Court Opinion

ID: 4613714
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:54:02.152948+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:54:40.216956
License: Public Domain

CORNELIA W. ROEBLING, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Roebling v. CommissionerDocket No. 85381.United States Board of Tax Appeals37 B.T.A. 82; 1938 BTA LEXIS 1089; January 14, 1938, Promulgated 1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1089  1.  Losses on sales of municipal and Federal Government bonds held allowable as losses on transactions entered into for profit.  2.  Petitioner, who owned securities of a value close to $9,000,000 and personally directed the management thereof, including the investment of funds, held engaged in a business and entitled to deduct as business expenses the salaries of employees who aided in handling investments and the cost of safe deposit box rental.  William H. Wiegering, Esq., and Robert W. Burton, Esq., for the petitioner.  F. R. Shearer, Esq., James C. Maddox, Esq., and E. M. Woolf, Esq., for the respondent.  ARUNDELL37 B.T.A. 82">*82  This proceeding is before us for redetermination of a deficiency in income tax for the year 1933 in the amount of $4,231.17.  The respondent disallowed a part of the deduction claimed by the petitioner under the heading of "other deductions." By amended answer the respondent alleges error in allowing any part of the claimed deductions and asks for an increased deficiency.  FINDING OF FACT.  Petitioner is an individual, residing at Bay Head, New Jersey.  In 1933 she owned securities of a value close to $9,000,000, 1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1090  exclusive of her stock interest in the John A. Roebling Sons Co., the value of which is not shown.  A substantial part of her wealth was inherited from her husband upon his death in 1926.  Prior thereto the petitioner's business affairs had been managed by her husband.  Shortly after the death of her husband the petitioner employed Austin C. Cooley to aid her in the management of her affairs.  Cooley was secretary and treasurer of John A. Roebling & Co., hereinafter called the Roebling Co.  The Roebling Co. is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of iron and steel wire and wire rope and is controlled by the members of the Roebling family.  The petitioner had a substantial stock interest in it.  Cooley, as an officer of the Roebling Co., occupied office space in its offices at 640 South Broad Street, Trenton, New Jersey.  That address was the mailing address of the petitioner and was given as her address in her income tax return for 1933.  Cooley's services were rendered from the offices of the Roebling Co.; the petitioner paid no rent for the office space occupied by Cooley.  Petitioner paid Cooley a salary of $5,000 a year.  Petitioner also paid Cooley's secretary a salary of1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1091  $500 a year.  The secretary was an employee of the Roebling Co. and received a salary from that company.  37 B.T.A. 82">*83  The secretary kept the petitioner's books and took care of the correspondence in connection with petitioner's affairs.  Cooley's duties, as an employee of the petitioner, consisted largely of advising and consulting with the petitioner concerning the investment and reinvestment of her funds, the changes from one security to another, keeping the petitioner advised of market conditions, and carrying out transactions decided upon by the petitioner.  The petitioner did not always follow Cooley's advice and at times acted contrary thereto in making investments.  Before buying or selling securities it was the petitioner's practice to confer with both Cooley and her brokers.  She and Cooley and the brokers consulted various advisory services, and upon full consideration of available data the petitioner made the final decision, which she communicated to Cooley with instructions to act.  Cooley directed the purchase and sale of securities solely upon the petitioner's instructions.  He had no authority to buy or sell for her except as instructed by her.  Purchases of securities1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1092  were paid for by the petitioner with checks drawn by herself.  The petitioner frequently met with other stockholders of the Roebling Co. and discussed the policies of the company and the conduct of its business.  At regular stockholders' meetings Cooley, holding petitioner's proxy, voted her stock in accordance with instructions given by the petitioner.  Petitioner's security holdings, exclusive of the Roebling Co. stock, were distributed as follows on October 2, 1933: PercentGovernment and Federal Farm Loan bonds14Municipal bonds44Public utility bonds2Preferred and guaranteed stocks7Industrial common stock17Public utilities common stock11Railroad common stocks2Banking and insurance company stocks3During the year 1933 the petitioner's major transactions in securities were as follows: Purchases:70 shares of stock (company not indicated)$9,613International Harvester (stock)5,677350 shares International Harvester15,332314 shares Standard Oil of California12,456500 shares Atlas Corporation5,987400 shares R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co19,660500 shares General Motors16,450168 shares Kennicott Copper4,109250 shares United States Steel16,304300 shares Atlantic Coast Line16,552500 shares Northern Pacific Railway$17,487100,000 Treasury notes due 1945100,656100,000 First Liberty Loan 3 1/2%100,54050,000 Treasury notes due 1937 3%50,48925,000 Treasury notes due 193725,76850,000 Treasury certificates of indebtedness 4 1/4%50,00050,000 Treasury notes due June 1938, 2 7/8%50,000Total517,080Redemptions:City of Minneapolis bonds$20,000Cumberland County, N.J. bonds33,000Duluth, Minnesota Bank30,000Treasury certificates 3 3/4%50,000Treasury notes 1 1/2%50,000Fourth Liberty bonds15,000Total198,000Sales:Associated Gas & Electric stock$1,281Asbury Park N.J. bonds2,891Chase National Bank stock34,191Total38,3631938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1093 37 B.T.A. 82">*84  In her income tax return for 1933 the petitioner claimed a deduction of $11,493.13 under the heading of "other deductions authorized by law." This total is made up of the following items: Salary of Cooley$5,000.00Secretary and stenographic services500.00Rental of safe deposit boxes278.00Tax on safe deposit boxes27.80Services of tax adviser in connection with claims for refund and audit of books4,000.00Postage, insurance, and check taxes173.63Loss on redemption of municipal and Liberty bonds1,513.70Total11,493.13The parties have stipulated the amount of $1,513.70 listed above to be a "loss on sale of municipal bonds and Liberty bonds." They have also agreed to the other items as being expenditures of the petitioner except the item of $173.63 claimed as postage, etc.  There is no agreement and no proof offered as to the latter item.  The amount of $4,000 was paid to an individual for auditing the petitioner's books for three years, for the preparation of income tax returns, and for procuring a reduction or refund of income taxes for prior years.  The respondent disallowed in full the $4,000 paid for services of tax adviser1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1094  and auditor, and also disallowed $4,469.67 of the other items claimed.  37 B.T.A. 82">*85  OPINION.  ARUNDELL: In the deficiency notice sent to the petitioner the respondent treated separately some of the items making up the total claimed deduction of $11,493.13.  He disallowed the item of $4,000 representing payment to an individual for auditing books, preparation of tax returns, and procuring refund of taxes.  The remainder of the total deduction is listed in the deficiency notice as $5,951.63, whereas the correct remainder is $5,979.43, a difference of $27.80.  This item is the same in amount as the amount of taxes paid on rental of safe deposit boxes, and apparently was allowed by the respondent.  Of the remainder of $5,951.63 the respondent disallowed $4,469.67 as being "allocable to tax-exempt income." The amount of $4,469.67 is 75.1 percent of $5,951.63.  In the petition filed herein the petitioner alleged the amount of $9,951.63 to be "ordinary business expenses" and alleged error on the part of the respondent in disallowing as ordinary business expenses (a) the amount paid for services of tax advisor and accountant and (b) the "75.1 percent of the total amount of all other expenses1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1095  * * *." These allegations were denied by the respondent in his answer.  By amended answer subsequently filed the respondent avers that he committed error in allowing the deduction of any portion of the claimed $11,493.13 and (quoting from the amended answer), "alleges affirmatively: (a) That during the year 1933 petitioner was not engaged in a trade or business.  (b) That the deduction claimed was not incurred in connection with the carrying on of a trade or business." Some of the items making up the total claimed by the petitioner are not affected by the respondent's change of position and will be disposed of first.  There is an item of $173.63 claimed as postage, etc., as to which counsel for the petitioner concedes there is no proof as to the amount of the expenditure.  The disallowance of that item is sustained.  The $27.80 stipulated to be "taxes on safe deposit boxes" is clearly allowable as "taxes paid" under section 23(c) of the Revenue Act of 1932, whether or not the petitioner was engaged in carrying on a trade or business.  The item of $1,513.70, being the loss sustained on bonds, is not separately discussed by either side.  This amount was claimed by petitioner to be1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1096  a loss on the redemption of bonds; the parties have stipulated it to be a loss sustained on the sale of bonds.  In either event the matter of allowance of the deduction would not depend upon whether the petitioner was engaged in trade or business.  Losses are not confined to those sustained in the operation of business enterprises but are allowable "if incurred in any transaction entered into for profit, though not connected with the 37 B.T.A. 82">*86  trade or business." Sec. 23(e)(2), Revenue Act of 1932.  Neither side suggests that the provisions of section 23(r), placing certain limitations on losses, are applicable.  The respondent has not determined, and we will not presume, that the petitioner's acquisition of the bonds was inspired by a philanthropic or other nonprofit motive.  The natural assumption is that an investor is actuated by a profit motive when he buys securities.  As the respondent's disallowance is not based on any ground that would indicate any other purpose, we hold that the loss should be allowed.  According to the notice of deficiency in this case the respondent's disallowance of the $4,000 item is based on the ruling in 1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1097 Charles Henry Mattlage,3 B.T.A. 242">3 B.T.A. 242. In that case the Board, without opinion, sustained the disallowance of an amount paid to a firm of accountants for services rendered in connection with the preparation of the individual taxpayer's income tax return.  The decided cases in which this question has been discussed hold that fees paid in connection with tax matters are deductible as expenses where the taxes result from business in which the taxpayer is engaged. J. W. Forgeus,6 B.T.A. 291">6 B.T.A. 291; Caroline T. Kissel,15 B.T.A. 1270">15 B.T.A. 1270. Fees paid in connection with taxes on transactions not amounting to a trade or business are considered personal expenditures and not deductible.  See Malcolm G. Gibbs,34 B.T.A. 1028">34 B.T.A. 1028, and cases there cited.  As to this item there has been no change of position by the respondent, and the burden of proof is on the petitioner.  The $4,000 fee paid in this case was paid for services rendered in prior years.  The only evidence in regard to this payment is the testimony of the individual to whom it was paid.  He testified that it was paid for audits, preparation of returns, and services in connection1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1098  with proposed additional income taxes for prior years.  The proposed additional taxes, he stated, involved the same question "as is raised in this case." We take this to mean that there was a controversy over whether or not the petitioner was engaged in carrying on a trade or business in the earlier years.  We have no evidence of the extent of the petitioner's business activities for the years prior to 1933.  We have not been informed as to the outcome of the controversy over additional taxes for prior years.  We do not know whether the Commissioner, or whoever passed judgment on the matter, determined the petitioner to have been engaged in a trade or business.  Thus, the petitioner has failed to establish that she was engaged in a trade or business in the years for which this fee was paid, and consequently we can not find that it was a business expense.  We have left for consideration the following items: $5,000 salary paid to Austin C. Cooley; $500 paid to Cooley's secretary for services 37 B.T.A. 82">*87  rendered in connection with petitioner's affairs; and $278 paid for rental of safe deposit boxes.  A portion of these items was disallowed as being "allocable to tax-exempt income", 1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1099  and in support of such disallowance the deficiency notice cites I.T. 2751, C.B. XIII-1, p. 43.  That ruling, after citing other rulings of the Commissioner's office, decisions of this Board, and one court decision, concludes that "all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year with respect to the management, protection, and conservation of properties producing taxable income should be allowed as deductions in computing net income." That ruling does not hold that expenses in producing exempt income are not deductible and the statute does not classify business expenses according to the character of the property handled or the income produced. John H. Watson, Jr., et al., Trustees,35 B.T.A. 706">35 B.T.A. 706. Where such classification is intended it is so provided in the statute as in the case of interest, deduction being disallowed for interest on money borrowed to purchase or carry exempt securities (sec. 23(b), Revenue Act of 1932; Denman v. Slayton,282 U.S. 514">282 U.S. 514), and, beginning with the Revenue Act of 1934, for amounts allocable to exempt income, other than exempt interest.  See 1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1100 35 B.T.A. 706">John H. Watson, Jr., et al., Trustees, supra, distinguishing Victor G. Marquissee,11 B.T.A. 334">11 B.T.A. 334. It follows that the respondent's allowance of a part of the deduction must have been predicated upon a determination by him that the taxpayer's activities amounted to carrying on a trade or business.  The respondent having made that determination and now affirmatively alleging error in so doing, the burden is on him to establish error.  Board's Rule 30; Henderson Tire & Rubber Co.,12 B.T.A. 716">12 B.T.A. 716; Drawoh, Inc.,28 B.T.A. 666">28 B.T.A. 666, 28 B.T.A. 666">686. The respondent has not met his burden of affirmatively proving that the petitioner was not engaged in carrying of a trade or business.  The evidence on the respondent's side is mostly negative.  Thus, it appears that the petitioner did not regularly visit the office in which her affairs were handled; she paid no rent for office space; her sales in the taxable year were only three in number.  These negative matters are not enough in our opinion to overcome the presumption that the Commissioner correctly determined that the petitioner was carrying on a trade or business when he allowed part of her1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1101  expenditures.  But if our holding as to the burden of proof is questioned and if the burden is on the petitioner to establish a trade or business, our opinion is that that burden has been met.  The petitioner's evidence shows that she was engaged in the taxable year in managing securities of close to $9,000,000 in value in addition to her interest in the Roebling Co.  Her management was an active one; she did not confine her interest to employing others to manager her property for 37 B.T.A. 82">*88  her.  When it came to buying, selling, or reinvesting she conferred with Cooley and with her brokers and, after such conferences and after consulting investment services, she made the final decision.  She instructed Cooley accordingly and he ordered purchases or sales in accordance with her instructions.  She paid for the purchases by drawing checks herself.  Cooley testified that he saw only one or two of the checks.  Petitioner's interest in the Roebling Co. likewise engaged her active attention.  She was a substantial stockholder in that company and frequently conferred with other stockholders as to the company's business.  At stockholders' meetings she had Cooley vote her stock in accordance1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1102  with instructions that she gave him.  All of this evidence indicates activities on the part of this petitioner beyond those of a mere passive investor.  Cf. Foss v. Commissioner, 75 Fed.(2d) 326; Austin D. Barney et al., Executors,36 B.T.A. 446">36 B.T.A. 446. This petitioner's purchases and sales, amounting to more than a half million dollars, exceeded in amount those in the case of L. T. Alverson,35 B.T.A. 482">35 B.T.A. 482, in which we allowed the deduction of the cost of statistical services in connection with the purchase and sale of securities.  Her dividends for 1933 were in excess of $169,000 and interest received was over $230,000, which on its face shows at least a business-like management of the petitioner's property.  On authority of the cited cases, and in addition thereto considering the active interest of this petitioner in the management of her property, we are of the opinion and find as a fact that the petitioner's activities amounted to carrying on a trade or business.  Consequently, the amounts expended for Cooley's services, the secretary's services, and rental of safe deposit box are deductible as business expenses.  1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1103  The cases chiefly relied on by the respondent are distinguishable on the facts from this case.  In Helen W. Heilbroner,34 B.T.A. 1200">34 B.T.A. 1200, the taxpayer inherited a substantial amount of securities.  She had no business experience.  She placed some of the securities with a trust company to collect the income for which she paid the trust company a commission, and she engaged an employee of her brother to look after her accounts and paid $1,200 as her share of the employee's compensation and office rent.  In that case it was found from the evidence that the taxpayer "did not manage her estate or direct its management.  She merely received income from investments, and this is not a trade or business." In this case, as pointed out above, the evidence abundantly establishes active management by the petitioner.  In Alice G. Kales,34 B.T.A. 1046">34 B.T.A. 1046, the taxpayer was a woman of considerable means.  A major part of her wealth was received from the estate of her father and included a block of automobile stock.  Dividends on that stock and profit on its sale gave 37 B.T.A. 82">*89  rise to tax controversies with the Government.  The taxpayer instituted suits against the Government1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1104  and in connection therewith she paid fees, court costs, and legal expenses in 1928 and 1930 and claimed deductions therefor as business expenses.  In that case it appeared that the taxpayer's principal activity with respect to her securities prior to the taxable years was that of shifting the bulk of her investments from stocks to bonds.  It was found as a fact that the taxpayer "knew nothing about bonds, but her approval was always asked and given before the purchase or sale of bonds." In the case before us, it is shown that the petitioner informed herself as to the securities she bought and sold.  She did not, as in the Kales case, merely give her assent to proposals formulated by others, but studied the recommendations and actually made her own decisions.  In the Kales case, while the taxpayer's transactions amounted to considerable sums over a period of years, there is no showing of the extent of the taxpayer's activities in stocks for one of the taxable years; as to the other year, 1930, her stock purchases amounted to but $55 and her sales were in the amount of $210.  No analysis of this point is needed to show the distinction between the two cases.  In neither the 1938 BTA LEXIS 1089">*1105 Heilbroner nor the Kales case were the taxpayers active in personally handling their affairs as was the petitioner in this case, and the cited cases are not controlling here.  Reviewed by the Board.  Decision will be entered under Rule 50.MURDOCK MURDOCK, concurring: I think this case is contrary to that of Victor G. Marquissee,11 B.T.A. 334">11 B.T.A. 334; affd., 47 Fed.(2d) 32. The effort to distinguish the latter case in the Watson case does not satisfy me.  However, since the Commissioner has acquiesced in the Watson case, I concur in the result reached here.  SMITH agrees with the above.  TURNER TURNER, dissenting: The majority opinion undertakes to distinguish this case from the case of Alice G. Kales,34 B.T.A. 1046">34 B.T.A. 1046. In my opinion, the two cases are indistinguishable and for that reason I note my dissent.  BLACK, MELLOTT, DISNEY, HARRON, and KERN agree with the above.