A plan for the reorganization of a corporation and its wholly
owned subsidiary in a proceeding under § 77B of the Bankruptcy
Act, provided for the creation of a new company which would assume
the obligations of the bonds of the parent company and would issue
income bonds and common stock in exchange for the first mortgage
bonds of the subsidiary company, the latter having been guaranteed
as to principal and interest by the parent company. Stockholders of
the debtor companies were to receive in exchange for their stock
only warrants for the purchase of shares of the new company. The
plan was confirmed by the bankruptcy court and was consummated by a
conveyance of the assets of the old companies to the new by the
debtor companies, the bankruptcy trustee, and the trustee under the
indenture securing the bonds of the subsidiary
Page 316 U. S. 528
company. The new securities were issuable to, or on the order
of, the reorganization managers, acting a "agents" of the security
holder. Immediately after the consummation of the plan, all of the
issued shares of the new company (552,660 common shares of an
authorized 1,000,000) belonged to the former holders of the bonds
of the old subsidiary company. Nearly two year later, only 465
shares had been issued to holders of warrants.
Held:
1. The transaction was not a "reorganization" within §
112(g)(1)(B) of the Revenue Act of 1936 (
Helvering v. Southwest
Consolidated Corp., 315 U. S. 194),
nor within § 112(g)(1)(C) of that Act. P.
316 U. S.
530.
2. The transaction satisfies the requirements of §
112(b)(5) of the Revenue Act of 136, and no gain resulting
therefrom to holders of bonds of the subsidiary company is to be
recognized. P.
316 U. S.
531.
The legislative history of § 112 (b)(5) supports this
conclusion.
3. The "reorganization" provisions of the Revenue Acts do not
furnish the exclusive methods for securing a deferment of gains or
losses arising out of transactions popularly known as corporate
readjustments or reorganizations. P.
316 U. S.
533.
4. Whether a tax liability in this case may have been incurred
under § 112(a) -- a question not fairly within the issues as
framed by the Commissioner, and not decided below -- is not here
determined. P.
316 U. S. 535.
122 F.2d 380, 416, affirmed.
Certiorari, 315 U.S. 825, to review affirmances of decisions of
the Board of Tax Appeals, 42 B.T.A. 473, in favor of the
taxpayers.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue presented by these cases is whether, under §
112(b)(5) of the Revenue Act of 1936, 49 Stat. 1648,
Page 316 U. S. 529
1678, the gain of the taxpayers from the transactions in
question should be recognized.
The taxpayers owned first mortgage bonds of Colorado Industrial
Co. which was a wholly owned subsidiary of the Colorado Fuel and
Iron Co. The bonds were guaranteed both as to principal and
interest by the parent company. After defaults on these bonds and
on other bonds issued by the parent company, each company filed a
petition under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act. A plan of
reorganization was formulated by committees of the security
holders. It provided for the formation of a new company to which
all the assets of the two debtor companies would be transferred.
The new company would assume the obligations of the bonds of the
old parent company, Colorado Fuel and Iron Co., and issue income
bonds and common stock in exchange for the bonds of the old
subsidiary company, Colorado Industrial Co. The stockholders of the
debtor companies would receive no interest in the new company, but,
in exchange for their stock, they would receive warrants for the
purchase of shares of the new company. Approval of the plan by the
requisite percentage of security holders was obtained. The plan was
confirmed by the court in April, 1936, and was duly consummated as
follows: the debtor companies, the bankruptcy trustee, and the
trustee under the indenture securing the bonds of the old
subsidiary company conveyed the assets of the debtors to the new
company. The new securities were issuable to or on the order of the
reorganization managers, who were acting, as stated in the plan, as
"agents" of the security holders. The reorganization managers
effected an exchange of the old securities for the new on or about
September 1, 1936. Immediately after the consummation of the plan,
all of the issued shares of the new company (552,660 shares of
common out of an authorized issue of 1,000,000 shares) belonged to
the former holders of the bonds of the old subsidiary company. No
stock was issued
Page 316 U. S. 530
by the new company to other parties until October, 1936, when 37
shares were issued on exercise of the warrants. By June, 1938, only
465 shares had been issued to holders of the warrants.
Each of the taxpayers in these cases exchanged his Colorado
Industrial Co. bonds for income bonds and common stock of the new
company. In each case, the fair market value of the new securities
exceeded the basis of the old. The Commissioner determined
deficiencies on the ground that the profit from the exchange was a
taxable gain. The Board of Tax Appeals held for the taxpayers.
See 42 B.T.A. 473. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed
(122 F.2d 380, 416) holding,
inter alia, that the exchange
met the requirements of § 112(b)(5). We granted the petitions
for certiorari because the application of § 112(b)(5) to
receivership or bankruptcy reorganizations raised important
problems in the administration of the income tax law.
It is plain from
Helvering v. Southwest Consolidated
Corp., 315 U. S. 194,
which involved identical definitions of the term "reorganization"
as are involved here, that this transaction does not meet the
requirements of § 112(g)(1)(B) of the 1936 Act. [
Footnote 1] The assets of the old companies
were not acquired in exchange "solely" for voting stock of the new
company, since income bonds and warrants were also issued. It is
also clear that the requirements of § 112(g)(1)(C) were not
satisfied, since clause C
"contemplates that the old corporation or its stockholders,
rather than its creditors, shall be in the dominant position of
Page 316 U. S. 531
'control' immediately after the transfer and not excluded or
relegated to a minority position."
Id., p.
315 U. S. 202.
But it does not necessarily follow that § 112(b)(5) is
inapplicable. Sec. 112(b)(5) provides:
"No gain or loss shall be recognized if property is transferred
to a corporation by one or more persons solely in exchange for
stock or securities in such corporation, and immediately after the
exchange such person or persons are in control of the corporation;
but in the case of an exchange by two or more persons, this
paragraph shall apply only if the amount of the stock and
securities received by each is substantially in proportion to his
interest in the property prior to the exchange."
"Control" is defined in § 112(h) to mean
"the ownership of stock possessing at least 80 percentum of the
total combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to
vote and at least 80 percentum of the total number of shares of all
other classes of stock of the corporation."
If it may be said that property was transferred by the
bondholders to the new corporation, then the other requirements of
§ 112(b)(5) were satisfied. For the bondholders, as owners of
all of the outstanding shares of the new corporation, were in
"control" of it "immediately after the exchange." And it has not
been disputed that the stock and income bonds acquired by each
bondholder were substantially in proportion to his interest in the
assets of the debtor companies prior to the exchange. Petitioner,
however, maintains that the only transfer within the meaning of
§ 112(b)(5) was effected by the debtor companies, the
bankruptcy trustee, and the indenture trustee, and that the
exchange of the bonds for the new securities was merely part of the
mechanics for consummation of the plan, and not an exchange by
which "property" was
Page 316 U. S. 532
transferred to the new corporation. Though we agreed with the
latter proposition, it would not necessarily follow that the
requirements of § 112(b)(5) were not met.
In case of reorganizations of insolvent corporations, the
creditors have the right to exclude the stockholders entirely from
the reorganization plan. When the stockholders are excluded and the
creditors of the old company become the stockholders of the new,
"it conforms to realities to date their equity ownership" from the
time when the processes of the law were invoked "to enforce their
rights of full priority."
Helvering v. Alabama Asphaltic
Limestone Co., 315 U. S. 179.
Under that approach, the ownership of the equity in these debtor
companies effectively passed to these creditors at least when
§ 77B proceedings were instituted. But, however their interest
in the property may be described, it clearly was an equitable claim
in or to it. It was that equitable interest with which the plan
dealt. The transfer of the properties of the debtor companies to
the new corporation was made pursuant to that plan. The plan was
approved by the requisite percentage of these creditors, as
required by § 77B(e)(1) of the Bankruptcy Act. Thus, it is
fair to say that the property transferred was property in which the
creditors had an equitable interest, and that the transfer was made
with their authority and on their behalf. Certainly "property" as
used in § 112(b)(5) includes such an interest in property. And
we see no reason to conclude that a beneficial owner of, or
equitable claimant to, property is precluded from consummating an
exchange which qualifies under § 112(b)(5) merely because the
actual conveyance is made by his trustee or title holder. In
situations comparable to this one, the Board of Tax Appeals has
held that § 112(b)(5) is applicable. Leckie v. Commissioner,
37 B.T.A. 252; Miller & Paine v. Commissioner, 42 B.T.A. 586.
Cf. Rockford Brick & Tile Co. v. Commissioner, 31
B.T.A. 537. We accept its view.
Page 316 U. S. 533
The legislative history of § 112(b)(5) supports that
conclusion. Sec. 112(b)(5) and the "reorganization" provisions are
rather closely related.
See Miller, Hendricks, and
Everett, Reorganizations and Other Exchanges in Income Taxation
(1931), ch. 6. While the "reorganization" provisions are restricted
to intercorporate transactions, § 112(b)(5) is not so
confined, since the phrase "one or more persons" includes
"individuals, trusts or estates, partnerships and corporations."
Treasury Reg. 94, Art. 112(b)(5)-1. But there is no indication that
the "reorganization" provisions were designed as the exclusive
method of deferring recognition of gain or loss in all cases of
corporate readjustments or reorganizations. The history of §
112(b)(5) makes clear that it too was designed to function in that
field (
American Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Bender, 70
F.2d 655, 657, 658), and to permit deferment of gains or losses
where "there has been a mere change in the form of ownership" or
where the taxpayer has not "closed out a losing venture."
Portland Oil Co. v. Commissioner, 109 F.2d 479, 488. Sec.
112(b)(5) derives from § 202(c)(3) of the 1921 Act, 42 Stat.
229, 230. Its legislative history shows that it was designed to
permit "readjustments" [
Footnote
2] without present recognition of gain or loss by allowing
property to be transferred to a controlled corporation by an
individual, a partnership, a corporation, or others. [
Footnote 3]
See Hearings, Senate
Committee on Finance, Proposed Revenue Act of 1921, 67th Cong., 1st
Sess., May 9-27, 1921, pp. 536-537, 546, 557-558; Magill, Taxable
Income (1936), pp. 123-131.
Page 316 U. S. 534
If a transaction meets the requirements of § 112(b)(5), the
basis of the property in the hands of the acquiring corporation is
the same as it would be in the hands of the transferor. §
113(a)(8).
See P. A. Birren & Son, Inc. v.
Commissioner, 116 F.2d 718. A similar result obtains in case
of a transaction which qualifies as a "reorganization."
See § 113(a)(7)(B). And the theory underlying the two
basic provisions is the same. Miller, Hendricks, and Everett,
op. cit., pp. 304, 404; S.Rep. No. 398, 68th Cong., 1st
Sess., Committee Reports on the Revenue Acts, 1913-1938,
Int.Rev.Bull., pp. 278-279. The close relationship between §
112(b)(5) and the "reorganization" provisions is further evidenced
by the fact that they overlap to a degree. Thus, a transaction
which meets the requirements of clause B or clause C of §
112(g)(1) may also qualify under § 112(b)(5). In short, the
"reorganization" provisions do not furnish the exclusive methods
for securing a deferment of gains or losses arising out of
transactions popularly known as corporate readjustments or
reorganizations. The instant transaction comes fairly within the
family of business readjustments for which § 112(b)(5) was
designed. Hence, the fact that it cannot meet the statutory
standards of a "reorganization" does not necessarily mean that it
cannot qualify as an "exchange," any more than the failure to
satisfy one clause of the "reorganization" provisions means that
none can be satisfied.
But the argument seems to be that, even though there was an
"exchange" which met the requirements of § 112(b)(5), there
was nevertheless a gain which is taxable. That gain, it is
suggested, arose from the acquisition by the taxpayers of their
equitable interest in the properties in substitution for their old
bonds. And it is argued that, unlike the situation which obtains
under the "reorganization" provisions (
Helvering v. Alabama
Asphaltic Limestone Co., supra), § 112(b)(5) covers only
the exchange itself,
Page 316 U. S. 535
and not the antecedent steps in connection with a plan of
reorganization. Thus, the contention seems to be that, since a gain
arose from a transaction which was separate and distinct from and
anterior to the exchange of property for the new securities, it
must be recognized under the general rule of § 112(a). We
express no view on that contention. The deficiencies were not
assessed on that transaction, but only upon the exchange of stock
and securities in the new corporation for bonds of the old. We will
not consider here for the first time the question whether a tax
liability may have been incurred under § 112(a) by reason of
the earlier transaction -- a question not fairly within the issues
as framed by the Commissioner, and hence not decided below.
Cf.
Helvering v. Wood, 309 U. S. 344,
309 U. S.
349.
Affirmed.
* Together with No. 645,
Helvering, Commissioner of Internal
Revenue v. James Q. Newton Trust, and No. 646,
Helvering,
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Newton, also on writs of
certiorari, 315 U.S. 825, to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit.
[
Footnote 1]
In
Helvering v. Southwest Consolidated Corp., supra, no
question as to the applicability of § 112(b)(5) was involved.
The only question raised or considered by the Board or the Circuit
Court of Appeals or passed on by this Court was whether or not the
transaction in question qualified as a "reorganization" under
§ 112(g)(1) of the 1934 Act.
[
Footnote 2]
H.Rep. No. 350, 67th Cong., 1st Sess.; S.Rep. No. 275, 67th
Cong., 1st Sess., Committee Reports on the Revenue Acts, 1913-1938,
Int.Rev.Bull., pp. 175-176, 188-189.
[
Footnote 3]
For the result which would otherwise obtain in such situations,
see Insurance & Title Guarantee Co. v. Commissioner,
36 F.2d 842, and cases cited.