1. Section 115(f) of the Revenue Act 1928 exempted dividends of
preferred stock from taxation.
Helvering v. Cowran, ante
p.
302 U. S. 238. P.
302 U. S.
250.
2. An appellee cannot, without a cross-appeal, attack the
judgment appealed from. This rule applies to a decision of the
Board of Tax Appeals. P.
302 U. S.
250.
88 F.2d 3 affirmed.
Certiorari, 301 U.S. 677, to review a judgment affirming in part
and reversing in part a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals.
Page 302 U. S. 248
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents questions of income taxation applicable to
stock dividends.
In 1931, Annie M. Pfeiffer, a holder of common stock in William
R. Warner Corporation, received as a dividend thereon 6,291 1/4
shares of its preferred stock. She also received from the
corporation in that year $200,000 cash in exchange for 2,000 shares
of its preferred stock which she had received as a dividend in
1928. In her income tax return for 1931, she did not include as
taxable income either the preferred stock or the $200,000 cash. She
did not include the preferred stock received in that year, because
she deemed it exempt from taxation under § 115(f) of the
Revenue Act of 1928. She did not include the $200,000 cash as
taxable income, because she considered it the proceeds from the
sale of a capital asset. But she did include $180,100 thereof as
taxable capital gain on the sale, computing the gain in accordance
with the then effective Treasury Regulations. And she paid a tax of
$22,512.50 on such capital gain.
The Commissioner assessed a deficiency on each item. He
determined that the 6,291 1/4 shares of preferred stock, valued at
$629,125, were taxable income of 1931 because not exempt under
§ 115(f), and that the $200,000 cash were the proceeds of a
redemption under § 115(g), and hence taxable income. He
eliminated the taxable capital
Page 302 U. S. 249
gain reported, and assessed a deficiency on each of the
items.
The taxpayer sought a review by the Board of Tax Appeals. It
affirmed the Commissioner's determination that the preferred stock
received in 1931 was taxable income, but reversed his determination
as to the proceeds of the 2,000 shares, and said:
"The Commissioner held that the redemption of the 2,000 shares
in 1931 was at such time and in such manner as to be substantially
equivalent to a taxable dividend in 1931 within the meaning of
§ 115(g) of the Revenue Act of 1928. He erred in this, since
the distribution was subject to tax as a dividend in 1928
(
see cases above cited). Thereafter, the shares had a
basis for gain or loss to the petitioner of $100 each, and they
were redeemed without gain or loss to the petitioner at $100 each
in 1931."
The Commissioner acquiesced in the Board's decision. The
taxpayer sought a review by the Circuit Court of Appeals. It
reversed the Board's decision as to the 1931 stock dividend on the
ground that § 115(f) exempted that dividend from taxation, and
it affirmed the Board's decision that the $200,000 cash was not
taxable income of 1931, saying, 88 F.2d 3, 5:
"The appellee argues that the proceeds from the redemption in
1931 of 2,000 shares of preferred stock distributed as a stock
dividend in 1928 should be considered either (a) subject to a tax
as a capital gain or (b) subject to taxation as the equivalent of
the distribution of a taxable dividend pursuant to § 115(g) of
the Revenue Act. The question of taxability as capital gain of the
$200,000 or any part thereof was not in issue before, or decided
by, the Board of Tax Appeals. The contention that we have authority
to sustain the deficiency
pro tanto. even though the issue
was not raised before the Board nor decided by it nor assigned as
error in the
Page 302 U. S. 250
petition to this Court for a review of the Board's decision, is
untenable.
General Utilities & Operating Co. v.
Helvering, 296 U. S. 200;
Helvering v.
Salvage, 297 U. S. 106. The Board held
that this stock dividend redeemed in 1931 at $100 per share was
taxable in the year 1928 when received, and was therefore not
taxable under § 115(g); that it had a basis for gain or loss
of $100 per share, and that therefore there was no taxable income
from the redemption. The Commissioner did not file a cross-appeal.
By the provisions of § 115(g), the proceeds of the redemption
of the stock can be taxed only if it occurs at such time and in
such manner as to make the redemption essentially equivalent to the
distribution of a taxable dividend. Since the Board did not so
find, we cannot support this contention."
The Commissioner's petition for certiorari was granted in
connection with that in
Helvering v. Gowran, ante, p.
302 U. S. 238,
decided this day.
First. As to the 1931 dividend in preferred stock, the
Commissioner contends that the immunity from taxation conferred by
§ 115(f) did not extend to it. We hold, for the reasons stated
in paragraph first of
Helvering v. Gowran, that it was
exempt from taxation.
Second. As to the $200,000 received in 1931, the
Commissioner contends that the Circuit Court of Appeals erred in
failing to hold it taxable income, since, under the rule declared
in
Helvering v. Gowran, the cost was zero.
We are not at liberty to entertain that contention. The Board of
Tax Appeals decided that the $200,000 was not taxable income of
1931. As the Commissioner did not seek a review of that decision,
which was adverse to him, the Circuit Court of Appeals properly
refused to consider the contention.
General Utilities &
Operating Co. v. Helvering, 296 U. S. 200,
296 U. S. 206.
While a decision
Page 302 U. S. 251
below may be sustained without a cross-appeal although it was
rested upon a wrong ground,
see Helvering v. Gowran, an
appellee cannot, without a cross-appeal, attack a judgment entered
below.
Compare United States v. American Railway Express
Co., 265 U. S. 425,
265 U. S. 435;
Morley Construction Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
300 U. S. 185.
* The same rule
applies to a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals.
Third. The Commissioner requests that, if we hold that
the Board erred in declaring that the 2,000 shares received in 1928
were then taxable and refuse to review its decision that the
proceeds received in 1931 were not taxable, we should remand the
case to the Board to determine whether redemption of the 2,000
shares was made at such time and in such manner as to be
essentially equivalent to the distribution of a taxable dividend
under § 115(g). The Commission acquiesced in the decision of
the Board. No good reason is shown for disturbing it.
Affirmed.
*
See also The Stephan Morgan, 94 U. S.
599;
Mount Pleasant v. Beckwith, 100 U.
S. 514,
100 U. S. 527;
United States v. Blackfeather, 155 U.
S. 180;
Landram v. Jordan, 203 U. S.
56;
Southern Pine Lumber Co. v. Ward,
208 U. S. 126,
208 U. S. 137;
Fitchie v. Brown, 211 U. S. 321,
211 U. S. 329;
Bothwell v. United States, 254 U.
S. 231.
MR. JUSTICE STONE and MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO think the judgment
should be reversed.
The issue before the Board of Tax Appeals was the existence of a
deficiency in respondent's income tax for a single year, 1931. The
deficiency fixed by the Commissioner represented her net tax
liability for that year, and drew in question every item which
entered into computation of the tax.
Lewis v. Reynolds,
284 U. S. 281,
284 U. S. 283.
Her appeal to the Board drew in question her net tax liability on a
reexamination of every item of income in that year which she had
challenged in her petition.
Page 302 U. S. 252
The Commissioner had treated as taxable income of respondent two
items, both received in that year, and assessed a deficiency
accordingly. They were a dividend paid to the taxpayer in preferred
stock and cash received by her in that year upon the redemption of
preferred stock received as a dividend in an earlier year. The
Board of Tax Appeals thought respondent was taxable in 1931 on the
first, but not on the second, item, and reduced the deficiency
accordingly. It "[o]rdered and decided that there is a deficiency
for the year 1931 in the amount of $89,841.75."
This Court, upon consideration of the facts stipulated by the
parties and found by the Board, holds that respondent was taxable
upon the full amount of the item of cash received, but not upon the
stock dividend. But, because the Commissioner took no appeal from
the order of the Board, the Court declines to give any effect to
its ruling that the cash is taxable income in 1931. If the
Commissioner had sought only to increase the deficiency found by
the Board, it may be conceded that the point would be well taken,
but such is not his purpose. On the contrary, he accepts the order
and relies upon it as establishing a deficiency of which he asks
the benefit only so far as it is sustained by the application, to
the facts found, of the rule of law announced by this Court.
The circumstance that the Board, by the erroneous application of
a rule of law to the facts before it arrived at a deficiency which
is sustained by a correct application of a different rule, is not
ground for setting aside its order.
Langnes v. Green,
282 U. S. 531,
282 U. S.
538-539;
Anderson v. Atherton, post, p. 643;
compare Morley Construction Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
300 U. S. 185. In
denying to the Commissioner any benefit of the order because he did
not appeal, the opinion of the Court gives no hint of any ground
upon which the Commissioner should or could have appealed so far as
the order fixes a deficiency which the record shows is lawfully
due, or
Page 302 U. S. 253
why the respondent is not free to maintain that the Board
reached the right result even though the reason it gave was
wrong.
The cause should be remanded to the Board of Tax Appeals to
recompute the deficiency in conformity with the rule of tax
liability laid down in the opinion of this Court, but in an amount
not exceeding that which the Board has found.
General Utilities & Operating Co. v. Helvering,
296 U. S. 200,
does not require any different result. There, it was held that it
was error for the Circuit Court of Appeals, on an appeal by the
Commissioner, to reverse an order of the Board and remand the cause
for new findings to support a theory of tax liability which first
emerged from the case on appeal. Here, there is no new issue to be
tried by the Board. The only issue is one of law which this Court
has resolved, and which has been implicit in the case from the
beginning.