42 T.C. 1130">*1130 Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax for the year ended December 31, 1959, in the amount of $ 17,251.05.
At issue is whether a balance in the amount of $ 27,445.71 1 in a reserve for bad debts account of a proprietorship was includable in petitioners' taxable income in 1959 when in that year the business of the proprietorship, including accounts receivable, was transferred to a corporation in a transaction which qualified under
FINDINGS OF 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*37 FACT
The facts have been stipulated.
Charlotte Schmidt is the executrix of the estate of her late husband, Heinz Schmidt, who died on July 11, 1961. Heinz and Charlotte, residing in San Francisco, Calif., timely filed their joint income tax return for the taxable year ended December 31, 1959, with the district director of internal revenue at San Francisco.
From 1935 to June 30, 1959, Heinz had operated a proprietorship under the fictitious name of Mohns Commercial Co. The principal place of business of this proprietorship, at all times involved herein, was at 24 California Street, San Francisco, Calif. The business of the proprietorship was the importing of steel and wire products. Most of its sales were to jobbers or wholesalers. For purposes of operating its business, the proprietorship did not usually take an inventory. Orders would be obtained from the jobbers or wholesalers; they would then be booked with the mill and the products would later be shipped to the customers.
The proprietorship was on an accrual and calendar year basis of accounting.
On December 12, 1958, Heinz and Charlotte received permission from respondent to employ the reserve method of accounting for bad 42 T.C. 1130">*1131 debts 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*38 for Federal income tax purposes, beginning with their taxable year ended December 31, 1958. The reserve for bad debts was set up by entry dated December 31, 1958, as follows:
Debit -- bad debt expenses | $ 21,968.48 | |
Credit -- reserve for bad debts | $ 21,968.48 |
Also, by entry dated December 31, 1958, accounts in the total amount of $ 3,470.03 were written off and charged against the reserve for bad debts as follows:
Debit -- reserve for bad debts | $ 3,470.03 | |
Credit -- accounts receivable | $ 3,470.03 |
As of December 31, 1958, the proprietorship had accounts receivable in the amount of $ 609,429.12 and a credit balance in the amount of $ 18,498.45 in its reserve for bad debts account.
On June 30, 1959, there was a credit to the reserve for bad debts in the amount of $ 10,427.90 and, also on that date, accounts in the total amount of $ 1,480.64 were written off by a debit to the reserve for bad debts and a credit to accounts receivable. As of June 30, 1959, the proprietorship had accounts receivable in the amount of $ 914,564.38 and a credit balance in the amount of $ 27,445.71 in its reserve for bad debts account.
The Mohns Commercial Corp. was formed under the laws of California on February 24, 1956. 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*39 At all times involved herein, the corporation had its principal place of business at 24 California Street, in San Francisco. It was on an accrual basis of accounting and employed a fiscal year ending June 30. The corporation was engaged in the business of warehousing steel and wire products, principally nails, and selling them to retailers. In operating this business the corporation usually carried an inventory. However, the business of the corporation did not develop.
From the date of its incorporation to June 29, 1959, all of the corporation's outstanding stock, namely 600 shares $ 10 par value, was owned one-half by Heinz Schmidt and one-half by Harold Paschkes. On June 29, 1959, Heinz purchased 300 shares of the corporation's stock from Paschkes.
Heinz also, by letter dated June 29, 1959, offered to transfer to the corporation all of the proprietorship's assets, as of June 30, 1959, on the condition that the corporation assume all of the proprietorship's liabilities, as of June 30, 1959, and agree to issue to Heinz its $ 10 par value common stock in an amount equal to the net worth of the business transferred. He also authorized the corporation to change its name to Mohns Commercial 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*40 Co. if it accepted his offer. In no event was the number of shares to be issued to Heinz to exceed 5,500 shares.
42 T.C. 1130">*1132 Among the liabilities to be assumed by the corporation in respect of the transfer of the business was a debt in the amount of $ 14,000 owed to an employee of the proprietorship, Fred Leimbrock, for services he had rendered to it. Leimbrock made an offer to the corporation to cancel this indebtedness in exchange for 1,400 shares of the corporation's stock.
The corporation was also to assume proprietorship obligations to another of its employees, Joseph Grisay, in the amount of $ 68,880, of which $ 64,880 constituted commissions due him, and the remainder a loan made by him to the proprietorship. Subsequent to July 1, 1959, the corporation had borrowed $ 8,028 from Grisay. Grisay offered to cancel $ 10,000 of the indebtedness due him for commissions, $ 4,000 of the indebtedness due him from a loan to the proprietorship, $ 8,028 of the indebtedness owed to him by the corporation in respect of the loan made subsequent to July 1, 1959, and to transfer to the corporation furniture and fixtures and a motor vehicle having an aggregate fair market value of $ 2,972, in exchange 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*41 for 2,500 shares of stock of the corporation.
On June 30, 1959, Heinz transferred all the assets of the proprietorship to the corporation in accordance with his letter of June 29, 1959.
The balance sheet of the corporation as of June 30, 1959, prior to the transfer, showed total assets in the amount of $ 6,621.10. The balance sheet of the proprietorship as of June 30, 1959, showed total assets of $ 989,589.39.
Among the assets transferred were accounts receivable in the amount of $ 914,564.38, subject to the reserve for bad debts in the amount of $ 27,445.71.
On or about August 7, 1959, the name of Mohns Commercial Corp. was changed to the Mohns Commercial Co.
The officers and directors of the corporation, as of August 10, 1959, were as follows: Heinz Schmidt -- president-director Joseph Grisay -- vice-president-director Fred Leimbrock -- secretary-treasurer-director
The corporation accepted the foregoing offers of Heinz Schmidt, Leimbrock, and Grisay at a special meeting of its board of directors on August 10, 1959.
Subsequent to the transfer of the proprietorship's business the corporation continued the same operations as that of the proprietorship.
The amounts of accounts receivable, sales 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*42 on account, additions to the reserve for bad debts, and writeoffs against the reserve for bad debts, by the corporation for the 3 years subsequent to the foregoing transfer were as follows: 42 T.C. 1130">*1133
Accounts receivable | ||
Fiscal year ended June 30 -- | ||
Beginning of | End of year | |
year | ||
1960 | $ 915,039.58 | $ 1,203,940.88 |
1961 | 1,203,940.88 | 932,954.56 |
1962 | 932,954.56 | 705,830.24 |
Additions | Writeoffs of | ||
Sales on | to reserve | accounts | |
Fiscal year ended June 30 -- | account | for bad | receivable against |
debts | reserve for bad | ||
debts | |||
1960 | $ 8,889,859.41 | $ 4,657.25 | $ 8,084.58 |
1961 | 5,191,604.77 | 29,383.89 | 34,743.54 |
1962 | 5,464,441.54 | 32,081.49 | 29,565.31 |
The accounts receivable of both the proprietorship and the corporation were 30-day accounts with maximum credit extending to 90 or 120 days.
An application by the corporation to the commissioner of corporations of California bearing the date November 23, 1959, indicated that the corporation proposed to issue 8,400 shares of stock as follows:
Shares | |
Heinz Schmidt | 4,500 |
Joseph Grisay | 2,500 |
Fred Leimbrock | 1,400 |
From June 29, 1959, to May 3, 1960, Heinz was the owner of 600 shares of the corporation's stock, such stock representing all of the corporation's then outstanding stock.
From May 3, 1960, to June 30, 1962, the corporation's 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*43 stock was owned as follows:
Shares | |
Heinz Schmidt | 1 5,100 |
Joseph Grisay | 2,500 |
Fred Leimbrock | 1,400 |
Heinz and Charlotte reported taxable income for 1958 and 1959 in the amounts of $ 27,957.98 and $ 48,279.28, respectively.
OPINION
The sole issue before us is whether the balance in the proprietorship's reserve for bad debts account in the amount of $ 27,445.71, as of June 30, 1959, was includable in petitioners' taxable income in 1959 when, on June 30, 1959, the business of the proprietorship, including accounts receivable, was transferred to the corporation in a transaction which qualified for nonrecognition under
The Government's position follows
The income here sought to be taxed did not arise from the sale of assets. The only relation the sale of petitioner's assets had to this income is that it removed the necessity for maintaining the reserve for bad debts because petitioner no longer held receivables, the full collection of which might be doubtful.
A like result is called for in the present case. Here, too, there was a nonrecognizable transaction, and pursuant to the applicable provisions of
It is true, as petitioners point out, that in
If the result for which petitioners contend is correct, then the transferee corporation must start out with the $ 27,445.71 reserve, without obtaining a deduction 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*51 therefor. Such reserve would then serve as a base for determining the reasonableness of future additions thereto; and when the business is finally wound up the balance in the reserve would be restored to income in the hands of the transferee. Thus, the $ 27,445.71 balance at the time of the transfer would either be absorbed by bad debts sustained by the transferee or it would ultimately be included in income of the transferee. But we know of nothing in the statute that would require or permit any such practice, regardless of how the parties have in fact handled the matter. Such result would appear to be desirable, but we are dealing with a statute characterized by a high degree of specificity, 61964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*52 and we must take it as we find it. In the absence of any provision for carryover of the reserve account, we must hold that an adjustment to income, otherwise proper, is not to be disapproved merely because there was a tax-free transaction pursuant to
1. The parties have stipulated that the balance in the reserve was $ 27,445.71, but the deficiency was determined upon the assumption that the balance was $ 27,437.38. However, the Commissioner has not asked for any increased deficiency based upon the comparatively minor difference.↩
1. 600 shares owned prior to June 30, 1959, plus 4,500 shares received in the exchange involving the transfer of his business.↩
2.
(a) General Rule. -- No gain or loss shall be recognized if property is transferred to a corporation by one or more persons solely in exchange for stock or securities in such corporation and immediately after the exchange such person or persons are in control (as defined in
(b) Receipt of Property. -- If subsection (a) would apply to an exchange but for the fact that there is received, in addition to the stock or securities permitted to be received under subsection (a), other property or money, then -- (1) gain (if any) to such recipient shall be recognized, but not in excess of -- (A) the amount of money received, plus (B) the fair market value of such other property received; and (2) no loss to such recipient shall be recognized.
(c) Special Rule. -- In determining control, for purposes of this section, the fact that any corporate transferor distributes part or all of the stock which it receives in the exchange to its shareholders shall not be taken into account.
(d) Cross References. -- (1) For special rule where another party to the exchange assumes a liability, or acquires property subject to a liability, see (2) For the basis of stock, securities, or property received in an exchange to which this section applies, see (3) For special rule in the case of an exchange described in this section but which results in a gift, see (4) For special rule in the case of an exchange described in this section but which has the effect of the payment of compensation by the corporation or by a transferor, see
(c) Control. -- For purposes of part I (other than
3.
"A taxpayer, engaged in a business as a sole proprietor, transferred all of the assets of his business, subject to its liabilities, to a corporation controlled by the transferor in a nontaxable exchange under the provisions of
4. Whether
5. Thus,
6. In addition to the provisions dealing with carryover of basis, the Code contains a number of highly specific provisions relating to carryovers of net operating losses, earnings and profits, capital losses, methods of accounting, inventories, and other items. Sec. 381. But regardless of whether the carryover of "methods of accounting" would justify a carryover of a bad debt reserve -- a matter on which we express no opinion -- the provisions of sec. 381 are explicitly limited to certain types of corporate readjustments that do not include
7. The dictum in the