1. Upon appeal from an order of the Board of Tax Appeals
sustaining a tax assessment, the Circuit Court of Appeals should
confine itself to grounds which were presented to or considered by
the Board. P.
297 U. S.
108.
2. Stock of a corporation worth more than par was acquired from
it by the taxpayer upon payment of par value in cash and in further
consideration of an option to the corporation to repurchase part of
the shares at par and of the taxpayer's agreement not to compete
with the corporation in business.
Held:
(1) That the taxpayer's failure to report the profit at the time
in his income tax return, due to an innocent mistake, did not estop
him, when measuring the gain from a disposition of the shares in a
later year, from claiming that their market value at time of
purchase was greater than the cash price he had paid for them. P.
297 U. S.
109.
(2) That the market value of the shares subject to the option of
repurchase was necessarily limited to $100 per share. P.
297 U. S.
109.
76 F.2d 112 affirmed.
Certiorari (cross-writs),
296 U. S. 557, to
review a judgment reversing an order of the Board of Tax
Appeals.
Page 297 U. S. 107
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cross-writs bring up a judgment of the Circuit Court of
Appeals, Second Circuit, which disapproved a deficiency assessment
for 1929 income, and authorized recovery for overpayment below the
taxpayer's claim.
The petition for certiorari in No. 173 asserts:
"The question is -- Whether the taxpayer is estopped to claim
that the difference between the market value of the 1,500 shares as
of December 30, 1922 and their cost to him constituted taxable
income to him for 1922, and hence that the fair market value of
these shares, and not their cost, is the basis to be used in
measuring the gain from the disposition of the shares in 1929, no
income from the transaction having been reported in 1922."
The points to be urged in No. 280 are stated thus:
"The Circuit Court of Appeals erred: (1) In holding that the
cost base of the preferred stock of American Viscose Corporation
redeemed in 1929 was to be arrived at by taking as the fair market
value of the Viscose Company stock the sum of $100 per share,
insofar as the five-sevenths of said stock which was subject to the
option to repurchase was concerned. (2) In making a finding as to
the value of said optioned stock."
Prior to 1922, Salvage, the taxpayer, bought 25 shares Viscose
Company stock. He paid $166.66 for each one, for all $4,166.66. In
December, 1922, he acquired from the corporation 1,500 shares for
which he paid $100 per share ($150,000), and entered into an
obligation to refrain from competing business, etc. Also, he agreed
that, during 1923, the corporation might repurchase five-sevenths
of 1,500 shares at par; during 1924, four-sevenths, etc.
Intrinsically (when unencumbered), a share of the company stock was
then worth $1,164.70.
Later, during 1922, all these shares (1,525) were exchanged for
6,100 preferred shares, redeemable at $110,
Page 297 U. S. 108
and 7,625 common shares, American Viscose Corporation. The basis
of exchange was four preferred and five common shares of new stock
for one share of old. The taxpayer's return for 1922 (not in
evidence) showed no gain from these transactions.
During 1929, American Viscose Corporation redeemed its preferred
shares at $110; Salvage received $671,000. His return for that year
disclosed as net capital gain the difference between that sum and
$154,166.66, total outlay for the 1,525 converted shares. Upon
this, he paid the assessed tax. Apparently, he supposed
apportionment between preferred and common stock of their total
cost was impossible or unnecessary; also, that no taxable gain
arose before return of his entire outlay.
Upon an audit, the Commissioner ruled that proper apportionment
of the total cost, $154,166.66, could be made. He assigned 37
percent to the preferred and 62 percent to the common shares, and
made a deficiency assessment of $12,005.38. Thereupon, the taxpayer
claimed: First, that in 1922, each Viscose Company share was fairly
worth $1,164.70, and, with that as the base, no taxable gain arose
upon redemption of the preferred stock. Also, that he had overpaid
to the extent of $63,750. Second, that apportionment of the cost of
both between preferred and common shares was impracticable, and no
taxable gain could arise prior to recovery of the full outlay.
Upon these conflicting claims, the Board of Tax Appeals took the
matter. There, the Commissioner asserted correctness of his action;
he presented no affirmative defense; set up no claim of estoppel
because of the taxpayer's failure properly to report 1922 gain.
The Board held the difference between the true value of Viscose
Company shares and the price paid by the taxpayer was not
compensation for services; also, that the
Page 297 U. S. 109
deficiency assessment was properly made. Estoppel was neither
presented nor considered.
The court below held that the consideration for the Viscose
Company stock acquired in 1922 was $100 per share, plus the
covenants to resell five-sevenths at par, etc., and not to engage
in competing business. Also, that the base cost for estimating
capital gain in 1929 was the fair market value in 1922 of the
shares then held. And since the corporation had the right to
repurchase at par, the market value of five-sevenths did not exceed
$100 per share. Further, that the failure to disclose 1922 taxable
gain apparently resulted from innocent mistake of law; there was no
false representation of fact; nothing gave support to the claim of
estoppel. The cause was remanded for ascertainment of the amount of
the overpayment.
We find no reason to disagree with the judgment of the
court.
The defense of estoppel was not before the Board. Under what we
regard as the correct practice,
General Utilities &
Operating Co. v. Helvering, 296 U. S. 200, the
court should have passed the point. Furthermore, the facts
disclosed give it no support.
Considering the option to repurchase at par, outstanding in
1922, there could be no proper finding of fair market value at that
time in excess of $100 per share. In the circumstances, the court
did not err in so holding.
Pertinent Treasury regulations, rulings, and judicial opinions
are adequately pointed out by the court's opinion.
The judgment is affirmed. The cause will be remanded for further
proceedings.
Affirmed.
Together with No. 280,
Salvage v. Helvering, Commissioner of
Internal Revenue. Certiorari to the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit.