1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65">*65
Personal Holding Company -- Dividends Paid Credit. -- A corporation which had no earnings accumulated after February 28, 1913, and no current earnings is not entitled to reduce its subchapter A net income by the amount of a liquidating distribution, one of a series in complete liquidation, since that distribution was not a dividend within the definition of that term contained in section 115 (a).
5 T.C. 892">*892 OPINION.
The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $ 8,047.33 in personal holding company surtax for the calendar year 5 T.C. 892">*893 1941. The1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65">*67 issues for decision are whether the petitioner was a personal holding company during 1941 and, even if it was, whether it was liable for any personal holding company surtax in view of the fact that it was dissolved during the year and made a substantial distribution towards complete liquidation. A stipulation of facts was filed.
The petitioner is a corporation, organized in June 1929 under the laws of Maryland. It filed a personal holding company return for the calendar year 1941 with the collector of internal revenue for the first district of New York.
More than 50 percent in value of the outstanding stock of the petitioner was owned directly or indirectly by not more than five individuals during 1941. More than 80 percent of its gross income for the calendar year 1941 consisted of personal holding company income as defined in
The petitioner had no accumulated earnings or profits on January 1, 1941, but had a deficit at that time in the amount of $ 72,100.29. Its operations during the taxable year resulted in a net loss of $ 30,518.06. One of the items going to make up this loss was a net long term capital loss of $ 43,083.93. Its subchapter1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65">*68 A net income for 1941, within the meaning of section 505 (a), was $ 4,367.80.
The petitioner has been engaged in the purchase, holding, and sale of securities. This business has not proven successful. The stock of the petitioner was offered for sale to the public when it was organized in 1929. There were in the beginning about 500 stockholders, but this number was reduced by the petitioner buying its own stock until there were only 333 stockholders at the end of 1941. The directors of the petitioner discovered in 1940 that more than 50 per centum of the value of the outstanding stock was owned directly or indirectly by not more than five individuals. They realized that as long as the capital was impaired, dividends could not be paid under the law, and if dividends were not paid, the corporation might be taxed as a personal holding company. The stockholders adopted a resolution in November 1941 dissolving the corporation and authorizing its liquidation, including the distribution of its assets, within three years from the date of the resolution. Articles of dissolution filed with the State Tax Commission of Maryland were approved on Decmeber 15, 1941.
The petitioner paid liquidating1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65">*69 dividends to its stockholders in the amount of $ 133,980 in each of the calendar years 1941, 1942, and 1943. The assets remaining at the end of 1943 consisted of cash in the amount of $ 19,818.60, real estate of the value of $ 5,965.38, and prepaid insurance of $ 66.57. The sole asset of the corporation held at the end of 1944 was cash in the amount of $ 25,685.64.
5 T.C. 892">*894 It is obvious that the petitioner comes within the definition of a personal holding company given in section 501. Its stockholdings and its income bring it precisely within that definition and the petitioner makes no contention to the contrary. The petitioner argues, nevertheless, that the imposition of a personal holding company surtax upon it for the calendar year 1941 is a hardship which Congress never intended. This Court has no authority to hold that the petitioner does not come within the definition of a personal holding company because it was not originally formed as such a company, because it still had several hundred stockholders in 1941, or because of the circumstances under which the stock owned by five individuals became more than 50 percent of the total stock outstanding. This would not be the1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65">*70 first case where there might be apparent hardship. Cf.
The petitioner does not deny that it had a small amount of "Subchapter A net income" within the definition contained in section 505, despite its operating loss. But it argues that a very large distribution which it made in that year should be subtracted1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65">*71 from the subchapter A net income in determining "undistributed Subchapter A net income," and, since the distribution far exceeded the income, the result is that there is no "undistributed Subchapter A net income" and, consequently, no personal holding company surtax for the year. It relies heavily upon the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in
Undistributed subchapter A net income is defined as subchapter A net income, minus,
The appellate court in the