1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*185
1.
2.
10 T.C. 894">*894 These cases involve deficiencies in income tax and declared value excess profits tax, and penalties for 1940 and 1941. The cases were consolidated.
In Docket No. 11221 the respondent determined that petitioner Coast Carton Co. was an association, taxable as a corporation in 1940 and 1941. In Docket No. 11222 the respondent determined deficiencies in the joint income tax liability of petitioners James L. Norie and his wife, Sarah May Norie.
10 T.C. 894">*895 By reason of stipulations filed at the hearing, the sole remaining issue to be decided in either case is whether the Coast Carton Co. is taxable as a corporation in the years 1940 and 1941.
It is stipulated that, in the event the Coast Carton Co. is taxable as a corporation, there are deficiencies as follows:
Docket No. 11221 | ||||||
Income tax and penalties | Declared value excess profits | |||||
tax and penalties | ||||||
Year | ||||||
Tax | 50% | 25% | Tax | 50% | 25% | |
penalty | penalty | penalty | penalty | |||
1940 | $ 920.23 | None | $ 230.06 | $ 251.34 | None | $ 62.84 |
1941 | 3,337.55 | None | 834.39 | 2,272.88 | None | 568.22 |
Docket No. 11222 | |||
Income tax and penalties | |||
Year | |||
Tax | 50% | 25% | |
penalty | penalty | ||
1940 | $ 382.36 | None | |
1941 | 2,117.19 | None |
1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*187 It is further stipulated that, in the event the Coast Carton Co. is not taxable as a corporation in the years 1940 and 1941, there are deficiencies in income tax due from petitioners James L. Norie and Sarah May Norie (Docket No. 11222) for the years 1940 and 1941 in the respective amounts of $ 1,138.34 and $ 3,436.61, and that the Court may enter its decision accordingly.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The Coast Carton Co. was a corporation, organized in 1904 under the laws of the State of Washington for a period of 25 years. Its charter expired by limitation in 1929 and has not been renewed or extended.
In or about 1926 petitioner James L. Norie had acquired all of the stock of the Coast Carton Co. At that time he was married and living with his wife, Martha Kaye Norie. Qualifying shares of stock were issued as follows: To his son, James L. Norie, Jr., 11 shares; to his daughter, Mary E. Banks, 10 shares; and to his wife, Martha Kaye Norie, 10 shares. No consideration was paid for these shares and the certificates representing them were not delivered, but were retained by James L. Norie.
For all the years up to and including 1939, corporation income tax returns were filed by the corporation. 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*188 For the years 1940 to 1945, both inclusive, James L. Norie and his present wife, Sarah May Norie, 10 T.C. 894">*896 reported the income from the business conducted under the name of the Coast Carton Co. in their individual returns.
Martha Kaye Norie died intestate in 1937, leaving as her heirs James L. Norie, Jr., son; Mary Norie Banks, daughter; and James L. Norie, her husband. In the inventory and appraisement of her estate filed with the Superior Court of King County, Washington, on September 28, 1938, by James L. Norie, administrator, there were listed as community personal property "522 shares of stock of the Coast Carton Company, a Washington Corporation (the total outstanding issued stock consists of 543 shares) par value of shares $ 100.00 each." James L. Norie, Jr., and Mary Norie Banks, on or about July 26, 1937, transferred and conveyed to James L. Norie all their right, title, and interest in and to all the personal and real property in their mother's estate. On August 15, 1944, the administrator of said estate was ordered to distribute the assets thereof to James L. Norie, the husband relict.
James L. Norie, Jr., died in 1938, and Muriel Mawer was appointed administratrix 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*189 c. t. a. In the inventory and appraisement of his estate filed October 10, 1939, there appears "11 shares of stock in the Coast Carton Company." All of his estate was set over to Esther Norie in lieu of homestead by order of the court dated November 3, 1939.
Between May 1, 1938, and May 8, 1940, James L. Norie filed financial statements for himself as an individual, and for the Coast Carton Co. as a corporation, with the University National Bank of Seattle. In these statements J. L. Norie is represented as being the controlling owner, president, and treasurer of the Coast Carton Co., a Washington corporation, having a capital stock issued and outstanding of $ 54,300 par value. He further stated that all outstanding stock was "owned in the family."
Sometime after October 22, 1940, and before January 1941, the attorney of James L. Norie told him that the charter of the corporation had expired in 1929. Thereafter, beginning with the year 1940, James L. Norie and his present wife, a petitioner herein, filed individual tax returns including therein all of the income from the business formerly carried on and reported in the name of the corporation. In financial statements made by James1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*190 L. Norie after learning that the charter had expired, he represented himself as an individual doing business as the Coast Carton Co.
At some time prior to 1941 the company lettering on the office door was removed and changes were made in the letterheads used in the business.
About 1939 Virgil B. Chadwick began talking with the Norie family about buying the business of the Coast Carton Co. In his dealing with James L. Norie there was never any mention made of stock or stockholders. The negotiations were for the purchase of the business from Norie as sole proprietor. In conversations with Mary Norie 10 T.C. 894">*897 Banks, daughter of James L. Norie, she repeatedly stated that her father was sole owner of the Coast Carton Co. and she had no interest in it. About 1941 Chadwick asked the widow of James L. Norie, Jr., now Esther Brockelbank, if she had any interest in the company, and she expressly stated to Chadwick that she had no interest in the business.
In an action by James L. Norie brought in 1947,
IV
That upon advise that it was necessary for him to transfer nominal qualifying shares to other parties in order that they might hold offices as officers and directors of said corporation, the plaintiff caused to be made out three certificates evidencing thirty-one shares of the common capital stock of the corporation as follows: One such certificate in the name of his son, James L. Norie, Jr. for eleven shares; one certificate in the name of his daughter, Mary E. Banks, for ten shares, and one certificate in the name of his wife, Martha Kaye Norie, for ten shares; that no consideration ever passed from any of said parties to the plaintiff therefor1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*192 and that none of said certificates were ever delivered to any of said parties but were, at all times, retained by plaintiff in his possession; that no dividends were ever paid on any of said capital stock and that no distribution of assets was ever made to said above named persons nor did, or have, any of said persons, their representatives, heirs or legatees, at any time, either before or after the year 1929, make any claim to the ownership of said shares of stock or said stock certificates or for the right to receive any dividends or distribution of assets, nor did plaintiff intend to create any rights, by gift or otherwise, by causing said certificates to be made. That at no time after acquiring all of said capital stock as hereinbefore set forth, did plaintiff dispose of any of said stock or create any interest therein in any other person, either by sale, gift, transfer or otherwise.
It was further found and adjudged that the Coast Carton Co., a Washington corporation, incorporated September 8, 1904, ceased to exist as a corporation, either "
The question of whether the Coast Carton Co. was taxable as a corporation for the year 1939 was litigated in the Tax Court. In its decision promulgated April 27, 1944,
The mortgage on the property at 4133 Stoneway Street, on which the plant of the Coast Carton Co. was situated, was reduced from $ 12,500 to $ 2,000, which was being paid off in 1941 by petitioner James L. Norie at the rate of $ 50 a month, plus interest.
In the calendar years 1940 and 1941 James 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*194 L. Norie, in his individual capacity, was the sole owner of the manufacturing business conducted by him under the name of the Coast Carton Co.
OPINION.
The respondent determined that the Coast Carton Co. is an association taxable as a corporation for the calendar years 1940 and 1941. He contends that the decision here is controlled by our decision in
If the doctrine of
In
A taxpayer may secure a judicial determination of a particular tax matter, a matter which1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*196 may recur without substantial variation for some years thereafter. But a subsequent modification of the significant facts or a change or development in the controlling legal principles may make that determination obsolete or erroneous, at least for future purposes. If such a determination is then perpetuated each succeeding year as to the taxpayer involved in the original litigation, he is accorded a tax treatment different from that given to other taxpayers of the same class. As a result, there are inequalities in the administration of the revenue laws, discriminatory distinctions in tax liability, and a fertile basis for litigious confusion. Compare
1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*197 It clearly appears that where different taxable years are involved collateral estoppel must be limited to cases where the situation squares exactly with that obtaining in the former case and the controlling facts and applicable legal rules remain unchanged. For example, a judgment as to the basis of depreciation on a certain building would be binding in a suit involving a subsequent tax year where no change in either the facts or the law has occurred. But if the former judgment involved a status that may well change from year to year and there has been a change in the situation between the time of the first judgment and the second, the prior judgment is not conclusive. Cf.
Whether the Coast Carton Co. is doing business as1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*198 an association is not based on an historical document such as a bond or a lease, cf.
In the instant case it appears that in 1940 James L. Norie learned that the charter of the Coast Carton Co. had expired in 1929 and that the business was not incorporated. He immediately took steps to erase all corporate activity and thereafter held himself out as an individual doing business as Coast Carton Co. Corporate evidences were removed from the door of the building and from the stationery; financial reports were made by him as owner doing business under the name of Coast Carton Co. and1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*200 income tax returns were filed by him as an individual doing business as Coast Carton Co. Moreover, after the judgment in
We turn then to a consideration of the case on its merits. Although we find here no organized community of effort for the doing of business which in any way remotely resembles a corporation in organization or function, the respondent contends that the petitioner should be held to be an association under the provisions of the regulations which have remained substantially the same since they were promulgated under the Revenue Act of 1921. 2 The particular provision on which he relies is, "If the conduct of the affairs of a corporation continues after the expiration of its charter, or the termination of its existence, it becomes an association." A similar contention was made in
Here, the petitioner was in fact and in law a corporation for all purposes until its charter was revoked. Neither before nor after that time did it have the essential characteristics of an association. During its corporate life, as well as afterwards, it was under the sole ownership, management, and control of H. R. Thornton. The Commissioner's regulation, section 19.3797-2, above, to the effect that if the conduct of the affairs of a corporation continues after the expiration of its charter it becomes an association, can be sustained only if it is restricted to the usual type of business corporation which itself embodies 10 T.C. 894">*902 the essential features of an association. Otherwise, a business once incorporated might forever afterwards be classified as an association and taxed as a corporation, regardless of its ownership and methods of operation.
1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*203 In
The instant case is not an operating trust as in
It is true that the property on which the plant of the Coast Carton Co. was situated was carried in the name of the Coast Carton Co. during the years when Norie thought the corporation was in existence. But it also appears that during this time the mortgage on the property was reduced from $ 12,500 to $ 2,000, which latter amount was being paid 10 T.C. 894">*903 off in 1941 by petitioner James L. Norie at the rate of $ 50 per month, plus interest.
We have observed that the mere ownership of minor interests in the business by the daughter and the daughter-in-law of James L. Norie would not of itself be determinative of the issue here. But the record before us convinces us, and we have found as a fact, that James L. Norie was the sole owner in the taxable years before us of the business conducted by him under the name of the Coast Carton Co.
In his income tax returns for the years before us, James L. Norie represented, under oath, that he was the sole owner of the business.
A prospective purchaser for the Coast Carton Co. 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*206 testified that in 1939, when he made initial inquiries pertaining to the purchase of the Coast Carton Co. of James L. Norie, the conversation between these two was on the basis of James L. Norie being the sole owner of the company. Shortly thereafter the prospective purchaser inquired of Esther Brockelbank, the former wife of James L. Norie, Jr., deceased, whether she had any interest in the Coast Carton Co. as a stockholder, and she disclaimed any such interest. He also inquired of Mary Norie Banks, the daughter of James L. Norie, as to whether or not she had any ownership in Coast Carton Co. and her answer was also in the negative. This same witness testified that in the fall of 1940, after James L. Norie, Sr., had discovered that the Coast Carton Co. was not a corporation, the letterhead of the company was changed from what it had been in the preceding years. He does not say just what this change was, but he does say that the name of the corporation was removed from the door. All of this testimony was brought out by counsel for the petitioner by cross-examination of a witness subpoenaed by the Commissioner and without any objection from Commissioner's counsel.
After the proceeding1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*207 and judgment in
10 T.C. 894">*904 While we do not regard the ownership of minor interests as controlling here in view of the record in this1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*208 case, we are of the opinion that it is settled by the decision in the
The facts surrounding the
Usually state law determines the creation and existence of legal relationships and their attendant rights, duties, obligations, and incidents. The extent to which these legal relationships are recognized by the Federal revenue laws has often been at issue in the courts. It is generally held that the power of Congress to tax is not subject to state control, but that in the exercise of 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*210 its taxing power Congress may impose its own criteria. See
The law is concerned with the substance of things, rather than with mere form. It is possible that James L. Norie, after discovery that the Coast Carton Co. was no longer a corporation, might have taken some additional steps to clarify his tax status, but it is doubtful whether many reasonably prudent men would have done much more than he did. He notified the revenue department, changed his letterhead, and removed the corporate name from the door, and he notified the bank with which he did business. Under these circumstances, when an individual is doing everything within reason to avoid holding himself out to the public as a corporation and to avoid operation as a corporation, we can see no purpose in attempting to torture the facts in order to find that this taxpayer was 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*212 operating as an "association" taxable as a corporation.
In our opinion, during the taxable years the Coast Carton Co. was an individually owned and operated business and the owner of that business, James L. Norie, was not operating it in a representative capacity. Our conclusion, therefore, is that the Coast Carton Co. was not an association taxable as a corporation during the years 1940 and 1941.
Pursuant to the stipulation of the parties, we find that there is no deficiency in Docket No. 11221, and in Docket No. 11222 there are deficiencies for the years 1940 and 1941 in the respective amounts of $ 1,138.34 and $ 3,436.61, and there are no penalties due.
Disney,
10 T.C. 894">*906 The facts found by the majority opinion disclose that James L. Norie, as administrator, listed only 522 shares of the 543 shares of stock in the community1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*213 estate of himself and his wife after her death. This shows his recognition, in accord with the transfer of 10 shares to his daughter and 11 shares to his son, that he and his wife did not own 21 shares. It is in accord too with his statement, as late as 1940, that all outstanding stock was "owned in the family," and in accord further with his statements that he was "controlling owner." It is likewise in accord with the fact that the probate court distributed the 11 shares of stock formerly held by Norie's son to his widow in lieu of homestead. In short, the record is affirmative and positive, and based upon statements made by Norie at a time when he was not interested in taxes, that he did not own all the stock. He now contends, and the majority opinion upholds him in the contention, that it was all owned by him. No transfer of the stock to him is shown since the above mentioned statements by him; and I am unable to accept an interested contention instead of disinterested statements of fact. The evidence of the witness Chadwick that the daughter and the daughter-in-law stated that they had no interest does not dispose of the interests which they actually owned according to the1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*214 above disinterested statements by Norie.
The judgment of the Superior Court I consider clearly collusive under the language of
Believing that the facts proved are contrary to the conclusions drawn therefrom, I respectfully dissent.
Opper,
What we are now doing fails to distinguish between new evidence, which
The issue here is not whether petitioner was a
Now why did the Tax Court determine in the earlier proceeding that this was an association? It was because it rejected the contention there made, which is the same as that made here, "that it was not an association, but a sole proprietorship. The contention is predicated upon the 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185">*217 theory that J. L. Norie, as the sole stockholder of the corporation, was the owner of petitioner's business. The record fails to prove such a premise for the argument."
There is absolutely no evidence in this record that the conduct of petitioner's business was different in the year 1940; that, for example, it became a partnership or joint venture. The mere fact that it changed the letterhead -- how does not appear -- or that it removed the name from the door, does not to any extent bear on its manner of doing business. Incidentally, this was not until the close of 1940. For all that appears, there was not even this change for 365 days of the year. The real issue is the same as that in the prior proceeding -- petitioner's classification as an "association" because it had "associates," and was not a sole proprietorship. On this issue nothing is produced, certainly no evidence which was not or could not have been produced in the prior proceeding.
The State Court proceeding relied on, if not collusive under the definition of the
It is further adjudged in the same decree that the corporation ceased to exist either
Perhaps the prior decision of this Court was also "in error"; perhaps its affirmance on appeal was also "in error." But even if that were so, it would be the kind of error which the rule of
1. * * * The general rule of
But where the second action between the same parties is upon a different cause or demand, the principle of
2. Sec. 19.3797-2 [Regulations 103]. Association. -- The term "association" is not used in the Internal Revenue Code in any narrow or technical sense. It includes any organization, created for the transaction of designated affairs, or the attainment of some object, which, like a corporation, continues notwithstanding that its members or participants change, and the affairs of which, like corporate affairs, are conducted by a single individual, a committee, a board, or some other group, acting in a representative capacity. It is immaterial whether such organization is created by an agreement, a declaration of trust,a statute, or otherwise. It includes a voluntary association, a joint-stock association, or company, a "business" trust, a "Massachusetts" trust, a "common law" trust, an "investment" trust (whether of the fixed or the management type), an interinsurance exchange operating through an attorney in fact, a partnership association, and any other type of organization (by whatever name known) which is not, within the meaning of the Code, a trust or an estate, or a partnership. If the conduct of the affairs of a corporation continues after the expiration of its charter, or the termination of its existence it becomes an association.↩
1. "Of course, where a question of fact essential to the judgment is actually litigated and determined in the first tax proceeding, the parties are bound by that determination in a subsequent proceeding
2.
3.