1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*228
1. War Loss. -- On the facts,
2. Pleadings. -- Contention not covered by respondent's answer not considered.
3. War Loss. -- Petitioner claimed losses under subsection (2) of
8 T.C. 841">*841 Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax for the year 1941 in the amount of $ 9,993.75. Petitioner contends that he is entitled to deductions for war losses under subsection (2) and (3) of
Petitioner's original and amended income tax returns for the year 1941 were filed with the collector for the twenty-third district of Pennsylvania.
FINDING OF FACT.
Petitioner resides near Valencia, Pennsylvania. He keeps his books and files his income tax returns on the cash basis and for the calendar year.
Petitioner last came to the United States from the Netherlands in February 1939. Before his last trip to the United States he had made numerous trips to the United States for vacations. He was a citizen of the Netherlands, where he had resided for about twenty years prior to 1939. Petitioner's wife and son came to the United States to join him late in 1939. Since then, petitioner and his family have resided in the United States. Petitioner became a naturalized citizen of the United States in June 1945, by a special act of Congress.
Petitioner's principal business in the United States is the recovery of steel from slag by a patented process.
1. In 1941 petitioner owned 17 shares of stock of a Dutch corporation, known as U. V. Rotterdamsche Goederenhaudel, hereinafter referred to as the Dutch company, or as the company. These1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*231 shares represented the entire outstanding capital stock in 1941. Petitioner 8 T.C. 841">*842 acquired the stock in 1919 at a cost of $ 31,715.20, American dollars. He owned the stock continuously from the time of acquisition. He brought the certificates for the stock with him to the United States, and they remained in his possession.
The office of the Dutch company was in Amsterdam, and its business was a general merchandising business. It represented foreign manufacturers and sold their goods in the Dutch market. The merchandise dealt in consisted of steel and finished aluminum and steel goods for household use. Its assets consisted of cash, inventories of merchandise, securities, and accounts receivable from customers, other Dutch companies.
Jan Aandewiel was the manager of the commercial operations of the company in 1937 and thereafter. He was the manager of those operations in 1939, 1940, and 1941. In April 1946 he was still manager of the company, managing what was left of it.
The German military forces invaded the Netherlands on May 10, 1940; the Netherlands ceased resistance on May 14, 1940; and thereafter the country was occupied by the enemy. The assets of the Dutch company1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*232 were not seized or destroyed by the enemy in its invasion of the Netherlands. After September 1942 part of the assets were seized by the Germans. In the winter of 1945 the whole office inventory was taken away by the Germans, including the books and records.
The assets of the Dutch company were not seized or taken by the German authorities or by any other governmental authority prior to December 11, 1941, and such assets were in existence on that date.
Petitioner brought some American securities which the Dutch company owned to the United States in 1939. He sold them in the latter part of 1939, realizing proceeds in the amount of $ 18,551.75. He did not pay the proceeds to the Dutch company, but retained them.
At the end of 1939, the Dutch company owed petitioner salary in the amount of $ 6,706.79, American dollars.
Petitioner has not recovered any part of his original capital investment in the 17 shares of stock of the Dutch company except by way of the proceeds he realized in 1939 upon the sale of the American securities.
2. Prior to coming to the United States in 1939, petitioner maintained a family residence in Hilversum, which is 20 meters from Amsterdam. The house contained1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*233 about 20 rooms. Petitioner's wife, in 1939, had the household furnishings packed and removed from the house. Two-thirds of the possessions were shipped to the United States, and one-third was left in the Netherlands. Of the one-third which was left in the Netherlands, part was placed in a storage warehouse near Hilversum; part was left with petitioner's mother, including 8 T.C. 841">*843 a collection of miniatures; and part was left in the office of the Dutch company. Petitioner has in his possession the warehouse receipt for the goods which were stored.
Most of the goods which were left in the Netherlands were purchased by petitioner after 1920, but some of the items had been received through inheritance. The goods which were stored included wooden paneling for a library, large corner cabinets and cupboards, lamps, oil paintings, 23 family portraits and pictures, silk draperies, wooden sculptures, dishes, linens, kitchen utensils, pillows and comforters. Some of the articles placed in storage were seventeenth or eighteenth century pieces.
Silverware was left in the office of the Dutch company in Amsterdam. It was insured for 4,000 guilders, about $ 2,000.
Petitioner's mother was 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*234 83 years old. At some time after the invasion of the Netherlands she was carried away by the Germans.
OPINION.
Petitioner claims deduction in the sum of $ 19,870.24, for a war loss sustained on 17 shares of stock of the Dutch company, under
Petitioner has abandoned claim for another war loss, or for a long term capital loss, in the amount of $ 10,660, which was taken in his original income tax return for the year 1941. 1 Effect will be given under Rule 50 to the abandonment of this item.
1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*235 1.
In this case petitioner has met the required proof through the testimony, given under deposition, of Jan Aandewiel of Amsterdam. The deposition was taken in Amsterdam before an American consul on April 15, 1946. Aandewiel testified that all of the assets of the Dutch company were not destroyed or seized by the enemy in its invasion of the Netherlands, i. e., prior1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*236 to December 11, 1941, and that the Dutch company was in possession of all of its assets on December 11, 1941, the date on which the United States declared war on Germany.
All of the property of the Dutch company is deemed to have been destroyed or seized on December 11, 1941, under subsection (2) of
It is held that petitioner is entitled to deduction for a loss under subsection (3) of
Petitioner now concedes that he recovered part of his invested capital in 1939 to the extent of $ 11,844.96, and he claims loss in the amount of $ 19,870.24. On brief, for the first time, respondent1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*237 raises a question about the amount of the adjusted cost of the stock, contending that $ 6,706.79 of the proceeds received in 1939 should not be treated as payment of salary. Petitioner objects to our considering the contention, claiming prejudicial surprise.
We think the objection is well founded. The contention of the respondent raises a question about the liability, if any, of petitioner for income tax for the year 1939 on account of receipt in 1939 of payment of $ 6,706.79 salary for services which he rendered while he was in the Netherlands to the Dutch company. The pleadings do not cover such question; the taxable year 1939 is not before us in this proceeding; and the respondent has made the contention for the first time, after the trial, on brief. If the respondent had desired to inject this question into this proceeding, he should have done so at the trial, at the latest, as required by the rules of the Court. He did not do so. If he had done so, petitioner would have had notice which would have caused him to introduce evidence which is not in the present record. Respondent did not move to amend his answer. Since the question is not properly before us, it is not considered. 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*238 (The point raised by respondent does not involve subsection (c) of
It is held that the adjusted cost of the 17 shares of stock of the Dutch company is $ 19,870.24, and that petitioner is entitled to deduction of that amount as the loss which he sustained in 1941.
2.
In
The presumed loss and the presumed time of its occurence under subsection (2) constitutes in a sense an anticipatory or accelerated loss and does not operate to postpone losses previously sustained.
1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*241 8 T.C. 841">*846 The property left in the Netherlands was separated into three parts: miniatures, which were left with petitioner's mother, of an alleged value of $ 3,000; silverware and other articles, which were left in the safe and in the office of the Dutch company in Amsterdam, of an alleged value of $ 2,000; and household furnishings, which were stored in a warehouse near Hilversum, of an alleged value of $ 9,870.
The deposition of Jan Aandewiel establishes the fact that the goods which were stored in the office in Amsterdam were in existence on December 11, 1941.
The testimony of petitioner is that he does not know when his mother was seized or what became of her. From this it is to be implied that he does not know what became of property which he left with her. Since the invasion of the Netherlands took place on May 10, 1940, and that country capitulated on May 14, 1940, there was a substantial period of time before December 1941, within which property in the possession of the mother may have been seized or destroyed. Therefore, we may not assume that the property left with the mother was in existence and was within the area of the Netherlands on December 11, 1941. The claim 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*242 for a war loss deduction in connection with this part of the property must be denied.
The claim for loss of the household furnishings which were stored must also be denied, but for additional reasons discussed later. It is sufficient to say at this point that it seems that petitioner could have established through the deposition of Aandewiel whether the warehouse where the goods were stored was in existence in December 1941. It is a matter of public record that the Germans bombed Rotterdam and Amsterdam heavily when they crossed into the Netherlands on May 10, 1940, and before General Henri Winkelman surrendered on May 14, 1940. See the Encyclopedia Britannica (1942 ed.) vol. 11, p. 667. Aandewiel was the right hand man of petitioner, and it appears that he remained in Amsterdam in 1941. Hilversum is close by. Petitioner has offered no evidence from which we could make a reasonable inference that the household furnishings were in existence on December 11, 1941.
There is a second question under this issue, which relates to proof of the amount of the loss claimed. The Commissioner's regulation treats war losses under
The loss is determined in the same manner as in the case of any other loss by casualty (see sections 29.23 (e)-1 and 29.23 (f)-1) except that the possibility of recovering such property described in
Under the above quoted part of the regulations, petitioner in this case must show the basis of the property involved, i.e., the cost, adjusted if adjustment is required. 5 In the group of household furnishings which were stored there were at least 65 items, among1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*244 which was a large trunk filled with linens and 23 family portraits. The schedule in evidence states that the items left in the office of the company were insured for 4,000 guilders. Whether or not some of these personal, nonbusiness items were depreciable property is not shown, but such items as pillows and comforters may have been.
The rule applicable to casualty losses under section 23 (e) (3) is that the deduction for the loss may not exceed costs, and, in the case of depreciable nonbusiness property, may not exceed the value immediately1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*245 before the casualty.
Petitioner has failed to show the cost of any of the items involved in the claim for a loss in the total amount of $ 14,870. He purchased most of the items after 1923. Some items were purchased in Italy at various times. The loss claimed is measured in American dollars. Petitioner has not shown costs measured in American dollars. 6 In some instances, petitioner could not state how he arrived at the amount set opposite each item in his petition, as the amount of the claimed loss. Petitioner introduced no evidence about the adequacy of insurance on insured articles.
1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 228">*246 Since petitioner's total war loss deduction may not exceed the aggregate of all the costs, and since he has failed to prove costs, his claim under this issue fails. Petitioner is not entitled to a war loss deduction in the amount of $ 14,870, or in any lesser amount.
1. Petitioner deducted in his original return, as a long term capital loss, one-half of the cost of stock in two Dutch companies, in the amount of $ 33,312.50. The respondent denied the deduction. The claim for loss which is abandoned for the year 1941 relates to 40 shares of stock of a corporation known as Electromagnetische -- Extracite My. N. V. Petitioner made claim for deduction under
2. Regulations 111 set forth in section 29.127, the regulations under
3. The statutory provision which became
4. In
5. See section 23 (e) (3) of the code, losses by individuals (losses sustained not compensated by insurance or otherwise); and section 29.23 (e) of Regulations 111, p. 105.
See, also, section 23 (i) of the code, basis for determining loss; and section 29.23 (i)-1 of Regulations 111, p. 114; and section 29.113 (b) (1)-1 of Regulations 111, pp. 409 and 411.
See, also, Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation, vol. 5, pp. 208, 209, paragraphs 28.50, 28.51, and 28.53, and footnotes.↩
6. For example, petitioner would have to translate his costs in a foreign currency to dollars at the exchange rates for guilders, lira, etc., at the respective times of each purchase. Petitioner did not do this.↩