*722 DEDUCTIONS - STOCK LOSSES - PARTNERSHIP AND INDIVIDUAL RETURNS - SECTION 23(r)(1), REVENUE ACT OF 1932. - A partner entitled as such to a share of the profits of the partnership upon its sale of noncapital assets, can not, in computing his individual taxable income, reduce that share of profits by the amount of his loss upon sale of other similar assets, owned by himself individually.
*276 Respondent has determined a deficiency of $1,432.35 for the year 1932. This resulted from his disallowance of petitioner's deduction of $2,147.89, as a loss on sale of securities, claimed under section 23(r)(1) of the Revenue Act of 1932, in computing his net income for that year. The propriety of that disallowance presents the only issue.
*277 FINDINGS OF FACT.
The taxpayer is an individual, residing in Montclair, New Jersey. His principal place of business is in the city of New York, where his income tax return for 1932 was filed with the collector for the second district of New York.
Prior to 1932, petitioner and one Samuel T. Jones, entered into*723 a verbal agreement of partnership, under which the partnership was to purchase and sell shares and fractional shares of stock of the Chemical Bank & Trust Co. and, having united such fractional shares into whole shares, to sell such whole shares on the market. Each of the partners contributed one-half of the capital, and, under the agreement of partnership, each received one-half of the profits thereof.
The business of the partnership constituted a service performed in part for the Chemical Bank & Trust Co. This bank was successor to the Chemical National Bank. A stock dividend had been issued by the Chemical Bank & Trust Co. and a number of fractional shares were outstanding. These fractional shares were the shares to be purchased by the partnership. Pursuant to the agreement, the partnership sold, in 1932, 1,031 shares of the capital stock of said bank for $30,325.78. Certain of the shares sold consisted to whole shares purchased. Others represented fractional shares which had been purchased and surrendered to the bank, in exchange for which the partnership had received certificates for whole shares corresponding to the fractional shares surrendered. The cost of the 1,031*724 shares was $26,030. These shares had been acquired during the years 1931 and 1932. The profit on the sale of such shares was $4,295.78.
The partnership also received commissions of $1,154.36 in connection with the purchases and sales made by it.
The amount of the above profit ($4,295.78) was equally divided between petitioner and Samuel T. Jones in accordance with the terms of the agreement of partnership. Petitioner's share was $2,147.89. That share of such profits was included by petitioner in his income tax return for 1932. In the same year (1932) petitioner sold other shares of stock, owned by him, at a loss of $2,431.25. To the extent of the above amount of $2,147.89, petitioner deducted such loss in his return for 1932. The Commissioner disallowed that deduction. That disallowance gave rise to the pending deficiency.
Neither the shares, the fractional shares, of the Chemical Bank & Trust Co., so sold in 1932, nor the other shares sold by petitioner in that year at a loss as above stated, were capital assets within the meaning of that term when used in the Revenue Act of 1932.
*278 OPINION.
LEECH: Only $512.68 of the total income of the partnership*725 distributable to petitioner was reported by the latter on his return. This resulted from petitioner's reducing his distributable share shown on the partnership return by using $2,147.89 of a loss of $2,431.25, sustained by him personally upon sale of noncapital assets consisting of securities, to reduce, to that extent, his income from the partnership. This was done on the theory that the partnership income contained an item of gain of $4,295.78 from the sale of similar noncapital assets and that one-half, or $2,147.89, of this amount pertained to petitioner's partnership interest, and, consequently, was subject to offset by a similar loss sustained by him individually.
Though a partnership is not a taxpaying entity, is is a separate and distinct entity for the computation of the income. And "its non-taxation carries no implication of the measure of its income or that of its individual partners." Edward B. Archbald,27 B.T.A. 837">27 B.T.A. 837; affd., 70 Fed.(2d) 720.
So, an individual on the cash basis, who is a member of a partnership on the accrual basis, is taxable on his share of the accrued distributable partnership income. *726 Percival H. Truman,3 B.T.A. 386">3 B.T.A. 386; Truman v. United States,4 Fed.Supp. 447.
Nor may he deduct, on his individual return, partnership expenses paid out of his withdrawals from the partnership, since they were deductible on the partnership return filed on the accrual basis. Shearer v. Burnet,285 U.S. 228">285 U.S. 228; Samuel Kurzman,8 B.T.A. 412">8 B.T.A. 412; Charles Colip,5 B.T.A. 123">5 B.T.A. 123.
Section 23(r) of the Revenue Act of 1932 provides:
(r) LIMITATION ON STOCK LOSSES. -
(1) Losses from sales or exchanges of stocks and bonds (as defined in subsection (t) of this section) which are not capital assets (as defined in section 101) shall be allowed only to the extent of the gains from such sales or exchanges (including gains which may be derived by a taxpayer from the retirement of his own obligations).
Petitioner, under the quoted section, seeks to deduct his personal loss on sale of noncapital assets from one-half of a similar gain by the partnership and, in this way, reduce the amount included on his return as his share of the partnership income. The question appears to be original here. However, it has been*727 considered by this Commissioner and a conclusion reached contrary to petitioner's contention. G.C.M. 14012, C.B. XIV-6, p. 4; I.T. 2892, C.B. XIV-20, p. 10.
Section 183 of the Revenue Act of 1932 provides:
SEC. 183. COMPUTATION OF PARTNERSHIP INCOME.
The net income of the partnership shall be computed in the same manner and on the same basis as in the case of an individual, except that the so-called *279 "charitable contribution" deduction provided in section 23(n) shall not be allowed.
Under the theory advanced by petitioner, the last quoted section of the act would seem to be without real meaning or effect. To accept that theory we must conclude that Congress provided for the separate computation of partnership net income, but intended that the total so reached would be discarded and the individual items of gain or loss, income or deduction, would then be separated and each brought forward into the returns of the several partners, in the proportionate amounts of these partners' individual interests in profits, and there combined, in each case, with nonpartnership income and deductions, to arrive at the partners' net taxable income
That conclusion*728 necessarily rests upon the unreasonable assumption that the purpose and intent of Congress in the enactment of the last quoted section was to compel the doing of something wholly without significance in the computation of the tax imposed. That such assumption is unreasonable is supported by the fact that the taxing act has specifically provided that certain items of the partnership income be reflected in the partners' individual returns as if directly received by the latter. Thus section 184 of the Revenue Act of 1932 provides:
SEC. 184. CREDITS AGAINST NET INCOME.
The partner shall, for the purpose of the normal tax, be allowed as a credit against his net income, in addition to the credits allowed to him under section 25, his proportionate share of such amounts of dividends and interest specified in section 25(a) and (b) as are received by the partnership.
If the position of petitioner be correct, the rights expressly granted by the quoteo section would have existed even without this section. The provision would be mere statutory surplusage.
The applicable revenue act likewise expressly provides that other items of partnership income shall be accounted for, unaffected*729 by interposition of the partnership return. These items include "earned income" under section 185, "capital gains and losses" under section 186, and "taxes of foreign countries and possessions of the United States" under section 187. Those specific grants of rights as to certain items of partnership income indicate that Congress intended the "General Rule", set out in sections 182 and 183, to be an exclusive method aside from the exceptions mentioned. As the Court said in Botany Worsted Mills v. United States,278 U.S. 282">278 U.S. 282: "When a statute limits a thing to be done in a particular mode, it includes the negative of any other mode." See also Paso Robles Mercantile Co. v. Commissioner, 33 Fed.(2d) 653; certiorari denied, 280 U.S. 595">280 U.S. 595.
Section 182(a) of the Revenue Act of 1932 was amended, effective January 1, 1933, by section 218(d) of the National Industrial Recovery *280 Act, approved June 16, 1933, by the provision: "No part of any loss disallowed to a partnership as a deduction by section 23(r) shall be allowed as a deduction to a member of such partnership in computing net income." This provision covers the converse*730 of the situation here shown, but, in view of its background, just discussed, we think it only a clarification of then existing law. Cf. Tiger v. Western Investment Co.,221 U.S. 286">221 U.S. 286; Cope v. Cope,137 U.S. 682">137 U.S. 682.
Reviewed by the Board.
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
VAN FOSSAN and SEAWELL dissent.