1. Substance, and not form, should control in the application of
the Sixteenth Amendment and the income tax laws enacted under it.
P.
257 U. S.
168.
2. The Income Tax Law of October 3, 1913, in declaring that the
tax shall be laid on gains, profits, and income derived from
dividends, means not that everything in the form of a dividend must
be treated as income, but that income derived in the way of
dividends shall be taxed. P.
257 U. S.
168.
3. Income defined (p.
257 U. S. 169)
as in
Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.
S. 189.
4. With the concurrence of 90% of the stockholders of a
corporation, a plan of reorganization was effected, pursuant to
which a new corporation with an authorized capital stock nearly
four times as great in par value as the aggregate stock and bonded
indebtedness of the old was formed under the laws of a different
state, all the assets of the old were transferred to the new, as a
going concern, including the goodwill and a large surplus, and, in
consideration, the old corporation retained money enough to redeem
part of its bonds and received (1) the new company's debenture
stock of par value sufficient to redeem the remainder, retire its
own preferred stock, and leave in its treasury an amount equal in
par value to its own outstanding common stock, and (2) the new
company's common stock of par value double the amount of the old
company's outstanding common stock, which the latter immediately
distributed to its common stockholders as a dividend, paying them
two shares of the new for each of the old. Upon completion of the
transaction, October 1, 1915, the personnel of the stockholders and
officers of the two corporations was identical, the stockholders
having proportionate
Page 257 U. S. 157
holdings in each, but less than one-half of the new company's
authorized stock had been issued. Thereafter, the old corporation
continued as a going concern, but, except for the redemption of its
bonds and retirement of its preferred stock, and the holding of the
debenture stock equal to its common, and collection and disposition
of the dividends thereon, did no business.
Held:
(a) The shares of the new company's common stock which passed to
the old company and through it to its stockholders as a dividend,
representing its surplus, were income of the shareholders, taxable
under the Act of October 3, 1913. P.
257 U. S.
169.
(b) And this although the market value of the stockholder's old
shares before the dividend was the same as that of his old and new
shares after it. P.
257 U. S.
170.
(c) The new company must be regarded not as substantially
identical with the old, but as a separate entity, and its
stockholders a having property rights and interests materially
different from those incident to ownership of stock in the old
company. P.
257 U. S.
172.
(d) The new common stock in the treasury of the old company
being treasury assets representing accumulated profits and capable
of distribution, its distribution transferred to the several
stockholders new individual property which they were severally
entitled to enjoy or to sell -- their individual income. P.
257 U. S.
174.
56 Ct.Clms. 157, reversed.
Appeal from a judgment sustaining a claim for a refund of moneys
paid under protest in discharge of an income tax assessment.
Page 257 U. S. 165
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The court below sustained the claim of C. W. Phellis for a
refund of certain moneys paid by him under protest in discharge of
an additional tax assessed against him for the year 1915 based upon
alleged income equivalent to the market value of 500 shares of
stock of a Delaware corporation called the E. I. du Pont de Nemours
& Co., received by him as a dividend upon his 250 shares of
stock of the E. I. du Pont de Nemours Powder Company, a New Jersey
corporation. The United States appeals.
From the findings of the Court of Claims, read in connection
with claimant's petition, the following essential facts appear: in
and prior to September, 1915, the New Jersey company had been
engaged for many years in the business of manufacturing and selling
explosives. Its
Page 257 U. S. 166
funded debt and its capital stock at par values were as
follows:
5% mortgage bonds . . . . . . . . . . $ 1,230,000
4 1/2% 30-year bonds. . . . . . . . . 14,166,000
Preferred stock ($100 shares) . . . . 16,068,600
Common stock ($100 shares). . . . . . 29,427,100
-----------
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $60,891,700
It had an excess of assets over liabilities, showing a large
surplus of accumulated profits; the precise amount is not
important, except that it should be stated that it was sufficient
to cover the dividend distribution presently to be mentioned. In
that month, a reorganization and financial adjustment of the
business was resolved upon and carried into effect with the assent
of a sufficient proportion of the stockholders in which a new
corporation was formed under the laws of Delaware with an
authorized capital stock of $240,000,000, to consist in part of
debenture stock bearing 6 percent cumulative dividends, in part of
common stock, and to this new corporation all the assets and
goodwill of the New Jersey company were transferred as an entirety
and as a going concern, as of October 1, 1915, at a valuation of
$120,000,000; the new company assuming all the obligations of the
old except its capital stock and funded debt. In payment of the
consideration, the old company retained $1,484,100 in cash to be
used in redemption of its outstanding 5 percent Mortgage bonds, and
received $59,661,700 par value in debenture stock of the new
company (of which $30,234,600 was to be used in taking up, share
for share and dollar for dollar, the preferred stock of the old
company and redeeming its 30-year bonds), and $58,854,200 par value
of the common stock of the new company, which was to be and was
immediately distributed among the common stockholders of the old
company as a dividend, paying them two shares of the new stock for
each share they held
Page 257 U. S. 167
in the old company. This plan was carried out by appropriate
corporate action; the new company took over all the assets of the
old company, and that company, besides paying off its 5 percent
bonds, acquired debenture stock of the new company sufficient to
liquidate its 4 1/2 percent 30-year bonds and retire its preferred
stock, additional debenture stock equal in amount at par to its own
outstanding common stock, and also two shares of common stock of
the Delaware corporation for each share of the outstanding common
stock of the New Jersey corporation. Each holder of the New Jersey
company's common stock (including claimant) retained his old stock
and, besides, received a dividend of two shares for one in common
stock of the Delaware company, and the New Jersey corporation
retained in its treasury 6 percent debenture stock of the Delaware
corporation equivalent to the par value of its own outstanding
common stock. The personnel of the stockholders and officers of the
two corporations was on October 1, 1915, identical, the new company
having elected the same officers as the old, and the holders of
common stock in both corporations had the same proportionate
stockholding in each. After the reorganization and the distribution
of the stock of the Delaware corporation, the New Jersey
corporation continued as a going concern, and still exists, but,
except for the redemption of its outstanding bonds, the exchange of
debenture stock for its preferred stock, and a holding of debenture
stock to an amount equivalent to its own outstanding common and the
collection and disposition of dividends thereon, it has done no
business. It is not, however, in process of liquidation. It has
received as income upon the Delaware company's debenture stock held
by it dividends to the amount of 6 percent per annum, which it has
paid out to its own stockholders, including the claimant. The fair
market value of the stock of the New Jersey corporation on
September 30, 1915, prior to the reorganization, was $795
Page 257 U. S. 168
per share, and its fair market value, after the execution of the
contracts between the two corporations, was, on October 1, 1915,
$100 per share. The fair market value of the stock of the Delaware
corporation distributed as aforesaid was, on October 1, 1915,
$347.50 per share. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue held that
the 500 shares of Delaware company stock acquired by claimant in
the distribution was income of the value of $347.50 per share, and
assessed the additional tax accordingly.
The Court of Claims, observing that, from the facts as found,
claimant's 250 shares of stock in the New Jersey corporation were
worth on the market, prior to the transfer and dividend, precisely
the same that the same shares plus the Delaware company's shares
received by him were worth thereafter, and that he did not gain any
increase in the value of his aggregate holdings by the operation,
held that the whole transaction was to be regarded as merely a
financial reorganization of the business of the company, producing
to him no profit, and hence no income, and that the distribution
was in effect a stock dividend nontaxable as income under the
authority of
Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.
S. 189, and not within the rule of
Peabody v.
Eisner, 247 U. S. 347.
We recognize the importance of regarding matters of substance
and disregarding forms in applying the provisions of the Sixteenth
Amendment and income tax laws enacted thereunder. In a number of
cases besides those just cited, we have under varying conditions
followed the rule.
Lynch v. Turrish, 247 U.
S. 221;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Lowe,
247 U. S. 330;
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Lewellyn, 248 U. S.
71.
The act under which the tax now in question was imposed (Act of
October 3, 1913, c. 16, 38 Stat. 114, 166, 167) declares that
income shall include, among other things, gains derived
"from interest, rent, dividends, securities, or the transaction
of any lawful business carried
Page 257 U. S. 169
on for gain or profit, or gains or profits and income derived
from any source whatever."
Disregarding the slight looseness of construction, we interpret
"gains profits, and income derived
from . . . dividends,"
etc., as meaning not that everything in the form of a dividend must
be treated as income, but that income derived
in the way
of dividends shall be taxed. Hence, the inquiry must be
whether the shares of stock in the new company received by claimant
as a dividend by reason of his ownership of stock in the old
company constituted (to apply the tests laid down in
Eisner v.
Macomber, 252 U. S. 189,
252 U. S.
207), a gain derived from capital, not a gain accruing
to capital, nor a growth or increment of value in the investment,
but a gain, a profit, something of exchangeable value proceeding
from the property, severed from the capital however invested, and
coming in -- that is, received or drawn by the claimant for his
separate use, benefit, and disposal.
Claimant's capital investment was represented by his New Jersey
shares. Whatever increment of value had accrued to them prior to
September 30, 1915, by reason of the surplus profits that
theretofore had been accumulated by the company was still a part of
claimant's capital, from which as yet he had derived no actual and
therefore no taxable income so far as the surplus remained
undistributed. As yet, he had no right to withdraw it or any part
of it, could not have such right until action by the company or its
proper representatives, and his interest still was but the general
property interest of a stockholder in the entire assets, business,
and affairs of the company -- a capital interest, as we declared in
Eisner v. Macomber, supra, p.
252 U. S.
208.
Upon the face of things, however, the transfer of the old
company's assets to the new company in exchange for the securities
issued by the latter, and the distribution of those securities by
the old company among its stockholders,
Page 257 U. S. 170
changed the former situation materially. The common stock of the
new company, after its transfer to the old company and prior to its
distribution, constituted assets of the old company which it now
held to represent its surplus of accumulated profits -- still,
however, a common fund in which the individual stockholders of the
old company had no separate interest. But when this common stock
was distributed among the common stockholders of the old company as
a dividend, then at once -- unless the two companies must be
regarded as substantially identical -- the individual stockholders
of the old company, including claimant, received assets of
exchangeable and actual value severed from their capital interest
in the old company, proceeding from it as the result of a division
of former corporate profits, and drawn by them severally for their
individual and separate use and benefit. Such a gain resulting from
their ownership of stock in the old company and proceeding from it
constituted individual income in the proper sense.
That a comparison of the market value of claimant's shares in
the New Jersey corporation immediately before with the aggregate
market value of those shares plus the dividend shares immediately
after the dividend showed no change in the aggregate -- a fact
relied upon by the Court of Claims as demonstrating that claimant
neither gained nor lost pecuniarily in the transaction -- seems to
us a circumstance of no particular importance in the present
inquiry. Assuming the market values were a precise reflex of
intrinsic values, they would show merely that claimant acquired no
increase in aggregate wealth through the mere effect of the
reorganization and consequent dividend, not that the dividend did
not constitute income. There would remain the presumption that the
value of the New Jersey shares immediately prior to the transaction
reflected the original capital investment plus the accretions which
had resulted through the company's
Page 257 U. S. 171
business activities and constituted its surplus, a surplus in
which, until dividend made, the individual stockholder had no
property interest except as it increased the valuation of his
capital. It is the appropriate function of a dividend to convert a
part of a surplus thus accumulated from property of the company
into property of the individual stockholders, the stockholder's
share being thereby released to and drawn by him as profits or
income derived from the company. That the distribution reduces the
intrinsic capital value of the shares by an equal amount is a
normal and necessary effect of all dividend distributions, whether
large or small and whether paid in money or in other divisible
assets, but such reduction constitutes the dividend nonetheless
income derived by the stockholder if it represents gains previously
acquired by the corporation. Hence, a comparison of aggregate
values immediately before with those immediately after the dividend
is not a proper test for determining whether individual income,
taxable against the stockholder, has been received by means of the
dividend.
The possibility of occasional instances of apparent hardship in
the incidence of the tax may be conceded. Where, as in this case,
the dividend constitutes a distribution of profits accumulated
during an extended period and bears a large proportion to the par
value of the stock, if an investor happened to buy stock shortly
before the dividend, paying a price enhanced by an estimate of the
capital plus the surplus of the company, and after distribution of
the surplus, with corresponding reduction in the intrinsic and
market value of the shares, he was called upon to pay a tax upon
the dividend received, it might look in his case like a tax upon
his capital. But it is only apparently so. In buying at a price
that reflected the accumulated profits, he, of course, acquired as
a part of the valuable rights purchased the prospect of a dividend
from the accumulations -- bought "dividend on," as the phrase
Page 257 U. S. 172
goes -- and necessarily took subject to the burden of the income
tax proper to be assessed against him by reason of the dividend if
and when made. He simply stepped into the shoes, in this as in
other respects, of the stockholder whose shares he acquired, and
presumably the prospect of a dividend influenced the price paid,
and was discounted by the prospect of an income tax to be paid
thereon. In short, the question whether a dividend made out of
company profits constitutes income of the stockholder is not
affected by antecedent transfers of the stock from hand to
hand.
There is more force in the suggestion that, looking through and
through the entire transaction out of which the distribution came,
it was but a financial reorganization of the business as it stood
before, without diminution of the aggregate assets or change in the
general corporate objects and purposes, without change of personnel
either in officers or stockholders, or change in the proportionate
interest of any individual stockholder. The argument, in effect, is
that there was no loss of essential identity on the part of the
company, only a change of the legal habiliments in which the
aggregate corporate interests were clothed; no substantial
realization by individual stockholders out of the previous
accumulation of corporate profits, merely a distribution of
additional certificates indicating an increase in the value of
their capital holdings. This brings into view the general effect of
the combined action of the entire body of stockholders as a
mass.
In such matters, what was done, rather than the design and
purpose of the participants, should be the test. However, in this
case, there is no difference. The proposed plan was set out in a
written communication from the president of the New Jersey
corporation to the stockholders, a written assent signed by about
90 percent of the stockholders, a written agreement made between
the old company and the new, and a bill of sale made by the
former
Page 257 U. S. 173
to the latter, all of which are in the findings. The plan as
thus proposed and adopted, and as carried out, involved the
formation of a new corporation to take over the business and the
business assets of the old; it was to be and was formed under the
laws of a different state, which necessarily imports a different
measure of responsibility to the public, and presumably different
rights between stockholders and company and between stockholders
inter sese than before. The articles of association of
neither company is made to appear, but in favor of the asserted
identity between the companies, we will assume (contrary to the
probabilities) that there was no significant difference here. But
the new company was to have authorized capital stock aggregating
$240,000,000 -- nearly four times the aggregate stock issues and
funded debt of the old company -- of which less than one-half
($118,515,900) was to be issued presently to the old company or its
stockholders, leaving the future disposition of a majority of the
authorized new issues still to be determined. There was no present
change of officers or stockholders, but manifestly a continuation
of identity in this respect depended upon continued unanimous
consent or concurrent action of a multitude of individual
stockholders actuated by motives and influences necessarily to some
extent divergent. In the light of all this, we cannot regard the
new company as virtually identical with the old, but must treat it
as a substantial corporate body with its own separate identity, and
its stockholders as having property rights and interests materially
different from those incident to ownership of stock in the old
company.
The findings show that it was intended to be established as
such, and that it was so created in fact and in law. There is
nothing to warrant us in treating this separateness as imaginary,
unless the identity of the body of stockholders and the transfer
in solido of the manufacturing business and assets from
the old company to the
Page 257 U. S. 174
new necessarily have that effect. But the identity of
stockholders was but a temporary condition, subject to change at
any moment at the option of any individual. As to the assets, the
very fact of their transfer from one company to the other evidenced
the actual separateness of the two companies.
But, further, it would be erroneous, we think, to test the
question whether an individual stockholder derived income in the
true and substantial sense through receiving a part in the
distribution of the new shares, by regarding alone the general
effect of the reorganization upon the aggregate body of
stockholders. The liability of a stockholder to pay an individual
income tax must be tested by the effect of the transaction upon the
individual. It was a part of the purpose and a necessary result of
the plan of reorganization, as carried out, that common stock of
the new company to the extent of $58,854,200 should be turned over
to the old company, treated by it as assets to be distributed as
against its liability to stockholders for accrued surplus, and
thereupon distributed to them "as a dividend." The assent of the
stockholders was based upon this as a part of the plan.
In thus creating the common stock of the new company and
transferring it to the old company for distribution
pro
rata among its stockholders, the parties were acting in the
exercise of their rights for the very purpose of placing the common
stockholders individually in possession of new and substantial
property rights
in esse, in realization of their former
contingent right to participate eventually in the accumulated
surplus. No question is made but that the proceedings taken were
legally adequate to accomplish the purpose. The new common stock
became treasury assets of the old company, and was capable of
distribution, as the manufacturing assets whose place it took were
not. Its distribution transferred to the several stockholders new
individual property rights which they
Page 257 U. S. 175
severally were entitled to retain and enjoy, or to sell and
transfer, with precisely the same substantial benefit to each as if
the old company had acquired the stock by purchase from strangers.
According to the findings, the stock thus distributed was
marketable. There was neither express nor implied condition,
arising out of the plan of reorganization or otherwise, to prevent
any stockholder from selling it, and he could sell his entire
portion or any of it without parting with his capital interest in
the parent company or affecting his proportionate relation to the
interests of other stockholders. Whether he sold the new stock for
money or retained it in preference, in either case, when he
received it, he received as his separate property a part of the
accumulated profits of the old company in which previously he had
only a potential and contingent interest.
It thus appears that, in substance and fact, as well as in
appearance, the dividend received by claimant was a gain, a profit
derived from his capital interest in the old company, not in
liquidation of the capital, but in distribution of accumulated
profits of the company; something of exchangeable value produced by
and proceeding from his investment therein, severed from it and
drawn by him for his separate use. Hence, it constituted individual
income within the meaning of the Income Tax Law, as clearly as was
the the case in
Peabody v. Eisner, 247 U.
S. 347.
Judgment of the Court of Claims reversed, and the cause
remanded, with directions to dismiss the suit.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS dissenting.
In the course of its opinion, citing
Eisner v.
Macomber, 252 U. S. 189,
252 U. S. 213,
the Court of Claims declared:
"We think the whole transaction is to be regarded as merely a
financial reorganization of the business of the company, and that
this view is justified by the power and duty of the court to look
through the form of the transaction
Page 257 U. S. 176
to its substance."
And further:
"It seems incredible that Congress intended to tax as income a
business transaction which admittedly produced no gain, no profit,
and hence no income. If any income had accrued to the plaintiff by
reason of the sale and exchange made, it would doubtless be
taxable."
There were perfectly good reasons for the reorganization, and
the good faith of the parties is not questioned. I assume that the
statute was not intended to put an embargo upon legitimate
reorganizations when deemed essential for carrying on important
enterprises.
Eisner v. Macomber was rightly decided, and
the principle which I think it announced seems in conflict with the
decision just announced.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER concurs in this dissent.