Booth Furniture & Carpet Co. v. Commissioner

*888OPINION.

Milliken :

The respondent’s plea in bar, with respect to the fiscal years ending in 1918 and 1919, is well taken. The jurisdiction of the Board, with respect to years for which no deficiencies are asserted, was considered and decided adversely to the petitioner in Appeal of R. P. Hazzard Co., 4 B. T. A., 150, and Appeal of Cornelius Cotton Mills, 4 B. T. A. 255.

The record does not disclose the reason for respondent’s action in disallowing as invested capital, for the fiscal year 1920, the account receivable standing against W. H. Booth and/or his estate, on the petitioner’s books of account. The right of a corporate taxpayer to include in its invested capital funds advanced to stockholders, as bona fide loans, has been upheld in the Appeal of Kale C. Ryan, Executrix, 2 B. T. A. 1130, and Appeal of Ruckman Coal Co., 5 B. T. A. 534. The balance in the account at the beginning of the year in question represented a valid obligation of W. H. Booth and/or his estate, for funds advanced to him or his estate by the petitioner, or paid in his or its behalf for personal bills; It was so regarded by the petitioner as evidenced by its books of account. That the advances made to Booth and his estate by the petitioner, were considered by Booth and his executors as loans, is evident from the facts that from time to time, prior to his death, Booth made partial repayment through substantial cash payments and by applying to the accounts amounts due as salary, and the subsequent liquidation of the account, in full, by his executors.

Further, the respondent, for the purposes of the estate tax, considered the advances to Booth as loans by the petitioner, and allowed as a deduction, in valuing the gross estate, one-half of the amount of Booth’s indebtedness on account of such loans. The respondent’s action in allowing only one-half of the indebtedness to the petitioner, as a deduction in valuing the gross estate, appears to have been based upon the fact thát Booth was a resident of the State of Louisiana, at the time of his death, and subject to the community property laws of that State. The respondent’s action in disallowing the indebtedness of Booth and/or his estate to the petitioner as invested capital for the fiscal year 1920, is in error.

The petitioner claimed a deduction, for the fiscal year 1920, in the sum of $2,500, representing an alleged loss sustained from the sale of certain shares of the capital stock of the Youree Hotel Co., and the *889deduction has been disallowed by the respondent. . There is grave doubt in our minds as to whether ownership of this stock vested in the petitioner or in W. H. Booth and/or his estate. Obviously, if it vested in the latter, petitioner is not entitled to deduct any loss which may have resulted from the sale. Petitioner’s bookkeeper testified at the hearing that the stock in question -was the property of the petitioner; but she testified further, that she had never seen the stock certificates, and, though the dividend checks had passed through her hands in the ordinary routine of office affairs, she could not recollect to whom such checks were payable. We were not told why the dividends paid on this stock during the period September 24, 1919, to June 30, 1921, in the total amount of $2,800, were credited to the account of W. H. Booth and/or his estate. The bookkeeper simply testified that if ownership of the stock vested in the petitioner, the dividends were erroneously credited to Booth’s account.

At the time of the sale the stock referred to was carried on the books at a value of $5,000. When the stock was sold, or shortly thereafter, cash was charged with the sum of $5,000 and “Youree Stock ” account credited with a like amount. The bookkeeper testified that the difference between the book value of the stock, $5,000, and the selling price, $2,500, was later charged off as a loss; but how ? Certified copies of the surplus account are in evidence and the loss does not appear as a charge against that account. The stock was sold on September 24,1919; and the ledger sheets bearing the account of W. H. Booth and/or his estate from that date to June 80, 1921, are missing from petitioner’s records, so that it is not possible now to check that account to determine if the loss, if any was sustained, was charged against it.

Furthermore, not a shred of evidence was presented to show the cost of the stock; hence, we are in no position to determine whether or not an actual loss was sustained. What then is the situation with which we are confronted? Just this: The ownership of the stock has not been satisfactorily established; the petitioner’s books of account, on their face, show that the stock was sold at its book value; and the cost of the stock, or its March 1, 1913, value if acquired prior to that date, has not been proven. How then can we determine whether or not a loss was sustained upon the sale of the stock in question, and, if so, who sustained the loss? Under the circumstances, the respondent’s action in refusing to allow the deduction claimed, must prevail.

Judgment will be entered on 15 days’ notice, wider Rule 50.