal title, was not required until payment in full therefor had been made. Thus Brookridge at 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*235 no time parted with anything for which it had not been paid, and was not required by the contract to do so. For this reason we conclude that there was no security element in the contract.
Certainly the most important indicium of ownership, passage of title, occurred only seriatim over the course of two years after the real estate contract was executed. That the transfer of title in this case was not simply a substanceless charade is indicated by the important conditions precedent to the transfer. For example, prior to purchasing a lot the buyer could require that an abstract of title therefor be provided by the seller. If title was considered not merchantable, the buyer could require one of two alternative cures of the defect. Further, the buyer had to select the particular lot he wished.
The second indicium of when a completed sale or exchange had occurred, i.e. the shift in the benefits and burdens of ownership, also appears to have occurred only as each lot was "purchased". Special assessment installments and general taxes were, for example, prorated between the buyer and seller as of the date any deed was, or was required to be, delivered. Further, interest on the purchase 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222">*236 price did not accrue until the original due date for delivery of title to any particular lot had passed.
Thus we conclude that in substance, as well as form, the real estate contract called for the seriatim sale and transfer of the various lots covered thereby over the course of approximately two years. As the real estate contract contemplated a series of sales, not one sale in one transaction, Brookridge's liquidation failed to qualify under
The case before us is similar to our case in
The cases relied on by petitioner are inapposite.Petitioner cites, for example,
In contrast to the real estate contract before us, the case of
The case of
Finally while
We can sympathize with the petitioners for the transaction at issue could have been structured more artfully. Nonetheless we are without authority to decide the case on what might have been.
*. By Order of the Chief Judge dated June 20, 1979, these cases were reassigned from Judge Bruce M. Forrester to Judge Samuel B. Sterrett↩ for disposition.
1. Petitioners have conceded that, in the event we determine deficiencies in Brookridge's income taxes for its taxable year ended December 31, 1970 and for its short taxable period ended October 31, 1973, they are jointly and severally liable for the payment of such deficiencies plus interest, as transferees of Brookridge within the meaning of sec. 6901. They have also conceded that Brookridge was a member of a controlled group of corporations and that, therefore, its tax for its short taxable year period ended October 31, 1973 must be computed under sec. 1562.
2. The parties stipulated that "legal titles to 22 of the lots in Brookridge Estates were transferred [between October 16, 1972 and October 1, 1973], as detailed in Exhibit A of the statutory notice * * *". Our inspection of Exhibit A shows that although one lot was "billed" to Pacesetter on October 1, 1973, legal title thereto was not transferred, and payment therefore was not made, until October 25, 1973. Thus while we shall, for convenience, use the numbers as stipulated, we note that titles to only 21 lots were transferred from Brookridge to Pacesetter prior to Brookridge's liquidating distribution on October 1, 1973.↩
3. SEC 337. GAIN OR LOSS ON SALES OR EXCHANGES IN CONNECTION WITH CERTAIN LIQUIDATIONS.
(a) General Rule.--If--
(1) a corporation adopts a plan of complete liquidation on or after June 22, 1954, and
(2) within the 12-month period beginning on the date of the adoption of such plan, all of the assets of the corporation are distributed in complete liquidation, less assets retained to meet claims,
then no gain or loss shall be recognized to such corporation from the sale or exchange by it of property within such 12-month period.
(b) Property Defined.--
(1) In General.--For purposes of subsection (a), the term "property" does not include--
(A) stock in trade of the corporation, or other property of a kind which would propertly be included in the inventory of the corporation if on hand at the close of the taxable year, and property held by the corporation primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of its trade or business,
* * *
(2) Nonrecognition with Respect to Inventory in Certain Cases.--Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of this subsection, if substantially all of the property described in subparagraph (A) of such paragraph (1) which is attributable to a trade or business of the corporation is, in accordance with this section, sold or exchanged to one person in one transaction, then for purposes of subsection (a) the term "property" includes--
(A) such property so sold or exchanged * * *.↩
4. Sec. 1.337-2. Sales or exchanges within the scope of
(a) * * * The date on which a sale occurs depends primarily upon the intent of the parties to be gathered from the terms of the contract and the surrounding circumstances. * * *. Moreover, an executory contract to sell is to be distinguished from a contract of sale. Ordinarily, a sale has not occurred when a contract to sell has been entered into but title and possession of the property have not been transferred and the obligation of the seller to sell or the buyer to buy is conditional.
(b) * * *
5. Our holding in
6. Petitioners argue that possession by Pacesetter was shown by way of a claim in their petition that Pacesetter occupied 2 of the 38 lots after the sales contract was executed. From the fact that, in his answer, respondent claimed a lack of sufficient information or knowledge to admit or deny this allegation, petitioners would conclude that their claim in this regard is established as a fact for purposes of this case. Clearly, we can draw no such inference from the pleadings in this case. Rather it was incumbent upon petitioners to carry their burden of proving this alleged fact.
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