1. Transfers involved in the "lending" of stock and "return" of
the stock "borrowed," on the New York Stock Exchange, are taxable
transfers within the meaning of provisions of the Revenue Acts of
1917, and 1918, imposing a stamp tax of two cents per share upon
"all sales or agreements to sell, or memoranda of sales or
deliveries of, or transfers of legal title to shares or
certificates of stock." P.
269 U. S. 456.
2. Under the rules and practice of the New York Stock Exchange,
a broker requiring certificates of stock to deliver in consummation
of a short sale may "borrow" them for that purpose from another
broker as follows: the "borrower" deposits with the
Page 269 U. S. 444
"lender" their full market price; and, until the loan is
returned, this deposit is maintained, by daily payments back and
forth between the borrower and the lender at the level of the
market value of the borrowed stock; the lender usually pays
interest on the deposit, but whether interest is paid or the
borrower pays a premium for the "loan" of the shares may be matters
of agreement between them; the borrower contracts to give the
lender, while the loan continues, all the benefits (such as
dividends), and the lender contracts to bear all the burdens (such
as assessments), incident to the ownership of the shares, as though
the lender had retained ownership of them; concurrently with the
receipt of the deposit, the lender delivers to the borrower or for
his account, the certificates of the stock lent. The stock borrowed
thus becomes available to the borrower for delivery upon his short
sale. Upon demand of either broker, their mutual obligations may be
satisfied by a "return" to the lender of the stock borrowed --
i.e. of the same kind and amount of shares, which the
borrower purchases, borrows, or otherwise procures for the purpose
-- and by repayment of the deposit to the borrower with interest,
as agreed.
Held:
(1) That, upon the physical delivery of the certificates by the
lender, with full recognition of the right and authority of the
borrower to appropriate them to his short sale contract and their
receipt by the purchaser, all the incidents of ownership of the
stock borrowed pass to the latter. P.
269 U. S.
456.
(2) The borrower in that event is neither a pledgee, trustee,
nor bailee for the lender, nor is the transaction within the
meaning of a proviso in the above cited statutes exempting from the
tax deposits of stock certificates as security for money loaned.
Id.
(3) The "return" of the borrowed stock transfers to the lender
all the incidents of ownership in the shares represented by the
certificates delivered to him.
Id.
(4) Consequently both the "loan" and the "return" transactions
are within the terms of the above taxing statutes as "transfers of
legal title to shares of stock."
Id.
(5) And deliveries of indorsed certificates of stock incidental
to these transfers, are "deliveries of . . . shares or certificates
of stock" within the statutory provision.
Id.
3. The reenactment of a taxing provision, after it has been
construed by the Attorney General and the construction has been
adopted by the Treasury Department and called to the attention of
Congress, indicates a purpose to continue the law in force as so
construed. P.
269 U. S.
457.
Page 269 U. S. 445
4. When Congress, in reenacting a provision, rejects a proposed
alteration, a subsequent amendment incorporating it evinces a
purpose to effect a change in the law. P.
269 U. S.
458.
60 Ct.Cls. 49 affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims for the United
States in a suit to recover, as an illegally exacted tax, the cost
of revenue stamps affixed to "tickets" constituting documentary
evidence of "loans" of shares of stock and return of shares
"borrowed" in transactions between brokers on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Page 269 U. S. 449
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellants are copartners engaged in business as
stockbrokers, with membership in the New York Stock Exchange. They
brought suit in the Court of Claims to recover, as an illegally
exacted tax, the cost of internal revenue stamps affixed by them in
the period from 1917 to 1920 to "tickets" which were documentary
evidence of transactions commonly known in the stockbrokerage
business as the "loan" of shares of stock and the return by the
borrower to the lender of shares of stock "borrowed." The case was
tried upon agreed facts embodied in the findings of the court
below, and, from the judgment for the defendant in that court, the
case was brought here on appeal. Judicial Code, § 242, before
amendment of 1925.
Page 269 U. S. 450
The applicable provisions of the statutes are to be found in War
Revenue Act of 1917, Title VIII, Schedule A, Par. 4, 40 Stat. 300,
322, which is printed in the margin, [
Footnote 1] and in the similar provision of the Revenue
Act of 1918, Title XI, Schedule A, Par. 4, 40 Stat. 1057, 1135,
which may, for the purposes of this case, be taken to be a
reenactment of the 1917 provision. Both Acts imposed a stamp tax of
2 cents per share upon "all sales or agreements to sell, or
memoranda of sales or deliveries of, or transfers of legal title to
shares or certificates of stock." The question presented is whether
the transfers of shares of corporate stock involved in the "loan"
and "return" transactions in accordance with the rules and practice
of the stock exchange, are taxable transfers within the meaning of
the statute.
The loan of stock is usually, though not necessarily, incidental
to a "short sale." As the phrase indicates, a short sale is a
contract for the sale of shares which the
Page 269 U. S. 451
seller does not own or the certificates for which are not within
his control so as to be available for delivery at the time when,
under the rules of the exchange, delivery must be made. Under the
rules of the New York Stock Exchange, applicable so far as the
facts of this case are concerned, a broker who sells stock is
required to make delivery of the certificates on the next business
day. If he does not have them available, he must procure them for
the purpose of making delivery. This he may do by purchasing or
borrowing the required shares, delivery of the certificates to be
made to the broker to whom he has already contracted to sell.
If he borrows them, he deposits with the lending broker their
full market price, and until the loan is returned, this deposit is
maintained, by means of daily payments back and forth between the
borrower and the lender at the varying level of the market value of
the shares loaned.
Page 269 U. S. 452
The lender, who thus receives in money the full market value of
the shares -- much more than he would ordinarily realize by
pledging them -- usually pays interest on the money so received at
the current rate for demand loans. But the rate of interest is a
matter of negotiation and agreement, and the deposit may, on
occasion, carry no interest, or the borrower of the stock may pay a
premium when the stock is greatly in demand.
During the continuance of the loan, the borrowing broker is
found by the loan contract to give the lender all the benefits, and
the lender is bound to assume all the burdens, incident to
ownership of the stock which is the subject of the transaction, as
though the lender had retained the stock. The borrower must
accordingly credit the lender with the amount of any dividends paid
upon the stock while the loan continues, and the lender must assume
or pay to the borrower the amount of any assessments upon the
stock. The lender of the stock, concurrently with the receipt of
the deposit, delivers to the borrower the certificates of the stock
lent, and the transaction is evidenced by a "loan ticket," to which
the broker lending the stock affixes the revenue stamps here in
question. The stock thus borrowed then becomes available for
delivery on the short sale.
The original short sale is thus completed, and there remains
only the obligation of the borrowing broker, terminable on demand,
either by the borrower of the lender, to return the stock borrowed
on repayment to him of his cash deposit, and the obligation of the
lender to repay the deposit, with interest as agreed. The stock for
this purpose, if not provided by the customer, must be obtained by
borrowing stock of like kind and amount from other brokers, or by
purchasing the stock in the open market and charging the customer
for whose account the sale was originally made with the purchase
price. In that case, the short sale transaction and the
borrowing
Page 269 U. S. 453
transaction as well are brought to their conclusion by the
actual purchase of stock of which the customer was short at the
time when the sale was made and the delivery of the stock thus
purchased to the lender. [
Footnote
2] The return transaction in every case is evidenced by a
"borrowed stock return ticket," to which the borrowing broker
affixes the revenue stamps. The claim of the appellants comprises
the cost of stamps purchased by them and affixed to loan tickets or
to borrowed stock return tickets pursuant to Treasury
regulations.
It will be observed that the completed short sale transaction
usually involves four separate steps, in each of which there is
either a sale or a complete transfer of all the legal elements of
ownership. These are (1) the sale of the stock by the person
effecting the short sale, followed by the transfer and delivery of
the certificates for the borrowed stock to the purchaser's broker;
(2) the transfer of the shares from the lender to the borrower, who
uses them for delivery on the customer's short sale; (3) the
purchase by the borrowing broker of the stock required to repay the
loan, and (4) the transfer and delivery by the borrower to the
lender of the certificates for the purchased shares to replace the
shares borrowed. Each transfer may be accompanied by a physical
delivery of certificates of the stock transferred, but the
intermediate deliveries in (2) and (3) are usually eliminated by
use of the stock exchange Clearing House.
It is conceded that the first and third transactions are taxable
as "sales" or "agreements to sell" within the
Page 269 U. S. 454
meaning of the statute, but it is contended that the second and
fourth are not subject to the tax, because they involve neither a
transfer of the legal title to the stock loaned and returned nor
"deliveries" of the shares or certificates representing them within
the meaning of the Acts of 1917 and 1918, and that, taking into
account the history and purposes of the two statutes, it was not
intended to include these transactions among the taxable transfers
described.
On the argument, it was also earnestly urged that the lender of
stock is in a position analogous to that of a pledgor of the stock
which he lends; that, in consequence, there is no transfer of title
to the stock within the meaning of the taxing provisions of the two
Acts, and that, in any event, the lender is in the position of a
borrower of money, and the transaction falls within the proviso of
the Acts exempting from the tax deposits of stock certificates as
collateral security for money loaned.
These arguments ignore the essential legal characteristics of
the loan transaction. It may be agreed for the purpose of this
discussion, as was argued at the bar, that it is the law of many
jurisdictions, including New York, where these transactions
occurred, that the relation of the customer and the broker with
whom the customer deposits stock as security for advances, or who
purchases securities for account of the customer, is technically
that of pledgor and pledgee, with authority and power on the part
of the broker to repledge to the extent of his advances.
See
Richardson v. Shaw, 209 U. S. 365,
209 U. S. 374;
Gorman v. Littlefield, 229 U. S. 19;
Duel v. Hollins, 241 U. S. 523;
Skiff v. Stoddard, 63 Conn.198;
Markham v.
Jaudon, 41 N.Y. 235;
Lawrence v. Maxwell, 53 N.Y. 19;
Taussing v. Hart, 58 N.Y. 425;
Caswell v. Putnam,
120 N.Y. 153. But that view of their legal relationship finds
support in the agreement between the customer and the broker which
contemplates, as the law requires, that the
Page 269 U. S. 455
broker should at all times have on hand specific securities for
delivery to the customer on payment of the amount of the broker's
advances for the customer's account. Although the broker has an
implied authority to substitute other securities of the same kind
and amount for the securities which he holds for his customer, and
to repledge them to the extent of his advances, courts have not
dispensed with the requirement that he should at least have, either
in his own possession or lodged with his bank on the repledge,
specific securities of the kind and amount purchased for his
customer, available for delivery to the customer on payment of the
balance due.
Richardson v. Shaw, supra; Skiff v. Stoddard,
supra; Taussig v. Hart, supra; Lawrence v. Maxwell, supra; Caswell
v. Putnam, supra. See Carlisle v. Norris, 215 N.Y.
400. For breach of this duty he is liable, under the law of New
York, for conversion (
Markham v. Jaudon, supra; Lawrence v.
Maxwell, supra; Taussig v. Hart, supra; Mayer v. Monzo, 221
N.Y. 442), and guilty of a criminal offense. N.Y. Penal Law §
956.
But the borrower of stock holds nothing for account of the
lender. The procedure adopted and the obligations incurred in
effecting a loan of stock and its delivery upon a short sale
neither contemplate nor admit of the retention by either the
borrower or the lender of any of the incidents of ownership in the
stock loaned. The seller, having contracted to sell securities
which he does not own, is under the necessity of acquiring dominion
over stock of the kind and amount which he has sold, with
unrestricted power of disposition of it in order that he may
fulfill his contract. Whether his broker acquires the stock by
purchase or by giving to the lender of it the market value of the
stock plus his personal obligation to acquire and return to the
lender, on demand, a like kind and amount of stock, the legal
effect of the transfer is the same. Upon the physical delivery of
the certificates of
Page 269 U. S. 456
stock by the lender, with the full recognition of the right and
authority of the borrower to appropriate them to his short sale
contract, and their receipt by the purchaser, all the incidents of
ownership in the stock pass to him.
When the transaction is thus completed, neither the lender nor
the borrower retains any interest in the stock which is the subject
matter of the transaction and which has passed to and become the
property of the purchaser. Neither the borrower nor the lender has
the status of a stockholder of the corporation whose stock was
dealt in, nor any legal relationship to it. Unlike the pledgee of
stock, who must have specific stock available for the pledgor on
payment of his loan, the borrower of stock has no interest in the
stock, nor the right to demand it from any other. For that reason,
he can be neither a pledgee, trustee, nor bailee for the lender,
and he is not one "with whom stock has been deposited as collateral
security for money loaned." For the incidents of ownership, the
lender has substituted the personal obligation, wholly contractual,
of the borrower to restore him, on demand, to the economic position
in which he would have been, as owner of the stock, had the loan
transaction not been entered into.
When the borrower returns the borrowed stock, he acquires it by
purchase or by borrowing again, and, in the process, acquires and
transfers to the lender all the incidents of legal ownership in
securities which neither possessed before.
We therefore conclude that both the loan of stock and the return
of borrowed stock involve "transfers of legal title to shares of
stock" within the express terms of the statute, and while we are
not called upon to define or enumerate the precise conditions which
must attend the delivery of a certificate of stock, under other
circumstances, to bring it within the taxing provisions of the Act,
we think it clear that deliveries of indorsed certificates
Page 269 U. S. 457
of stock incidental to these transfers of legal title are
"deliveries of . . . shares or certificates of stock" within the
language of the statute.
It follows that the borrowing of stock and the return of
borrowed stock are both subject to the tax unless there is to be
found in the legislation now under consideration or in its history
a purpose sufficiently definite and controlling to exclude the
transactions in question from the operation of its applicable
language.
In earlier revenue legislation, the Act of 1898 (30 Stat. 448,
458) and the Act of 1914 (38 Stat. 745, 759), a stamp tax was
imposed on "all sales or agreements to sell or memoranda of sales
or deliveries or transfers of shares or certificates of stock." No
attempt appears to have been made under these statutes to impose a
tax on loans of stock or returns of borrowed stock. In March, 1915,
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, in response to an inquiry
which incorrectly stated that the transfer involved in borrowing
and returning borrowed stock "does not represent a change of
ownership," made a decision (T.D. 2182) that such transactions were
not subject to the tax under the Act of 1914. Neither of these Acts
contains the words "or transfers of legal title to shares or
certificates," which, as we have indicated, are of significance in
the Acts of 1917 and 1918 because precisely applicable to the
transfers under consideration.
The Act of 1917 became a law on October 3, 1917. On March 23,
1918, the Attorney General rendered an opinion (31 Op. 255) that
the transfers of stock involved in loans of stock and returns of
borrowed stock were subject to the tax under the Act. This opinion
was adopted by the Treasury Department in its ruling of March 30,
1918. T.D. 2685. When the bill which became the Revenue Act of 1918
was pending, the attention of the Senate committee on finance was
directed to the opinion of the Attorney General and the ruling of
the Treasury Department,
Page 269 U. S. 458
and it was urged in public hearing (September 11, 1918) to amend
the bill so as to include "mere loans of stock or the returns
thereof" within the proviso exempting from the tax deposits of
certificates of stock as collateral security. The recommended
change was not adopted. The provision of the Act of 1917 was
reenacted without substantial change, and continued on the statute
books until the adoption of the Revenue Act of November 23, 1921
(c. 136, 42 Stat. 227), when the proposed change was incorporated
in it (Title XI, Schedule A, Par. 3, 42 Stat. 304).
We can find in this history no substantial basis for the
contention that there was a legislative adoption of any settled
administrative construction of the statute adverse to the position
now taken by the government. On the contrary, the enactment of the
Revenue Act of 1918 without material change of the provision in
question must, we think, be taken as indicating a purpose to
continue in force the existing law as interpreted by the Attorney
General (
United States v. G. Falk & Bro., 204 U.
S. 143), and when Congress adopted in the amended law of
1921, the very suggestion made and rejected two years before, it
then intended to effect a change in the law as it had previously
existed (
Smietanka v. First Trust & Savings Bank,
257 U. S.
602).
Nor are we able to find in the statute any expression of a
general purpose to exclude from the application of its express
language the type of transactions now under consideration. It
evidenced a purpose not only to tax all sales or agreements to sell
which had been previously taxed, but to extend the taxing provision
to all transfers of legal title to shares or certificates, whether
technical sales or not. It was not suggested at the argument that
other forms of transfer, not sales and not expressly excepted from
the operation of the Act by this proviso, such as gifts or
transfers in trust for the benefit of the transferor,
Page 269 U. S. 459
were not subject to the tax, and the Department has consistently
ruled that they were.
See T.D. Regulations 40.
As already indicated, the borrowing of stock and the returning
of borrowed stock do not fall within the description of those
classes of transactions expressly exempted from the tax. Nor do
they so resemble them in a popular and nontechnical sense as to
warrant their inclusion among the exceptions. Even in a loose and
colloquial sense, it cannot be said that the loan of stock is a
"deposit of stock certificates as collateral security for money
loaned thereon." We therefore conclude that, while there is no
indication of a purpose to impose a discriminatory tax upon short
sales or transactions necessarily involved in short sales, there
was a general purpose to tax all transfers of legal ownership of
shares of stock which includes those made necessary in order to
complete a short sale. It follows that they are subject to the tax
imposed upon the class of transactions in which they are
included.
Judgment affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Act Oct. 3, 1917, c. 63, Tit. VIII, Schedule A, Par. 4, 40 Stat.
300, 322:
"4. Capital stock, sales or transfers: On all sales, or
agreements to sell, or memoranda of sales or deliveries of, or
transfers of legal title to shares or certificates of stock in any
association, company, or corporation, whether made upon or shown by
the books of the association, company, or corporation, or by any
assignment in blank, or by any delivery, or by any paper or
agreement or memorandum or other evidence of transfer or sale,
whether entitling the holder in any manner to the benefit of such
stock or not, on each $100 of face value or fraction thereof, 2
cents, and where such shares of stock are without par value, the
tax shall be 2 cents on the transfer or sale or agreement to sell
on each share, unless the actual value thereof is in excess of $100
per share, in which case the tax shall be 2 cents on each $100 of
actual or fraction thereof:
Provided, that it is not
intended by this title to impose a tax upon an agreement evidencing
a deposit of stock certificates as collateral security for money
loaned thereon, which stock certificates are not actually sold, nor
upon such stock certificates so deposited:
Provided,
further, that the tax shall not be imposed upon deliveries or
transfers to a broker for sale, nor upon deliveries or transfers by
a broker to a customer for whom and upon whose order he has
purchased same, but such deliveries or transfers shall be
accompanied by a certificate setting forth the facts:
Provided
further, that in case of sale where the evidence of transfer
is shown only by the books of the company, the stamp shall be
placed upon such books, and where the change of ownership is by
transfer of the certificate, the stamp shall be placed upon the
certificate, and in cases of an agreement to sell or where the
transfer is by delivery of the certificate assigned in blank, there
shall be made and delivered by the seller to the buyer a bill or
memorandum of such sale, to which the stamp shall be affixed, and
every bill or memorandum of shall or agreement to sell before
mentioned shall show the date thereof, the name of the seller, the
amount of the sale, and the matter or thing to which it refers. Any
person or persons liable to pay the tax as herein provided, or
anyone who acts in the matter as agent or broker for such person or
persons who shall make any such sale, or who shall in pursuance of
any such sale deliver any stock or evidence of the sale of any
stock or bill or memorandum thereof, as herein required, without
having the proper stamps affixed thereto with intent to evade the
foregoing provisions shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and
upon conviction thereof shall pay a fine of not exceeding $1,000,
or be imprisoned not more than six months, or both at the
discretion of the court."
[
Footnote 2]
In practice, on the New York Stock Exchange, deliveries on sales
and on stock loaned and returned, evidenced by loan tickets and
borrowed stock returned tickets, are usually cleared on balance
through the Stock Exchange Clearing House, so that the certificates
pass directly from the lender to the purchaser on the short sale
when stock is borrowed, and from the seller to the lender when
borrowed stock is returned.