1. Where stockholders owning all of the shares of corporation A
exchanged them for stock in corporation B and mortgage bonds of
corporation A guaranteed by Corporation B, there was a
"reorganization" under § 203(h)(1)(A) of the Revenue Act of
1924, and, by the effect of § 203(b)(2), no taxable gain
resulted notwithstanding the A corporation continued in business.
Helvering v. Minnesota Tea Co., ante, p.
296 U. S. 378. P.
296 U. S.
388.
2. The transaction is within the description of reorganization
set forth by Article 1574 of Treasury Regulations 65, applicable to
the Revenue Act of 1924, and that this regulation is a proper
interpretation of the Act is confirmed by the reenactment, without
change, by Congress of the paragraph to which it refers. P.
296 U. S. 389.
3. The bonds were "securities" within the meaning of §
203(b)(2) of the Act. P.
296 U. S. 389.
75 F.2d 981 affirmed.
Certiorari to review a Judgment reversing a decision of the
Board of Tax Appeals, 28 B.T.A. 1056, which sustained a deficiency
assessment of income taxes.
Page 296 U. S. 388
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These causes involved deficiency assessments for income tax
against the three respondents for the year 1924.
They were the sole stockholders of United States Ferro Alloys
Corporation, herein Ferro Alloys, and the causes, alike in all
essential particulars, were dealt with below in one opinion.
The respondents maintain that they exchanged all stock of Ferro
Alloys for shares of Vanadium Corporation of America and bonds of
Ferro Alloys guaranteed by Vanadium, that these two corporations
were parties to a reorganization, and that, under § 203(b)(2),
Revenue Act 1924, 43 Stat. 256, no taxable gain resulted. The
Commissioner insists that the transaction was a sale of all the
stock of the Ferro Alloys, and therefore taxable gain resulted. The
applicable statutory provision is § 203, Revenue Act 1924, the
pertinent parts of which are in the margin of the opinion in
Helvering v. Minnesota Tea Co., ante, p.
296 U. S. 378.
In December, 1924, respondents owned all the stock of Ferro
Alloys Corporation. They exchanged this with the Vanadium
Corporation for stock of the latter valued at $30 per share and for
$1,161,184.50 mortgage bonds of Ferro Alloys guaranteed by
Vanadium. Ferro Alloys continued to conduct business until its
dissolution in 1928. Article 1574 of Treasury Regulations 65
provided that, under the Act of 1924, no gain or loss shall be
recognized to the shareholders from the exchange of stock made in
connection with the reorganization if two or more corporations
reorganize; for example, by either the sale of the stock of B to A,
or the acquisition by A of a majority of the total number of shares
of all other classes of stock of B.
Page 296 U. S. 389
The transaction here involved is within the description of
reorganization recognized by the Treasury Regulation above quoted.
And, if the regulation can be taken as properly interpreting the
statute, the challenged judgment must be affirmed.
The court below recites the history of the Treasury Regulation
above quoted, and concludes that, in view of the reenactment of the
paragraph to which it refers without change, Congress intended to
approve the regulation as written.
The Commissioner here maintains that the definition of
reorganization found in § 203(h)(1)(A), Revenue Act 1924, 43
Stat. 256, should be limited to transactions which partake of the
nature of mergers or consolidations, and that here, the Vanadium
merely made an investment in Ferro Alloys stock and obtained only
the rights of a stockholder therein. It is also urged that an
exchange of stocks for bonds results in a substantial change of
position, and that such bonds are "other property" within the
meaning of the statute, and, as such, subject to tax. Much of the
argument presented is the same as the one considered in the
Minnesota Tea Company case, and it need not be again
followed in detail. The bonds, we think, were securities within the
definition, and cannot be regarded as cash, as were the short-term
notes referred to in
Pinellas Ice & Cold Storage Co. v.
Commissioner, 287 U. S. 462.
The judgment of the court below must be
Affirmed.