OPINION.
Disney, Judge'.Issue 1. Sale of 53¿^8£8 acres of land. — The negotiations leading to the sale of the land to the National Co. and the steps taken in consummating it are set forth in detail in the findings of fact. The respondent contends that, while the transaction, in form, was a liquidation of the petitioner Turpentine Co. and a sale of the land by its stockholders, it was, in substance and effect, a sale by the corporation. The Turpentine Co. contends that the sale was, both in form and substance, a sale by its stockholders as individuals, and cites particularly Falcon Co., 41 B. T. A. 1128; affd., 127 Fed. (2d) 277.
On August 25 D. F. Howell, president of petitioner corporation, in a conference with Kipnis, president of National, and their respective attorneys, agreed upon the sale of the property, the price “and matters of that kind.” It was understood between them that the title to the land was in Howell Turpentine Co. The Howell sons were not present.
In an obvious effort to avoid the effect of this agreement upon the whole transaction, the petitioners advance the view that.earlier in August the stockholders had informally agreed that the corporation would not sell but would liquidate, and that such agreement constituted the stockholders equitable owners of the corporate assets, with power to sell. To quote petitioner’s brief:
The principal legal question here is whether the Howell individuals became the equitable owners of this 63,000 acres by the action taken by the directors and by the stockholders in early August, 1940, which was formalized by the resolution of September 6th, both actions being taken before any option or contract was made with the prospective purchaser, and the informal action having been taken long before any approach was made by the purchaser. * * *
It is also contended: “The decision of the corporation in August, 1940, made the stockholders equitable owners of the land, and as such, entitled to sell the same”; also that under the law of Florida and general law, “an informal liquidation is valid,” and “The right of the stockholders to dividends accrues at the time of the informal agreement to liquidate.”
With this view we can not agree, because it is contrary to settled law, and because we are convinced from the record that there was no such informal agreement prior to August 25; also, that if there had been, it was not among all of the stockholders. A mere informal agreement among stockholders does not transfer the equitable title to corporate property to them. In Fred A. Hellebush, et al., Trustees, 24 B. T. A. 660, 668; affd., 65 Fed. (2d) 902, contention was made that a resolution for dissolution and liquidation, and conveyance to trustees for the stockholders, divested the corporation of title. We quoted from Taylor Oil & Gas Co. v. Commissioner, 47 Fed. (2d) 108; certiorari denied, 283 U. S. 862, as follows:
It may be doubted that the contract of sale was merely executory. Except for executing the formal deed, there was nothing to be done. The price, the thing, and the effective time of delivery, December 15, 1919, had been agreed upon. But, if it was executory, it was still the contract of the company to be executed before there could be any liquidation of its affairs. Conceding for the purpose of argument that the legal title to the property vested in the trustees by the dissolution, no part of the title passed to the stockholders thereby. The real owner was still the company until such time as its affairs were liquidated, the debts paid, and the residue distributed to the stockholders. * * *
Stockholders may not informally dissolve or agree to sell out a corporation. In re William S. Butte & Co., 207 Fed. 705; Dela Vergne Refrigerating Mach. Co. v. German Savings Inst., 175 U. S. 40 (53). Moreover, the statutes of Florida specifically provide the procedure for dissolution, i. e., a resolution of the board of directors, a meeting of stockholders after notice of at least ten days, and a two-thirds vote, or a consent in writing by all stockholders of record. Any theory that an understanding of stockholders to liquidate constitutes them equitable owners of what they are to receive on liquidation necessarily means an agreement by all stockholders, since less than all could not act informally. This is particularly true in the light of the Florida statute requiring written consent by all. In Tazewell Elec. Light & Power Co. v. Strother, 84 Fed. (2d) 327, where a sale was held to be that of the corporation, the court points out that the resolution was passed at a stockholders* meeting at which all were not represented and some did not assent. (The directors, of course, could not dissolve or sell out the corporation. That is a matter for stockholders’ decision. Hartman v. Master, 269 Fed. 483; Fletcher Cyc. Corporations, vol. 16, sec. 8019, 8020; Petition of Evans, 52 Fed. (2d) 961.)
But “in August 1940” the Howells were not the sole stockholders of the corporation. Until September 6, Max S. Long was the holder of 50 shares — as much as either of the Howell sons. No evidence indicates, nor is it contended, that he was present or joined in any understanding or agreement that the corporation would not sell, or to liquidate. He had lef-t the corporation about two years before.
Moreover, examination of the evidence is convincing that if there was any informal agreement to liquidate and that the corporation should not sell, it was not prior to September 6. It is the testimony of D. F. Howell that the determination not to permit the corporation to sell was at the same time as the determination to liquidate, also that there were then no other stockholdérs, as Long’s stock had been “formerly purchased from him by me and my two sons,” and that the discussion was between “the stockholders of the company, my two sons and myself.” Since he also definitely testified that “September 6th was the date” of the purchase of Long’s stock (and is borne out by the issuance of substitute certificates on that date to his' sons), it becomes clear that any agreement not to sell but to liquidate was not before September 6, after the purchase of Long’s stock by the Howells. The purchasers, at any earlier date, would have required Long to join in the agreement to sell, since without him, even after liquidation, title could not have been delivered since he, as distributee of his share, might have refused to join in the sale. (See First National Bank of Greeley v. United States, 86 Fed. (2d) 938, as to doubt whether each stockholder would assign.) In fact, Long’s name, including provision for signature, was included in the contract dated September 6, but is in each place marked out; which shows that the purchaser, National, never contemplated purchasing from less than all of the stockholders, and that prior to September 6 the Howells alone had no individual agreement to dispose of the land. Any agreement to liquidate and then sell the land as distributees, moreover, could not have been prior to September 3, for the telegram and letter to Shingler on September 4 (the letter moreover being signed “Howell Turpentine Company” and thereunder “D. F. Howell”) disclosed that the buyer had on September 3 agreed to buy the corporate stock “at price agreed upon for lands” and D. F. Howell, considering that “the only intelligent way to make the sale,” asked Shingler to come to Olustee to take part in getting up the proper method, minutes, and resolutions for consummating the sale on a stock basis. The sale of stock, however, is completely inconsistent with liquidation; so we see that as late as September 3-4 the agreement was not to liquidate, but to sell stock. Also, since the letter and telegram of September 4 disclose that letters of August 30 and August 31 from Shingler had been received and carefully noted, and that he had sent I). F. Howell “three different methods” and that it was “judging” from them that Howell resolves that the only intelligent way to make the sale is by selling the capital stock, and since Howell also testified that he was getting Shingler to “outline those things to me. I was unable to outline them to him * * *,” it is clear that until September 3, at least, no decision as to how to handle the sale had been decided upon — except that as shown by the telegram, the letter, and testimony of National’s attorney, on August 25 there had been agreement for sale of the land and price thereof. It is obvious, of course, that there was some change of mind between September 4 and September 6, since on the latter date the record was made for sale of assets by the stockholders instead of the stock sale agreed upon on September 3 and discussed in the telegram and letter of September 4.
From all the above, we can not but conclude that any agreement not to sell through the corporation but to liquidate did not antedate the agreement upon sale and price on August 25; and that therefore as a matter of fact, as well as of law, as above seen, the three Howells as stockholders did not have, prior to August 25, either equitable title to the corporate assets or agreement that the corporation would not sell. (Yet, it is clear that the petitioners regard such prior agreement and equitable right as necessary to their theory. It is indeed the basis thereof.) The agreement of August 25 thus plainly appears as one entered into by the president of the corporation, prior to any possibility of binding all stockholders, therefore not a stockholders’ agreement. As above seen, the sons were not present at the conference on August 25. If not, it was a corporation agreement, since the stock-purchase idea was not adopted until September 3. Since on August 25 D. F. Howell, in agreeing to sale of land and price, did not represent all of the stockholders, and agreement not to sell as corporation was not until later when the Howells became sole stockholders, he obviously represented the corporation. That such agreement with the corporation through its president was not in writing is not material, as we said in Court Holding Co., 2 T. C. 531, with the approval of the Supreme Court. We may not, seeking to learn the real nature of this matter, disregard an “anticipatory arrangement” so real as an agreement on sale and price. The cases consider negotiations short of agreement as indication of corporation sale.
In Hattie W. Mackay, Executrix, 29 B. T. A. 1090, negotiations by the general manager of a corporation with representatives of a proposed purchaser had resulted in an agreement as to price for the corporate assets. .Thereafter, the corporation declared a dividend in kind of certain personal property and the stockholders gave a joint receipt for such assets, which were a part of those covered by the prior negotiations. In holding that the sale was by the corporation, we referred to the negotiations and the fact that they “resulted in a complete meeting of the minds of the seller and purchaser. There was an agreement as to price * * There was the same meeting of the minds on sale and price in the instant matter. It was Kipnis’ “earnest desire” to “close this deal.”
The petitioners, apparently to meet such cases as Taylor Oil & Gas Co., supra, and Fred A. Hellebush, supra, where trustees for dissolution making a sale were held to make it on behalf of the corporation, suggest that under the Florida statute the directors do not act as trustees until dissolution is completed, so that the three Howells could not act as trustees in dissolution until October 14, 1941. It is suggested that the Florida statute is peculiar in this respect. It says, as the petitioners quote: “Upon the dissolution of any corporation * * * the directors shall be trustees thereof with full power * * * ,” etc. The idea is, in our view, erroneous. South Carolina has a statute on this subject which is in effect the same as that of Florida, for it provides that “upon the dissolution in any manner of any corporation” the directors shall be trustees thereof “with full power to settle the affairs,” etc. In Brown v. Hammett, 131 S. E. 612, the South Carolina court construed the expression in the South Carolina statute, “upon the dissolution in any manner of any corporation,” and held that the expression “does not mean after the dissolution may have been completed, but should be construed as if it had read ‘upon the compliance with the provisions of section 4280’; that is, after it had been legally determined to liquidate and wind up the affairs and dissolve.” In re Citizens Exchange Bank v. Denmark, 139 S. E. 135, construing the South Carolina statute, adopts the language of Brown v. Hammett, supra.
In this case, on September 6, the stockholders not only resolved to dissolve and wind up its affairs and completely liquidate, but recited “and the corporation is hereby declared to be in liquidation.” Being such directors the three Howells, when they made the contract on September 6, did so on behalf of the corporation. Not only was the corporation the holder of the title, but its directors, representing it, could not agree to dispose of its title for their own personal benefit. The petitioner’s brief, in fact, relies upon and quotes a Florida case, Tampa Waterworks Co. v. Wood, 121 So. 789, affirming quasi fiduciary relation of corporate directors, in arguing for the interest deduction by D. H. Howell, later discussed herein.
Assuming as a generality that stockholders may validly agree to deliver what they expect to receive by distribution in kind from a corporation, we have here to consider the actions of stockholders who are directors, with a definite status toward the corporation, its property, and its creditors. The Government is such a creditor, as is demonstrated by .the use of the trust fund theory to make transferees liable for income and gift taxes. In re Wolf Mfg. Industries, 56 Fed. (2d) 64. The Government had a statutory right to tax based upon aqy sale by the corporation, and the trustees could not, merely by acting as stockholders, evade their trust relationship to the detriment of a creditor for which they were trustee. Even stockholders are not altogether free from an agency relation to the corporation in liquidation and disposition of the property. In Moody-Hormann-Boelhauwe v. Clinton Wire Cloth Co., 246 Fed. 653, quoted and relied upon by us in Taylor Oil & Gas Co., 15 B. T. A. 609, it was held that the action of stockholders voting to liquidate and dissolve and dispose of the corporate assets constituted an act of bankruptcy, not of themselves, but of the corporation. The court said:
We do not think that there is any merit in the suggestion that the transaction alleged was one by the corporation’s stockholders, and was not one by the corporation, because not effected by the officers or agents of the corporation having authority to bind it. An effect of the statute is to make the corporation’s stockholders the agency by which a conveyance or transfer of its property and an appropriation of it to raise funds to pay its debts, share and share alike, are accomplished. The transfer was as effectually that of the corporation as it would have leen if made in the name of the corporation ly its officers or agents ordinarily vested with authority to take such action in its lehalf. [Italics supplied.1]
In Senour Mfg. Co. v. Clarke, 71 N. W. 883, the president held nearly all the stock, and managed the corporation. His individual conveyance of the corporate assets in fraud of creditors was held to be the act of the corporation and attachment against it was sustained.
In Chilhowee Mills, Inc., 4 T. C. 558, we considered a situation helpful on this question of director-trustees’ and stockholders’ status. There stockholders on June 30, 1937, voted to dissolve as of that date and the certificate of such dissolution was filed with the state secretary of state on July 2, 1937. The stockholders on June 30 agreed to carry on business as partners, formed a partnership, and opened partnership books on July 1, 1937, and used the property in partnership business. An option had earlier been given by the corporation on its property. This option the stockholders, directors, and officers extended, through H. A. Vestal, the manager. In authorizing execution of the extension the stockholders signed as “stockholders (or assignees thereof),” and the directors and officers of Chilhowee Mills, Inc., signed as such. This option by stockholders is essentially the same kind of contract to sell as executed by the stockholders in this case. Later a deed, under the extension of option, was executed, signed by the “officers and directors * * * now trustees in dissolution,” warranting title for the corporation, officers, directors, stockholders, and trustees, the grantor being described as the corporation in process of dissolution. In holding that the sale was made by the corporation and not the partnership, we said, in part:
* * * The fact that the stockholders had limited present rights and absolute ultimate rights to the property of the corporation (or its proceeds), and pursuant to such rights made use of the property in the business of a partnership carrying on the business of the corporation pending its complete liquidation in dissolution, is not controlling. Any distribution of property rights to them was subject to the rights of the trustees in dissolution under the state statutes and to the burden of the option contract executed by the corporation prior to dissolution.
We conclude that the sale of the property of Chilhowee Mills, Inc., made by its trustees in dissolution should be treated as If made by the corporation. We are of the opinion that the transactions in 1937 did not amount to a distribution by the corporation of its assets in complete liquidation. Upon dissolution of the corporation the rights of the stockholders to the corporation’s property used by them in the business of the partnership which they then organized were subject to powers and duties of the trustees in dissolution acting on behalf of the corporation and its creditors (including the Government), as well as the stockholders. The stockholders took by absolute right only the proceeds of the sale made by the trustees after the payment of the corporate debts (including taxes). * * *
We conclude that the Howells were trustees for the corporation, and that their disposition of the property is essentially of the same nature as by the trustees in such cases as Taylor Oil & Gas Co. supra.
On September 6 there were in form, minutes and a contract indicating, if they can be given face value, intent to sell the land to National, at $6 an acre, after liquidation of all corporate assets pro rata to the three remaining stockholders. After much examination of the whole record, we are unable to conclude that such value should be ascribed to them.
We may fairly test the intent of the stockholders and the formalities used by what was actually done. We should view the matter as a whole to test its reality or unreality. The result and outcome of the whole matter was a disposition of the land to National as desired, and the placing of practically all other assets, and largely the proceeds of the sale of the land in control of the chief stockholder, D. F. Howell. This clearly indicates the lack of reality in the distribution formalities. The facts are: In addition to the lands which passed to National, Howell Turpentine Co. had other assets. These included land, a still location and the equipment at another, personal property, intangible assets, accounts, and good will. Though in form a “Bill of Sale and Deed,” covering this and all other assets not conveyed to National, was under date of December 26 executed by Howell Turpentine Co. to the three Howells, in fact all property remaining after sale of land to National was sold by the company to Dan F. Howell, for $31,713.89 debts assumed by him. D. F. Howell testified that the assets left, including the turpentine places, were sold to him for that amount, and he identified the charge against him for that amount for such assets on December 27 on the general ledger of Howell Turpentine Co. In addition, his income tax return shows the purchase on December 27 of “land” in that amount. Also, he testified that he had title by bill of sale and received in 1941 the reforestation and social security refunds, accounted for them as his personal income, and distributed them to his sons, and that his sons either “received their share or it was reflected in moneys that I owed them.”
Likewise, the contract of September 6 provided that the notes and mortgages to be executed by National were to Dan F. Howell. Though he answered “Yes” to the question whether all the instruments, cash, mortgages, and notes were payable to himself and sons in proportion to stock, the contract indicates that the answer is inaccurate. This is accentuated when we observe that the contract specifically provides also that Dan F. Howell shall simultaneously with the consummation of the contract receive back from National a seven-year lease for naval stores and turpentine purposes, including a thirty-year lease on the Cliftonville still site, and a grazing lease, rent-free for seven years, both the naval stores-turpentine lease and the grazing lease covering all of the lands deeded to National. We may reasonably assume that the contract was carried out as drawn. It is not contended otherwise. The other assets conveyed for the $31,713.89 to Dan F. Howell were valued at $24,511.49, but one item, valued at $7,510.20, was sold February 1, 1941, for $10,000.
We see then, that at the end of this transaction, instead of a real liquidation of all of the corporate assets, about 8 percent of them had reached Dan F. Howell, the principal stockholder; also, that out of the corporate assets there had been returned to him a grazing lease, rent free for sóven years, a turpentining naval-stores lease for seven years, including a still site lease for thirty years, as well as the notes and mortgage. This is by no means the liquidation distribution of all the corporate assets in kind pro rata to stockholders, earlier in form resolved upon.
What was the real intent? In the minutes of September 6 it is recited, as reason for the resolution to dissolve, that “the naval stores business has been very unprofitable for the past few years and offered no immediate prospect for improvement”; but the lease returned by National to Dan F. Howell was “for the purpose of working and using said pine timber” on the deeded land “for the production of oleoresin, naval stores and turpentine purposes” for a period of seven years (and thirty years, so far as conveyance of the Cliftonville still site is concerned). Apparently the naval stores business was worth continuing. Howell Turpentine Co.’s return for 1940 states its business “Naval stores farming.”
What the stockholders received was not land in kind, but the proceeds thereof through the cooperation of D. F. Howell, the principal recipient. Such disposition of property belonging to the corporation prior to the dissolution is, in our view, disposition by the corporation.
Other reasons also impel us to the same view. The earnest money payment of $4,000, though ostensibly made to the three stockholders, was immediately placed in a bank account with the mortgagee, Factors, Inc., with specific written authority given such mortgagee to apply the amount on the mortgage owned by the Turpentine Co., and on December 26 it was so applied. In short, the money went to discharge the corporate petitioner’s debt. In like manner, we observe that there was assigned to such mortgagee the contract with National, on December 26 and before collection thereon, placing the mortgagee in position to collect the payments provided in the contract; for the assignment recites conveyance of the “right to receive the payments provided for in said contract” and that when the parties “have made conveyance of said real estate to the purchaser above described and received purchase money and purchase money mortgage therefor — they will assign, transfer and set the same over to the party of the second part herein [Factors, Inc.].” With the Turpentine Co. thus kept throughout in a secure position of having its mortgage obligations to Factors, Inc., paid and discharged (as they were), this transaction appears largely for the benefit of the corporation. In addition the assignment was used by D. F. Howell as collateral security in borrowing $180,500, with a part of which, when paid to Turpentine Co. on D. F. Howell’s debts to it, the mortgage to Factors, Inc., on the land was immediately paid.
The petitioners point out that Turpentine Co.’s indebtedness was paid by D. F. Howell by borrowing such $180,500 on his demand note, from Factors, Inc., and using $170,198.78 thereof to draw a draft to his company for his debts (except $22,637.50 called an “advance”), enabling Turpentine Co. to pay Factors, Inc. We consider this loan no evidence of reality of sale by the stockholders instead of by the corporation. No $180,500 or even $170,198.70 was necessary to discharge the mortgage on the land. The mortgage indebtedness was $249,745.46, against which Turpentine Co. had a “timber account” credit of $114,303.75, and the earnest money credit of $4,000, amounting with interest to $4,070.69. This left only an obligation of $131,-431.02. The $73,500 down payment from National reduced this debt to $57,931.02. Not only does this show that a loan of $180,500 was very largely an unnecessary gesture so far as paying Turpentine Co.’s mortgage is concerned (and that, above about $57,931.02, Turpentine Co. is seen as the real payor), but this is shown also by the fact that on December 27, the next day after the $180,500 was borrowed, $35,000 was repaid thereon. The proceeds of the down payment ($73,740, including the $240.10 for documentary stamps) went into D. F. Howell’s account, so he merely in effect used it to pay the company’s debts. It is to be recalled also that National had agreed to accept the property at the option of Turpentine Co. subject to the mortgage to Factors and to pay the $80,000 and give second notes for the balance, so that it was unnecessary to pay off the mortgage as was done. The bookkeeping on December 26 and 27 appears as an unnecessary record, for the purpose of indicating reality of distribution to the stockholders, but failing to do so. It indicates rather realization in very large part by Turpentine Co. of the immediate proceeds of sale.
We note also that the contract of September 6 provides that while the contract is in force “Howell” (explained in general as reference to the three Howells) “should have the right to continue the cutting of cypress cross ties under his present operation.” Since nothing in the record indicates that the three Howells, and not the corporation, were on September 6 conducting such operation of cutting cross ties, we see here recognition that the contract was in fact that of the corporation.
The petitioners’ stock was not canceled until December 27. Thus they had not on December 26 paid the consideration for the conveyance made to them on December 26, on any theory of liquidation and exchange of assets for stock. Neither liquidation nor dissolution by resolution of December 28 had taken place when they received the property. In Fairfield Steamship Corporation, 5 T. C. 566, 575, we considered as indication of unreality the fact that corporate property passed prior to cancellation of the stock. Taylor Oil & Gas Co. v. Commissioner, supra.
“Taxes cannot be escaped ‘by anticipatory arrangements and contracts however skilfully devised * * * ” Griffiths v. Helvering, 308 U. S. 355; Lucas v. Earl, 281 U. S. 111, and we have here such an anticipatory arrangement. In Meurer Steel Barrel Co. v. Commissioner, 144 Fed. (2d) 282, the idea of “anticipatory plan” was relied upon to deny a claim that stockholders, and not the corporation, had sold its assets, where the stockholders, in order to avoid taxes, formed a partnership, and as such received, in complete liquidation and dissolution, the corporate assets and carried out an option earlier granted by the corporation. The court found substantial indication of “a unified operation which had as its goal the sale of petitioner’s assets free from taxes which would ordinarily arise.” In S. A. MacQueen Co., 26 B. T. A. 1337; affd., 67 Fed. (2d) 857, the corporation had three stockholders who were also directors. Pursuant to an informal understanding between them, formal meetings of stockholders and directors on February 1, 1927, approved sale of the company’s real estate to the majority stockholder (and president) and he, after agreeing on February 2, 1927, to sell it to a third party (and pursuant to the informal understanding) on February 11,1927, declared himself trustee for the three stockholders as to the sale price to be received. The corporation later conveyed to him and he paid the corporation the price set in the resolution. He then conveyed to the purchaser for a higher price, and later divided the sale price with the other stockholders according to stock ownership. The corporation was dissolved by court decree on August 3, 1927. We said that the president, chief stockholder, received the property not in his individual right, but as trustee, that as director he occupied a place of trust and must execute the trust with fidelity for the benefit of the stockholders and could be compelled to account to the corporation, that the situation in law implied a fraud on the corporation; and we concluded that the sale was that of the corporation and the profit taxable to it. Affirming, the Circuit Court said: “Such anticipatory arrangements and contracts, intended to circumvent the taxing statutes, are not looked upon with favor”; also that “The principle that substance and not form should control in the application of income tax laws [citing cases] may be invoked in the instant case.” There appears in substance little or no difference between this case and that cited, for both are based on agreement between the stockholders that they will receive the benefit of the sale of their corporation’s assets. This was in substance an agreement to liquidate to themselves, and sell, in one case as much as the other.
In Embry Realty Co. v. Glenn, 116 Fed. (2d) 682, a corporation had carried on negotiations with the plaintiff corporation for an option to purchase its property. No option was given, but the president of plaintiff corporation (as in this case) quoted to the other company a price at which the property could be purchased. The plaintiff did not wish to give an option until the necessary arrangements had been made to relieve from tax on the anticipated profit. A special meeting of the stockholders authorized and directed themselves as directors and officers to transfer the property to themselves as trustees for the stockholders for the purpose of sale and to apply proceeds in part liquidation of the company. The next day the property was transferred to them as tenants in common, and they gave an option to the company, which exercised it and purchased, the property being conveyed by the trustees. It was held that the trustees, for the benefit of the stockholders, acted as agents for the corporation, and that the sale was by the corporation.
In R. G. Trippett, 41 B. T. A. 1254; affd., 118 Fed. (2d) 764, Meadows and Trippett, the only stockholders-directors of a corporation, Texota, agreed to sell as individuals the corporate property when they became the only stockholders, and in discussing sale with proposed purchaser they stated that they wished to liquidate the corporation and the negotiations were between them in their individual names and the proposed purchaser. Nothing had earlier been said to indicate that the corporation would sell the property. These negotiations and a written contract as individuals took place after the two had contracted with all other stockholders to purchase their stock, but before delivery thereof to them. The stock was later delivered. After agreeing to buy other stock, the two men had their attorneys prepare a paper for liquidation of the corporation. It was executed, but in some manner got into the file of the purchasing corporation and never reached the office of the state secretary of state, so was of no legal effect. On January 5, 1935, the corporation conveyed to Meadows, then sole stockholder (for himself and Trippett) for a recited consideration of “$10 and other good and valuable considerations,” though there was none, and on the same date Meadows and Trippett executed a conveyance to the purchaser, attached it to a draft drawn on the purchaser, and forwarded it to a Tyler, Texas, bank for collection. On January 7, 1935, the conveyance was delivered when the purchase price was paid. The stock certificates of Meadows and Trippett were in the possession of . a bank as collateral for the money borrowed by them to purchase the other stock. This they repaid on January 7, but the bank mislaid the certificates and they could not be located until shortly before the hearing. The corporation was dissolved on August 14, 1936, though in 1935 it had wound up its affairs and distributed the remainder of its assets to Meadows and Trippett. We said that, though the corporate name was not used in the contract to sell the property, the property was at that time owned by the corporation, the contracting parties were its directors and only stockholders, and the contract was for the benefit of the corporation. The parallel with the instant case is plain, for in both there was individual contract to sell what the sole stockholders expected to get, and did later get, followed by dissolution of the corporation. In both cases the stockholders received conveyance from their corporation (in each case reciting consideration of $10 and other valuable consideration) before they consummated sale to the purchaser. In both cases final dissolution, due to delay, did not occur for several months after the sale. In both cases the purchaser dealt with the stockholders as individuals. In the Trippett case we considered. agreement to deliver abstract of title certified to date as indication that title was known to the purchaser to be in the corporation. (Herein the purchaser specifically knew title was in the corporation.) In both cases, in the negotiations with the proposed purchaser it was stated that liquidation was desired and the negotiations were in the stockholders’ individual names. We held the sale to be on behalf of the corporation and the profit taxable to the corporation, and the Circuit Court affirmed.
The petitioners, in seeking to distinguish the Trippett case, supra, point out, in effect, that therein the property sold had not been distributed to the stockholders, “when the contract of sale was entered into or when it was consummated,” in the language of the Circuit Court, whereas here the Howells had become absolute owners before consummation of the sale. The opinion of the Board was not placed on such ground, and the facts therein set forth show that the property involved was conveyed by the corporation to the selling stockholder the same day that he executed an assignment to the purchaser, but (he conveyance to the purchaser was not delivered until two days later. Here the petitioners received their deed December 26 and conveyed on December 27, the day their stock was canceled. Moreover, the Trippett case is based on S. A. MacQueen Co., supra, and therein the stockholders had received the property before the consummation of the sale, yet it was held to be the sale of the corporation.
The petitioners say that “The most recent and applicable case (in any court) is the Falcon case (127 F. 2d 277),” which affirmed 41 B. T. A. 1128. The salient facts therein are set forth in the Trippett case, where it is distinguished, as follows:
* * * In that case, prior to any contract of sale, the corporation distributed in partial liquidation the eight leases which were subsequently sold. The stockholders turned in their stock and 60 percent thereof was canceled as a part of the plan of partial liquidation. * * * After the stockholders received the leases in liquidation, they entered into a contract on their own account to sell the leases * * * and in pursuance thereof the leases were subsequently sold to the named purchaser for the consideration specified in the contract. * * *
Further pointed distinction is seen in the fact that there had been no contract of purchase and sale, formal or otherwise, prior to distribution, between the corporation or stockholders and the company which later purchased; and in the fact that the stockholders each received a check for his interest, and “No part of the consideration was paid to the petitioner or in any manner utilized by or for petitioner” — a striking contrast to the use of the purchase money paid to discharge in large part the corporate petitioner’s mortgage, in this case. Also, the Falcon Co. continued in business, a going concern. Clear it is that a case involving no contract prior to distribution in liquidation proffers no authority whatsoever here. Yet petitioners offer it as their strongest authority.
Petitioners cite also, with other cases less applicable, Robert Jemison, Jr., 3 B. T. A. 780; Fruit Belt Telephone Co., 22 B. T. A. 440. The Jemison and Fruit Belt Telephone Co. cases have been distinguished, on this question, by us in Will T. Caswell, 36 B. T. A. 810, 824, we saying:
* * * In the Jemison case the corporation was dissolved and its assets distributed in kind among the stockholders, who thereafter made the sale. In Fruit Belt Telephone Co. the corporation sold, and by formal deed conveyed, it's assets to its stockholders for a cash consideration. There was no question of mala fides. The property was thereafter sold by the stockholders. In' both cases, the stockholders had, in good faith and by lawful transactions, become the legal and equitable owners of the properties of the corporation prior to the sales in controversy. * * *
In the Jemison case negotiations previous to dissolution were specifically tentative by both parties, and subject to approval by boards of stockholders and directors. Dissolution was under an Alabama statute providing that upon agreement by the stockholders to dissolve, and filing thereof in the probate judge’s office, the corporation was dissolved. Such agreement, referring to the statute, had been executed and filed prior to any contract or conveyance by the stockholders. The conveyance by the corporation to stockholders recited that the corporation had “been duly dissolved.” Later conveyance by the stockholders to grantee was their only contract. . Such facts present no authority here.
In Boggs-Burnam & Co., 26 B. T. A. 988, 994, we distinguished the Jemison case, supra, saying that we had held “that the taxpayer was nonexistent, except for winding up its business.” In fact the agreement to dissolve stated that “the business and affairs have been settled up and adjusted.”
Herein the petitioner had carefully not completed dissolution, even by resolution, until December 28, two days after the transfer.
The Fruit Belt Telephone Co., Conservative Gas Co., 30 B. T. A. 552, and Falcon Co. cases were distinguished by us in the Trippett case. We referred to them as “clearly distinguishable on their facts.”
In George S. Towne et al., Executors, 35 B. T. A. 141, cited by petitioners, the corporation had actually been dissolved by a decree of dissolution in the Supreme Court, and its books “closed and ruled,” and the assets distributed on January 8, upon which the stockholders entered into a contract to sell. We specifically said “the sale of these shares had not been agreed upon before the dissolution of Johnson, Inc [the corporation].” Neither Grand Rapids Trust Co. et al., Administrators, 34 B. T. A. 170, nor Chisholm v. Commissioner, 79 Fed. (2d) 14; certiorari denied, 296 U. S. 641, involved the question as to whether sale was by a corporation or its stockholders. The Chisholm, case involved an option given by four brothers upon some stock, and their transfer thereof to a partnership, long contemplated by them, prior to the date when the option was exercised. The partnership continued, and continued to hold the proceeds of the sale. George T. Williams, 3 T. C. 1002, not cited by the petitioner, shows on its face that it recognizes the necessity of inquiry into previous negotiation or agreement, and that it is not applicable here; for, referring to the resolution to dissolve and the execution and mailing of the documents required for dissolution, we said:
* * * Up to that time there had been no negotiations for the sale of the Willmoto. No sale was even contemplated. * * *
The Willmoto was a ship, the corporate property later sold. Liquidation and dissolution had been decided on and initiated for other bona fide business reasons, before any offer whatever for the ship.
We conclude, after examination of the various cases touching this question, that the Trippett and MacQueen cases parallel the instant case, are controlling in principle and on fact and supported by others above noted, that the same examination into the whole and real transaction is required here, notwithstanding an attempt to show the form of a liquidation, and that the Falcon case and others cited to support it are inapplicable and not helpful on the facts here found. We have here no mere question whether stockholders may agree to convey a distribution in liquidation, but one whether under all the facts the sale was by corporation or stockholders. No case cited justifies the petitioners’ contention here. The Falcon and Jemison cases, petitioners’ principal authorities, both involve contracts made after dissolution and distribution, prior to contract by stockholders. We hold the sale to be that of the corporation.
Counsel agree that the expenses of the sale of the land are allowable deductions to the parties who are taxable with the profit on the sale, and, since we have held under the first issue that the profit is taxable to the Turpentine Co., thé deduction should be made in computing the capital gain of the corporate petitioner herein and not allowed as deduction to the individuals. The record shows such expenses to be $8,694.91, and deduction in that amount is allowed.
'Issue 2. Capitalized interest included in cost basis. — Having concluded that the corporation made the sale of the land, it is necessary for us to consider whether the cost base thereof shall be increased by $15,060.27, representing interest paid on mortgages on land which interest in the alternative petitioners seek to capitalize as cost. The land was admittedly unproductive.
The question arises under section 113 (b) (1) (A) of the Internal Revenue Code2 (prior to its amendment by section 130 of the Revenue Act of 1932). Thereunder the interest to be capitalized must be “properly chargeable to capital account.” In Queensboro Corporation, 46 B. T. A. 1216; affd., 134 Fed. (2d) 942, it was held that interest on a mortgage indebtedness may not be capitalized “unless such indebtedness was assumed or created as part of the purchase price of the mortgaged property, or unless such interest itself represents a carrying charge.” The record here does not show the interest to be either upon purchase price or that it is itself a carrying charge. It is a portion of a balance between two interest accounts kept by Factors, Inc., one charging Turpentine Co. with interest on various debts owed to Factors, Inc., and the other crediting Turpentine Co. with interest, at the same rate, on a certain timber account. The testimony was that Factors, Inc., held a mortgage for the indebtedness owed to it, yet, when Factors, Inc., gave a release to Turpentine Co. on December 26, 1940, covering all indebtedness, it released 13 mortgages, only 1 of which is therein called, or appears as, a purchase money mortgage; and the account between the two companies in which interest occurs as a debit is a running account including sundry matters other than mortgages, including open account and grocery account and operating expenses borrowed. The petitioner did not produce the books necessary to allocate the interest here involved to any particular indebtedness. Though there is testimony as to $84,000 borrowed in 1933 to bid in about 52,000 acres of land at foreclosure sale, that indebtedness may not all have been so used, as the borrowing is referred to as saving the company. In any event, nothing in the record enables us to apportion the interest between purchase money mortgages or any other proper carrying charges, and other indebtedness, all of which amounted to at least $249,745.46 when released on December 26, 1940. For lack of proof the capitalization is disallowed. In any event, the item of $6,202.98 can not, under the statute, be capitalized, since it is the subject of a deduction taken, in the words of the statute, “in determining net income for the taxable year” — deduction as interest having been allowed in 1989, thus increasing the operating loss carried to 1940.
Issue 3. Social security tax refund. — The Turpentine Co. contends that it was not bound to accrue and return the refund of social security taxes of $556.68 in the year 1940, because, in that year, it was not certain that the refund would be made. The respondent argues that he has made his determination that the amount accrued as income in 1940 and that such determination must be sustained for failure of the Turpentine Co. to prove that the amount did not accrue as income in that year.
The only evidence on this question is that Turpentine Co. paid certain social security taxes in 1936, that it filed claim for refund therefor in 1940 because of a court decision that turpentine farmers were not subject to the tax, and that payment of the refund was made in 1941. The date of the decision does not appear of record herein. The petitioner, Howell Turpentine Co., the holder of the claim for refund, was upon an accrual basis of accounting. The record does not indicate when Turpentine Co.’s right to receive the refund became so definite and certain as to be accruable. D. F. Howell did not know when it accrued. Apparently, however, the decision was entered prior to the filing of the claim for refund, which would be some indication at least that the amount of the refund was sufficiently definite as to be accruable in 1940. The Commissioner having determined that the income accrued in 1940, mere payment in 1941 is not sufficient to indicate error on his part. Permanent Homes Land Co., 27 B. T. A. 142; Leo M. Klein, 20 B. T. A. 1057. We hold that no error has been shown in the addition of the $556.68 to the income of Turpentine Co. for 1940.
Issue 4. Reforestation and conservation payments. — The Turpentine Co. in its petition assigns error by the respondent in “the inclusion in the assets of taxpayer corporation of conservation payments of $7,254.54,” and alleges that, as they were not available at the time of liquidation they became income to the stockholders in the year 1941, when they were received, and were not income of the Turpentine Co.
Its income tax return fails to show that the Turpentine Co. reported the payments as income and there is nothing in the statement attached to the notice of deficiency to show that the Turpentine Co.’s income for 1940 was increased by the Commissioner by the amount of such payments, or any portion thereof. Thus it does not appear from this record that the respondent committed any error in determining the Turpentine Co.’s income, in so far as these payments are concerned. In such situation that company is not entitled to the relief here sought on this issue.
Moreover, the situation is essentially the same as that of the social security payments above considered. The corporation was upon an accrual basis of accounting. The conservation payments were made for reforestation work performed by the corporation in 1940, and on the basis of an inspection, which usually was made on or before December 1 of each year, and a report and approval of payment thereafter. Thus, it is seen that the right to the payments may have accrued prior to the end of 1940. No showing to the contrary is made.
Issue 5. Interest on open accounts of D. F. Howell. — The question is whether there was any obligation to pay interest on admitted indebtedness for loans and stock purchases reflected in Howell’s accounts.
The evidence in the present case shows that the indebtedness was not an ordinary open account between strangers dealing on a commercial basis and the conclusion to be drawn from all of the facts and circumstances is that D. F. Howell never agreed to pay interest and that neither he nor the Turpentine Co. intended that he should ever do so. Howell was the principal stockholder of the Turpentine Co. and, over a nine-year period he continued to borrow the funds of the corporation until his indebtedness rose from $9,520.54 in 1931 to $52,-895.80 in 1940, exclusive of what he owed for stock. He withdrew as loans and was charged for stock $26,050 in 1937. He withdrew as loans $5,539.70 in 1938, and $7,182.97 in 1939 and 1940, although the business was losing money as is indicated by operating losses in the years 1939 and 1940. During all of the years 1931 to 1939 the Turpentine Co. never charged any interest on the accounts and never entered any on its books. It merely carried the balances of the principal. It was not until the liquidation and sale of the assets had been agreed upon in 1940 that Howell considered the matter of paying interest to this corporation which he controlled and dominated. When it was known that the sale would result in a large profit, he caused his auditor to compute, the interest on the average yearly balances and, on the basis of the auditor’s computation showing $28,-058.75 to be due, he decided to pay that amount of interest. Howell’s testimony on direct examination left the inference that payment of this interest had been agreed upon in the prior years, but his cross-examination developed the fact as to the agreement to pay:
A. It might have been in the month of December 1940. It was some time during the time that we were discussing the sale of this property.
Q. Now, as a matter of fact, by making this payment of interest to the corporation, you had it figured out that it would save considerable taxes, did you not?
A. It was understood that it would save taxes on it, yes. That is true.
The payment of the interest and of the entire principal of Howell’s indebtedness to the Turpentine Co. was made out of the loan of $180,-500 which Howell obtained from Factors, Inc., as shown in our findings of fact under issue 1, for the purpose of enabling the Turpentine Co. to discharge its mortgage indebtedness to Factors, Inc., and thereby permit the land to be sold free of the mortgage lien. In other words, the obligation to pay interest was incurred and the payment thereof was made with the intent that, on the day of payment, 850/1000 of the payment would be returned to Howell, as owner of 850 of the 1,000 shares of stock, in the form of unencumbered land. It would thus seem apparent that Howell would have little, if any, concern as to any amount of money paid by him to the Turpentine Co. which was requisite to discharge the mortgage indebtedness.
In view of all the circumstances, it is our opinion that the entire arrangement was for the sole purpose of creating a tax deduction for Howell. The statute allowing deductions for interest obviously was not intended to permit a taxpayer, even though on the cash basis, to pile up indefinitely deductions which ordinarily would accrue annually and then claim them in a year when it is important to offset a large income, particularly where, as here, the creditor is a family-owned corporation. Miller Safe Co., 12 B. T. A. 1388. So far as statutory rate of interest, without contract, is concerned, agreement that a debt or obligation shall not bear interest may be implied, as well as an agreement to pay interest. 33 C. J. 197. On all of the evidence, we think there was an understanding that interest be not paid. Ross v. Walker, 44 Fla. 704; 32 So. 934. The deduction of $27,058.75 is disallowed. The petitioners contend, and the respondent agrees, that in such case the amount should not be included in income of the corporation; and we so hold.
Issue 6. Capital gain of stockholders from liquidation. — The individual petitioners, D. F. Howell, C. L. Howell, and J. F. Howell, allege error by the respondent in increasing the capital gain reported by each of them from the liquidation of the Turpentine Co. The capital gains determined by the respondent and the resulting additions to their taxable income appear in the findings of fact. The petitions allege that such increases in the capital gains relate to the assets acquired in the liquidation, and that the additions to taxable income result from the various adjustments and disallowances which the respondent made in the income of the Turpentine Co. for the year 1940 and which are contested in that company’s petition. D. F. Howell in his petition further alleges that the increase in his capital gain is due also to the improper reduction of the basis of 50 shares of his stock and that the tax liability asserted against the Turpentine Co. should have been deducted before determining his capital gain.
The individual petitioners, as we point out in our discussion of issue 1, are not entitled to deduct their proportionate shares of the expense of selling the timberland. This leaves for consideration in the computation of the capital gain of the individual petitioners the questions: (a) Whether the social security tax refund of $556.68 (considered in issue 3, supra) and the conservation payments of $6,738.45 (as proven) (considered in issue 4, supra), should be treated as distributed in the liquidation; (b) whether the respondent erred in failing to allow petitioner D. F. Howell an increase of $3,592.47 in the basis of 50 of his shares of stock in the Turpentine Co.; and (c) whether the tax liability of the Turpentine Co. should be deducted from the corporate assets before computation of capital gain of the individuals. These questions are considered in the order stated.
(a) On behalf of the individual petitioners, it is urged that inclusion of the tax refund and conservation payments in the income of the corporation increased the capital gains of the stockholders, and they state that disposition of their contention that such increases are improper will follow as of course the decision reached in the case of the corporation (issues 3 and 4, supra). With respect to both the conservation payments and the refund of the social security taxes, it is to be observed that, whether or not they constituted proper accruals of the corporation in the year 1940, they nevertheless must be taken into account in computing the stockholders’ gain from the liquidation. The corporation in 1940 filed its claims for taxes improperly paid and for conservation work performed. The claims were choses in action or property rights which passed under the assignment of the residual assets. The claims were well founded, and they had value as is evidenced by the fact that they were paid within the next year after they were filed. The petitioners have produced no evidence to show that they were not worth, at the time of assignment, the amount which was ultimately received on them. They represented assets distributed in kind, returnable to them at their fair market value at the time of distribution. I. R. C., sec. 115 (c); 111 (a), (b); Mente v. Commissioner, 76 Fed. (2d) 965; affirming 29 B. T. A. 804; Boudreau v. Commissioner, 134 Fed. (2d) 360; affirming 45 B. T. A. 390. The respondent properly included the amounts of $556.68 tax refunds and $6,738.45 conservation payments in the assets distributed for the purpose of computing the capital gain of the individual petitioners, and his action in that regard is to that extent approved.
(b) In determining the capital gain of D. F. Howell, the respondent found the basis of his 850 shares to be $85,000, or $100 per share. Howell contends that, with respect to 50 of those shares, his basis is $3,592.47 in excess of the amount of $5,000 allowed by the respondent. We have found the cost basis of the 50 shares to D. F. Howell to be $135.92 per share and such amount should be used in computing D. F. Howell’s capital gain.
(c) The tax liability of the corporation should be deducted from the value of the corporate assets in computing the stockholders’ gain or loss on their stock. T. H. Symington & Son, Inc., 35 B. T. A. 711, 757.
Reviewed by the Court.
Decision in each of the proceedings here considered will he entered wnder Rule 50.
Murdock, Leech, and Hill, JJ., dissent.The italics are those of the Board of Tax Appeals, 15 B. T. A., at page 619.
SBC. 113. ADJUSTBD BASIS BOR DETERMINING GAIN OR LOSS.
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(b) Adjusted Basis. — The adjusted basis for determining the gain or loss from the sale or other disposition of property, whenever acquired shall be the basis determined under subsection (a), adjusted as hereinafter provided.
(1) General rule. — Proper adjustment in respect of the property shall in all cases be made—
(A) For expenditures, receipts, losses, or other items, property chargeable to capital account, including taxes and other carrying charges on unimproved and-unproductive real property, but no such adjustment shall be made for taxes or other carrying charges for which deductions have been taken by the taxpayer in determining net ineome for the taxable year or prior taxable years.