1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*133
In 1961, two partners organized a corporation to take over their partnership business. On Oct. 31, 1961, they paid cash for all the stock of the corporation. On Nov. 1, 1961, they transferred all the partnership assets (except cash and accounts receivable) to the corporation in exchange for a 10-year promissory note.
50 T.C. 203">*203 Respondent determined deficiencies in income taxes of the petitioners as follows:
Petitioners | Year | Amount |
George A. Nye and Myrtle Nye, docket No. 5333-66 | 1962 | $ 925.83 |
1963 | 776.10 | |
1964 | 438.89 | |
Dale Thornton and Lucille M. Thornton, docket No. | 1962 | 1,016.80 |
5334-66 | 1963 | 870.87 |
1964 | 605.92 | |
FYE -- | ||
Delta Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning, Inc., docket | 9/30/62 | 10,478.10 |
No. 5335-66 | 9/30/63 | 9,510.65 |
9/30/64 | 4,285.05 |
All issues presented for decision 2 arise from the creation of a corporation, Delta Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning, Inc. (sometimes referred to herein as corporation), and the transfer thereto of assets of a partnership composed of petitioners, Dale Thornton and George Nye. The issues to be decided are as follows:
(1) Whether the transaction whereby the partnership assets were transferred to the corporation falls within the provisions of Code 50 T.C. 203">*204
(2) Whether the corporation is entitled to deductions for amortization of an alleged covenant not to compete executed in connection with the transaction.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts are stipulated and are found accordingly.
George A. Nye and Myrtle E. Nye 4 are husband and wife, and resided in Northridge, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*137 Calif., at the time their petition was filed. They filed joint Federal income tax returns on the cash basis of accounting for the periods in question with the district director of internal revenue at Los Angeles, Calif.
Dale Thornton and Lucille M. Thornton are husband and wife and resided in Sepulveda, Calif., at the time their petition was filed. They filed joint Federal income tax returns on the cash basis of accounting for the periods in question with the district director of internal revenue at Los Angeles, Calif.
Delta Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning, Inc., is a corporation formed under the laws of the State of California. On1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*138 the date its petition was filed, the corporation's principal office and principal place of business was located in Van Nuys, Calif.The corporation filed its Federal income tax returns for the periods in question with the district director of internal revenue at Los Angeles, Calif.
On or about September 1, 1954, Thornton and Nye, as equal partners, formed a partnership, Delta Sheet Metal Co. (sometimes referred to herein as partnership) to engage in the business of operating a sheet-metal shop and doing sheet-metal contracting. In 1961, Thornton and Nye decided to expand their business. They consulted their attorney and, for various reasons including limiting their personal liability, decided to form a corporation through which their business would be conducted. The corporation was formed on October 10, 1961, to succeed the partnership in the operation of the sheet-metal business. It had authorized stock consisting of 2,000 shares of $ 100 par value common stock.
50 T.C. 203">*205 On October 31, 1961, a check in the amount of $ 4,000 was drawn on the partnership bank account and made payable to the corporation and the corporation later issued a total of 40 shares of its common stock 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*139 to Thornton and Nye. No other stock was outstanding during the periods relevant to this proceeding. On October 31, 1961, another check in the amount of $ 10,000 representing a loan was drawn on the account of the partnership and made payable to the corporation.
The cash disbursements journal of the partnership contains the following entry dated October 31, 1961:
Investments -- stock | $ 4,000 | |
Cash | $ 4,000 | |
Loan receivable | 10,000 | |
Cash | 10,000 | |
To record the issuance of checks 6833 and | ||
6834 to Delta Sheet Metal & Air | ||
Conditioning, Inc. |
On November 1, 1961, all assets of the partnership, except cash in bank and accounts receivable, were transferred to the corporation pursuant to an "agreement" and "amendment to agreement" signed by Thornton and Nye as "Sellers" and, on behalf of the corporation, as "Buyer." The agreement transferred the physical assets of the partnership as well as intangibles, including goodwill, to the corporation. The recited consideration was $ 177,179.30, which consisted of $ 3,290 cash designated for inventory; a $ 73,889.30 promissory note designated for the transfer of the tangible and intangible assets of the partnership (other1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*140 than inventory, cash, and accounts receivable); and a $ 100,000 promissory note designated for a covenant not to compete. The agreements allocated the consideration as follows:
1. Inventory | $ 3,290.00 |
2. Heavy equipment, excluding trucks | 60,000.00 |
3. Leasehold improvements | 2,274.00 |
4. Trucks and vehicles | 7,000.00 |
5. Office equipment, customer lists and contracts, and | |
other tangible property | 4,614.60 |
6. Restrictive covenant to be executed by sellers | 100,000.00 |
The allocations to items 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 reflected the approximate fair market values of the properties transferred. The remaining cost basis of items 2, 3, 4, and 5 (excluding customer lists and contracts) in the hands of the partnership was $ 29,542.89. The value of the business as a going concern and of its goodwill was substantial, but no part of the recited consideration was allocated to them.
On November 1, 1961, the corporation executed an unsecured promissory note payable to Thornton and Nye in the amount of $ 73,889.30, with interest of 6 percent per annum. The note was payable in annual installments of $ 7,388.93, or more, plus interest, the first payment to become due "on or before" December1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*141 31, 1962. The corporation executed another document dated November 1, 1961, entitled "Promissory 50 T.C. 203">*206 Note," calling for the corporation to pay $ 100,000, without interest, in annual installments of $ 10,000 or more, the first payment to become due December 31, 1962.
The $ 73,889.30 promissory note was not subordinated to claims of stockholders or other creditors, and payments of principal and interest were made annually when due. Payments of principal on the $ 100,000 promissory note were also made annually when due.
On November 1, 1961, Thornton and Nye also executed a supplemental agreement with the corporation entitled "Restrictive Covenant." In this agreement, Thornton and Nye covenanted that they would not "establish, re-establish, re-open, become engaged in, or in any other manner become interested in, directly or indirectly, financially or otherwise, or assist any person, firm or corporation, nor attempt to solicit customers for, or advise any firm or in any way alienate, directly or indirectly, any of the customer accounts of said business, nor disclose to any other person, firm or corporation, the trade secrets, customer lists, modus operandi or bidding procedure 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*142 of said business, or engage in any similar type of business" within four designated counties. The recited consideration was $ 100,000, payable in 10 annual installments. Paragraph III of the agreement provided as follows:
In the event of breach of this covenant by the Sellers all monies paid to the date of breach shall remain the property of the Sellers and Buyer shall have no further obligation to pay the remaining balance thereof.
Thornton and Nye had operated the partnership business without a covenant not to compete.
On November 1, 1961, the first meeting of the corporation's incorporators and directors was held. Dale Thornton was elected president, and George A. Nye, vice president. They served in these capacities during the years 1962, 1963, and 1964.
On November 27, 1961, 40 shares of stock of the corporation were issued at par value in the following names: Dale Thornton, 20 shares; George A. Nye, 20 shares. Permission to issue these shares had been obtained from the State of California on November 24, 1961.
Account number 408, "Loans from stockholders and officers," on the books of the corporation, contains the following entries, reflecting certain loans made by Thornton1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*143 and Nye to the corporation:
Posting | ||||
reference | Dr. | Cr. | Balance | |
10/12/61 | CR1 | 1,000 | ||
10/31/61 | CR1 | 10,000 | ||
11/15/61 | CR3 | 15,000 | 26,000 | |
9/10/62 | CD30 | 26,000 | ||
12/11/62 | CR25 | 20,000 | ||
9/30/63 | CR44 | 15,000 | ||
12/12/63 | CR51 | 25,000 | 60,000 | |
5/12/65 | CD 126 | 20,000 | 40,000 |
50 T.C. 203">*207 The loans made in 1961 were non-interest-bearing and unsecured. The loans made in 1962 and 1963 were unsecured and bore interest at the rate of 6 percent per annum.
The business continued to prosper following its transfer to the corporation. The partnership return for 1961 discloses sales of $ 471,918.72 and net income of $ 84,941.26. 5 The corporate tax returns for the fiscal years ending September 30, 1962, 1963, and 1964, show net sales of $ 501,832.58, $ 574,839.58, and $ 503,264.65, respectively. The corporate tax return for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1962, the first taxable year of the corporation, shows taxable income of $ 66,615.83. This figure is unadjusted for interest, depreciation, and amortization of the restrictive covenant which are in dispute as well as for officers' salaries. Adjusting the reported taxable income for these1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*144 items, the net income of the corporation for the fiscal period ended September 30, 1962, computed in the same manner as that of the partnership for the prior period, was $ 132,943.72. 6
1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*145 ULTIMATE FINDINGS OF FACT
The transaction whereby the partnership assets were transferred to the corporation was not a bona fide sale of assets to the corporation by Thornton and Nye or by the partnership. Rather it was part of a larger transaction whereby the individual partners transferred cash and assets to the corporation in exchange for stock and a promissory note in the amount of $ 73,889.30. The promissory note in the amount of $ 73,889.30 was a security within the meaning of
The purported covenant not to compete, entitled "Restrictive Covenant," and the promissory note in the amount of $ 100,000, lacked economic substance and reality. The note did not constitute bona fide indebtedness of the corporation.
OPINION
On October 10, 1961, Dale Thornton and George Nye, partners in an air-conditioning contracting business, organized a corporation, 50 T.C. 203">*208 Delta Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning, Inc., to take over their partnership business. Thereafter, on October 31, 1961, Thornton and Nye caused the partnership to transfer $ 4,000 in cash to the corporation and the corporation subsequently issued to Thornton1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*146 and Nye 40 shares of $ 100 par value common stock. The next day, November 1, 1961, Thornton and Nye executed an agreement and an amendment thereto whereby they transferred and purportedly sold the assets of the partnership (excluding cash and accounts receivable) to the corporation for $ 3,290 cash, stated to have been paid for inventory, and a 10-year, interest-bearing installment promissory note of $ 73,889.30, stated to have been given for the remaining tangible and intangible assets of the partnership.
Respondent contends that the transfer of cash and partnership assets were both contributions of capital to the corporation under
Petitioners contend that Thornton and Nye created the corporation with a cash capital contribution1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*147 of $ 4,000 and then in a separate transaction sold the partnership assets to the corporation. They contend that the $ 73,889.30 note was not "stock" but evidence of bona fide indebtedness of the corporation and that the transaction produced the following tax results: (1) The payments of the principal of the note, to the extent they exceed basis, were taxable to Thornton and Nye as capital gain; (2) the interest payments on the note were taxable to Thornton and Nye as interest and were deductible as such by the corporation; and (3) the corporation took as its basis for the transferred assets the purchase price of $ 73,889.30 as allocated among the transferred assets in the November 1, 1961, agreement.
All the tax adjustments in dispute depend upon whether
50 T.C. 203">*209 As part of the November 1, 1961, agreement, Thornton and Nye also agreed to enter into a covenant not to compete with the corporation in its business for a period of 10 years. Purportedly in consideration of a separate agreement so providing, the corporation gave them a non-interest-bearing, 10-year promissory note for $ 100,000, payable in 10 equal annual installments. This part of the agreement raises a separate set of legal problems and, in our view, respondent correctly determined that the purported covenant lacked economic reality and did not support the annual $ 10,000 amortization deductions claimed by the corporation.
Here, in a transaction carried out pursuant to a preconceived plan, cash and business assets were transferred to the corporation by Thornton and Nye. Property includes1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*151 money, so the fact that cash as well as business assets was transferred does not prevent the applicability of the section.
To escape the applicability of
(a)
The general rule of California law is that property acquired with community funds is community property and Thornton and Nye concede that they created the partnership with community funds. However, a "partner is co-owner with his partners of specific partnership property holding1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*153 as a tenant in partnership" and a "partner's right in specific partnership property * * * is not community property."
In
(b)
Whether a transfer of property to a corporation, for purposes of Federal taxation, is a sale as distinguished from an exchange within
We are not convinced that the evidence here shows a sale. The language used in the transfer documents is, of course, to be considered, but standing alone it is not sufficient to require a portion of the transaction to be treated as a sale; substance, not form, governs.
In our view, petitioners have provided no factual basis for their contention that the purported sale of business assets was a transaction separate from the $ 4,000 cash transfer. On the contrary, the evidence shows clearly that the transfers of cash and business assets and the receipt of stock and the note were inseparably related. The corporation was formed by Thornton and Nye on October 10, 1961, following conferences with their attorney. On October 31, 1961, the partnership issued a check in the amount of $ 4,000 in payment for 40 shares to be isssued to Thornton and Nye. The next day the parties entered into an agreement transferring the partnership's assets to the corporation 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*156 for cash and notes. The testimony is unmistakably clear that these steps were part of a preconceived plan developed by petitioners' attorney to change the organization of the business from partnership to corporate form. The fact that the cash was purportedly paid for stock one 50 T.C. 203">*212 day and the assets transferred for the note the next confirms the oral testimony that the whole transaction was the consumation of a single plan.
Thornton and Nye testified that their reason for incorporating the business was to limit their liabilities for possible losses from a projected expansion of their operations. However, they gave no reason why the transaction was divided into two parts, the transfer of cash for stock and the purported sale of the business assets for the note. Such evidence might have confirmed that the form in which the transaction was cast was consistent with its true nature. Cf.
(c)
The law is now well settled that promissory notes may qualify as securities within the purview of
In
The test as to whether notes are securities is not a mechanical determination of the time period of the note. Though1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*160 time is an important factor, the controlling consideration is an overall evaluation of the nature of the debt, degree of participation and continuing interest in the business, the extent of proprietary interest compared with the similarity of the note to a cash payment, the purpose of the advances, etc. It is not necessary for the debt obligation to be the equivalent of stock since section 112(b)(5) specifically includes both "stock" and "securities."
An "overall evaluation" of the $ 73,889.30 note given to Thornton and Nye shows that it was a security within
The note did not evidence an isolated transaction of purchase and sale having its inception after the formation and launching of the corporation but, as we have indicated, was "an integral part of the scheme of its forming1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*161 and financing"; the note and the stock ownership by Thornton and Nye "were together different forms of the assured participation in the potluck of the enterprise," for a 10-year period.
In sum, the 10-year $ 73,889.30 note was no less a security than, for example, the debt obligations which were held to fall within that category in
Implicit in our conclusion that the 10-year $ 73,889.30 promissory note was indebtedness in the form of a security within
As noted above, the note was in the form of a debt obligation. Its terms in no way resembled stock. Form is, of course, not determinative, but is a factor to be considered.
Respondent relies primarily on four factors to show that the promissory note did not in fact constitute debt. He contends that the corporation was undercapitalized; that Thornton and Nye placed the partnership's assets at the risk of the business; that the notes were owned in the same proportion as the stock, and that the value placed on the assets was overstated.
In attacking the adequacy of the capital structure of the corporation, respondent adds to the promissory note of $ 73,889.30, the loans made by Thornton and Nye to the corporation of $ 1,000 on October 12, 1961; $ 10,000 on October 31, 1961, and $ 15,000 on November 15, 1961, and compares this total1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*164 indebtedness of $ 99,889.30 with the $ 4,000 cash capital contribution in arriving at a debt-equity ratio of 25 to 1.
As we pointed out in
Here the partnership had operated successfully since its inception in 1954. The partnership return for the year 1961 shows sales of $ 471,918.72, and net income to each partner of $ 42,470.63, a total of $ 84,941.26, a sum larger than the amount of the note. The corporate returns show net sales of $ 501,832.58, $ 574,839.58, and $ 503,264.65, for the fiscal years ended September 30, 1962, 1963, and 1964, respectively. Looking at the net income of the partnership in 1961 of $ 84,941.26 and the net income of the corporation computed in like manner for its first taxable year of $ 132,943.72, 10 it is clear that reasonably anticipated current earnings were sufficient to permit retirement of the $ 73,889.30 note. In addition, the corporation made all payments of principal and interest on the $ 73,889.30 promissory note when due. These facts rebut the inference raised by the high ratio of debt to capital that the note was not true indebtedness.
Moreover, we perceive no reason why either the going-concern value or the goodwill of the established business should not be taken into account in testing the adequacy of the corporation's capitalization. While no evidence was offered to establish precisely the going-concern value of the business, the high level of income both before and after the transfer demonstrates substantial value.
50 T.C. 203">*216 To support the thin-capitalization argument, respondent also contends that excessive values were assigned by petitioners to the following assets transferred in exchange for the $ 73,889.30 promissory note:
Petitioner's | Respondent's | |
values | values | |
Pacific hydraulic press brake | $ 11,000 | $ 4,000 |
Wysong shear | 8,700 | 6,650 |
Whitney hand brake | 700 | 575 |
Chicago hand brake | 1,150 | 125 |
Peddinghams iron works | 8,900 | 3,750 |
Total | 30,450 | 15,100 |
Respondent does not challenge the reasonableness of the values assigned to other transferred assets totaling $ 43,439.30.
The testimony of Thornton and Nye was undisputed that they employed an independent appraiser to give them an opinion as to the values of the transferred assets and that such values were used in computing the contract prices. Later, when a revenue agent questioned the values used, petitioners employed another appraiser, Gerald P. Cashion, whose competence was admitted by respondent. Cashion personally1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*168 inspected the disputed items in March 1965, and testified that the values assigned by petitioners were the approximate values of the assets.
While it is true that Cashion estimated the values as of March 1965, nothing in the record suggests that the equipment was more valuable after 3 1/2 years of use than in October 1961. Respondent offered no testimony in support of a lower valuation; instead, respondent relied on book values -- notoriously poor guides to fair market value.
Respondent next argues that the assets were placed at the risk of the1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*169 business and that the ownership of the stock and note was proportionate. We agree that Thornton and Nye assumed some risk in transferring the partnership assets to the corporation; any long-term investment in the form of a security involves some risk. Cf.
While it is true that the stock ownership was in the same proportion as the note, this factor is not conclusive.
Thus we find no substantial basis on which this Court could declare that the $ 73,889.30 note was not what it purported to be, i.e., indebtedness. This is what the petitioners intended it to be and they treated it as such. By its unambiguous terms the note created indebtedness. It was subordinated to no other claims. The business history of the enterprise demonstrates that the corporation had a capacity to pay indebtedness of this amount; indeed, the face of the note was in an amount less than the prior year's net earnings of the partnership. The facts are that the high level of earnings continued and the annual installments were paid when due. Taking into account1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*171 the goodwill and going-concern values of the business we think it is clear that the corporation was adequately capitalized from the beginning. The note represented a long-term investment of valuable assets and was given as an integral part of the formation, launching, and financing of the corporation. We see no substantial basis for a conclusion that the note did not represent indebtedness.
In summary, the following tax results flow from our conclusions that the transaction falls within
Unlike the asset transfer the purported covenant not to compete does not stand up to close scrutiny. The covenant was the subject of a separate agreement and a separate, non-interest-bearing note. Although its general provisions were in standard form, forbidding Thornton and Nye to enter into a competing business, alienate customers, or disclose trade secrets, customer lists, modus operandi, or bidding procedures, it limited the corporation's remedy in the event of breach to extinguishment of the obligation1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*173 to continue payments. All payments made to the date of breach were to remain the property of the sellers.
The rights acquired by the corporation were as empty as the sanction specifically granted to enforce these rights. The corporation received little of substance it did not have already by virtue of the fact that the covenantors were officers of the corporation and by virtue of the express transfer of the partnership's goodwill to the corporation. Corporate officers and directors are not permitted to use their position of trust and confidence to further their private interests. While technically not trustees, they stand in a fiduciary relationship to the corporation and its stockholders. The most scrupulous observance of duty is required of a corporate officer, "not only affirmatively to protect the interests of the corporation committed to his charge, but also to refrain from doing anything that would work injury to the corporation, or to deprive it of profit or advantage which his skill and ability might properly bring to it, or to enable it to make in the reasonable and lawful exercise of its powers."
Where goodwill is transferred to the buyer of a business there is an implied obligation of good faith and fair dealing that the seller will not do anything to injure the right of the buyer to receive the benefits of the agreement.
These rights flowing to the corporation by virtue of the status of Thornton and Nye as officers and the transfer of the partnership's goodwill may not have much significance as long as Thornton and Nye are also the sole stockholders, but neither does the covenant not to compete. It merely relates to technical rights which the corporation already has in any event.
Not every covenant not to compete will support amortization deductions. To provide a basis for such deductions the "covenant must have some independent basis in fact or some arguable relationship with business reality such that reasonable men, genuinely concerned with their economic future, might bargain for such an agreement."
Considering all the evidence, including the fact that Thornton and Nye were the sole stockholders and were the principal officers of the corporation, that they had conducted the business as partners from 1954 to 1961 without such a covenant, that substantially the same rights were conferred on the corporation by the express transfer of goodwill, and that the enforcement remedies were hollow, we conclude that the covenant not to compete lacked economic reality. It was not the kind of agreement that businessmen dealing at arm's length would have executed.
Petitioners seek to justify the covenant on the theory that the annual payments were designed to help keep one of the former partners, Thornton or Nye, from leaving the corporation to enter a competing business. But payments by the corporation under the covenant were necessarily to be made from earnings and profits. Since Thornton and Nye were the sole stockholders of the corporation, they could have declared dividends equal not only to the 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 133">*177 $ 10,000 annual covenant payments but to all the earnings and profits available for distribution. 50 T.C. 203">*220 If the right to receive all the earnings through dividend distributions would not keep them from leaving the corporation, there is no reason to think that payments of only part of the earnings under the covenant would achieve that purpose.
We conclude that the covenant lacked economic substance and reality and was merely a device to obtain deductions for the corporation for annual distributions in the nature of dividends. The corporation is therefore not entitled to deductions for the amortization of the covenant.
To reflect our disposition of the issues in these cases,
1. The proceedings of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: Dale Thornton and Lucille M. Thornton, docket No. 5334-66, and Delta Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning, Inc., docket No. 5335-66.↩
2. Although the petition and brief filed on behalf of the corporation dispute an adjustment to its return for fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 1962, as to gain from the sale of an automobile, no evidence on this issue was presented at trial. The issue has been treated as abandoned. In any event, we would be compelled to find for respondent for lack of evidence.
3. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated.↩
4. The individual tax liabilities grow out of the activities of individual petitioners Dale Thornton and George A. Nye (sometimes referred to herein as Thornton and Nye); their spouses are parties only by virtue of joint returns. The term "petitioners" as used herein refers to the corporation, Delta Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning, Inc., and Thornton and Nye, unless otherwise indicated.↩
5. The partnership used the calendar year for reporting income for tax purposes. The transfer of assets from the partnership to the corporation occurred on Nov. 1, 1961. The partnership did not file its return for 1961 on the basis of a "short" taxable year but continued in existence for the purpose of collecting accounts receivable which were retained and also to collect payments on the notes executed by the corporation. The sales figure in the 1961 partnership return reflected sales only through Oct. 31, 1961.↩
6. The items for which adjustments are made consist of (1) interest on the $ 73,889.30 promissory note ($ 4,063.91), (2) depreciation in excess of that which would have been allowable by using the partnership's basis in the transferred assets ($ 5,983.98), (3) amortization of the alleged covenant not to compete ($ 10,000), and (4) officers' salaries for Thornton and Nye ($ 46,280). The corporate tax returns for fiscal years ending Sept. 30, 1963 and 1964, with similar adjustments would also show increases, although the profit was not as great in those years. We have used fiscal 1962, for comparison purposes, because we believe it more accurately reflects what the parties could have reasonably anticipated at the time of incorporation.↩
7. While respondent on brief has taken the broader position that the $ 73,889.30 note was evidence of equity interests, rather than indebtedness, our conclusion that the note was a security within
8.
(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.↩
9. Commentators view the term of a note as the single and most important quality and agree that notes with a maturity of 10 years or longer may be safely termed securities. Bittker and Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, sec. 3.03 (2d ed. 1966), states: "Notes with a five year term or less seem to be unable to qualify as 'securities,' while a term of ten years or more is apparently sufficient to bring them within the statute." See also Kaufman, "Securities Within the Tax-Free Reorganization and Exchange Provisions," 8th Ann. N.Y.U. Tax Inst. 117, 120 (1956).↩
10. See fn. 6,
11. Viewed as a single transaction involving the transfer of cash and partnership assets for stock and the $ 73,889.30 note, the transaction falls within