1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*22
Petitioner, a majority stockholder in a corporation located in Budapest, Hungary, made advancements to the corporation in 1939 to be used in the corporation's operations. Petitioner was absent from Hungary during the years 1941 to 1948. In 1946 the corporation distributed a quantity of veneers to the taxpayer, which veneers were never moved from Budapest. In 1948, the Hungarian Government nationalized both the corporation's remaining assets and the veneers.
27 T.C. 455">*455 The respondent determined a deficiency in the petitioners' income tax for the year 1948 in the amount of $ 2,427.78. The issues are (1) whether the petitioners are entitled to a loss deduction of $ 134,009.53, either under
FINDINGS OF FACT.
Some of the facts were orally stipulated at the trial and they are hereby incorporated by this reference.
Petitioners, husband and wife, reside in New York, New York, and they filed a joint Federal income tax return for the year 1948 with the then collector of internal revenue for the third district of New York. Dezso Goldner will hereinafter be called the petitioner.
27 T.C. 455">*456 On October 20, 1933, the petitioner, together with his brothers Charles and Nicholas, formed a corporation under the name Dunavolgyi Fiapar Es Fabehozatali RT (hereinafter called the corporation) to establish a sawmill in Budapest, Hungary, and to import wood products. Petitioner and his two brothers at this time controlled four other corporations, located in Czechoslovakia, Roumania, and England, which were engaged in the general lumber 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*26 business. The corporation was authorized to issue 1,500 shares of stock at 100 pengos per share. Petitioner subscribed to 68 per cent of the shares, or 1,020 shares, and the balance of the shares was purchased by his brothers, Nicholas and Charles, 12 per cent and 20 per cent, respectively. The corporation issued receipts to the three brothers to represent their respective interests. No stock was ever actually issued since the corporation was organized as an "anonyme societe." On November 29, 1933, the petitioner made a payment of approximately 30,000 pengos toward the subscription price and on July 10, 1936, he paid the balance, amounting to approximately 70,000 pengos. The official rate of exchange of the pengo in dollars was as follows:
Dec. 31, 1933 | .278000 |
Dec. 31, 1936 | .197750 |
Dec. 31, 1939 | .176012 |
Dec. 31, 1940 | .197700 |
The cost basis of petitioner's stock in the corporation was $ 22,182.50. In the agreement establishing the corporation it was agreed that "in case the original capital should not be enough [for the operation of the business] * * * without any special agreement the contracting parties will furnish the required capital."
In 1939 the petitioner1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*27 advanced to the corporation 763,854.32 pengos to be used for the operating expenses of the corporation. Charles also advanced smaller amounts to the corporation at various times. Petitioner received no note or security from the corporation in connection with the advancements. The corporation did not have to pay interest on this sum, and there was no due date for the repayment of these advances by the corporation. No repayments had been made by the corporation to the petitioner on account of these advancements by June 5, 1942.
Petitioner left Hungary in April 1940 to go to England on a business trip and was prevented from returning by the outbreak of war in Europe. He came to the United States in May 1941. Petitioner had funds on deposit in this country and he acquired interests in a real estate corporation and in a corporation engaged in the business of importing merchandise, both in New York, New York. Petitioner became an officer in both corporations and he received a salary for his services. Petitioner was engaged briefly in the lumber business in the United States in the years 1941 and 1942.
27 T.C. 455">*457 Charles Goldner was the manager of the corporation in Budapest from 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*28 1933 to 1946 and Nicholas undertook the management of the corporation when Charles left Hungary in 1946. Petitioner was familiar with the business activities of the corporation, though not in all details. The corporation did an extensive business prior to World War II. The corporation leased property under long-term lease in the vicinity of Budapest and erected the necessary buildings for use in the lumber business.
On June 5, 1942, the United States declared war on Hungary. The corporation suffered heavy damage and losses of assets during the war, and after the cessation of hostilities on January 20, 1945, the sawmill, in damaged condition, and approximately 5 million square feet of veneers were the only assets remaining to the corporation. The corporation's office was destroyed in 1944 and most of the corporation's books and records were lost. Repairs were made to the sawmill and it was rented to another corporation. The sawmill was in operation in 1948.
The veneers had been placed in eight different basements in Budapest during the war. The value of these veneers depended upon whether the market for them was in Hungary, England, or in the United States. In 1946 approximately1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*29 3,100,000 square feet of veneers, some of which were damaged, were transferred by the corporation to the petitioner. The veneers were not moved out of the basements at the time of this transfer. Petitioner corresponded with various parties in Europe and in South America in an effort to sell the veneers transferred to him. Early in 1948 petitioner went to Hungary to dispose of the veneers. He was not successful and he returned to the United States in March of the same year. In March 1948 a "Commissioner" of the Hungarian Government took over the property of the corporation as well as the veneers which had been transferred to the petitioner. From March to October 1948, Nicholas Goldner was not allowed to go into the office of the corporation. He left Budapest in October 1948.
In 1948 a judgment was rendered against Ruger Associates, Inc., in which the petitioner was a 50 per cent stockholder, in favor of the Howie Construction Company, for additional expenses incurred in the construction of a building for the Ruger corporation. The Ruger corporation paid out of its own checking account the amount of $ 6,752.99, which covered the amount of the judgment as well as legal fees and1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*30 expert witness fees incidental to the trial. The bills and statements by the attorneys and witnesses in connection with this litigation were rendered to the Ruger corporation. In 1946 the Ruger corporation had been liquidated and the petitioner had received a liquidating dividend of $ 6,554.85 which was reported by him in that year as a long-term capital gain. Petitioner, as transferee, was liable for his portion of the judgment against the Ruger corporation, and 27 T.C. 455">*458 to meet this transferee liability he deposited his personal check in the amount of $ 3,650 to the account of the Ruger corporation in 1948.
Petitioner claimed a deduction of $ 3,376.50 as an expense in his income tax return for the year 1948 in connection with the payment made by him to the account of the Ruger corporation. Respondent disallowed this amount as an expense deduction but allowed, as a long-term capital loss, the amount of $ 1,565.51. Petitioner claimed as an ordinary loss on his return for 1948 the amount of $ 134,009.53 for the veneers allegedly nationalized by the Hungarian Government in that year. Petitioner also claimed a long-term capital loss of $ 20,400 on his return for 1948 for worthless1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*31 stock in the Budapest corporation. Respondent disallowed both the ordinary loss deduction of $ 134,009.53 and the long-term capital loss deduction of $ 20,400. Petitioner claimed a deduction for traveling expenses in the amount of $ 2,518, incurred on a trip to Europe. Respondent disallowed this deduction in full.
The advances of 763,854.32 pengos made by the petitioner to the Budapest corporation in 1939 were contributions to capital.
Petitioner incurred expenses of $ 2,518 on his trip in 1948 to Budapest to dispose of the veneers belonging to him.
The fair market value of the veneers distributed to the petitioner by the corporation in 1946 was $ 5,000. The petitioner incurred a loss of $ 5,000 in 1948 due to the nationalization of the veneers by the Hungarian Government in that year.
OPINION.
The principal issues are whether the petitioner is entitled to a long-term capital loss deduction of $ 34,147.60 1 in 1948 under
As shown in the foregoing Findings of Fact, petitioner and his two brothers established the corporation in 1933 for the purpose of operating a sawmill in Budapest, Hungary, and to import various wood products. When petitioner came to the United States in 1941 his two brothers ran the corporation and in 1948 they had the corporation transfer 3,100,000 square feet of veneers to petitioner in payment of petitioner's 1939 advancement to the corporation of 763,854.32 pengos. The bales of veneers remained in storage in Budapest and petitioner made various efforts to sell them but was unsuccessful and in March 1948 the veneers were "nationalized."
27 T.C. 455">*459 Petitioner argues that the advances of 763,854.32 pengos to the1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*33 corporation in 1939 were loans which were repaid to him in 1946 by the distribution to him by the corporation of approximately 3,100,000 square feet of veneers. He then contends that the nationalization by the Hungarian Government in 1948 of the corporate assets and of the veneers belonging to him caused the stock owned by him in the corporation to become worthless in that year and also resulted in a loss of the veneers in the amount of $ 134,009.53.
Petitioner's argument falls at several points. We believe that the advances made by petitioner to his corporation in 1939 were capital contributions, not loans. It is not necessary that capital contributions be in proportion to the stockholdings of the various stockholders.
It is evident that the petitioner must first establish some new basis for his stock when he recovered it. We cannot say with any great certainty when this event took place. Presumably, it occurred when the United States1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*37 entered into an armistice agreement with the provisional national government of Hungary on January 20, 1945. Originally, the corporation had issued temporary receipts to the petitioner in lieu of stock, and these temporary receipts had been left behind in Hungary when the petitioner left that country in 1940. Recovery of property "deemed" lost under
Even assuming that the petitioner had established a new basis for his recovered stock in 1945 under
We think the respondent's determination must be sustained. The property owned by the petitioner was stock in Nitra. So far as we can ascertain from the record this stock as such was never seized or nationalized or confiscated by Czechoslovakia. As we read and interpret the decrees of the Czechoslovakian Government on which the petitioner relies, these decrees nationalized the assets of Nitra and not the stock. Perhaps this had the effect of destroying the value of the corporate assets, but even this is not established by the evidence. The fact remains that the petitioner's stock itself was not seized or confiscated. We are not overlooking the fact that the petitioner's stock was in April of 1946 turned over to representatives of Czechoslovakia "purportedly" pursuant to Czechoslovakian Decree No. 95. Nevertheless, the record before us does not contain this1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*40 decree, we are unable to determine its effect or purpose, and for all that appears, this transfer was made at the voluntary instruction of the petitioner and cannot be considered a seizure or confiscation.
We conclude that the petitioner is not entitled to a loss deduction for worthless stock in 1948 through the naturalization of the corporate assets by the Hungarian Government in that year.
27 T.C. 455">*462 Petitioner also makes the argument that he is entitled to a loss deduction in 1948 under
We think, after an examination of all the evidence, that1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*42 the petitioner did suffer a loss under
Petitioner made a trip to Hungary from the United States in 1948 in an unsuccessful effort to sell the veneers. Respondent agrees that expenses in connection with this trip are deductible by the petitioner under
The last issue is whether the petitioner may deduct under
Petitioner was a 50 per cent stockholder in Ruger Associates, Inc., which was liquidated in 1946 and paid to the petitioner a liquidating dividend of $ 6,554.85. In 1948 a judgment was rendered against1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22">*44 the Ruger corporation in favor of a construction company for additional costs incurred in the construction of a building for the Ruger corporation. The Ruger corporation paid the amount of the judgment, $ 6,752.99, which covered the amount of the judgment as well as legal fees and expert witness fees incidental to the trial. Petitioner's claim that $ 1,342.03 is deductible under
1. It does not appear from the record how the petitioner computes this amount as the basis of the stock. We have found as a fact that the basis of the 1,020 shares of stock held by the petitioner in the Budapest corporation was $ 22,182.50.↩
2.
(a) Cases in Which Loss Deemed Sustained, and Time Deemed Sustained. -- For the purposes of this chapter -- * * * * (2) Property in enemy countries. -- Property within any country at war with the United States, or within an area under the control of any such country on the date war with such country was declared by the United States, shall be deemed to have been destroyed or seized on the date war with such country was declared by the United States. (3) Investments referable to destroyed or seized property. -- Any interest in, or with respect to, property described in paragraph (1) or (2) (including any interest represented by a security as defined in
3.
(d) Basis of Recovered Property. -- The unadjusted basis of property recovered in respect of property considered destroyed or seized under subsection (a) shall be determined under this subsection. Such basis shall be an amount equal to the fair market value of such property, determined as of the date of the recovery, reduced by an amount equal to the excess of the aggregate of such fair market value and the amounts of previous recoveries of money or property in respect of property considered under subsection (a) as destroyed or seized over the aggregate of the allowable deductions in prior taxable years on account of the destruction or seizure of property described in subsection (a), and increased by that portion of the amount of the recovery which under subsection (c) is treated as a recognized gain from the involuntary conversion of property. * * *↩