*1525 1. Where a taxpayer corporation, incorporated under the laws of the State of New York, is consolidating with another corporation of the same State under the laws of the State of New York relating to the consolidation of corporations forming a new corporation, such new corporation is a proper party to prosecute an appeal from deficiency letters addressed to and mailed to such consolidating corporation for taxes incurred by it in years prior to the consolidation.
2. Capital-stock taxes accrued in 1926 but not paid until 1928 are properly deductible from 1926 income where the books of the corporation were kept on the accrual basis. Aluminum Castings Co. v. Routzahn,282 U.S. 92">282 U.S. 92.
3. Net losses sustained by four certain corporations in taxable period first two months of 1924, before affiliation, may not be carried forward and deducted in determining the net income for the period March 1, 1924, to December 31, 1924 and 1925, of the affiliated group of which they had become members, where the admitted facts are that the same four corporations had losses and not net income in the periods from March 1, 1924, to December 31, 1924, and for 1925. Commissioner v. Ginsburg Co., 54 Fed.(2d) 238,*1526 followed.
4. In November, 1916, petitioner acquired a certain leasehold and building agreement and issued its capital stock of the par value of $1,999,500 in payment therefor. Under the evidence, held that the leasehold and building agreement at the time it was acquired by petitioner had an actual cash value of $1,000,000 and that petitioner is entitled to include said leasehold and building agreement in its invested capital at $1,000,000 and to compute the annual allowance for the exhaustion of the leasehold on that basis. A. H. Woods Theatre Co.,12 B.T.A. 827">12 B.T.A. 827, followed.
*1194 In these appeals, which have been consolidated for hearing, the petitioners seek a redetermination of the following deficiencies found by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue:
Year | Deficiencies found | Deficiencies found |
against Bowman | against Bowman-Biltmore | |
Hotel Corporation | Hotels Corporation | |
1919 | $37,299.41 | |
1920 | 115,077.70 | |
1921 | 60,613.61 | |
1922 | 3,913.59 | |
1923 | 13,357.00 | |
1924 (Jan. 1 to Feb. 28, inclusive) | 2,272.16 | |
Period Mar. 1 to Dec. 31, 1924 | $22,455.79 | |
1925 | 13,860.97 | |
1926 | 14,615.65 |
*1527 The issues for our decision are:
(1) The value of a certain leasehold and building agreement at the time of acquisition by Bowman Hotel Corporation in 1916, for the purpose of determining invested capital for 1919, 1920 and 1921.
(2) The value of the leasehold and building agreement for the purpose of amortization deduction in all the taxable years involved.
(3) The right of the petitioner, Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, to deduct from the consolidated net income of the group, losses sustained by members of the affiliated group for periods within the taxable year or for prior taxable year in which they were not affiliated with the petitioner, said corporations still having losses instead of income in the years when petitioner seeks to take the deductions.
(4) The right to deduct from consolidated net income in the year 1926, $8,107 additional Federal capital-stock tax paid on June 19, 1928, for 1926.
(5) Whether the Board has jurisdiction in Dockets Nos. 10651, 24912, 28971, and 38006, the deficiency notice on each case having been mailed to Bowman Hotel Corporation, which corporation at the time said deficiency notices were mailed and at the time appeals therefrom*1528 were taken, had been consolidated under the laws of the State of New York with another corporation and had its separate existence merged with such other corporation into a new corporation known as Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation.
Under Rule 62 of this Board there has been reserved for a later hearing the question of petitioner's right to have its excess-profits taxes determined under the provisions of sections 327 and 328 of the Revenue Acts of 1918 and 1921 for the years 1919, 1920 and 1921.
*1195 FINDINGS OF FACT.
Petitioner, Bowman Hotel Corporation, was organized under the laws of the State of New York in April, 1916. Its authorized capital stock was 20,000 shares of common stock of $100 per value and 20,000 shares of preferred stock of $100 par value. Five shares of common stock were subscribed for and issued to its incorporators. Petitioner, Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, is a corporation the result of a consolidation in 1924 of the Bowman Hotel Corporation and the Beau-Site Company under section 86 of the stock corporation laws of the State of New York. John McE. Bowman was the leading spirit in the organization and operation of these corporations.
*1529 In the latter part of 1915 or early in 1916, Bowman, who at that time was president of the company operating the Biltmore Hotel, New York City, decided that a location adjacent to the Grand Central Terminal, and owned by the New York State Realty & Terminal Company, would be an excellent site for a large hotel operated at moderate rates. He had been in the hotel business a great many years and had been very successful in the operation of the Biltmore Hotel. At that time the hotel business in New York was excellent and the hotel with which Bowman was then connected, the Biltmore, was turning away guests and he felt the need in that locality of a large hotel operated at rates more moderate than those charged by the Biltmore Hotel.
Vice president Newman of the New York State Realty & Terminal Company, a subsidiary of the New York Central Railroad Company, was a permanent guest at the Biltmore and personal friend of Bowman. Bowman approached Newman in reference to obtaining a lease on the site of land which he had selected and which he thought would be desirable for a hotel site. Bowman discussed his plans and ideas with Newman and Newman advised him that he thought the plan*1530 excellent, and that the New York Central Railroad Company was anxious to see a good hotel constructed on the site, but did not want to go into the hotel business itself; that because Bowman had demonstrated that he was a good hotel man, the site would be leased to him or to a corporation which he might organize for that purpose on more advantageous terms than to anyone else. Negotiations were then entered into between representatives of the New York State Realty & Terminal Company and Bowman with the view of formulating a plan for the leasing of the land and erecting a hotel on the site which had been selected.
The parties agreed to general provisions of the leasing of the property and the financing of the building. The first written communication *1196 passing between the parties was a letter from the New York State Realty & Terminal Company, dated September 23, 1916. This letter, addressed to Bowman, reads as follows:
NEW YORK, Sept. 23rd, 1916.
Mr. JOHN MCE. BOWMAN,
Hotel Biltmore, New York City.
DEAR SIR: In connection with the negotiations pending between us for some time in respect of the construction of a hotel building on the plot on the northwesterly*1531 corner of 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue, Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, and the leasing of the same to you, or to a corporation in which you are interested:
This is to advise you that for value received, we agree that if on or before the 26th day of September, 1916, you deliver to this Company, duly executed and acknowledged on your part, or on the part of a corporation satisfactory to this Company, three originals of the lease and building agreement, copies of which are hereto attached, and the bond provided for in said building agreement, duly executed, this Company will on its part, upon the return of its President, execute said lease and building agreement and secure the execution of the covenant of quiet enjoyment attached to said lease, and deliver one copy of such lease and building agreement duly executed to you or to the corporation satisfactory to this Company executing the same. If the right to receive such lease pass to such corporation by the assignment hereof, this agreement with such assignment duly endorsed shall be delivered to us with such leases so to be executed.
(Signed)
September 25, 1916, two days after the foregoing letter accompanied by*1532 copies of the lease and building agreement which it was proposed the parties should enter into was received by Bowman, he assigned his rights in the agreement to lease to one Holland B. Judkins by the following instrument:
FOR VALUE RECEIVED, I JOHN MCE. BOWMAN, do hereby sell, assign and transfer to HOLLAND B. JUDKINS my option for a lease and building agreement with the New York State Realty and Terminal Company hereto annexed, and request that said New York State Realty and Terminal Company execute and deliver said lease and building agreement to said Holland B. Judkins or to his assignee.
Dated, New York, September 25th, 1916.
JOHN MCE. BOWMAN.
On the same day Judkins submitted an offer to the Bowman Hotel Corporation to assign to it the said options under the terms and conditions stated in said letter as follows:
NEW YORK, September 25, 1916.
BOWMAN HOTEL CORPORATION,
New York City
GENTLEMEN: I am the holder of two options which are hereto annexed and which have been assigned to me by Mr. John McE. Bowman. I am willing to assign these two options to you in consideration of the sum of $1,999,500 and accept in lieu of cash therefor, 19,995 shares of the*1533 common stock of your Company.
*1197 I think these two options are of great value because they practically provide for the erection and financing of a hotel of the first magnitude in a very advantageous location in the City of New York, and believe that such a hotel will be extremely profitable.
I ask you for an acceptance or rejection of such offer.
Very truly yours,
HOLLAND B. JUDKINS.
On the same day the offer of Judkins was accepted by the corporation, as shown by the minutes of the corporation, reading in part as follows:
The President presented to the meeting an option which had been granted to Mr. John McE. Bowman by the New York State Realty and Terminal Company for a lease and building agreement in connection with the erection of a hotel at the northwest corner of 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue, copies of which agreement and lease were annexed to said option. He also presented an option which Mr. Bowman had obtained from the George A. Fuller Company in relation to a contract for the construction of the proposed building, and the delivery of a bond for $2,500,000 to meet the requirements of the building agreement, copies of which agreement and bond*1534 were annexed to said option.
He stated that as this Company had been incorporated for the purpose of carrying on a hotel that this was an excellent opportunity to secure the control of property, which when developed, would yield great returns, and pointed out that with the amount to be realized by the Company from the subscriptions to this preferred stock, the Company would in his opinion, be able to finance the transaction, in view of said contracts, practically providing for the advancement to the Company of the sum of $6,000,000. He stated that these options had been assigned by Mr. Bowman to Mr. Holland B. Judkins, and that Mr. Judkins was willing to assign such options to the Company for the sum of $1,999,500, and would accept in lieu of cash that amount of the full paid common stock of this Company. That, in his opinion, the property so proposed to be assigned was of the value fixed by Mr. Judkins and necessary and desirable to carry out the use and lawful purposes of this Corporation.
After discussion, the following resolution was made, seconded and unanimously adopted:
RESOLVED that in the opinion of this Board of Directors the options proposed to be assigned by Mr. *1535 Holland B. Judkins and presented to this meeting by the president are of the full value of $1,999,500, and that in the opinion of this Board, it is advantageous and desirable to this corporation that these options be purchased on the terms offered by Mr. Judkins.
RESOLVED FURTHER that the president be and he hereby is authorized to accept the offer of Mr. Judkins, and upon due assignment to this corporation of said two options, that the officers of this corporation be and they hereby are authorized to execute and deliver to said Judkins or to such person or persons as he may designate 19,995 shares of the common stock of this company.
A. C. Mau was president and Frank M. Raynor was secretary of the Bowman Hotel Corporation at the time of these transactions. Bowman was one of the directors. On the same day, Judkins executed to Bowman Hotel Corporation the following instrument:
*1198 FOR VALUE RECEIVED, I, HOLLAND B. JUDKINS, do hereby sell, assign and transfer to the BOWMAN HOTEL CORPORATION the option for a lease and building agreement with the New York State Realty and Terminal Company hereto annexed, and request that said New York State Realty and Terminal Company*1536 execute and deliver said lease and building agreement to said BOWMAN HOTEL CORPORATION or its assignee.
Dated, New York, September 25th, 1916.
HOLLAND B. JUDKINS.
Holland B. Judkins had no interest in, and no financial connection with, the transaction in any manner and acted merely s a "dummy" for Bowman. Upon the execution by, Judkins of the assignment of the lease and building agreement to the Bowman Hotel Corporation, shown above, the corporation, on September 27, 1916, issued to Judkins 19,995 shares of its common stock of the par value of $100 per share. Subsequently, over a period extending from October 30, 1916, to April 23, 1919, Judkins transferred thes shares to various named individuals upon the order of Bowman. Of these shares, 5,993 were transferred to Bowman himself and the balance to various individuals who purchased preferred stock of the Bowman Hotel Corporation. The preferred stock of the Bowman Hotel Corporation was $100 par value and it was sold at par, with a varying bonus of common stock, extending over a period of two or three years. The money obtained by the Hotel Corporation from the sale of its preferred stock was used by it in purchasing furnishings*1537 and equipment to operate the hotel and as operating capital. With the first shares of preferred stock sold at $100 per share, some purchasers received two shares of common stock in the corporation; later one share of common stock was sold with each share of preferred; then still later, 50 per cent of as much common as preferred was issued to the purchasers of preferred stock; then as the hotel became more of an assured success, this percentage was cut down to 25 per cent, and finally, toward the end of the sale period, no common stock at all was issued with sales of preferred stock.
The evidence does not show that the Bowman Hotel Corporation paid John McE. Bowman anything for the 14,002 shares of common stock originally issued to Judkins as the nominee of Bowman and which were by him transferred without consideration to the various individuals purchasing preferred stock of the Bowman Hotel Corporation. These 14,002 shares of common stock issued to purchasers of the preferred stock, plus the 5,993 shares subsequently issued to Bowman, make up the total of 19,995 shares originally issued to Judkins. A list giving the names of all these stockholders was introduced in evidence and*1538 is incorporated herein by reference.
The lease and building agreements, when finally executed September 25, 1916, were between the New, York State Realty & Terminal *1199 Company and the Bowman Hotel Corporation. They are lengthy instruments (the lease agreement consisting of 56 pages), and are incorporated herein by reference. The leasehold provided in substance for a demise of the property owned by the New York State Realty & Terminal Company at Lexington Avenue and 42d Street, New York, N.Y., for a term of twenty-one years, with the privilege of two renewals of 21 years each under conditions set forth in great detail in the leasehold. It was provided in the lease, should the lessor refuse to renew at the expiration of the first renewal period, it would pay to the lessee the then value of the building constructed upon the land and provided for arbitration if the parties to the leasehold were unable to agree as to this value. The building agreement, which was also executed between the same parties on September 25, 1916, provided that the New York State Realty & Terminal Company would advance the cost of the building, $4,500,000. The New York State Realty & Terminal*1539 Company did advance toward the construction of the hotel, which is now known as the Commodore Hotel, $5,082,592.79. The Fuller Construction Company was engaged for the purpose of constructing the hotel.
Due to the entrance of the United States into the World War, the hotel was not opened until 1919. The delay was occasioned by inability of the contractors, the Fuller Construction Company, to obtain steel and other materials necessary to complete the contract. When completed in 1919 the building contained 2,000 rooms and has been operated continuously by the Bowman Hotel Corporation and its successor corporation, the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, under the leasehold secured in 1916.
In addition to taxes, and/or special assessments which might be assessed against the land for local benefits, the lessee, Bowman Hotel Corporation, assignee of John McE. Bowman, agreed to pay to lessors, for the demised premises and other benefits conferred under the lease, $175,000 as ground rental. Six per cent on funds advanced by lessor to construct the building was to be paid. The amount thus advanced by lessor was $5,082,592.79 and this interest payment amounted to $304,955.52 annually. *1540 Two per cent of the amount of cash advanced by the lessor was to be paid to lessor by lessee each year as amortization of principal and this amounted to $101,651.84 annually. The real estate covered by the lease agreement from New York Realty & Terminal Company to the Bowman Hotel Corporation had a value at the time of the execution of the lease of $3,500,000.
The earnings of the petitioner, the Bowman Hotel Corporation, as shown by the books of that corporation, and its successor corporation, The Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, and the net income *1200 determined by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue in his 60-day letters, are shown below:
Year | Net earnings shown by books of | Net income shown in deficiency |
corporation | notices | |
1919 | $389,358.18 | |
1920 | $1,075,704.71 | 1,186,458.79 |
1921 | 803,895.57 | 741,606.93 |
1922 | 1,042,369.24 | 1,086,123.80 |
1923 | 938,117.59 | 1,060,509.97 |
1924 | 1,312,417.52 | (*) |
1925 | 1,669,614.36 | (*) |
1926 | 1,821,566.36 | (*) |
The actual*1541 cash value of the lease and building agreement (not including any value for their renewal provisions), at the time of their transfer to petitioner in exchange for 19,995 shares of its common stock, in excess of the rentals agreed to be paid was $1,000,000.
The Bowman Hotel Corporation continued to operate the Commodore Hotel until February, 1924, at which time it was consolidated with the Beau-Site Company, also a corporation formed under the laws of the State of New York. This consolidation was effected pursuant to section 86 of the Stock Corporation Laws of the State of New York and the certificate of consolidation was filed with the Secretary of State of New York on February 20, 1924. When the consolidation was effected the new corporation was known as the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation. The stockholders of the Bowman Hotel Company received in exchange for their stock in that corporation stock of the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation in accordance with the plan of consolidation.
For the period from March 1, 1924, to December 31, 1924, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue computed the tax liability of the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation upon the basis of a consolidated*1542 net income, bringing into the consolidation certain corporations which were affiliated with the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation.
For the calendar year 1925 the Commissioner of Internal Revenue also computed the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation's net income upon a consolidated basis, bringing into the consolidation certain corporations which were affiliated with the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation.
For the period from January 1, 1924, to February 29, 1924, the following corporations, members of the affiliated group mentioned *1201 above, sustained net losses, at a time they were not members of the affiliated group, as follows:
B.L.M. Bates Corporation | $35,558.89 |
Hotel Ansonia Corporation | 1,877.41 |
Bellevue Griswold Hotel Company | 2,035.25 |
Westchester Biltmore Corporation | 69,428.03 |
On June 19, 1928, the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation paid $8,107 described in the notice and demand dated June 6, 1928, which the corporation received from the office of collector of internal revenue as 1926 "Additional Capital Stock Tax." The Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation paid capital-stock tax July 1, 1925, amounting to $7,143. This was accrued on its*1543 books monthly, one-twelfth each month, and of such amount, one-half, or $3,571.50, was accrued on the books in 1926. The books of Bowman Hotel Corporation and of Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation were kept on the accrual basis during the taxable years involved in this proceeding. Of the $8,107 additional capital-stock tax paid by petitioner in 1928 for the year beginning July 1, 1926, petitioner had not accrued anything as a liability on its books in 1926.
OPINION.
BLACK: The issues involved in this proceeding have already been stated preliminary to our findings of fact. We will first dispose of the question of jurisdiction mentioned in paragraph (5) of our preliminary statement. In Docket Nos. 24912, 28917, and 38006 the appeals are taken in the name of "The Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, successor to Bowman Hotel Corporation."
Paragraph (1) of each of said petitions alleges: "The Bowman Hotel Corporation was incorporated April 16, 1916, under the laws of the State of New York and has its principal place of business at the Commodore Hotel, Lexington Avenue and 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. It was succeeded in February, 1924, by the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, *1544 Madison Avenue and 43rd Street, New York, N.Y., a corporation organized for the purpose of acquiring and operating the Commodore Hotel together with certain other hotel properties."
The deficiency notices from which appeals were taken in said dockets were dated, respectively, January 12, 1927, May 24, 1927, and March 19, 1928, and in each instance the notice was addressed to the Bowman Hotel Corporation, Lexington Avenue and 42nd Street, New York, N.Y.
In docket No. 38006 a motion was filed by the respondent in June, 1928, to dismiss the petition, for the reason that no deficiency had *1202 been determined against the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, petitioner. Said motion came on for hearing before a division of the Board, which under date of August 1, 1928, ordered that the petitioner be given until August 15, 1928, to file an amended petition, showing the facts and circumstances under which the Bowman-Biltmoe Hotels Corporation had been organized by consolidation of the Bowman Hotel Corporation and the Beau-Site Company. Said amended petition was thereafter filed and the following allegations are made therein:
(1) The Bowman Hotel Corporation was incorporated*1545 April 16, 1916, under the laws of the State of New York, and had its principal place of business at the Commodore Hotel, Lexington Avenue and 42nd Street, New York, New York. On February 20, 1924, it was consolidated with the Beau-Site Company, also a corporation formed under the laws of the State of New York, pursuant to section 86 of the Stock Corporation Law of the State of New York, pursuant the name of Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation. The Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation thereby became the successor to the Bowman Hotel Corporation and all the property, real, personal, and mixed, and all the debts due on whatever account to the Bowman Hotel Corporation, all stock, subscriptions and other things in action belonging to the Bowman Hotel Corporation were vested in the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation and became as effectually the property of the new corporation as they were of the Bowman Hotel Corporation. The Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation also became vested through the consolidation with all the rights, franchises and privileges possessed by the Bowman Hotel Corporation and became liable for all liabilities and obligations of the Bowman Hotel Corporation in the same*1546 manner as if the new corporation had itself incurred such liabilities and obligations. The consolidation by virtue of the provisions of the statute terminated the existence of the Bowman Hotel Corporation as well as the Beau-Site Company and the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation became the only company authorized thereafter to sue or to be sued on any claim or obligation of the consolidating companies or to institute any proceeding for the enforcement of any right, privilege or claim of such consolidating corporations.
After petitioner had filed its amended petition aforesaid, no further action was taken on respondent's motion to dismiss the appeal in Docket No. 38006. As to Docket Nos. 24912, 28971, and 38006, it is not now contended by either party that we do not have jurisdiction.
No motion for dismissal was ever filed in Docket Nos. 24912 and 28971, although the same question is presented in those cases as in Docket No. 38006, and no amendment to the petitions in those cases has been filed. At the hearing counsel for respondent insisted that we do have jurisdiction in these dockets and can determine the deficiencies, if any, of the Bowman Hotel Corporation for the respective*1547 taxable years involved against the petitioner, Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, because of the language of the New York *1203 statute under which the consolidation was effected in 1924. The language of this statute is stated in footnote. 1
*1548 Petitioner contends that in these dockets which we have just named the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, as successor, is a proper party petitioner, but that any deficiency found by this Board must be found against the corporation to whom the deficiency notice was mailed, which, as we have already pointed out, in these dockets was the Bowman Hotel Corporation. We do not agree to this latter contention, because, as we interpret the statutes of the State of New York, providing for the consolidation of corporations, the petitioner corporation in this proceeding, Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, is obligated and birthmarked by statute with all primary liability of its components - an obligation which is not measured or proven by its obligation as transferee of property under section 280 of the Revenue Act of 1926, but is determined by the primary *1204 debt or obligation of the component. The reasons why we think that is the situation in the instant proceeding, we will discuss more at length later on in this opinion.
As we stated in *1549 , this Board is limited in its jurisdiction to the boundaries prescribed by Congress, and if from the pleadings of the parties and the evidence brought before us it appears we have no jurisdiction, we must take notice of that fact and dismiss the proceeding, even though both parties are willing to stipulate that we do have jurisdiction. This is not a case where the assets of a corporation are transferred to a new corporation and the old corporation goes into voluntary liquidation. Clearly, under such a state of facts, the corporation in dissolution, under section 108(8) of the Stock Corporation Law of the State of New York 2 would have its existence continued for winding up its business and its corporate affairs and would be the proper party to prosecute an appeal from a deficiency notice which it had received and we would have no jurisdiction to hear an appeal from the successor corporation. ; ; *1550 ; . But that is not the kind of a case which we have before us. The proceeding which we have before us in the instant case involves the consolidation statutes of the State of New York.
A corporation chartered under the laws of the State of New York which has had its existence terminated by reason of its consolidation with another corporation, thus forming a new corporation, presents a very different situation from that which exists where a corporation has transferred its assets to another corporation and then itself has gone into voluntary liquidation. In the latter situation the corporation which has*1551 gone into voluntary dissolution can, and is required to, wind up its affairs under section 105(8) of the Stock Corporation Law of the State of New York, and may sue and be sued in its own name, whereas no such provision is made for corporations which are dissolved by reason of their consolidation under the cited statutes of New York.
The rights of creditors in the latter case are determined by section 90, Consolidated Laws of New York, quoted in our footnote 1. In the case of he consolidation involved in the instant case, if at the time the consolidation was made a suit had been pending against the *1205 Bowman Hotel Corporation, it would not have abated by reason of the consolidation, but might have been prosecuted either against the corporation in its own name or the new corporation, Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, might have been substituted as a party. This by reason of the express language of the statute.
There can be no question, however, that any suits brought after the effective date of the consolidation, either to recover claims owing to the Bowman Hotel Corporation prior to the date of its consolidation, or liabilities existing against it at he time of*1552 the consolidation, including, of course, tax liabilities, would have to be brought by or against the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation. . There is no provision of the New York statutes which permits a consolidating corporation to sue or be sued in its own name after the effective date of its consolidation.
The deficiency notices from which appeals are taken in Docket Nos. 24912, 28971 and 38006 were all mailed after the consolidation had been effected. These deficiency notices, although addressed to the Bowman Hotel Corporation, were promptly delivered to the consolidated corporation, Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, and we hold that the appeals which the latter has taken from such deficiency notices are proper and that it is liable for deficiencies, if any, which may be determined in these proceedings against it as the successor in law of Bowman Hotel Corporation.
The statutes of New York have separate provisions for mergers and consolidations. In the case of a merger the statute as it formerly existed did not make the corporation receiving the assets of the merged institution unconditionally liable for its debts, *1553 but the corporate existence of the merged institution was continued for the purpose of affording creditors a remedy and they must sue and prosecute their claims against the corporation whose assets have been merged into such other corporation. Cf. .
It is different however where a consolidation has taken place. In that case the assets and liabilities of the consolidating corporations become the assets and liabilities of the new corporation which is brought into being by reason of the consolidation. For example, if, after the consolidation involved in the instant case had been effected, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue had sued to collect any income or excess-profits taxes due by the Bowman Hotel Corporation for the taxable years involved in the dockets now under discussion, he would have had to sue the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation. The Bowman Hotel Corporation would not be a proper party to the suit. This distinction between mergers and consolidations *1206 under the New York statutes was stated by the Court of Appeals of New York in *1554 , in which the court, among other things, says:
Each form of procedure is independent of the other. Where a consolidation is consummated pursuant to the statute, it is expressly provided that the rights of creditors of any corporation that shall be so consolidated shall not in any manner be impaired, and also "such new corporation shall succeed to and be held liable to pay and discharge all such debts and liabilities of each of the corporations consolidated in the same manner as if such new corporation had itself incurred the obligation or liability to pay such debt or damages." Consol. Laws, 3, 4, Sec. 11. If the gas company was liable for the indebtedness to the plaintiff described in the complaint, the action will lie against the defendant therefor because of the statute quoted. Whether the gas company became liable for the debts of the Block Company depends upon the statute, pursuant to which the merger took place. In the statute authorizing a merger of corporations there is no provision making the possessor corporation liable for the debts of the corporation merged. It is expressly provided in that statute that*1555 the merging of corporations shall be "without prejudice to any liabilities of such other corporation or the rights of any creditors thereof." This reservation of the rights of creditors permits them to proceed against the debtor corporation, notwithstanding such corporation is merged into another. The rights of creditors include the right to sue the debtor corporation, and to take the property which was of the debtor corporation by execution issued upon a judgment obtained against such debtor. Such right rests upon the express terms of the statute, and does not depend, as has been suggested, upon the existence and a finding of a fraudulent transfer.
To the same effect is ; . These statutes of the State of New York to which we have referred are more than rules of procedure - they are rules of property. In discussing the corporation Consolidation Act of the State of New York, then existing, the court in , said:
The defendants however interpose the objection that the provision just cited is*1556 for the government of the New York courts alone and can have no control over the equity practice in the Federal Courts. On such examination as we have given to the matter and to the authorities cited in the brief of counsel, we cannot assent to this view. No good reason has been assigned, nor does there appear to be any, why this court should not recognize the statutory provision of New York and apply it to the pending suit between these parties. The question would seem to involve something more that a mere rule of practice; it embraces the legal and equitable rights of the plaintiff under the laws of the state which created it and prescribed the terms and conditions on which it might be consolidated with one or more corporations of the same state.
The question of jurisdiction involved in the instant case was not before us in , for in that case the deficiency notice for taxes due by Meadows Lands Coal Company was issued to Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corporation, *1207 the consolidated corporation, and from which deficiency notice it appealed. We held that the Board did have jurisdiction in that case. We*1557 further held that the petitioner was not liable as a taxpayer for deficiencies incurred by Meadows Lands Coal Company in years when petitioner, Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corporation, was not in existence. In view, however, of the statutes of the State of New York providing for the consolidation of corporations which we have cited, and in view of the decisions of the appellate courts of that State, interpretative of such statutes, which we have likewise cited, we do not believe ;; and , should be followed in this proceeding and, accordingly, we hold that when the Bowman Hotel Corporation and Beau-Site Company consolidated and became the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, the tax liabilities, including the deficiencies, if any, involved in this proceeding, of the Bowman Hotel Corporation, became the tax liabilities of the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation and, therefore, we have jurisdiction of Docket Nos. 24912, 28971, and 38006.
Docket No. 10651 is an appeal in the name of the Bowman*1558 Hotel Corporation and paragraph (1) of the petition filed therein is the same as paragraph (1), already quoted, in the petitions filed in the dockets which we have just discussed, prior to the amendment filed to the petition in Docket No. 38006. The petition contains the following verification: "John McE. Bowman, being duly sworn says that he is the President of the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, the successor of the Bowman Hotel Corporation, above named, and as such is duly authorized to verify the foregoing petition; that he has read the said petition and is familiar with the statements therein contained and the same are true, except such as are made upon information and belief and these he believes to be true." The petition is captioned "Appeal of Bowman Hotel Corporation, (Predecessor of the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation)."
The deficiency notice from which the appeal was taken was addressed to the Bowman Hotel Corporation, New York, New York, and was mailed November 7, 1925. The petition in the appeal was filed January 5, 1926. At the hearing respondent offered in evidence a certified copy of the certificate of consolidation filed with the Secretary of State of the*1559 State of New York, showing that the Bowman Hotel Corporation and Beau-Site Company were in 1924 consolidated under the laws of the State of New York into a new corporation, to be known thereafter as the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation. After introducing such certificate in evidence, respondent moved that the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation be substituted, *1208 under the Board's rules of procedure, as party petitioner in place of the Bowman Hotel Corporation.
The general rule in the courts regarding substitution of parties seems to be that where the interests of a party to an appeal or writ of error devolve upon another, either by operation of law or by act of the parties, a person acquiring such interests will usually be allowed to be substituted and to prosecute or defend the appeal or writ in place of the original party, if the proper steps are taken in accordance with the practice in the particular jurisdiction.
Rule 37 of the rules of practice of this Board provides for the substitution of parties and, among other things, says: "In the event of a change of name of a corporation or other party petitioner, a motion to amend the pleadings to show such change should*1560 be filed, accompanied by a certified copy of the certificate, decree or other document, effecting such change, certified by the official having custody of such document." In view of Rule 37, just cited, and the statutes of the State of New York, relating to the consolidation of corporations and the decisions of the appellate courts of New York construing the provisions of said statutes, already cited by us, we think respondent's said motion should be and it is hereby granted, and the name Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation as party petitioner is substituted for Bowman Hotel Corporation as party petitioner in Docket No. 10651.
We will next discuss issue No. (4), wherein petitioner contends for the right to deduct from its gross income in 1926, $8,107 Federal capital-stock tax paid on June 19, 1928, for 1926. This amount was not deducted by petitioner when it filed its income-tax return for 1926 and respondent's deficiency notice for 1926, mailed to petitioner February 15, 1929, made no reference thereto. Petitioner however in an amendment to its petition filed December 17, 1929, in Docket No. 43629, sets up the payment of this $8,107 in 1928 and asks that "the petitioner's consolidated*1561 net income should be reduced in the amount of $8,107.00, being federal capital stock tax which accrued on July 1, 1926."
Counsel for respondent in his brief concedes that of the amount claimed by petitioner as a deduction, $4,535.50 should be accrued and allowed. Respondent claims however that the balance of $3,571.50 should not be allowed because it was in fact accrued as a liability on the books of the corporation in 1926 and duly taken as a deduction in making up its income-tax return for that year.
An examination of the facts shows that petitioner did accrue on its books $3,571.50 as capital-stock tax in 1926, but this was an accrual of one-half of the capital-stock tax of $7,143 due and payable from petitioner July 1, 1925. Petitioner's action in accruing this $3,571.50 *1209 in 1926 was improper. It had no right to accrue a 1925 tax liability in 1926. Inasmuch as petitioner took a deduction for this $3,571.50 on its income-tax return for 1926 and such deduction has not been disturbed by respondent, respondent's contention that deduction of the $8,107 capital-stock tax paid in 1928 for 1926, should be reduced by the $3,571.50 improperly accrued and allowed for*1562 similar taxes which were paid and properly accruable in 1925, is sustained.
Where a taxpayer keeps its books on the accrual basis, taxes should be accrued in the year when the liability becomes fixed. .
Issue No. (3) involves the right of corporations, members of an affiliated group filing a consolidated return, to bring forward net losses incurred in the prior year when they were not members of the affiliated group. The taxable period involved in this particular issue is March 1, 1924, to December 31, 1924, and all of 1925. The ground of the Commissioner's action with reference to these items is stated in his deficiency letter as follows: "In connection with items three and four, you are advised that the corporations sustaining losses for 1923 and the period January 1, 1924, to February 29, 1924, also sustained losses during the taxable years for the consolidation. Such losses sustained in a non-affiliated period may be applied only against subsequent income of that particular company. No deductible loss may be carried forward to the consolidated period." The applicable revenue act is the Revenue Act of 1924, *1563 section 206(b).
The Commissioner has ruled that during the period March 1, 1924, to December 31, 1924, and for all the calendar year 1925, the following corporations were affiliated: Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation, B.L.M. Bates Corporation, Hotel Ansonia Corporation, Bellevue-Griswold Hotel Company, Westchester Biltmore Corporation, Punderford Company, Inc., Commodore-Biltmore Company, Commodore Garage, Inc., 328 East Forty-sixth Street, Inc. Of these members of the affiliated group, B.L.M. Bates Corporation, Hotel Ansonia Corporation, Bellevue-Griswold Hotel Company, and Westchester Biltmore Corporation, had losses for 1924 and 1925 and respondent has allowed these losses calculated from March 1, 1924, to December 31, 1924, in making up the consolidated net income of the affiliated group for that period, and also has allowed their losses in 1925 in arriving at the net income of the consolidated group for 1925. These same four corporations had net losses as stated in our findings of fact for the period January 1, 1924, to March 1, 1924, next prior to the affiliation, and these net losses respondent has refused to allow petitioner to bring forward and use as a deduction *1210 *1564 in computing net income of the consolidated group, for reasons which we have just stated.
Respondent is sustained on this issue, on the authority of , and .
The last issue for our determination is the actual cash value of the leasehold acquired by the Bowman Hotel Corporation in exchange for 19,995 shares of its common stock of the par value of $100 per share issued to Holland B. Judkins. Briefly stated, it is contended by petitioner that the leasehold and building agreement in question had an actual cash value at the time of acquisition of at least $2,000,000 and that it is entitled to include in its invested capital for 1919, 1920 and 1921 that amount and to compute the annual allowance for exhaustion on that basis, for all the taxable years.
Respondent contends that the leasehold and building agreement had no actual cash value in excess of the rentals which were agreed to be paid for them and that, even if they did have the value claimed by petitioner, the purported transfer of the lease and building agreement to the Bowman Hotel Corporation*1565 was not in compliance with the statute of frauds of the State of New York and was void; that even if the purported transfer of the lease and building agreement were in compliance with the statute of frauds, it was null and void because John McE. Bowman, who negotiated the lease with the lessor and was the real party in interest in making the transfer, was an officer and director of the Bowman Hotel Corporation and his acquirement of the leasehold was for the benefit of the corporation, and under the laws of the State of New York he would have no right to benefit individually from the transaction; and that for these reasons the corporation has no right to include the value of the lease and building agreement in its invested capital or to take deductions as exhaustion thereof.
It is well settled that where a corporation purchased a leasehold and paid therefor by issuance of its capital stock, such leasehold is tangible property and the corporation is entitled to include in its invested capital the actual cash value of the leasehold at the time of purchase and furthermore is entitled to exhaust the cost of the leasehold ratably over the life of the lease. *1566 ; ; , and cases cited therein. Petitioner offered considerable evidence as to the value of the leasehold and building agreement at the time of their purported transfer to petitioner by one Holland B. Judkins, which transfer was also contemporary with the actual execution of the lease and building agreement to *1211 petitioner by the lessor, New York State Realty & Terminal Company. Respondent offered no testimony as to the value of the lease and building agreement, contenting himself with his cross-examination of petitioner's witnesses.
John McE. Bowman, a witness for the petitioner, testified that he was a hotel operator of many years experience and had dealt in and with many hotel leases in New York City and elsewhere, and that in his opinion the leasehold and building agreement in question had a value at the time of their acquisition by the Bowman Hotel Corporation in 1926 of at least $2,000,000. Bowman testified that his estimate of value was based upon figures which he made at the time of negotiating the lease*1567 and building agreement which were to the effect that a hotel of the size he had in mind to construct, operated at moderate rates and considering the location, would yield a net income of around $1,000,000 a year. He testified that this expectation of earnings had been actually realized in the subsequent operation of the hotel.
Robert Huntley, a real estate broker and appraiser of wide and varied experience, testified for petitioner. He testified that the leasehold and building agreement had a valuation of $2,213,283 at the time it was acquired by petitioner. He summed up the way he arrived at the above stated value of the leasehold and building agreement in the following language:
Then there is another way of looking at the leasehold interest. We have in this leasehold a benefit of the financing of $6,582,592. Under the conditions of the money market in 1916, in order to get this financing, it would have cost at least twelve and a half per cent to cover the sale of securities and a broker's commissions, and the bonuses which a lending company would want, while in this case it cost practically nothing to the borrower. I might figure that the lessee received a benefit here*1568 of twelve and a half per cent on $6,582,592, which, in round figures, is eight hundred thousand dollars.
Then, considering that the fair ground rent of this property would be $190,000, the tenant paying all taxes and charges of every kind, the rent reserved $175,000, and the tenant paid 91 per cent of the taxes against the land. Under this lease the tenant would have a benefit of $15,000 per year in actual rent, plus an additional benefit of five thousand dollars per year from a nine per cent saving on the taxes, making a total benefit of $20,000 per year. For twenty-one years this benefit would have a market value, in round figures, of $200,000.
Third, under the provisions of the lease, the loans of money would be amortized in twenty-one years, and the lessee would own the building free and clear of any encumbrances. Assuming that the rental, under the renewal, would be fixed at a land rental which would give no benefit to the lessee, he would still have the right to use the building. Assuming that this building had depreciated at the rate of two per cent per annum for twenty-one years, the building would still be worth $5,220,000 and the lessee would be benefitted by the*1569 use of that building.
The fair rental for that building would be eight per cent of $5,220,000, which is $417,600 clear, and to this would be added the annual benefit of the tax *1212 clause, five thousand dollars per year, so the lessee would receive an annual benefit of $422,600 per year for twenty-one years.
This benefit, deferred twenty-one years, would have a value of $1,135,265.
At the end of the first renewal the lessor reserves the right to buy the building and pay its fair market value, or else to grant a new lease. The building at that time would have been depreciated two per cent per year for forty-two years, which would leave its value $1,440,000.
I would assume that the landlord would elect to renew the ground lease rather than purchase the building.
I would also assume that the ground rental would be so fixed that there would be no benefit to the lessee. The lessee would then have the right to use the building worth $1,440,000 and the fair rent of that would be eight per cent of that value, which would be $155,200, per year, plus a tax benefit of five thousand dollars, which makes the total benefit $120,200 per annum.
He would enjoy these benefits*1570 for twenty-one years and that would have a present-day value of $78,018. The total value of the leasehold under this method of figuring would be as follows:
$800,000, $200,000, $1,135,165, $78,018, making a total valuation of $2,213,283, which is the value applicable to the common stock.
John J. Fleming, another witness produced on behalf of the petitioner, stated he had been a hotel broker for twenty-five years and that during most of that time his business had been the buying and selling of hotel leases for clients in New York City and elsewhere. He testified that in his opinion the leasehold and building agreement had a value at the time in question of $4,500,000. This witness offered no adequate explanation of how he arrived at so high a value.
We can not ignore testimony of the nature which we have just cited above and adopt respondent's contention that the leasehold and building agreement had no value above the rental agreed to be paid. ; , and cases there cited. If the evidence we have cited above were all that we*1571 had before us bearing on the value of this leasehold and building agreement at the time in question, we would be disposed to sustain petitioner's contention that it had a value of $2,000,000, but in addition to this evidence we have the fact brought out at the hearing that of the 19,995 shares of common stock issued to Holland B. Judkins in payment for the transfer of the leasehold and building agreement, more than 14,000 shares were reissued upon Judkin's endorsement to purchasers of the preferred stock of the Bowman Hotel Corporation. At first as many as two shares of common stock were issued with each share of preferred stock; later only one share of common was issued with each share of preferred stock and this amount was still further decreased until finally no common stock at all was issued with the preferred stock. If the leasehold and building agreement had a value of $2,000,000 or more at the time they were transferred to the Bowman Hotel Corporation, it *1213 does not seem reasonable to us that the Hotel Corporation would sell one share of its preferred stock of the par value $100of and two shares of its common stock of par value $100 each, all for $100. It does*1572 not appear from the evidence just what, if anything, the Bowman Hotel Corporation paid John McE. Bowman for this more than 14,000 shares of common stock standing in the name of Holland B. Judkins, nominee of Bowman, which were reissued to purchasers of the preferred stock. It may well be that in later years this common stock became worth its full par value of $100 per share, and the leasehold and building agreement became worth the full $2,000,000 claimed for them, after the Commodore Hotel was completed and in successful operation and earning around $1,000,000 a year net, before the deduction of income and excess-profits tax; but what we are concerned with is the actual cash value of the leasehold and building agreement for invested capital purposes, and the cost of it for exhaustion purposes, at the time it was acquired by the corporation in exchange for its common stock in September, 1916.
Petitioner can not increase its allowance for invested capital purposes or for exhaustion-deduction purposes merely because property which it has acquired has appreciated in value. *1573 . So, weighing all the facts in evidence, we have found that the actual cash value of the leasehold and building agreement at the time it was acquired by petitioner in 1916, was $1,000,000.
But respondent contends that even if the leasehold and building agreement did have this value at the time in question, nevertheless the purported transfer of them by Judkins to the Bowman Hotel Corporation was not in compliance with the statute of frauds of the State of New York and hence was null and void and that for this reason the Bowman Hotel Corporation is not entitled to include the value of the leasehold and building agreement in its invested capital, nor is it entitled to take deduction in the taxable years for exhaustion thereof. This Board has had that question before it in several cases and has decided it contrary to the contention made by respondent. ; . But respondent contends that even if the leasehold and building agreement did have the value which petitioner claims, and that even if the purported transfer of*1574 them was not void under the statute of frauds of the State of New York, nevertheless, John McE. Bowman, who was the real party in interest in effecting the purported transfer, was a director and general officer of the corporation, as well as a promoter, and that he occupied a fiduciary relation *1214 to the corporation and can not profit from any contract to which the corporation is a party. Any profit made in such a transaction would inure to the benefit of the corporation and could not be made the basis of paid-in capital or invested capital of the corporation for the purpose of determining the excess-profits credit of the corporation and could not be made the basis of deduction for the exhaustion of the cost of a leasehold used in petitioner's trade or business. In discussing this question raised by the respondent at the hearing and in his brief, it should be understood at the outset that Holland B. Judkins was a mere dummy for Bowman. He had no financial interest of any kind in the transactions. So in deciding this question we must regard the transfer by Judkins as one made by Bowman and the issuance of common stock to Judkins as an issue to Bowman, a director of the*1575 corporation.
The situation which we have before us is one where Bowman, acting for himself, negotiated a leasehold and building agreement with responsible officials of the New York State Realty & Terminal Company and after the terms of the leasehold and building agreement had been substantially agreed upon orally, he organized a corporation by the name of Bowman Hotel Corporation for the purpose of taking over the leasehold and building agreement and carrying out the plans.
We think a subsequent transfer of the lease and building agreement to the corporation by the holder and owner thereof in exchange for common stock would not be void, even if he is a director of the corporation, providing such transaction is fair and equitable and not tainted with fraud.
In the transactions involved in the instant case we have no evidence of fraud and the transactions seemed to have been fully made known to all the parties concerned, including the directors of the Bowman Hotel Corporation, and, so far as the record before us shows, no complaint has ever been made by any director or stockholder of the Bowman Hotel Corporation. Under these circumstances we think petitioner is entitled to*1576 include as a part of its invested capital in the years in question, the actual cash value of the leasehold and building agreement at the time they were received by transfer. We think in so holding we follow our decisions in ; ; ; and cases cited therein.
Petitioner's allowance for exhaustion of the leasehold and building agreement in the respective taxable years involved in this proceeding should be arrived at by taking the cost of the leasehold and building agreement, which we have found to be $1,000,000, and dividing it by 21 years, the term the lease was to run. The two renewal periods provided in the lease should not be considered. They have not been *1215 considered in arriving at the value of the lease and building agreement. Cf. .
Reviewed by the Board.
In Docket Nos. 10651 and 28971 further proceedings will be had under Rule 62, or in the absence of such proceedings, judgment will be entered under Rule 50. In the remaining dockets*1577 judgment will be entered under Rule 50.
SMITH, dissenting: I dissent from so much of the report as holds that the elasehold and building agreement at the time it was acquired by the petitioner had a fair market value of $1,000,000 and that petitioner is entitled to include said leasehold and building agreement in its invested capital at $1,000,000 and to compute the annual allowance for the exhaustion of the leasehold on that basis.
Much the same question as is here involved was before the Board in , affirmed in . The Board held in that case that the value of the contract paid in to the corporation was not includable in invested capital.
In , the court stated:
It is clear enough that Congress adopted the basis of "invested capital" measured according to actual contributions made for stock or shares and actual accessions in the way of surplus, valuing them according to actual and bona fide transactions and by valuations obtaining at the time of acquisition, not only in order*1578 to confine the capital, the income from which was to be in part exempted from the burden of this special tax, to something approximately representative of the risks accepted by the investors in embarking their means in the enterprise, but also in order to adopt tests that would enable returns to be more easily checked by examination of records, and make them less liable to inflation than if a more liberal meaning of "capital and surplus" had been adopted. * * *
In , the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit said:
* * * Actual cash value can have no other meaning than the amount of the proceeds of the property when reduced to cash in a bona fide transaction.
In the instant proceeding it appears that the New York State Realty & Terminal Company gave an option to Bowman of a leasehold and building agreement and provided that the same might be assigned to a corporation which would be satisfactory to the New York State Realty & Terminal Company. Bowman assigned the option to the petitioner. He simply acted as agent of the petitioner in negotiating the lease. The report of the Board is to the effect *1216 that the*1579 leasehold had an actual cash value of $1,000,000. There is nothing to indicate, however, that either Bowman or the petitioner could have sold the option for $1,000,000 cash. It was not an asset that could be sold. Not one dollar was invested by either Bowman or the petitioner for the option. In my opinion any value which might attach to the leasehold is not includable in the invested capital of the petitioner.
MURDOCK, dissenting: I do not agree with the decision of the jurisdictional question which is involved in these proceedings. The Board has such jurisdiction in cases like these as has been conferred upon it by section 274 of the Revenue Act of 1926, and no more. The pertinent provisions of that section are as follows:
If in the case of any taxpayer, the Commissioner determines that there is a deficiency in respect of the tax imposed by this title, the Commissioner is authorized to send notice of such deficiency to the taxpayer by registered mail. Within 60 days after such notice is mailed * * * the taxpayer may file a petition with the Board of Tax Appeals for a redetermination of the deficiency.
Notices of deficiencies were mailed to the Bowman Hotel Corporation. *1580 The Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation filed the petitions. These were two different corporations under the laws of New York as interpreted by the courts of that State. The first was the taxpayer. The latter was not. Thus we have no jurisdiction. It matters not, so far as our jurisdiction is concerned, that under the laws of the State of New York the latter corporation is the universal successor to the former, is liable for the taxes in question, and alone can sue or be sued on behalf of the former corporation. The fact remains that it is not the former corporation. The provisions of the statute are clear and permit no enlargement through interpretation. Before we have jurisdiction in cases like these Congress must use different words. The present decision is a departure from the strict rule previously adhered to by this Board and it is certainly contrary to the following decisions: ; ; *1581 . Cf. ; ; . The liability of the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels Corporation as a transferee is not before us.
I think that the statute relating to net losses was correctly interpreted in a line of cases beginning with . See also ; , appeal dismissed by the Third Circuit on the Commissioner's motion; ; ; ; and *1217 , reversing .
MORRIS, LANSDON, MCMAHON, and GOODRICH agree with this dissent.
Footnotes
*. The deficiency notices show income computed upon consolidated net income of affiliated corporations and do not segregate income earned by Bowman Hotel Corporation leasehold. ↩
1. [McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New York - 1923. Stock Corporation Law, ch. 60.]
SEC. 86. Any two or more corporations organized under the laws of this state for the purpose of carrying on any kind or kinds of business which a corporation organized under article two of this chapter may carry on, may be consolidated into a single corporation by the filing of a certificate which shall be entitled and endorsed "Certificate of Consolidation forming the pursuant to section 86 of the stock corporation law," and which shall state:
* * *
SEC. 88. Powers of Corporation formed by Consolidation. - Such new corporation in addition to the general powers of corporation shall enjoy the rights, franchises, and privileges possessed by each of the corporations so consolidated, subject to the restrictions, liabilities, duties and provisions contained in this chapter, and may prosecute or carry on any kind of business which any of the consolidating corporations was authorized by law to conduct. [Added by L. 1923, ch. 787, Oct. 1. Formerly Business Corporation Law, sec. 9.]
SEC. 89. Upon the filing of such certificate of consolidation in the office of the secretary of state all the rights, privileges, franchises and interests of each of the constituent corporations, and all the property, real, personal and mixed, and all the debts due on whatever account to either of them, as well as all stock subscriptions and other things in action belonging to either of them, shall be taken and deemed to be transferred to and vested in each new corporation, without further act or deed; and all claims, demands, property and every other interest shall be as effectually the property of the new corporation as they were of the constituent corporations, and the title to all real estae, taken by deed or otherwise, under the laws of this state, vested in either of such constituent corporation, shall not be deemed to revert or be in any way impaired by reason of the consolidation, but shall be vested in the new corporation.
SEC. 90. Rights of Creditors.↩ - The rights of creditors of any corporation that shall be consolidated shall not in any manner be impaired, nor shall any liability or obligation due or to become due, or any claim or demand for any cause existing against any such corporation or against any stockholder thereof be released or impaired by any such consolidation; but such new corporation shall be deemed to have assumed and shall be liable for all liabilities and obligations of each of the corporations consolidated in the same manner as if such new corporation had itself incurred such liabilities or obligations. The stockholders of the respective corporations consolidated shall continue subject to all the liabilities, claims and demands existing against them as such, at or before the consolidation; and no action or proceeding then pending before any court or tribunal in which any corporation that may be consolidated is a party, shall abate or be discontinued by reason of such consolidation, but may be prosecuted to final judgment, as though no consolidation had been entered into; or such new corporation may be substituted as a party in place of any corporation so consolidated, by order of the court in which such action or proceeding may be pending. [Added L. 1923, ch. 787, Oct. 1. Formerly Business Corporation Law, sec. 11.]
2. Section 105(8), Stock Corporation Law, McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New York Relating to Voluntary Dissolution of Corporations without Judicial Proceedings, reads:
Such corporation shall continue for the purpose of paying, satisfying and discharging any existing liabilities or obligations, collecting and distributing its assets and doing all oher acts required to adjust and wind up its business and affairs and may sue and be sued, in its corporate name. ↩