The taxpayer directed his brokers to sell certain shares bought
by him in the then current year, and directed his bank, which held
the certificates, to deliver them to the broker. By mistake, the
bank delivered and the broker sold other shares of the same stock
which the bank held for the taxpayer and which he had bought in an
earlier year for a lower price.
Held that the taxable gain
was properly computed on the basis of the cost of the shares so
actually sold, rather than the higher cost of the shares which the
taxpayer intended to sell. P.
305 U. S.
45.
94 F.2d 300, affirmed.
CERTIORARI, 304 U.S. 554, to review a judgment affirming an
order of the Board of Tax Appeals, 34 B.T.A. 555, which sustained a
deficiency income tax assessment.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Upon petitioner's insistence, and respondent's admission, that
the decision below conflicts with that of the circuit court of
appeals for the second circuit in
Miller v. Commissioner,
80 F.2d 219, we granted a writ of certiorari. 304 U.S. 554. The
question presented is whether petitioner's
Page 305 U. S. 45
taxable gain from sale in 1929 of 1,000 shares of stock is to be
determined upon the basis of the cost of stock petitioner bought in
that year, or upon the basis of lower cost of like shares earlier
bought by him.
The details found by the board of tax appeals may be given
briefly. March 27, 1929 at cost of $49.90 each, petitioner bought
1,000 shares, for which he received 10 separately numbered
certificates covering 100 shares each and delivered them to a bank
to be held as security for a loan. Some years earlier, he had
bought, at cost of $4.42 each, 1,000 shares of like stock for which
he obtained certificates that he delivered to the same bank as
collateral security, where they were held until the sales here
involved. June 19, 1929, petitioner instructed his broker to sell
500 shares of the stock he bought March 27, and, to enable the
broker to deliver, petitioner instructed the bank to give the
broker certificates covering shares bought in that year. By
mistake, the bank delivered him certificates of shares included in
the lot earlier purchased by petitioner. July 1, 1929, petitioner
instructed the broker to sell the rest of the lot bought in that
year and directed the bank to deliver the broker certificates of
the stock petitioner intended to have sold. Again failing to follow
instructions, the bank delivered the broker certificates of stock
in the other lot. It may be taken as granted that, when he made his
return, petitioner excusably assumed that the bank had followed his
directions.
He reported gain on the basis of cost of the stock purchased in
that year. The commissioner calculated gain on the basis of cost of
the stock earlier purchased, and gave notice of deficiency. The
board of tax appeals sustained his determination. 34 B.T.A. 555.
The circuit court of appeals affirmed. 94 F.2d 300.
Petitioner contends that, by this reference to amounts and dates
of purchases, he adequately designated to the
Page 305 U. S. 46
broker the shares to be sold, that in fact the shares so
identified were sold, and that the bank's delivery of certificates
of other stock to the broker did not affect petitioner's order.
Undoubtedly, petitioner sufficiently indicated to the broker and to
the bank the shares he intended to sell. He plainly allocated the
lots to be sold to the 1,000 shares he bought in 1929. But it does
not follow that they were the shares sold. His intention to sell,
even when coupled with his order to the broker and direction to the
bank, cannot be held to constitute sale.
Snyder v.
Commissioner, 295 U. S. 134,
295 U. S. 137.
Notwithstanding his order to the broker to sell shares in the 1929
lot, petitioner was free later to direct that shares from the other
lot be used for final consummation of the sale. And so, when the
bank delivered him certificates of stock not designated in his
order to sell, the broker may well have assumed that petitioner's
final purpose was to sell the shares covered by the certificates
that the bank sent him. He had no reason to suppose that the bank
did not act in accordance with instructions given it by petitioner.
The case is not different from what it would have been if
petitioner himself had delivered to the broker the certificates
sent by the bank. Plainly, petitioner's contention that the
certificates used to complete the sale did not cover the shares
sold cannot be upheld.
Commissioner v. Rankin,
295 U. S. 123,
295 U. S. 128.
The commissioner rightly computed gain on the basis of what was
done, rather than on what petitioner intended to do.
United
States v. Phellis, 257 U. S. 156,
257 U. S. 172;
Bonham v. Commissioner, 89 F.2d 725, 728;
Curtis v.
Commissioner, 89 F.2d 736, 738;
Remington Rand, Inc. v.
Commissioner, 33 F.2d 77, 78.
Affirmed.