In 1955, Management, a corporation wholly owned by petitioner and its joint venturer, Utah, distributed $ 250,000 to petitioner. The distribution was made by Management from a profit "realized" in 1954 from its two wholly owned corporations, but which it did not "recognize" for income tax purposes because of filing a consolidated return. Petitioner treated the distribution as an ordinary dividend, deducting 85 percent of the distribution under
52 T.C. 1">*1 Respondent determined a deficiency in the income tax of petitioner for the year 1955 in the amount of $ 110,240.
The principal question for our consideration is whether an intercompany profit of $ 1,065,313.09 obtained in 1954 by Ridgeview Management Co., and eliminated from a consolidated return for that year, constituted earnings and profits of Ridgeview Management Co. when received, so that a distribution by Ridgeview Management Co. to petitioner of $ 250,000 out of such profit in 1955 was a dividend within the meaning of sections 301 and 316,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Many of the facts have been stipulated by the parties. The stipulation of facts and the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
52 T.C. 1">*2 Henry C. Beck Co. (petitioner) is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware on April 4, 1946. Its principal place of business has always been in Dallas, Tex. Petitioner's Federal corporation income tax return for the calendar year 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*162 1955 was filed with the district director of internal revenue at Dallas.
Petitioner is a general building contractor. During 1955 all of petitioner's issued and outstanding stock was owned as follows:
Common stock | Preferred stock | |
Shareholder | Percent | Percent |
Henry C. Beck, Jr., Dallas, Tex | 60 | 33 |
Joe B. Hutchinson, Atlanta, Ga | 35 | 67 |
Henry C. Beck, Jr., trustee for Margaret Beck | ||
Grinnan Trust No. One, Dallas, Tex | 5 | 0 |
100 | 100 |
Ridgeview Management Co. (Management) was incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware on March 30, 1953, as were Ridgeview Homes, Inc. (Homes), and Ridgeview Development Co., Inc. (Development). At all times material hereto, the outstanding stock of Management consisted of 200 shares of voting common, of which 100 shares were owned by Utah Construction & Mining Co., San Francisco, Calif. (Utah), and the remaining 100 shares were owned by petitioner. All of the stock of Homes and Development was owned by Management.
Ridgeview Service Co. (Service) was incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware on June 1, 1953, and from that date through the taxable year in question, all its stock was owned by Homes and Development.
Utah, the owner with petitioner of the stock of Management, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*163 is a large California-based company engaged in building construction, mining, overseas operations, and real estate operations.
Management was organized to construct an FHA-insured housing project in Davenport, Iowa, for Homes and Development and to manage the project after its completion. Homes and Development were organized to own the housing units and to borrow the money to construct them. Service was formed to own and operate the utilities and establish a trustee relationship for the assurance of their continued operation.
On April 14, 1953, Management contracted with Homes to construct 196 housing units for Homes, and with Development, to construct 458 housing units for Development, both projects being under section 903 of title IX of the National Housing Act. Homes had obtained a commitment from the Commissioner of National Housing to insure the 196 units upon completion of construction, and Development had obtained a commitment from the Commissioner of 52 T.C. 1">*3 National Housing to insure 458 housing units upon completion of construction. Management completed construction of the houses in January 1954.
For the fiscal years ended February 28, 1954, February 28, 1955, and February 28, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*164 1956, inclusive, Management, as the parent corporation, and Homes and Development, filed consolidated Federal income tax returns on the accrual basis of accounting with the district director of internal revenue at Des Moines, Iowa. On the consolidated income tax returns, all intercompany transactions were eliminated in accordance with the applicable consolidated income regulations as promulgated by respondent.
The following schedule reflects the taxable income or loss per the books and records of Management, Homes, Development, and Service, after elimination of all intercompany transactions and after giving effect to respondent's adjustments agreed to in connection with his audit of the consolidated income tax returns, for each of the fiscal years ended February 28, 1954, to February 28, 1956, inclusive:
Year ending Feb. 28 -- | Management | Development | Homes |
1954 | |||
Net income per books | $ 1,059,448.64 | ($ 36,017.90) | ($ 28,063.70) |
Less intercompany profit | 1,065,313.09 | ||
Interest capitalized on books | 177,210.90 | 64,734.48 | |
Net loss per return | (5,864.45) | (213,228.80) | (92,798.18) |
Adjustment per RAR dated | |||
11/8/56 Management | |||
Consolidated taxable income | |||
(net loss) | |||
1955 | |||
Net income per books | (173,914.01) | (173,023.34) | (28,116.23) |
Less intercompany loss | 182,875.81 | ||
8,961.80 | (173,023.34) | (28,116.23) | |
Schedule M Adjustments: | |||
Adjustment of profit on houses | |||
Property taxes | |||
Consolidated taxable income | |||
per return (net loss) | |||
1956 | |||
Net income per books | (2,186.20) | (22,702.46) | (5,837.68) |
Schedule M adjustments: | |||
Adjustment of profit on houses | |||
Property taxes | |||
Consolidated taxable income | |||
per return (net loss) |
Year ending Feb. 28 -- | Service | Consolidated |
1954 | ||
Net income per books | ($ 7,526.07) | $ 987,840.97 |
Less intercompany profit | 1,065,313.09 | |
(77,472.12) | ||
Interest capitalized on books | 11969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*165 241,945.38 | |
Net loss per return | (7,526.07) | (319,417.50) |
Adjustment per RAR dated | ||
11/8/56 Management | 603.54 | |
Consolidated taxable income | ||
(net loss) | (318,813.96) | |
1955 | ||
Net income per books | (17,742.56) | (392,796.14) |
Less intercompany loss | 182,875.81 | |
(17,742.56) | (209,920.33) | |
Schedule M adjustments: | ||
Adjustment of profit on houses | 36,642.21 | |
Property taxes | 5,645.48 | |
Consolidated taxable income | ||
per return (net loss) | (167,632.64) | |
1956 | ||
Net income per books | (13,127.34) | (43,853.68) |
Schedule M adjustments: | ||
Adjustment of profit on houses | 29,533.73 | |
Property taxes | (2,257.86) | |
Consolidated taxable income | ||
per return (net loss) | (16,577.81 |
52 T.C. 1">*4 From the income tax return for February 28, 1954, Management showed a receipt of $ 5,323,422.31 from its construction contracts with Homes and Development, showed a construction cost to Management of $ 4,258,109.22, and showed an excess of $ 1,065,313.09 of receipts over cost. Management treated this excess as an intercompany profit. In accordance with the income tax regulations governing the filing of consolidated income tax returns, the intercompany profit of $ 1,065,313.09 was eliminated from taxable income and from the basis of the property subject to an allowance for depreciation.
On September 13, 1955, at least 19 months after Management received the profit, the board of directors of Management met and declared the following resolution:
Resolved, That there be and hereby is declared from the surplus profits of the Corporation, a dividend of Twenty Five Hundred Dollars ($ 2500) per share on each of the 200 shares of outstanding Common Stock of the Corporation, payable on the 14th day of September, 1955, to holders of record of said stock at the close of business on the 13th day of September, 1955, and the Treasurer is directed and authorized to cause the 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*166 same to be paid on the date specified.
Pursuant to this resolution, on September 14, 1955, Management made payments to its stockholders in the total amount of $ 500,000, of which $ 250,000 was paid to petitioner and $ 250,000 to Utah.
The $ 500,000 paid to the petitioner and Utah on September 14, 1955, was from the amounts received by Management from Homes and Development as part of the proceeds of the permanent financing of $ 5,959,006.67. At no time pertinent hereto did Homes or Development have any earnings and profits. On September 14, 1955, the basis of petitioner's stock in Management was $ 500, and the earnings and profits of Management, exclusive of the $ 1,065,313.09 intercompany profit, were $ 1,911.41.
Construction of houses by Management for Homes and Development ended on January 11, 1954, and January 25, 1954, respectively.
On June 30, 1957, Management sold its shares of Homes and Development to Herbal Homes, Inc., an unrelated organization, for $ 86,500, thereby breaking the consolidation. This sale and the taxable year 1957 are not in issue.
Service (now owned 50 percent by petitioner and 50 percent by Utah) and Management are still in existence. In a current project, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*167 Management has utilized some of its profit made on the Davenport, Iowa, construction project which is involved in this case.
OPINION
The key question in this case is whether the $ 250,000 distribution to petitioner, which was made from Management's $ 1,065,313.09 profit on its Davenport venture, was made out of Management's "earning and profits."
52 T.C. 1">*5 Petitioner claims that the intercompany construction profit earned by Management became a part of its earnings and profits on receipt in 1954, and thus the distribution made out of such profit in 1955 was a dividend to petitioner. It is argued that this result is not altered by the fact that, in accordance with the consolidated return regulations, the profit was not "recognized" by Management as taxable income. Petitioner asserts that reasonable accounting concepts require that the profit be included in Management's earnings and profits when received in 1954, and there is no statute or regulation which requires or permits any other result. 1 To the contrary, respondent contends that the distribution cannot be a dividend because Management had no earnings and profits. In addition, he maintains that the distribution was from a collapsible corporation 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*168 and is taxable as ordinary income. In his brief respondent relies on the following points in support of his position:
1. The filing of consolidated returns by Management and its subsidiaries represents a method of reporting income which must be followed in computing earnings and profits.
2. Since the intercompany profit of $ 1,065,313.09 was eliminated on the consolidated return, and, therefore, not recognized as taxable income, this "unrecognized" profit cannot be included in the earnings and profits of Management.
3. The earnings and profits of Management at the time of the distribution to petitioner were $ 1,911.41, and, therefore, it is only to this extent that the distribution could possibly be considered a dividend.
4. However, Management was "formed or availed of principally" to hold stock in Homes and Development, which corporations were formed or availed of principally for the manufacture, construction or production of property, or for the purchase of section 341 assets, "with a view to" a distribution to the stockholders, petitioner and Utah, before the corporations realized a substantial part of the income to be derived from the property.
5. Therefore, this distribution represents 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*169 income from a collapsible corporation which, to the extent it exceeds petitioner's basis in the stock of Management, is taxable as ordinary income.
The term "dividend" means a distribution by a corporation to its shareholders made out of the corporation's "earnings and profits." 21969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*172 52 T.C. 1">*6 The statute, however, does not define "earnings and profits," but leaves the job of determining its meaning primarily to the courts and to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. In common parlance the words usually connote some sort of realization. It also seems a reasonable inference that Congress was probably referring only to "realized" gain when it spoke of "earnings and profits," or at least this has been the almost unanimous 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*170 assumption. See Albrecht, "Dividends and Earnings or Profits,"
The fact that Homes and Development are subsidiaries of Management does not change this result. Parent and subsidiary corporations are not identical for tax purposes but are treated as separate entities no matter how closely they are affiliated.
The consolidated return regulations make it clear that intercompany profits and losses are eliminated in the computation of consolidated taxable income unless they are realized in a transaction with a party outside the affiliated group during the taxable year. See sec. 24.31 (b)(1), Regs. 129, and
The only published ruling on earnings and profits in an intercompany transaction prior to the 1965 proposed amendments to the consolidated return regulations is
In computing the earnings and profits of a parent corporation after a consolidated return period during which losses of a subsidiary were availed of as an offset to the income of 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*175 such parent, the amount of the income of the parent corporation should be added to its earnings and profits account even though such amount was offset for tax purposes by losses of the subsidiary. * * *
In essence, the position adopted is that earnings and profits are to be increased by actual income, and not just by income which has been taxed. See also
Section 39.115(a)-2, Regs. 118, and
In
Respondent's position is that, because the profit is "eliminated" by the consolidated return regulations at the time received, the profit does not increase earnings and profits at that time. He argues that the word "eliminated" in what is now
In the
The
Unlike other exclusions from income provided for by section 22(b), the profit from discharge of indebtedness is excluded only on the condition that it be applied in reduction of the basis of property held by the petitioner. * * * In reality, by providing for an adjustment altering the basis of property which petitioner would otherwise be entitled to use, Congress did not relieve the profit of tax but only postponed the time for levying the tax. Instead of collecting a tax on the profit when received, Congress merely deferred recognition of the profit and collection of the tax until the time at which the property with the reduced basis was sold or otherwise disposed of. * * *
This method of treating the profit is comparable to the treatment accorded nontaxable exchanges governed by the so-called reorganization provisions in section 112 of the Code, where 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*179 recognition is similarly postponed. In both situations, the earnings and profits are affected, not at the time of the original unrecognized transaction, but at the time that the gains or losses are actually taken into account in computing taxable income. True, the result with respect to section 112 transactions, dealing with sales and exchanges, is specifically called for by section 115(1), 71969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*196 but, as we have seen, section 115(1) was merely declaratory of existing law in this regard, and the same result is required by a proper interpretation of the term "earnings and profits."
Moreover, petitioner's position is open to the objection that it might actually require the same gains to be included twice in its earnings and profits. * * * As to the property affected by petitioner's election in the instant case, the adjusted basis for determining gain is the basis as adjusted downward under section 113(b)(3). When petitioner disposes of that property, the adjusted basis will increase the taxable gain or decrease the deductible loss. Since use of the same basis seems to be required under section 115(1), a comparable increase in earnings and profits apparently will take place at the time of 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*180 disposition of the property. If this consequence follows from the adjustment in basis under section 113(b)(3), there would be a duplication in the increase in petitioner's earnings and profits were they also to be increased, as petitioner contends they should be, upon the realization of the bond profit responsible for the basis adjustment. A construction which involves such an irrational result is to be avoided in the presence of an acceptable alternative. Cf.
[Footnote omitted.]
The
The taxpayer having technically realized its so-called bond profit in 1942, elected under an optional method of accounting permitted by the statute to postpone recognition of such gain and and to exclude the amount thereof from its gross income reported for 1942. It cannot then 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*181 shift its method of accounting, and treat that gain as both realized and recognized in 1942, for the purpose of 52 T.C. 1">*10 enhancing a deduction (the excess profits credit) used in the computation of its excess profits tax liability for 1943.
This case, unlike
Unlike
This single fact, that the profit will not be taxable to Management, does not make it any less a profit, and is no reason for concluding that it did not become a part of Management's "earnings and profits" when received. As we have previously stated herein, earnings and profits are not synonymous with or restricted to taxable income; rather, they are those funds which a corporation has available for distribution to its shareholders without invading their investment. See Bittker & Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders 160 (2d ed. 1966). In 1954, Management, on its Davenport venture, received $ 5,323,422.31 over 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*183 expenses of $ 4,258,109.22 -- an excess of receipts over cost in the amount of $ 1,065,313.09. As of the time of such receipt in 1954, this $ 1,065,313.09 was available for distribution to Management's shareholders without impairing their investment. It was clearly a profit made in 1954. Reasonable accounting principles, as well as accuracy, require that it be included in Management's "earnings and profits" as of 1954.
This is also made clear by the First Circuit opinion in
The concurring opinion in
In its treatment of the profit in this case -- eliminating it from the consolidated return and crediting it to earnings and profits when received -- Management has followed all applicable regulations, but, as of the time here in issue, there were no regulations which required or permitted the profit to be taken into earnings and profits at any time except when it was received. In these circumstances reasonable accounting principles should control, and these require that the profit be credited to earnings 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*185 and profits when received. See
In 1965 the regulations were amended. If these amended regulations were applicable to this case, the profit apparently would not be credited to earnings and profits until 1957, when Management sold its stock in Homes and Development to an outside party. 41969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*186 But, by 52 T.C. 1">*12 their express terms, these amended regulations do not apply to years prior to 1965.
Respondent relies upon section 39.115(a)-2(a), Regs. 118, 5 which provides:
In determining the amount of earnings or profits (whether of the taxable year, or accumulated since February 28, 1913, or accumulated before March 1, 1913) due consideration must be given to the facts, and, while mere bookkeeping entries increasing or decreasing surplus will not be conclusive, the amount of the earnings or profits in any case will be dependent upon the method of accounting properly employed in computing net income. For instance, a corporation keeping its books and filing its income tax returns under sections 41, 42, and 43 on the cash receipts and disbursements basis may not use the accrual basis in determining earnings and profits; a corporation computing 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*187 income on the installment basis as provided in section 44 shall, with respect to the installment transactions, compute earnings and profits on such basis; * * *
The part of this regulation relating to installment sales was upheld and applied in
Section 312(f)(1) of the 1954 Code and its predecessor, section 115(l) of the 1939 Code, do not, as the respondent contends, support the proposition that the profit made by Management cannot be included in earnings and profits when received. These sections, by their terms, apply to the "sale or other disposition of property." In
This result is also compelled by legislative history. In 1940 when Congress amended section 115(l) to provide that gain or loss from sale or other disposition of corporate property would be included in earnings and profits only to the extent recognized, the committee report specified that such amendment "does not purport to prescribe rules for anything other than certain exceptional cases, namely, the nonrecognition provisions of section 112, use of value as of March 1, 1913, as the basis for determining gain or loss, and depreciation and depletion, and tax-free distributions which either are applied in reduction of the basis or cause the basis to 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*191 be allocated." H. Rept. No. 2894, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., p. 43 (1940). Congress, however, did not see fit to include intercompany profits within the "certain exceptional cases" covered by the amendment to section 115(l).
52 T.C. 1">*14 The
Respondent also refers to
In terms of the instant
52 T.C. 1">*15 To summarize, the profit involved herein was received, and became available 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*194 for use by Management, in 1954, and realistically it should be included in Management's earnings and profits at such time. There is no statute, regulation, or other authority which requires that such inclusion be deferred. Contrary to respondent's contention, such inclusion cannot be deferred until 1957, when Management sold the stock of its subsidiaries, because, under the pre-1965 regulations, the gain is not to be recognized at such time, and will never be recognized by Management.
Accordingly, we hold that the profit received 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*195 by Management in 1954 should be included in its earnings and profits in that year, and Management's distribution to petitioner in 1955 was a distribution "made out of earnings and profits" within the provisions of section 316(a) and an ordinary dividend under section 301.
We do not reach the second question, i.e., whether Management was a collapsible corporation under section 341(a)(3), because that section applies only if the distribution is "a distribution made by a collapsible corporation which, under section 301(c)(3)(A), is 52 T.C. 1">*16 treated, to the extent it exceeds the basis of the stock, in the same manner as a gain from the sale or exchange of property." Since the type of distribution which is so treated under section 301(c)(3)(A) is a "distribution which is not a dividend," it follows that a distribution which is 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 160">*197 a dividend is not affected by section 341. See Bittker & Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders 419-420. In view of our conclusions on the first issue, we have made no findings of fact with respect to the second issue.
Tannenwald,
Concededly, the $ 1,065,313.09 profit made by Management was not simply deferred as to Management. Under the rules in existence during the period in question, that profit would never be taxed to Management (respondent's current regulations, as the majority points out, provide otherwise). But, since this intercompany profit was eliminated from the consolidated return, Homes and Development were required to exclude the amount of that profit from the cost basis of the property to them.
If the majority herein is correct, the same amount of profit will be subject to a double inclusion in earnings and profits -- in that of Management at the time of receipt of the payment and that of Homes and Development when the property is sold. This double counting is precisely what concerned this Court and the Court of Appeals in
To be sure, the double inclusion could be avoided by a sale of the stock of Homes and Development and a liquidation, with an accompanying step-up in basis under section 334(b)(2), but that would be the result of the independent action of that section and should not affect our analysis of the issue involved herein. See
I think it is also significant that, under the current regulations, the profit would not be included in earnings and profits until such time as the deferred amount is taken into income.
I would hold that the $ 1,065,313.09 did not enter into the earnings and profits of Management for 1954 and consequently its distribution in 1955 did not constitute a dividend to Management's shareholders.
Since the majority found it unnecessary to reach the collapsible issue and made no findings of fact with respect thereto, I am unable to express any opinion as to the considerations involved therein.
1. Charged off for tax purposes.
1. In its petition the petitioner has pleaded in the alternative that $ 249,500 of the distribution be taxed as long-term capital gain rather than ordinary income. The parties have agreed that if the Court finds against the petitioner in its contention that the distribution is a dividend and against respondent in his contention that the distribution is from a collapsible corporation, the petitioner will have dividend income of $ 1,911.41 and a long-term capital gain of $ 247,588.59.↩
2. SEC. 316. DIVIDEND DEFINED.
(a) General Rule. -- For purposes of this subtitle, the term "dividend" means any distribution of property made by a corporation to its shareholders -- (1) out of its earnings and profits accumulated after February 28, 1913, or (2) out of its earnings and profits of the taxable year (computed as of the close of the taxable year without diminution by reason of any distributions made during the taxable year), without regard to the amount of the earnings and profits at the time the distribution was made.
3. 175 T.M. "Earnings and Profits" A-2 (1967) states:
It is generally accepted today that the earnings and profits of a corporation consist of the total undistributed gains derived by the corporation with respect to the property contributed thereto by its shareholders since the time of such contribution. Such gains may arise not only upon the disposition of the contributed property but also as the result of corporate use of the property, by way of proceeds from its disposition, and as the result of the use of property acquired by the corporation with such proceeds. Earnings and profits are therefore to be distinguished from book income, taxable income, earned surplus, and similar concepts; what is involved in essence is the corporation's "tax-realized net gain with respect to contributed capital."↩
7. SEC. 301. DISTRIBUTIONS OF PROPERTY.
(a) In General. -- Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, a distribution of property (as defined in section 317(a)) made by a corporation to a shareholder with respect to its stock shall be treated in the manner provided in subsection (c).
* * * *
(c) Amount Taxable. -- In the case of a distribution to which subsection (a) applies -- (1) Amount constituting dividend. -- That portion of the distribution which is a dividend (as defined in section 316) shall be included in gross income. (2) Amount applied against basis. -- That portion of the distribution which is not a dividend shall be applied against and reduce the adjusted basis of the stock. (3) Amount in excess of basis. -- (A) In general. -- Except as provided in subparagraph (B), that portion of the distribution which is not a dividend, to the extent that it exceeds the adjusted basis of the stock, shall be treated as gain from the sale or exchange of property.↩
4. Under the amended consolidated return regulations, effective for years after 1965, the distribution from Development and Homes to Management would be treated as follows: The performance of construction services by Management for Homes and Development is defined as a deferred intercompany transaction.
5.
6.
(a) If property is transferred by one corporation to another, and, under the law applicable to the year in which the transfer was made, no gain or loss was recognized (or was recognized only to the extent of the property received other than that permitted by such law to be received without the recognition of gain), then proper adjustment and allocation of the earnings and profits of the transferor shall be made as between the transferor and the transferee. * * *↩
8.
(a) General Rule. -- In the case of a corporation, there shall be allowed as a deduction an amount equal to the following percentages of the amount received as dividends from a domestic corporation which is subject to taxation under this chapter: (1) 85 percent, in the case of dividends other than dividends described in paragraph (2) or (3);↩
1. Under the current regulations, a portion of that profit, when and if realized, would be allocated to Management, but those regulations are not applicable to the years involved herein. See fn. 4 to the majority opinion,
2. Salem, "The Consolidated Return Regulations Revision: Its Genesis and Objectives," 17 Tax Exec. No. 2 (Jan. 1965), pp. 166-168.↩
3. Under the current regulations, the deferred amount would enter into the earnings and profits of Management (rather than Homes or Development) at the later date. See fn. 1,