1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 291">*291
A corporation paid over to a trustee in 1945 the sum of $ 10,500 as compensation for past services rendered by petitioner. The trustee was directed to hold, invest and pay over this sum to petitioner or his estate in two installments in 1946 and 1947.
16 T.C. 244">*244 Respondent determined a deficiency of $ 11,550.61 in the petitioner's income tax for 1945.
16 T.C. 244">*245 The 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 291">*292 sole question is whether respondent was correct in including in petitioner's taxable income for 1945 the amount of $ 10,500 transferred in trust for petitioner in that year by petitioner's employer, but which was thereafter paid by the trustee to the petitioner in installments in 1946 and 1947 as required by the trust agreement.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The stipulated facts are found as facts. Those of the stipulated facts together with such facts found from oral testimony as are necessary for the decision are set forth below.
Petitioner, E. T. Sproull, is an individual residing in Bristolville, Ohio. His 1945 income tax return was filed on a calendar year basis with the collector of internal revenue for the 18th district of Ohio, Cleveland Division.
In 1929 petitioner became a large stockholder in and president of the Brainard Steel Corporation (hereinafter sometimes called the corporation). He held the office of president until the business was sold January 1, 1948.
Petitioner's salary was originally established at $ 12,000 per year, but shortly after 1929 the corporation ran into financial difficulties and petitioner voluntarily decreased his compensation over the depression years. 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 291">*293 He never made any claim on the corporation for the amount of the decrease, but at one time stated to the directors that he thought they owed him about $ 80,000.
The year 1945 was a good one financially for the corporation and on December 26, 1945, the corporation, following authorization of its board of directors, entered into a trust agreement with the Union Savings and Trust Company of Warren, Ohio, as trustee. Pursuant to the agreement, the corporation on December 31, 1945, paid over to the trustee the sum of $ 10,500 in consideration of services theretofore performed for the corporation by petitioner and the inadequacy of salary paid for such services. The trustee was empowered to invest and reinvest the money and was directed to pay out of principal to petitioner the sum of $ 5,250 on December 26, 1946, and the balance, including income, on December 26, 1947. In the event of petitioner's prior death, the amounts were to be paid to his administrator, executor, or heirs.
The trustee, pursuant to the agreement, paid to petitioner by check the sum of $ 5,250 on December 26, 1946, and a like sum on December 26, 1947.
The petitioner in his 1946 calendar year return included as income1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 291">*294 the first $ 5,250 received from the trustee and in his 1947 calendar year return included as income the $ 5,250 received from the trustee in 1947.
16 T.C. 244">*246 At the time the trust agreement was authorized by the corporation's board of directors, petitioner was president of the board and held 1,375 shares of the corporate stock. At the same time petitioner's wife held 1,000 shares, and his three daughters 5,919 each. Petitioner thus controlled 20,132 shares, or 25.1 per cent, of an outstanding total of 78,916 shares. This situation continued to exist during the years 1945 to January 1, 1948.
The action in setting up the trust was neither initiated by the petitioner nor taken pursuant to his direction.
On December 31, 1945, the corporation deducted, as an expense for salaries, the sum of $ 10,500 paid to the trustee, both in its records and in its calendar year income tax return for the year 1945.
OPINION.
The Commissioner included in petitioner's 1945 taxable income as bonus income the sum of $ 10,500 paid by Brainard Steel Corporation to the Union Savings and Trust Company of Warren, Ohio, trustee under the agreement of December 26, 1945.
Petitioner contends the respondent taxed1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 291">*295 him in the wrong year and that instead of being taxable on the full $ 10,500 in 1945 he was properly taxable in 1946 and 1947 on the amounts paid him by the trustee in those years.
Neither the stipulated facts nor the oral testimony establish whether petitioner made his returns on a cash basis. However, since that is the most common method of reporting income and since the trial apparently proceeded on that basis we assume the cash method was used.
Superficially the issue looks simple. Petitioner actually received no cash until the years 1946 and 1947. Why, then, should he be taxed in 1945? And what was the basis for respondent's action in so doing?
A possible basis is the application of the doctrine of constructive receipt and petitioner in his main argument assumes that to be the fact. He sets out to demonstrate the doctrine's in applicability, pointing out (1) that although the sum was fixed and paid by his employer as compensation for services, he actually received no part of the money in 1945; (2) that he could not have reduced any part of the money to possession in that year because of the time limitations on payment to him set in the trust instrument, and (3) that he had1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 291">*296 no control of the corporate action in establishing the trust, nor was such action taken at his suggestion or pursuant to his direction.
This Court has rather fully discussed the doctrine of constructive receipt in
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