1. A broker trading on the New York Cotton Exchange was
instructed by a customer, for whose account cotton for future
delivery was being held, to transfer the account to other brokers.
The instructions were given at the request of the broker, who
wished to be relieved of the account, and no commission was charged
on the transaction. The transfer was effected, according to the
custom on the exchange in respect of all transfers from one member
to another, by the broker's delivering a "sold" memorandum to the
transferees, and receiving a "bought" memorandum in return.
Held:
(1) The stamp tax imposed by § 800, Schedule A(4) of the
Revenue Act of 1926 upon
"each sale, agreement of sale, or agreement to sell (not
including so-called transferred or scratch sales). . . at, or under
the rules or usages of any exchange . . . for future delivery . .
."
was applicable. P.
300 U. S.
153.
(2) The transaction was not a "transferred" or "scratch" sale
within the meaning of the prescribed exemption. P.
300 U. S.
152.
(3) Under the rules and practice of the Cotton Exchange, the
transaction was an actual sale. P.
300 U. S.
153.
2. The tax imposed by § 800, Schedule A(4) of the Revenue
Act of 1926 is not a tax upon the business transacted, but is an
excise upon the privilege, opportunity, or facility offered at
exchanges for the transaction of the business. P.
300 U. S.
153.
83 F.2d 951 affirmed.
Certiorari, 299 U.S. 531, to review a judgment affirming a
judgment dismissing the complaint in a suit to recover taxes
paid.
Page 300 U. S. 151
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 800, Schedule A(4), of the Revenue Act 1926 (44 Stat.
99, 101), [
Footnote 1] imposes
a stamp tax upon
"each sale, agreement of sale, or agreement to sell (not
including so-called transferred or scratch sales) . . . at, or
under the rules or usages of, any exchange . . . for future
delivery."
Whether the tax is payable upon a broker's transfer of a
customer's account in cotton futures to another broker through the
cotton exchange is the matter in controversy. The Circuit Court of
Appeals has held the transaction taxable. [
Footnote 2] A conflict of decision moved us to grant
certiorari. [
Footnote 3]
Petitioners are members of a partnership trading on the New York
Cotton Exchange. On behalf of a customer, they purchased cotton for
future delivery. They were instructed by the customer to transfer
the account to other brokers. To accomplish this, petitioners
delivered a "sold" memorandum to the transferee of the account,
who, in turn, delivered a "bought" memorandum to the petitioners.
No commission was charged because the instructions to transfer had
been given at petitioners' request, as they desired to be relieved
of the account. In order to record such a transfer with the
exchange, the custom was to use bought and sold memoranda in the
form invariably employed by members of the exchange in purchase and
sale of cotton for future delivery. The petitioners affixed to the
sold memorandum stamps in the proper amount and, after denial of a
refund, brought action for the amount of the tax.
Page 300 U. S. 152
The petitioners contend that no sale, agreement of sale, or
agreement to sell was in fact made, though, for convenience, and
because of lack of other medium to evidence the transfer, papers in
form agreements of sale were employed. The government insists that
the tax is essentially upon the privilege of using the facilities
of an exchange, and petitioners here exercised this privilege and a
sale was in fact made. We hold the tax was lawfully imposed, and
the petitioners are not entitled to recover the value of the
stamps.
1. The transaction was not a "scratch" or "transferred" sale
within the meaning of the exemption found in the section. A scratch
or transferred sale is one in which there is an offsetting purchase
and sale at the same price on the same day. Where a broker, in
order to fill a customer's order, buys a larger amount and sells
the excess to a third broker, directing the selling broker to
deliver the excess to the broker who has purchased it, and
directing the broker who purchases the excess to take delivery from
the selling broker, the name of the intermediate broker is erased
from the records of the exchange so that the sale of the excess
appears as a sale direct from the one to the other of the two
remaining brokers. The exemption also covers trading by a scalping
broker who makes his profit in fractional movements on the
exchange, buying and selling with great rapidity, thus often
purchasing and selling the same amount of the commodity at the same
price within a few moments or hours. By agreement amongst the
members, his name is scratched out of the records of the exchange
and his temporary rights and liabilities do not appear upon its
records. Accordingly, the Treasury Regulations in force since 1918
require that purchase and sale be consummated on the same day if
the exemption is to apply,
Page 300 U. S. 153
and that the intermediate broker instruct the broker who sold to
him to deliver to the other who bought from him. [
Footnote 4]
2. The tax is not upon the business transacted, but is an excise
upon the privilege, opportunity, or facility offered at exchanges
for the transaction of the business. It is an excise upon the
facilities used in the transaction of the business, separate and
apart from the business itself. [
Footnote 5] In this view, it is immaterial whether the
transfer of the account constituted a sale. Unquestionably the
petitioners used the facilities of the exchange for offsetting
their obligation as a purchasing broker by arranging that another
broker should take over that obligation under the rules of the
exchange. Such a transaction comes within the intent of the
statute, and renders petitioners liable for the tax.
3. Under the rules and practice of the Cotton Exchange, the
transaction taxed was an actual sale. The fact that the sale was
made for the purpose of transferring a brokerage account is
irrelevant. When the petitioners purchased on the exchange the
future contracts for their customer, the selling broker handed the
petitioners a memorandum agreeing to deliver at the date and price
therein specified, and the petitioners gave the selling broker a
similar purchase memorandum. This each was required to do by the
bylaws of the exchange. As a result of the operations of the
clearing house, the petitioners would, at the close of the day's
business, be under obligation to pay the clearing house upon
delivery being made at the future date, and they would have a
correlative right to receive from the clearing house the cotton
purchased. Although the broker who made the sale to the
Page 300 U. S. 154
petitioners would have a right to receive from his principal the
necessary cotton to make delivery according to the sale, and,
although the petitioners who had bought the cotton would be under
an obligation to their customer to deliver to him, both brokers
were, under the bylaws of the exchange, principals in the
transaction. When, therefore, the customer ordered the transfer of
the account, the petitioners could only effect this by selling the
futures to the substituted broker, who, in turn, became obligated,
so far as the exchange was concerned, as principal, to accept
delivery of the cotton according to his purchase from the
petitioners. The obligation assumed by the petitioners when they
entered into purchase contracts could be satisfied by making
payment to the clearing house or offset by selling to another
broker and so obtaining that broker's contract to take delivery of
the cotton from the clearing house. In no other way could the
petitioners relieve themselves of that obligation.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
26 U.S.C. § 903.
[
Footnote 2]
83 F.2d 951.
[
Footnote 3]
See United States v. Uhlmann Grain Co., 84 F.2d
901.
[
Footnote 4]
Treasury Regulations 40 under R.A.1918, Articles 23(a) and
33(3)(c). Treasury Regulations 71, Articles 44(a) and
125(3)(c).
[
Footnote 5]
Nicol v. Ames, 173 U. S. 509,
173 U. S. 519,
173 U. S.
523.