Joel v. Commissioner

B. F. JOEL, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.
L. B. JOEL, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.
Joel v. Commissioner
Docket Nos. 6801, 6802.
United States Board of Tax Appeals
9 B.T.A. 1027; 1928 BTA LEXIS 4308;
January 3, 1928, Promulgated

*4308 Under the evidence, held that the petitioners did not receive a liquidating dividend from the Bass Dry Goods Co. in the year 1920.

Arthur Heyman, Esq., for the petitioners.
M. N. Fisher, Esq., for the respondent.

MARQUETTE

*1027 These proceedings are for the redetermination of deficiencies in income tax for the year 1920 asserted against the petitioners, B. F. Joel and L. B. Joel in the amounts of $1,046.18 and $1,068.75, respectively. The proceedings were consolidated for hearing and decision.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

In 1897 petitioners and one J. L. Bass organized a corporation, the Bass Dry Goods Co., under the laws of the State of Georgia. The life of the corporation was fixed in the charter at 20 years. In 1913 Bass became bankrupt and his stock was purchased by the petitioners, who were thereafter the sole stockholders.

Both stockholders' and directors' meetings were held, but not regularly nor frequently. Apparently no meetings were actually held after 1913, but B. F. Joel, as president, wrote up minutes of purported meetings from time to time up to January 28, 1920. All such minutes were written at one time, some time after*4309 January, 1920. The charter of the company expired by limitation in March, 1917. This was known to each of the petitioners.

From and after March 13, 1917, the business was actually conducted on an equal partnership basis. Each one had, and exercised, full authority to buy goods, employ and discharge help. They also informed persons and firms from whom they bought goods, that they owned the business and were personally responsible for the debts.

*1028 The income-tax returns were prepared by one Barnwell, the bookkeeper. He knew nothing of the expiration of the corporate charter and for two or three years thereafter he made out the returns as for a corporation and told petitioners to sign them, which they did without question. Barnwell, as notary, acknowledged their signatures. Barnwell also made out and returned to the state authorities each year the annual report or certificate required of corporations. This was done without the knowledge of either of the petitioners. In 1920 the true situation was discovered by an outside accountant, who at once prepared and filed amended income-tax returns on a partnership basis for the years 1917, 1918, and 1919.

The respondent, *4310 upon audit of the petitioners' income-tax returns for the year 1920, determined that the Bass Dry Goods Co. was an association taxable as a corporation from March 13, 1917, to January 31, 1920, and that there was at the latter date a distribution to the petitioners of the association's assets from which each of them realized a taxable gain in the amount of $15,641.61, and he determined deficiencies as above set forth.

OPINION.

MARQUETTE: The only issue in this proceeding is whether or not the petitioners received a liquidating dividend from the Bass Dry Goods Co. in the year 1920. The petitioners contend that the corporation was dissolved by operation of law on March 13, 1917, and that the business was conducted by them as a partnership after that date. The respondent urges on the other hand that during the period March 13, 1917, to January 31, 1920, the business was either continued as a corporation or was an association, and is therefore taxable as a corporation under section 1 of the Revenue Act of 1918, which provides that -

The term "corporation" includes associations, joint stock companies, and insurance companies.

There can be no question that the corporate life*4311 of the Bass Dry Goods Co. ended on the 13th day of March, 1917. The charter, as granted March 13, 1897, limited the life of the corporation to 20 years from that date. A corporation exists only by permissive grant from the sovereign State and its powers and privileges are determined by that grant. The laws of such sovereign State, so far as they are applicable, are an implied part of the contract granting the franchise. The statutes of Georgia provided:

Every corporation is dissolved, (1) by expiration of its charter * * *. Sec. 2241, Georgia Code.

The courts of that State have held that where a corporate franchise expires by limitation the corporation is then and thereby defunct *1029 and no longer exists either de facto or by estoppel. See Venable Bros. v. Southern Granite Co.,135 Ga. 508">135 Ga. 508; 69 S.E. 822">69 S.E. 822; Logan v. W. & A.R.R. Co.,87 Ga. 533">87 Ga. 533; 13 S.E. 516">13 S.E. 516; R.R. Co. v. City Council of Augusta,100 Ga. 701">100 Ga. 701; 28 S.E. 126">28 S.E. 126. Section 2823(i) of the Georgia Code provides that:

Sec. 2823(i). Method of Reviving Charters.

In all cases where a charter of any corporation, *4312 incorporated by an act of the legislature or by a certificate of the Secretary of State or the State of Georgia, or by any superior court of this state, has expired, and such corporation has continued in business in ignorance of such expiration, said charter may be revived * * * at any time within five years from the date of such expiration.

It will be noted that such revivor may be had when the "corporation has continued in business in ignorance of such expiration." In the present case both petitioners, who were the only stockholders in the company, knew that the corporate charter had expired; knew it at the time, or shortly thereafter. Having continued the business with full knowledge of such expiration of the charter, they would be barred, apparently, from seeking any renewal of that charter under the statute. We are therefore of the opinion that the corporation ceased to exist on March 13, 1917, and that on that date the title to its assets passed to the petitioners, subject to the corporation's debts, under section 2245 of the Georgia Code, which is as follows:

Upon the dissolution of a corporation, for any cause, all of the property and assets of every description belonging*4313 to the corporation, shall constitute a fund, first - for the payment of its debts and then for equal distribution among its members. To this end the superior court of the county where such corporation was located, shall have power to appoint a receiver, under proper restrictions, properly to administer such assets under its direction.

It is true that a business may be a partnership under the laws of a State and still be, within the meaning of the revenue acts of the United States, an association taxable as a corporation. Burk-Waggoner Oil Association v. Hopkins,269 U.S. 110">269 U.S. 110. That, however, is a rule of taxation and not a rule of property. Regardless of the manner in which the income of the business in question for the period March 13, 1917, to January 31, 1920, may be taxed by the United States, the property rights in the assets were fixed by the laws of Georgia and under those laws the Bass Dry Goods Co. ceased to exist as a corporation on March 13, 1917, and the title to its assets immediately vested in the petitioners as the sole stockholders, subject to its debts; and if there was any taxable gain accruing to the petitioners as the result of the dissolution, *4314 it was received at the date of dissolution and not in 1920. It may be, as contended by the respondent, that the petitioners so conducted the business from March 13, 1917, to January 31, 1920, as to subject it to taxation as a corporation, *1030 but since we hold that the liquidating dividend, which is the only item in dispute here, was received by the petitioners in 1917, it is not necessary for us to decide whether subsequent to that date the business was conducted as a partnership or as an association.

Judgment will be entered on 15 days' notice, under Rule 50.

Considered by PHILLIPS AND MILLIKEN.