1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*120
Petitioner was a 50 per cent stockholder in a corporation and held an option to purchase the remaining stock. He assigned the option to the corporation and on the same date, the corporation purchased the stock for $ 80,000 which resulted in petitioner's becoming the sole stockholder in the corporation.
28 T.C. 962">*962 The respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of petitioners in the amount of $ 41,385.34 for the taxable year 1951.
The sole issue for our determination is whether the payment of $ 80,000 by J. R. Holsey Sales Co. to a 50 per cent corporate stockholder in redemption of that stock constitutes a constructive taxable dividend to Joseph R. Holsey, the remaining stockholder, within the purview of
FINDINGS OF FACT.
Most of the facts have been stipulated1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*121 and are found accordingly.
Joseph R. Holsey and Eleanor T. Holsey are husband and wife residing in Westfield, New Jersey. They filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year ended December 31, 1951, with the then collector of internal revenue at Newark, New Jersey. Eleanor T. Holsey is joined in this action solely by virtue of having participated in filing a joint return with her husband and therefore only Joseph R. Holsey will be referred to as petitioner.
J. R. Holsey Sales Co., a New Jersey corporation, is an Oldsmobile dealership organized on April 28, 1936, and since that time the petitioner has been president and a director thereof. Of the 2,500 shares of authorized no-par-value stock, only 20 shares were issued to Greenville Auto Sales Company, a Chevrolet dealership, hereinafter referred to as Greenville, in exchange for all of the right, title, and interest to the Oldsmobile franchise and other assets with respect to the franchise which had prior thereto been owned and operated by Greenville. The value assigned to the 20 shares of stock was $ 11,000.
Petitioner's father, Charles V. Holsey, owned in 1936, in excess of two-thirds of the outstanding stock in1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*122 Greenville and petitioner was vice president and a director thereof. On April 30, 1936, Greenville 28 T.C. 962">*963 extended to the petitioner an option to purchase 50 per cent of the outstanding shares of J. R. Holsey Sales Co. for $ 11,000, and, within 10 years after the exercise of this option, an option to buy all the remaining shares for a sum to be agreed upon.
Greenville held all of the outstanding stock of J. R. Holsey Sales Co. from April 28, 1936, until November 1939, when petitioner exercised the first option, purchasing 50 per cent of the outstanding stock of J. R. Holsey Sales Co. for $ 11,000.
On June 28, 1946, petitioner was given a revised option to purchase the remaining shares of stock in the J. R. Holsey Sales Co., which permitted the petitioner to purchase such stock at any time up to and including June 28, 1951, for $ 80,000. The revised agreement ran to the petitioner individually and was not assignable by him to anyone except to a corporation in which he owned not less than 50 per cent of the common voting stock. On the date of the revised option, petitioner's father owned 76 per cent of the stock in Greenville and petitioner was vice president and director thereof.
1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*123 On April 28, 1948, J. R. Holsey Sales Co. declared a 3-for-1 stock dividend and the no-par-value common stock was allocated a stated value of $ 750 per share. This increased the outstanding capital stock to 80 shares held in equal portions by the petitioner and Greenville.
On January 19, 1951, petitioner assigned the option agreement of June 28, 1946, to J. R. Holsey Sales Co., which, on the same date, exercised the option, paying Greenville $ 80,000 as the purchase price of the stock held by it. The purchase of such stock by the J. R. Holsey Sales Co. resulted in the petitioner's becoming the owner of 100 per cent of the outstanding stock of the J. R. Holsey Sales Co. Petitioner gave no effect to this transaction in his income tax return for 1951.
The principal officers and only directors of the J. R. Holsey Sales Co. from April 28, 1936, until December 31, 1951, were petitioner; his brother, Charles D. Holsey; and their father, Charles V. Holsey.
The earned surplus of the J. R. Holsey Sales Co. on January 19, 1951, was in excess of $ 300,000. From the time of its incorporation in 1936 up to and including December 31, 1951, the earned surplus and yearly cash dividends of the 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*124 J. R. Holsey Sales Co. were as follows:
Cash | ||
Year | Earned surplus | dividends |
1936 | $ 310.67 | |
1937 | 2,413.46 | |
1938 | 1,497.54 | |
1939 | 7,299.63 | |
1940 | 13,706.60 | $ 3,200 |
1941 | 26,664.40 | 3,000 |
1942 | 26,446.78 | |
1943 | 33,877.21 | |
1944 | $ 43,956.86 | |
1945 | 35,862.67 | |
1946 | 80,687.97 | $ 2,000 |
1947 | 163,537.59 | 2,000 |
1948 | 183,851.17 | 4,000 |
1949 | 239,583.05 | 4,000 |
1950 | 306,979.81 | 4,000 |
1951 | 351,738.27 | 6,000 |
The Oldsmobile franchise or Direct Dealer Selling Agreement, under which the J. R. Holsey Sales Co. operated, was a yearly contract entered 28 T.C. 962">*964 into by the corporation and the automobile manufacturer in reliance upon, and in consideration of, the personal qualifications and representations of the petitioner, as an individual. It was the manufacturer's policy to have its dealers own all of the stock in dealership organizations.
The respondent determined that the effect of the transaction between the J. R. Holsey Sales Co. and Greenville, wherein J. R. Holsey Sales Co. paid $ 80,000 to Greenville for one-half of its stock, constituted a dividend to the petitioner who was the remaining stockholder.
The net effect of the transaction, whereby the J. R. Holsey Sales Co. purchased1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*125 50 per cent of its outstanding stock from Greenville, leaving petitioner in complete ownership of the J. R. Holsey Sales Co., constituted a taxable constructive dividend to the petitioner.
OPINION.
The question here is whether the payment of $ 80,000 by J. R. Holsey Sales Co., in redemption of 50 per cent of its outstanding capittal stock, constituted the payment of a constructive taxable dividend to petitioner, the other 50 per cent stockholder of said corporation, under the provisions of
(g) Redemption of Stock. -- (1) In general. -- If a corporation cancels or redeems its stock (whether or not such stock was issued as a stock dividend) at such time and in such manner as to make the distribution and cancellation or redemption in whole or in part essentially equivalent to the distribution of a taxable dividend, the amount so distributed in redemption or cancellation of the stock, to the extent that it represents a distribution of earnings or profits accumulated after February 28, 1913, shall be treated as a taxable dividend.
It has long been1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*126 held that, in order to constitute income taxable to the stockholder, actual receipt of the payment out of earnings is unnecessary, constructive receipt being sufficient.
In the
Petitioner argues he could not be charged with constructive receipt of a dividend because the payment out of earnings was not made to 28 T.C. 962">*965 satisfy his legal obligation. Petitioner points out he merely had an option and he was under no obligation to make1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*127 the $ 80,000 payment that was made by the corporation. There is no merit in the argument. The corporate act of payment could be
The question here is whether the payment by the corporation out of earnings was made at such time and in such manner as to be essentially equivalent to the distribution of a dividend. All of the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction must be considered.
The principle to be applied in determining whether a distribution is essentially equivalent to a dividend under
While the absence of a personal plan and motive in making the distribution will not characterize the transaction as not essentially equivalent1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*129 to a taxable dividend, the presence of a personal plan and motive which is served by the distribution is strong evidence that the distribution is essentially equivalent to a dividend. Here we start with the proposition that from the very beginning of J. R. Holsey Sales Co. in April 1936, the plan was that petitioner was to have rights, which, if exercised, would result in his owning all of the stock of J. R. Holsey Sales Co. In 1946, when the option was extended, the plan was still that petitioner have rights that would secure for him all of the stock; only now the plan was changed slightly so that the option would be assignable by him. The parties were careful to see that the new option to buy 50 per cent of the stock would be assignable to a corporation in which the optionee owned 50 per cent of the stock. Obviously this meant the option would be 28 T.C. 962">*966 assignable only to J. R. Holsey Sales Co. The option was a valuable personal contract which would give petitioner all of the stock of J. R. Holsey Sales Co. with its earned surplus in January 1951 in excess of $ 300,000, by a payment to Greenville of $ 80,000. The assignment of the option contract to J. R. Holsey Sales Co. 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*130 was clearly for the purpose of having that company pay the $ 80,000 in exercise of the option that was executed for petitioner's personal benefit. The payment was intended to secure and did secure for petitioner exactly what it was always intended he should get if he made the payment personally, namely, all of the stock in J. R. Holsey Sales Co. Clearly the net effect of the transaction was the distribution of a dividend to petitioner.
Petitioner argues in effect that the reacquiring of one-half of its stock by the corporation served a business purpose. That factor is to be considered.
The argument is that divided stock ownership of an automobile sales corporation was not in accordance with the manufacturer's policy and therefore an expenditure from earnings to eliminate divided stock ownership was an expenditure from earnings for a legitimate corporate purpose and not a dividend distribution. It seems obvious that it would not be the business of a corporation to use its earnings to redistribute its stock amongst shareholders. Surely the fact that divided stock ownership was against the manufacturer's policy, would not make the purchase of stock from corporate earnings of one stockholder, and turning the stock over to the other, a true corporate purpose act, or, in fact, anything less than a dividend distribution to the remaining stockholder. And yet that is essentially what occurred here. The manufacturer's policy that was violated was in the stock ownership1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*132 of the shareholders and it was up to the shareholders, not the corporation, to see, in the words of petitioner, that this was "remedied or rectified." It required no corporate act to remedy the situation. The "suggestions" of the manufacturer's representatives were obviously 28 T.C. 962">*967 that petitioner remedy the situation by securing all of the stock. This he did with the help of a payment out of earnings of $ 80,000. The corporation as an entity had not violated any policy of the manufacturer. It was not a corporate purpose to see to it that it have but one stockholder. It served the purpose of petitioner and not the corporation when it paid $ 80,000 out of earnings to aid petitioner in acquiring all of the stock, in accordance with the manufacturer's policy.
As was said in
It is no answer to say that these transactions [redemption of stock] had their origin in the demand of Chevrolet that the trust be eliminated as a stockholder. * * * It was an objective that the parties themselves would undoubtedly have desired to attain, wholly apart from1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120">*133 any suggestion emanating from Connell [the manufacturer's representative]. * * *
Petitioner cites
There was another adjustment made by respondent which the parties agreed depended upon the outcome of the principal issue, therefore --