1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*9
The mortgagees of real estate, upon default of the mortgagor, foreclosed on the property and bid it in at public sale at a price greatly in excess of the fair market value but slightly less than the amounts of principal and interest due from the mortgagor. At the time of the sale the mortgagor was hopelessly insolvent and had no assets except the mortgaged real estate, the fair market value of which was less than the mortgagees' investment in the real property.
1 T.C. 328">*328 The respondent has determined an income tax deficiency for 1933 of $ 62,969.87 on the joint return filed by the petitioners for that year. The only question for our determination is the amount of taxable income, if any, realized on a transaction in which petitioner1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*10 Elliott S. Nichols and his associates foreclosed on a mortgage on real estate, which they had previously sold, and bid in the property at a price somewhat less than the principal and interest due from the 1 T.C. 328">*329 mortgagor but greatly in excess of the fair market value of the property at that time. The petitioners reported a loss on the transaction, computed on the basis of the fair market value of the property at the time of the foreclosure sale, while the respondent has determined that petitioners realized taxable income to the extent of the interest due, and other income, based on the bid price.
The facts have been stipulated in part. The written stipulation is made a part of our findings of fact.
The term petitioner will be used hereinafter to refer to the husband, Elliott S. Nichols. His wife, Anne D. Nichols, is a party to this proceeding only by reason of having filed a joint return with the petitioner. Such return was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Michigan.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
On May 27, 1925, the petitioner purchased a one-fourth vendor's interest in a certain land contract entered into on September 10, 1924, between John M. Reid, as1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*11 vendor, and Lake Erie Land Co., as vendee. For such one-fourth interest petitioner paid $ 20,000 in cash and assumed one-fourth, or $ 38,125, of Reid's unpaid obligations on the land. In September 1925 the petitioner purchased an additional one-fourth interest in the contract from Reid for a like consideration.
The land in question comprised a tract of approximately 650 acres situated about 35 miles from Detroit, Michigan, and bordering on Lake Erie. About one-fourth of the tract was farm land and the balance was mostly marsh land and lagoons. There were several small wooded areas and about 25 acres of open water.
The total purchase price under the land contract of September 10, 1924, was $ 390,000, of which $ 100,000 was paid in cash and the balance was to be paid annually in varying amounts not later than September 1, 1932.
The Lake Erie Land Co. acquired the property for development purposes, intending to convert it into a high class residential subdivision. It had the entire tract platted and undertook extensive dredging and other development operations. Several lagoons were dredged and a roadway was constructed through the property. Lots were offered for sale to the public1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*12 on a long term purchase plan, the deeds to be delivered when the purchase price was fully paid, and a few of the lots were sold.
In 1925 the name of Lake Erie Land Co. was changed to Lagoona Beach Co.
During 1925 and 1926 the petitioner received $ 17,500 as his share of the payments made under the land contract of September 10, 1924. 1 T.C. 328">*330 In his income tax returns for those years he reported 19.82 percent of those amounts as taxable income and the balance as a return of capital, the cost of his interest in the property being 80.18 percent of his share of the principal amount ultimately due.
On July 13, 1926, resolutions were passed by the stockholders of the Lagoona Beach Co. reciting in substance that $ 255,000 principal and $ 5,000 interest was the balance unpaid on the land contract; that it would be greatly to the advantage of the company to defer payment of the installment due September 1, 1936, and to rearrange the maturity date of other installments; that certain provisions of the land contract were burdensome; and that the vendors were willing to rescind the old contract and enter a new one, to sell the land at a price of $ 440,000, with $ 135,000 credit for previous1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*13 payments, leaving $ 305,000 payable at dates stated, a deed to be issued and a mortgage given. The agreement so described was carried out, the old contract was rescinded, the land was deeded outright to the Lagoona Beach Co., and promissory notes payable in seven installments aggregating $ 305,000 and a mortgage securing same were executed to the petitioner and his associates under date of August 3, 1926.
In carrying out this change the petitioner paid off that portion of Reid's obligations on the property which he had previously assumed, amounting to $ 56,375.21, and the balance of Reid's obligations thereon in the same amount. He borrowed the money required for those payments.
No payments were ever made by the Lagoona Beach Co. on any of its purchase money notes. By December 1929, and at all times thereafter, the Lagoona Beach Co. was "hopelessly insolvent." Its only property consisted of the mortgaged real estate. Its corporate charter was forfeited, for failure to file annual reports or pay the fees in connection therewith, on September 1, 1930. Execution on various judgments against the company were returned unsatisfied and on February 10, 1930, its property was placed in1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*14 the hands of a receiver.
On July 7, 1930, petitioner and his associates instituted foreclosure proceedings on their mortgage on the property. On October 29, 1932, judgment was rendered, including a holding of personal liability on the part of the Lagoona Beach Co. in default of payment of which the property should be sold to "raise the amount decreed to be due the plaintiffs." Pursuant to court order the property was sold at public sale on January 5, 1933, and bid in by the Union Guardian Trust Co. as trustee for the mortgagees at a price of $ 435,000. This was the only bid submitted. The petitioner and his two associates, and their attorney in the foreclosure, attended the foreclosure sale, petitioner and his two associates driving together to the town where it was held. The subject of bidding was taken up informally among 1 T.C. 328">*331 the three. "We just said bid the purchase price." The bid was the amount due, but they neglected to add extra interest at the time of foreclosure. The petitioner did not know who made the bid. Market value and collection of deficiency judgment were not considered in fixing the bid. The total amount due on the property at that time, including principal1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*15 and interest, was $ 454,754.72. The court entered a deficiency judgment against the mortgagor for $ 19,754.72. No money was paid on the purchase at the foreclosure sale, the petitioner and his associates merely surrendering their mortgage and mortgage notes in full satisfaction of the bid price. No collection has ever been made of any part of the deficiency judgment and such judgment was always considered and treated by the petitioner as wholly worthless. The decree of foreclosure provided a six-month redemption period, and that at the end of that time the purchasers be let into possession of the property.
At the date of the foreclosure sale petitioner's adjusted cost basis of his interest in the property in question, after allowance of foreclosure costs and other incidental expenses, was $ 155,721.05. The fair market value of the petitioner's interest in the property at the date of the foreclosure sale was $ 133,405.35.
In his income tax return for 1933, which was made on the cash receipts and disbursements basis, petitioner claimed on the foreclosure transaction a deductible loss "from sales of real estate by contract and mortgage," in the amount of $ 22,410.36, computed as1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*16 follows:
Cost | $ 169,845.46 |
Less recovery of capital | 14,029.75 |
Adjusted cost | 155,815.71 |
Fair market value of the 68.413% interest | 133,405.35 |
Loss | 22,410.36 |
In his deficiency notice herein the respondent determined that the petitioner realized income on the transaction as follows:
Accrued interest | $ 89,809.68 |
Bonus | 30,785.85 |
Profit on foreclosure | 18,731.00 |
The accrued interest represents 68.413 percent of the following amounts:
Accrued interest represented by note of the mortgagor | $ 5,000.00 |
Accrued interest included in the court's decree | 126,275.75 |
Total | 131,275.75 |
The bonus is the same percentage of the $ 45,000 bonus note given by the mortgagor in 1926.
1 T.C. 328">*332 The profit on the foreclosure is computed as follows: 68.413 percent of the principal due on land contract $ 255,000 ($ 174,452.05), less the petitioner's cost of his interest $ 155,721.05.
OPINION.
The petitioner takes the view that the foreclosure sale described in the facts set forth above resulted in a loss to him in the difference between his stipulated adjusted base, $ 155,721.05, and $ 71,833.65, being the fair market value of his 68.413 percent interest in the property1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*17 purchased by him, based upon a value of $ 105,000. His view is that the transaction amounted to a mere exchange of notes receivable for land.
The respondent takes the position that under the doctrine of
The
In the
The petitioner, however, further seeks to distinguish the instant proceeding because of the insolvency of the mortgagor in this matter. Such therefore is the pivotal question here. He argues that insolvency of the mortgagor did not appear in the
* * 1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*22 * The amount so credited to the mortgagor as interest paid would be available to him as a deduction in making his own income tax returns. It would be strange if the sum deductible by the mortgagor debtor were not chargeable to the mortgage creditor as income received. Where the legal effect of a transaction fits the plain letter of the statute, the tax is held payable, unless there is clearly revealed in the act itself or in its history a definite intention to exclude such transactions from the operation of its applicable language. * * * [Citing many cases.]
Under this language it is incumbent upon the petitioner to demonstrate a definite intention to exclude from the applicable language of the statute as to income (as well as the cases cited above) a transaction where the mortgagor was insolvent. An insolvent mortgagor may have taxable income, and would be entitled to the deduction of interest credited against his debt, under the above language of the Court, equally with a solvent debtor. In
In
The petitioner further relies upon
After examination of the authorities submitted and others, we are of the opinion that the fact of insolvency on the part of the mortgagor herein does not constitute a material distinction from the situation in
The company argues that taxation is a practical matter; that we should be governed by1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*26 realities; that the reality is, that all the company got was the property; and that the property was worth less than the principal of the debt. The "reality" of the deal here involved would seem to be that respondent valued the protection of the higher redemption price as worth the discharge of the interest debt for which it might have obtained a judgment. * * *
In the present case, the record does not clearly show the reason for the bid higher than actual value. Though the petitioner testified that there was no connection between market value and bid and that neither the possibility of redemption nor deficiency judgment was considered by the mortgagees at the time, he further stated that the subject was informally taken up among the three mortgagees, that the amount of the bid was the amount due, but that they neglected to add extra interest at the time of foreclosure. He and the other mortgagees drove together to the town where the sale was held and were in attendance at the sale and "We just said bid the purchase price." All this obviously 1 T.C. 328">*336 fails to show that there was no reason for the bid higher than actual value. On the contrary, it indicates intent to prevent anyone1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*27 else from securing the property at a price less than the investment therein. It thus appears that the mortgagees agreed, in substance, not to let anyone else acquire the property for less than the indebtedness, including interest. That there was only one bid proves little or nothing. The mortgagees' high bid may have been the opening bid, made at once, precluding even a slightly less offer by any other bidder. It did in fact protect against redemption at any lower value, affected the mortgagor's right to deduction of interest, and therefore affected the tax consequences. Nor do we think that the evidence negatives the idea that the law as to redemption at bid price was considered, in spite of the petitioner's testimony, for a representative of the attorneys foreclosing was present at the sale. It is plain that the matter was in the hands of the attorneys, and the petitioner did not know who actually made the bid. We are unable to conclude that the possibility of redemption at bid price was not contemplated in the consummation of the foreclosure sale, as it was in the
We conclude and hold that the respondent did not err in including interest bid in the income of the petitioner. We do not include in such interest the $ 5,000 accrued upon $ 255,000 principal at the time of the change from a land contract to a mortgage in 1926, or the $ 45,000 "bonus" added to the then indebtedness. The parties at that time entered into a new transaction, and we regard as interest only that which accrued upon the $ 305,000.
The fact that we hold petitioner to have received income to the extent of accrued interest bid, is not decisive of the whole case; for there remains the question as to whether the provisions of Regulations 77, article 193, 1 here apply, requiring examination of the question of gain or loss to the mortgagees to the extent of the difference 1 T.C. 328">*337 between amount bid and fair market value of the property purchased.
1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*29 Respondent argues in effect that the effect of the
We have above held the mortgagees to have received income to the extent of accrued interest bid. The regulation provides clearly for gain or loss of the difference between fair market value of the property and the amount of obligations applied to purchase or bid price "(to the extent that such obligations constitute capital or represent an item the income from which has been returned by him)." The face amount of such obligations bid herein was $ 435,000, but they constituted, as to the petitioner's share, capital of only $ 155,721.05, the stipulated adjusted cost basis of petitioner's interest in the principal amount of the notes. With reference1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*31 to such base, Regulations 77, article 193, says: "Accrued interest may be included as part of the deduction only when it has previously been returned as income." Only the original cost base may be deducted. We hold that there was gain or loss to the petitioner of the difference between such $ 155,721.05 and the fair market value of petitioner's interest in the property. Considering all of the evidence, we conclude and hold that the petitioner's interest in the property had, on the date of sale, a value of $ 133,405.35, the value ascribed to it by 1 T.C. 328">*338 the petitioner in his return filed March 15, 1934. The petitioner was in the business of real estate.
The question then arises as to whether the loss (thus ascertained) is capital or ordinary, under section 101 (c) (2), Revenue Act of 1932.
We think the effect of Regulations 77, article 193, so far as concerns the gain or loss there allowed, contemplates capital gain or loss. The property has been acquired through the application of capital upon purchase price, and in that sense an exchange of capital assets has taken place. The apparent intent and the effect of the regulation is to permit adjustment of base in the taxable year when foreclosure takes place. We hold that the petitioner's loss is capital and limited under section 117 (a) (2) of the Revenue Act of 1932, to capital gains.
Smith,
(a) Net loss disallowed | $ 22,410.36 |
(b) Accrued interest (added) | 89,809.68 |
(c) Bonus (added) | 30,785.85 |
(d) Profit on foreclosure (added) | 18,731.00 |
Total | 161,736.89 |
All of the amounts in issue stem from the foreclosure sale of land of the Lagoona Beach Co., which was bid in by an agent for the mortgagees at a price of $ 435,000. The Court sustains the petitioner's contention with respect to items (c) and (d), above. It admits that the petitioner did sustain a net loss of $ 22,410.36 but finds that the 1 T.C. 328">*339 deductible net loss must be limited by section 117 (a) (2) of the Revenue Act of 1932. With this conclusion I am in accord. I am not, however, in accord that the correct amount of the net loss was $ 22,410.36, as more fully explained below. The Court also reduces the accrued interest to be added to the petitioner's net income from $ 89,809.68 to $ 86,389.03, which is 68.413 percent of the accrued interest included in the Court's decree of $ 126,275.75.
The Court finds that1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*34 the fair market value of the petitioner's interest in the real estate acquired at the foreclosure sale was $ 133,405.35. I think that the amount was much less. To prove his case the petitioner introduced in evidence the testimony of three expert real estate men who gave their opinion as to the fair market value of the entire property at the date of the foreclosure sale. The highest appraised value given by any witness was $ 105,000. The petitioner contends, and I think correctly, that the fair market value of the property was not in excess of $ 105,000, 68.413 percent of which is $ 71,833.65. The petitioner, therefore, contends that the actual loss sustained by him upon the transaction was the difference between $ 71,833.65 and the stipulated cost of his interest in the mortgage notes, $ 155,721.05, or $ 83,887.40. There was no countervailing evidence as to the fair market value of the land. I think, therefore, that the net loss was actually $ 83,887.40.
In its opinion the Court states that the high bid price made by the agent for the mortgagees at the foreclosure sale, namely, $ 435,000, "indicates intent to prevent anyone else from securing the property at a price less than1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*35 the investment therein. It thus appears that the mortgagees agreed, in substance, not to let anyone else acquire the property for less than the indebtedness, including the interest. That there was only one bid proves little or nothing. The mortgagees' high bid may have been the opening bid, made at once, precluding even a slightly less offer by any other bidder." As a Judge of the Court who heard the witnesses in this case I emphatically dissent from this view. There is not a particle of evidence to support it. At the hearing of this proceeding the petitioner testified as follows:
A. I thought the property was then worth about two hundred thousand dollars, to have bid and your idea of the net value of the property?
A. I thought the property was then worth about two hundred thousand dollars. I think I was very optimistic, because the first time we tried to sell it after then, which was in 1934, we authorized the sale at one hundred fifty thousand dollars and the man thought he had a propspect but wasn't able to move it.
Q. You told us now what your thought was about the market value of the property. I am asking you what influenced your conception of the market value of the property? 1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*36 Was it the amount of the bid?
Q. Can you tell me what consideration was given in connection with the fixing of the bid to possibilities of redemption?
1 T.C. 328">*340 Q. You understand what the term redemption means?
A. Yes, somebody comes in and pays us. That wasn't in the picture.
Q. What can you tell us about a consideration given at that time to a deficiency judgment?
A. Other creditors had not been able to collect anything. What could we collect?
A. Hopeless, certainly. There was no chance. The only thing we looked to was the land.
The argument of the attorney for the petitioner in his brief is that the Lagoona Beach Co. notes had no value in excess of the value of the land and that the bid price of $ 435,000 was made with the full knowledge on the part of the mortgagees that the notes could be surrendered in payment of the bid price. The evidence is to the effect that this was done and that no cash was paid in on the bid price.
All of the evidence goes to show that the Lagoona Beach Co. notes had no value in excess of the value of the land which secured them; also that1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*37 there was no probability that the defunct Lagoona Beach Co. or parties in interest would ever redeem the property at a price in excess of its value. It was immaterial to the petitioner and his associates whether the property was bid in at its fair market value or at an amount in excess of that value which could be paid by the surrender of the notes.
The only argument of the respondent upon this point is that it was immaterial what the fair market value of the property was at the time of the foreclosure sale. His argument is that the petitioner and his associates bid $ 435,000 for the property and that that amount must be accepted as its fair market value. The Court has not sustained the respondent's contention upon this point. It has found the fair market value of the land to be $ 200,000 at the time of the foreclosure sale and that the petitioner's proportionate part of that fair market value is $ 133,405.35.
We have then this situation: The petitioner sustained a loss upon the foreclosure transaction. Yet this Court holds that the petitioner derived taxable income from the transaction represented by accrued interest in the amount of $ 86,389.03.
This result gives me much puzzlement. 1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*38 Without the receipt of any money or of any property equaling the petitioner's investment in the mortgage notes, the petitioner is held liable to income tax upon a large amount of accrued interest which he did not receive. In the words of Nicodemus, "How can these things be?"
The incidence of the income tax is upon "gains, profits, and income." Without any gain or profit and without the receipt of anything that has the semblance of income, how can it be said that a man 1 T.C. 328">*341 has received taxable gain? Is a man taxable upon a transaction which results in a loss? The taxpayer made his return upon the cash basis. In
By many decisions of the Supreme Court we are told that questions involving income tax liability should be construed according to truth and substance and not mere form. The income tax is imposed upon true gains. The amount taken as a tax is simply a portion of the amount of the income received.
In this case the petitioner is not paying tax upon any amount received. In truth and substance the petitioner was no richer after the foreclosure sale than he was before. He did not receive the wherewithal to pay the tax which this Court finds to be due. The conclusion of the Court seems to me to lack the touch of reality. It is contrary to fact.
Were it not for the decision of the Supreme Court in
I am unable to understand the soundness of the application of the Supreme Court's opinion in the above cited case to the present. In
The Court finds that article 193 of Regulations 77 is applicable to this proceeding. That regulation provides that "If the creditor subsequently sells the property so acquired, the basis for determining gain or loss is the fair market value of the property at the date of acquisition." It thus appears that upon a subsequent sale of the property purchased at the foreclosure sale the basis for the computation of gain or loss is $ 133,405.35. The petitioner will, therefore, never be permitted to include as a part of the basis upon the sale of the property the accrued interest of $ 86,389.03 which the Court holds is taxable income to this petitioner for 1933. It seems to me plain that the Congress never intended such a result.
Turner,
* * * A mortgagee who, at foreclosure sale, acquires the property pursuant to a bid of the principal and accrued interest is, as purchaser and grantee, in a position no different from that of a stranger who acquires the property on a bid of like amount. It is true that the latter would be obliged to pay 1 T.C. 328">*343 in cash the amount of his bid, while the formality of payment in cash is ordinarily dispensed with when the mortgagee acquires the property on his own bid. But the rights acquired
In the instant case, however, it is held that
Furthermore, I am unable to find in article 193,
While it is true that this tribunal and other courts in seeking the answer to questions otherwise difficult have often fallen back on the proposition that the repeated reenactment of a statute without substantial change amounts to legislative approval of a regulation of long standing, they have on numerous1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9">*47 other occasions rejected regulations equally venerable on the theory that they did not present a reasonable interpretation or application of the statute, and in some instances, even the existence of a regulation has been ignored. In other words, where the regulation and the tax year are concurrent and the regulation is found to be a reasonable interpretation of the statute or principle of law involved, it is applied and the pronouncements argued for by the petitioner as to the force and effect of a regulation of long standing are very solemnly declared; but where the courts have felt that the regulation was not a reasonable interpretation of the statute or the principle of law involved, it has just as positively been overruled, whether hoary with age or of recent promulgation.
With all due respect to the court in
It may well be that, regardless of the correct rule in the instant case, application of the regulation in
For the reasons stated, I respectfully note my dissent.
1. Art. 193.
Accrued interest may be included as part of the deduction only when it has previously been returned as income.↩