1. When a corporation, owning shares in another company which
have increased in value since it bought them, declares a dividend
payable in such shares out of the surplus arising from such
increase, and pays it accordingly by distributing such shares
in specie among its stockholders, no taxable gain results
to the corporation. This is not a sale to stockholders, nor a use
of assets to discharge indebtedness. Pp.
296 U. S. 202,
296 U. S.
206.
2. In reviewing a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals, the
Circuit Court of Appeals may not sustain an assessment over the
Board's decision upon a ground which was not presented to the Board
nor in the petition for review; the taxpayer is entitled to know
with fair certainty the basis of the claim against him. P.
296 U. S.
206.
3. The Circuit Court of Appeals committed error in this case not
only in deciding a question not properly raised, but also in making
an inference of fact in conflict with the stipulation of the
parties
Page 296 U. S. 201
and the findings of the Board of Tax Appeals and without support
in the record. P.
296 U. S.
206.
4. Upon reversal of judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals
overruling a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals, the cause will
not be remanded to the Board for further findings if it be apparent
that nothing could properly be found to sustain the Commissioner's
contention. P.
296 U. S. 207.
74 F.2d 972 reversed.
Certiorari, 295 U.S. 730, to review a judgment which reversed a
decision of the Board of Tax Appeals overruling an income tax
assessment.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
January 1, 1927, petitioner -- General Utilities, a Delaware
corporation -- acquired 20,000 shares (one-half of total
outstanding) common stock Islands Edison Company, for which it paid
$2,000. Gillet & Company owned the remainder.
During January, 1928, Whetstone, president of Southern Cities
Utilities Company, contemplated acquisition by his company of all
Islands Edison common stock. He discussed the matter with Lucas,
petitioner's president, also with Gillet & Co. The latter
concern agreed
Page 296 U. S. 202
to sell its holdings upon terms acceptable to all. But Lucas
pointed out that the shares which his company held could only be
purchased after distribution of them among stockholders, since a
sale by it would subject the realized profit to taxation, and, when
the proceeds passed to the stockholders, there would be further
exaction. Lucas had no power to sell, but he, Gillet, and Whetstone
were in accord concerning the terms and conditions under which
purchase of all the stock might become possible --
"it being understood and agreed between them that petitioner
would make distribution of the stock of the Islands Edison Company
to its stockholders and that counsel would prepare a written
agreement embodying the terms and conditions of the said sale,
agreement to be submitted for approval to the stockholders of the
Islands Edison Company after the distribution of said stock by the
petitioner."
Petitioner's directors, March 22, 1928, considered the
disposition of the Island Edison shares. Officers reported they
were worth $1,122,500, and recommended an appreciation on the books
to that figure. Thereupon a resolution directed this change;
also
"that a dividend in the amount of $1,071,426.25 be and it is
hereby declared on the Common Stock of this Company payable in
Common Stock of The Islands Edison Company at a valuation of $56.12
1/2 a share, out of the surplus of the Company arising from the
appreciation in the value of the Common Stock of The Islands Edison
Company held by this Company --
viz., $1,120,500.00, the
payment of the dividend to be made by the delivery to the
stockholders of this Company,
pro rata, of certificates
for the Common Stock of The Islands Edison Company held by this
Company at the rate of two shares of such stock for each share of
Company Stock of this Corporation."
Accordingly, 19,090 shares were distributed amongst petitioner's
thirty-three stockholders, and proper transfers
Page 296 U. S. 203
to them were made upon the issuing corporation's books. It
retained 910 shares.
After this transfer, all holders of Islands Edison stock sold to
Southern Cities Utilities Company at $56.12 1/2 per share.
Petitioner realized $46,346.30 net profit on 910 shares, and this
was duly returned for taxation. There was no report of gain upon
the 19,090 shares distributed to stockholders.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue declared a taxable gain
upon distribution of the stock in payment of the dividend declared
March 22d, and made the questioned deficiency assessment. Seeking
redetermination by the Board of Tax Appeals, petitioner
alleged:
"The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has erroneously held that
the petitioner corporation made a profit of $1,069,517.25 by
distributing to its own stockholders certain capital stock of
another corporation which it had theretofore owned."
And it asked a ruling that no taxable gain resulted from the
appreciation upon its books and subsequent distribution of the
shares. Answering, the Commissioner denied that his action was
erroneous, but advanced no new basis of support. A stipulation
concerning the facts followed, and upon this and the pleadings, the
Board heard the cause.
It found:
"The respondent has determined a deficiency in income tax in the
amount of $128,342.07 for the calendar year 1928. The only question
presented in this proceeding for redetermination is whether
petitioner realized taxable gain in declaring a dividend and paying
it in the stock of another company at an agreed value per share,
which value was in excess of the cost of the stock to
petitioner."
Also:
"On March 26, 1928, the stockholders of the Islands Edison
Company (one of which was petitioner, owning 910 shares) and the
Southern Cities Utilities Company, entered into a written contract
of sale of the Islands Edison Company stock. At no
Page 296 U. S. 204
time did petitioner agree with Whetstone or the Southern Cities
Utilities Company, verbally or in writing, to make sale to him or
to the Southern Cities Utilities Company of any of said stock
except the aforesaid 910 shares of the Islands Edison Company."
The opinion recites: the Commissioner's
"theory is that, upon the declaration of the dividend on March
22, 1928, petitioner became indebted to its stockholders in the
amount of $1,071,426.25, and that the discharge of that liability
by the delivery of property costing less than the amount of the
debt constituted income, citing
United States v. Kirby Lumber
Co., 284 U. S. 1. . . . The intent of
the directors of petitioner was to declare a dividend payable in
Islands Edison stock; their intent was expressed in that way in the
resolution formally adopted, and the dividend was paid in the way
intended and declared. We so construe the transaction, and, on
authority of
First Savings Bank v. Burnet, supra [17
B.T.A. 804,
aff'd, 60 App.D.C. 307, 53 F.2d 919], we hold
that the declaration and payment of the dividend resulted in no
taxable income."
The Commissioner asked the Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth
Circuit, to review the Board's determination. He alleged:
"The only question to be decided is whether the petitioner
[taxpayer] realized taxable income in declaring a dividend and
paying it in stock of another company at an agreed value per share,
which value was in excess of the cost of the stock."
The court stated:
"There are two grounds upon which the petitioner urges that the
action of the Board of Tax Appeals was wrong: first, that the
dividend declared was in effect a cash dividend, and that the
respondent realized a taxable income by the distribution of the
Islands Edison Company stock to its stockholders equal to the
difference between the amount of the dividend declared and the cost
of the stock. Second, that the sale made of the
Page 296 U. S. 205
Islands Edison Company stock was in reality a sale by the
respondent (with all the terms agreed upon before the declaration
of the dividend), through its stockholders, who were virtually
acting as agents of the respondent, the real vendor."
Upon the first ground, it sustained the Board. Concerning the
second, it held that, although not raised before the Board, the
point should be ruled upon.
"When we come to consider the sale of the stock of the Islands
Edison Company, we cannot escape the conclusion that the
transaction was deliberately planned and carried out for the sole
purpose of escaping taxation. The purchaser was found by the
officers of the respondent; the exact terms of the sale as finally
consummated were agreed to by the same officers; the purchaser of
the stock stated that the delivery of all the stock was essential,
and that the delivery of a part thereof would not suffice; the
details were worked out for the express and admitted purpose of
avoiding the payment of the tax and for the reason that the
attorneys for the respondent had advised that, unless some such
plan was adopted, the tax would have to be paid, and a written
agreement was to be prepared by counsel for the respondent which
was to be submitted to the stockholders; all this without the
stockholders, or any of them, who were ostensibly making the sale,
being informed, advised, or consulted. Such admitted facts plainly
constituted a plan not to use the harsher terms of scheme,
artifice, or conspiracy to evade the payment of the tax. For the
purposes of this decision, it is not necessary to consider whether
such a course as is here shown constituted a fraud; it is
sufficient if we conclude that the object was to evade the payment
of a tax justly due the government."
"The sale of the stock in question was, in substance, made by
the respondent company, through the stockholders as agents or
conduits through whom the transfer of
Page 296 U. S. 206
the title was effected. The stockholders, even in their
character as agents, had little or no option in the matter, and in
no sense exercised any independent judgment. They automatically
ratified the agreement prepared and submitted to them."
A judgment of reversal followed.
Both tribunals below rightly decided that petitioner derived no
taxable gain from the distribution among its stockholders of the
Islands Edison shares as a dividend. This was no sale; assets were
not used to discharge indebtedness.
The second ground of objection, although sustained by the court,
was not presented to or ruled upon by the Board. The petition for
review relied wholly upon the first point, and, in the
circumstances, we think the court should have considered no other.
Always a taxpayer is entitled to know with fair certainty the basis
of the claim against him. Stipulations concerning facts and any
other evidence properly are accommodated to issues adequately
raised.
Recently (April, 1935), this Court pointed out:
"The Court of Appeals is without power, on review of proceedings
of the Board of Tax Appeals, to make any findings of fact. . . .
The function of the court is to decide whether the correct rule of
law was applied to the facts found, and whether there was
substantial evidence before the Board to support the findings made.
. . . If the Board has failed to make an essential finding and the
record on review is insufficient to provide the basis for a final
determination, the proper procedure is to remand the case for
further proceedings before the Board. . . . And the same procedure
is appropriate even when the findings omitted by the Board might be
supplied from examination of the record."
Helvering v. Rankin, 295 U. S. 123,
295 U. S.
131-132.
Here, the court undertook to decide a question not properly
raised. Also it made an inference of fact directly
Page 296 U. S. 207
in conflict with the stipulation of the parties and the
findings, for which we think the record affords no support
whatever. To remand the cause for further findings would be futile.
The Board could not properly find anything which would assist the
Commissioner's cause.
The judgment of the court below must be reversed. The action of
the Board of Tax Appeals is approved.
Reversed.