Court Opinion

ID: 4609191
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:44:13.302809+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:53:50.408291
License: Public Domain

T. HARVEY FERRIS AND ELIZABETH B. FERRIS, PETITIONERS, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Ferris v. CommissionerDocket No. 88214.United States Board of Tax Appeals38 B.T.A. 312; 1938 BTA LEXIS 881; August 11, 1938, Promulgated *881  Where petitioner on a cash basis was liable as endorser on a note of many years standing held by a bank, and during the tax year the bank took petitioner's own note for an amount sufficient to discharge the original note, and, for that purpose credited the proceeds to petitioner's account with it, honoring his check drawn thereon and using the proceeds to discharge the original note, held, petitioner is not entitled to deduct the amount of the original note either as a bad debt or as a loss, no payment of the new note having been made.  Henry T. Dorrance, Esq., D. H. Blair, Esq., J. G. Korner, Jr., Esq., and George D. Brabson, Esq., for the petitioners.  W. W. Kerr, Esq., for the respondent.  OPPER*312  This proceeding involves a deficiency of $2,693.54 in income tax determined against petitioners for the year 1934 as the result of the disallowance of a single deduction claimed on account of a transaction of petitioner T. Harvey Ferris.  FINDINGS OF FACT.  The following, appearing in a stipulation of the parties, are found as facts: The petitioners are residents of the city of Utica, County of Oneida, State of New York.  The deficiency*882  here involved, all of which is in controversy, is for the calendar year 1934.  All of said deficiency arises by reason of the disallowance of one certain deduction in the amount of $27,833.99.  On or about August 2, 1927, petitioner, T. Harvey Ferris, and one John W. Guibord were associated in certain business transactions entered into for profit, and on said date and in connection with said transactions said Ferris endorsed a certain promissory note executed by said Guibord in the principal amount of $25,110.11.  The said note bore interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum.  Said note was discounted with the Citizens Trust Company of Utica, New York.  which bank was thereafter on November 14, 1931, merged into the First Citizens Bank and Trust Company of Utica.  *313  From time to time during the period between August 2, 1927, and March 24, 1931, the said note was renewed and each time with the endorsement of said Ferris.  During said period the principal amount due thereon was reduced by payments on account, to $22,700.  On March 24, 1931, the note here in issue was given in renewal, said note like its predecessor being made by Guibord and endorsed by said Ferris.  *883  The maker of the said note, John W. Guibord, became bankrupt prior to 1934, and was unable to pay said note, and in the year 1934 was wholly insolvent and unable to make any payment whatsoever on the principal or interest of said note, and in said year 1934, the holder of the said note, First Citizens Bank & Trust Company of Utica, New York, made demand upon said Ferris for payment of the principal of said note together with interest due thereon.  Said Ferris had an account in the said First Citizens Bank & Trust Company and had credit with the said bank which enabled him to borrow money from said bank.  On December 27, 1934, said Ferris negotiated a loan of money from said bank in the amount of $27,833.99 upon his own promissory note in said amount, which was the amount of principal and interest that was due at that time upon Mr. Guibord's note.  Said loan was credited to the taxpayer's checking account in the said First Citizens Bank & Trust Company, and with the specific understanding between Ferris and the said bank that the money so borrowed would be applied by Mr. Ferris in payment of his liability upon the aforesaid note of Mr. Guibord.  On the same day, December 27, 1934, said*884  Ferris drew a check on his said account in the First Citizens Bank & Trust Company, said check being so drawn by him to the order of First Citizens Bank & Trust Company and in the amount of $27,833.99, and on the same day said Ferris delivered said check so drawn as aforesaid to said First Citizens Bank & Trust Company.  In consideration thereof the said bank surrendered and delivered said note of John W. Guibord to said Ferris, and upon its books and records showed said note as having been paid.  The said check drawn and delivered by said Ferris (as set out in the last preceding paragraph) was duly debited and charged to the account of said Ferris in said bank and his balance in his said bank account was duly and accordingly reduced and diminished by the said amount of $27,833.99.  The said check drawn and delivered by said Ferris (as set out in the last preceding paragraph) was cancelled by the said bank and marked "Paid" and returned to said Ferris.  The amount of $27,833.99 so borrowed by Mr. Ferris and used for the purpose of discharging his liability upon the Guibord note, has never been repaid to the said First Citizens Bank & Trust Company or to anyone else.  * * * The*885  amount of the obligation of said Ferris on the Guibord note which was discharged as set out hereinabove was as follows: Principal of note$22,700.00Interest to maturity340.50Interest to Dec. 29, 1934, when note was taken up by Ferris4,793.49$27,833.99Said Ferris was unable to recover anything from John W. Guibord, the maker of the said note, and was without any source of recoupment in the transaction hereinabove recited in which he took up and discharged the Guibord note; and said Ferris has not been compensated therefor by insurance or otherwise.  *314  In his income tax return for the year 1934, which was filed on the cash receipts and disbursements basis, said Ferris took deduction for $27,833.99 * * * [as a bad debt].  The Commissioner disallowed the said deduction and added $27,833.99 to taxable net income.  This action on the part of the Commissioner resulted in his determination of the deficiency here in controversy.  The transaction upon which the said deduction was claimed was a transaction of petitioner, T. Harvey Ferris, and no part of the deficiency here in question arises in or upon any transaction made by petitioner Elizabeth*886  B. Ferris, or to which she was a party, and no part of the deficiency here in question arises by reason of an increase in the income of petitioner, Elizabeth B. Ferris.  OPINION.  OPPER: Although the deduction sought by petitioner was claimed on his original return as a bad debt, 1 and although on oral argument petitioner's counsel took the position that he was not required to and would not elect whether to make the claim on that ground or as a loss not compensated for, it now appears that the sole contention made on behalf of petitioner is that the deduction is allowable as a loss.  The only statutory provision cited in petitioner's brief as being applicable is section 23(e) of the Revenue Act of 1934, 2 dealing with losses.  Since, however, in our opinion the same result would follow on either theory upon the facts before us, it matters little which claim is urged.  *887 This proceeding must, it seems to us, be disposed of upon the authority of Eckert v. Burnet,283 U.S. 140">283 U.S. 140. Petitioner seeks to avoid the controlling effect of that decision on two grounds, the first one being that the Court there treated the taxpayer's claim as a bad debt and failed to pass upon it as a deductible loss.  It may be assumed - in spite of petitioner's earlier position that it is the duty of the Board and the courts to determine cases on whatever theory is applicable, and to grant relief to a taxpayer if he be entitled to it on any appropriate ground - that it would be possible for the Supreme Court to disregard one principle favorable to the taxpayer and decide against him on another.  Such an implication should, if at all, be sparingly resorted to, and particularly since both grounds were considered in the course of the proceedings.  Eckert v. Commissioner, 42 Fed.(2d) 158. But be that as it may, the opinion itself is here sufficient to controvert such an assumption.  Mr. Justice Holmes, speaking for the unanimous Court, after disposing of the bad debt contention, says (p. 141): "The petitioner treats the case as one of an*888  investment that later turns out to be bad.  * * * We do not perceive that the case is bettered by the fact that some of the *315  original notes years before were given for property turned over to the corporation by the partnership that formed it.  For the purpose of a return upon a cash basis, there was no loss in 1925." (Emphasis added.) And in Frank Kuhn,34 B.T.A. 274">34 B.T.A. 274, 275, we referred to "the rule of Eckert v. Burnet,283 U.S. 138">283 U.S. 138, [sic] and other cases, that a taxpayer on the cash basis may not deduct, either as a sustained loss or a debt ascertained to be worthless, the amount of a note made by him as primary obligor in substitution for a note given by another upon which the taxpayer had theretofore been a secondary obligor, until he pays on the note * * *." (Emphasis added.) Petitioner's position seems in reality to be based upon a failure properly to analyze his contention.  If his position be that an investment made many years before has turned out to be worthless and he has thereby suffered a loss, it would follow that the deduction could be allowed only in the year when the investment became valueless.  Regulations*889  86, art. 43-2.  Dixie Groves & Cattle Co.,5 B.T.A. 1274">5 B.T.A. 1274; Charles M. Monroe Stationery Co.,15 B.T.A. 1227">15 B.T.A. 1227; Chickasha Cotton Oil Co.,18 B.T.A. 1144">18 B.T.A. 1144. Here there is no evidence of any investment, or whether or when it became worthless; and we may not assume that whatever loss there was did not occur long prior to 1934.  That being the case, the only ground upon which petitioner could urge a postponement of the year of deduction would be that he had never paid for his investment and, being on the cash basis, he should be permitted to deduct the investment loss in the year when he paid it.  It may be said in passing that this appears to be contrary to the view expressed in the very cases upon which petitioner relies, since there the deduction was permitted not because or in spite of the fact that the investment was paid for, but because in the year involved the investment became worthless.  Crain v. Commissioner, 75 Fed.(2d) 962; A. W. D. Weis,13 B.T.A. 1284">13 B.T.A. 1284; see also *890 Burns Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner, 59 Fed.(2d) 504, 506. Cf. Morris Sass,17 B.T.A. 261">17 B.T.A. 261. But in any event, if petitioner contends that his failure to pay for the investment justifies postponement of the deduction, it being clear that this is due to the fact that his investment was represented by his accrued but unpaid liability as an endorser on Guibord's note, then the same result must follow when there is substituted for that liability another, also accrued but unpaid.  That being so, no distinction from the Eckert case could be supported even if the decision there related solely to a bad debt, for that case clearly holds that a liability is not "paid" by a taxpayer on the cash basis by the mere substitution of another liability to the same creditor.  The principle would appear self-evident even in the absence of that decision. 3 It follows that even *316  on petitioner's theory the deduction if treated as a loss could be taken only in some previous year when the loss was ascertained or in some subsequent year when the accrued liability representing his investment was paid in cash, unless the substitution of petitioner's personal obligation*891  for the one upon which he was liable as an endorser is, on the facts in this proceeding, such an "identifiable event", so equivalent to payment in cash, that the year of that substitution may become the year of deduction.  This brings us to a consideration of petitioner's second contention.  The remaining ground advanced by petitioner for distinguishing the Eckert case is that here petitioner gave his creditor a check drawn on an account augmented by the proceeds of a new note from petitioner to the creditor, whereas there the old obligation was directly exchanged for a new one.  Perhaps recognizing that this distinction in fact will not advance his contention unless he also demonstrates a difference in principle, petitioner goes on to contend that the procedure adopted here resulted in a complete destruction of the original obligation and of any rights of the creditor under it, and a complete*892  relegation of the creditor to recourse upon the new liability, with the clear result that as between the parties the original obligation must be regarded as "paid." The difficulty is that, conceding everything that has been said, no distinction follows; for it is clear that no such narrow ground was the basis of the decision in the Eckert case.  There "the petitioner * * * received the old notes, marked paid, and destroyed them." If the Court had been of the opinion that it was of any materiality whether this was sufficient prima facie proof of payment as between the parties, it is inconceivable that some discussion of the point would not appear.  See Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act, sec. 119.  We did not regard the distinction as controlling in S. E. Thomason,33 B.T.A. 576">33 B.T.A. 576, for there we said (p. 585): "* * * petitioner substituted one promise to pay for another.  In so doing, even though he extinguished his liability under the first note for principal and interest, he 'paid' nothing in the sense in which this word is used in section 23(b), supra." (Emphasis added.) The important consideration is that, in dealing with the distinction under the revenue*893  acts between accounting systems on the case and accrual bases, rules of general law dealing with results as between the parties are of little benefit.  See, e.g., Schlemmer v. United States, 94 Fed.(2d) 77. It seems to us that the doctrine of the Eckert case, and others dealing with similar questions, is that the substitution of one obligation for another, at least when the parties are the same, is not payment for tax purposes, regardless of its effect as between the parties.  Frank Kuhn, supra;Morris Sass,12 B.T.A. 156">12 B.T.A. 156; Edmond A. Hughes,27 B.T.A. 1022">27 B.T.A. 1022, 1027; see Jacob F. Schoellkopf, Jr.,35 B.T.A. 855">35 B.T.A. 855. *317 Petitioner relies heavily upon Jenkins v. Smith,21 Fed.Supp. 433. There, as appears from the facts stated by the court, the taxpayer's decedent had "entered into a bond agreement with the other directors and the bank" (Merchants National Bank of New Haven).  The funds used to discharge this obligation were borrowed from the First National Bank & Trust Co., to which new collateral was given.  The court said this "was a new contract of a substantially different*894  nature." Without being required to determine whether upon such facts this Board would reach a similar conclusion, it is now sufficient to point out the distinction from the facts in the present proceeding, and to add that if the Jenkins case stands for any doctrine beyond that indicated we believe it to be inconsistent with Eckert v. Burnet, supra, and must respectfully decline to regard it as controlling.  As was said in S. E. Thomason, supra, "Petitioner * * * argues that, if he had gone to a * * * third party, borrowed the sum * * * and had paid his creditor, no question could be raised as to its deductibility.  We need not determine the correctness of that contention.  We are not concerned with what might have happened, nor need we decide whether, under a different set of circumstances, some other conclusion would be reached." Here the second borrowing was for the express purpose, and on the specific condition, of a repayment of the first.  The intermediate step of crediting petitioner's account and checking against it was inconsequential and immaterial.  Neither cash, nor the transfer of credit, nor their equivalent actually passed between the*895  parties.  We conclude that, on the facts here present, petitioner did not, within the meaning of the revenue act, "pay" the liability represented by the first note and is not entitled to deduct the amount thereof either as a bad debt or as a loss.  Decision will be entered for the respondent.Footnotes1. The stipulation recites that it was taken as a loss, but we have refused to find this as a fact since the return, which is in evidence, shows the contrary.  ↩2. SEC. 23. (e) LOSSES BY INDIVIDUALS. - In the case of an individual, losses sustained during the taxable year and not compensated for by insurance or otherwise - (1) if incurred in trade or business; or (2) if incurred in any transaction entered into for profit, though not connected with the trade or business; or * * * ↩3. Section 43, Revenue Act of 1934, provides: "The deductions and credits provided for in this title shall be taken for the taxable year in which 'paid or accrued' or 'paid or incurred', dependent upon the method of accounting upon the basis of which the net income is computed * * *." ↩