Court Opinion

ID: 4609437
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:44:43.82765+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:53:53.154123
License: Public Domain

ALEXANDER ZOLOTOFF, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Zolotoff v. CommissionerDocket No. 90883.United States Board of Tax Appeals41 B.T.A. 991; 1940 BTA LEXIS 1114; April 30, 1940, Promulgated *1114  Interest credited unconditionally to petitioner's account during 1924 and 1925 held to have been constructively received by him during those years.  Bernard J. Reis, C.P.A., for the petitioner.  S. U. Hiken, Esq., for the respondent.  HILL *991  In this proceeding petitioner asks a redetermination of income tax deficiencies for the calendar years 1924 and 1925.  The respondent has added a penalty of 25 percent of the tax for each year for failure to file a return, rendering the total deficiency for 1924, $691.65, and for 1925, $571.30.  The basis for the additional tax is the inclusion in petitioner's income of certain amounts of interest paid on bonds allocated to petitioner in settlement, without his consent, of a prior obligation.  The interest was credited to a bank account opened in petitioner's name by the bondholders' trustee.  On the trial respondent moved for judgment on the pleadings.  The case was submitted on the evidence and briefs.  FINDINGS OF FACT.  The petitioner is an individual, a citizen and resident during the taxable years of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics.  Prior to the year 1923 the petitioner had certain*1115  unsecured claims against an American concern which, without his knowledge, was placed in receivership and reorganized.  Under the plan of reorganization approved by the court having jurisdiction thereof the petitioner was allotted bonds in a new corporation, Melchior, Armstrong & Dessau of Delaware, Inc., in settlement of his claims.  *992  The bonds issued to petitioner were in the possession of the issuing corporation when in 1923 the petitioner was first apprised of the settlement and reorganization.  Interest on the petitioner's bonds was paid during the period from 1922 through 1925 to the Fidelity International Trust Co., trustee for the bond issue, and by that bank credited unconditionally to an account opened in petitioner's name.  These interest payments stood in petitioner's account and were subject to his unfettered control and use in the taxable year in which each respectively was received.  Through an action begun by petitioner in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York subsequent to 1923, the settlement received by him in the reorganization was contested.  This suit terminated in 1927 unfavorably to petitioner's contentions.  The amounts*1116  credited to petitioner's account in the taxable years were delivered over to him in 1935.  The Fidelity International Trust Co. filed returns as withholding agent for the interest payments received on petitioner's behalf for the years 1922 and 1923 and paid the taxes due thereon.  No return was filed for petitioner for the taxable years 1924 and 1925 nor any tax paid on the amounts of interest received as follows: 1924, $9,222; and 1925, $9,140.73.  The notice of the deficiencies and penalties determined for the taxable years was mailed to the petitioner on July 1, 1937.  The interest payments credited to petitioner's account by the Fidelity International Trust Co. in 1924 and 1925 were constructively received by him in those years.  OPINION HILL: The issue arising in this case is the year of taxable receipt of certain interest payments credited to petitioner's account in the years 1924 and 1925 but freed from the shadow of any legal dispute only in the year 1927.  In his petition the petitioner set forth, as the basis for the assignment of error, that he was under no obligation to make a return for the taxable years, inasmuch as the withholding agent was required to make*1117  a return in his behalf.  We understand that position to have been abandoned by petitioner in view of the provisions of sections 210, 217, and 221(d) of the Revenue Acts of 1924 and 1926.  There are, however, in paragraphs four and five of the petition additional statements which constitute adequate assignment of other points pressed by the petitioner on trial and on brief.  Respondent's motion for decision on the pleadings is, therefore, denied.  On the evidence, however, our decision must be for the respondent.  Whether the interest payments standing in petitioner's name with *993 the Fidelity International Trust Co. be regarded as funds in the hands of petitioner's agent or as a credit given him by a solvent banking institution, it seems clear that these amounts were subject to his immediate and unfettered control and were constructively received by him.  ; ; ; *1118 ; affd., , and cases there cited; . It has often been noted that the doctrine of constructive receipt is to be used with caution; under the citations given nevertheless, situations comparable to the present have been recognized as appropriate for its application.  The account opened by the trust company might have been used by the petitioner at any time he chose through the simple expedient of a draft or check.  It appears that the money would have been transmitted by the trustee to the petitioner as soon as it was received except for instructions given that it be retained.  Petitioner contends that he had no use of the interest payments during the taxable years for the reason that he was in ignorance of their existence.  Whatever weight this circumstance might have if shown by competent evidence to be true, no proof has been offered in substantiation.  On the contrary, his counsel stated on the trial that petitioner was informed in 1923 of the reorganization and placed the matter in the hands of his attorneys.  In addition there was some evidence*1119  that the petitioner instructed the trust company to retain the credited funds.  Petitioner has failed to offer any evidence in opposition from which we may find that he was unaware of the payments of interest.  The argument of the petitioner runs, however, that the interest payments were made on bonds given without his consent or knowledge in settlement of a valid obligation that might have been enforced in full through court action; that during the taxable years he could not use the interest credited to him without ratifying the very settlement which he was then contesting in court; that the condition of his acceptance of the settlement blocking his use of the interest nullified the unfettered control of the funds that is required for the operation of the idea of constructive receipt.  A similar argument was made to the Board in , where taxpayer contended that royalty payments due from his lessee were not received in the years when they were payable (on the presentation by taxpayer of a signed division order), since at that time taxpayer was contesting the lease, asking its cancellation, and the signing of the required division order*1120  and use *994  of the funds would have prejudiced his position.  He had been so advised by counsel.  In that case we said: * * * We need not determine whether petitioner was correctly advised and whether his position would have been prejudiced by signing a division order, for in any event our decision as to whether the income was constructively received is not affected.  If he elected not to take possession of income which was subject to his demands because of some benefit which would thereby accrue to him, the amount is nevertheless constructively received.  * * * Similarly, in , where the taxpayer received as income certain securities to the terms of which he objected.  Although he took manual delivery of the certificates, he refused to accept them in settlement of the claims for which they were offered.  We rejected the contention that the certificates were not received for taxation purposes in the year in which they were delivered into his unfettered control. For similar holdings see *1121 ; . In view of these decisions we think respondent must prevail in his determination that petitioner received taxable income in 1924 and 1925 in the amounts of interest credited to his account in the taxable years.  Decision will be entered for the respondent.