Court Opinion

ID: 4620670
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-21 02:43:08.165098+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:59:42.684157
License: Public Domain

* Isidore Himmel and Lillian Himmel, Petitioners, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentHimmel v. CommissionerDocket No. 91375United States Tax Court41 T.C. 62; 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36; October 15, 1963, Filed *36 Decision will be entered for the respondent.  Held, distributions in redemption of portions of the principal petitioner's preferred stock in the H. A. Leed Co. were essentially equivalent to dividends; and accordingly they are taxable as ordinary income from dividends to the extent of the corporation's earnings and profits.  George B. Lourie and Arnold R. Cutler, for the petitioners.John R. Berman, for the respondent.  Pierce, Judge.  PIERCE *63  The respondent determined deficiencies in the income taxes of the petitioners for the calendar years 1957 and 1958, in the amounts of $ 2,346.11 and $ 3,287.45, respectively.The sole issue is whether distributions of $ 5,000 and $ 7,000 which the H. A. Leed Co. made to petitioner Isidore Himmel in 1957 and 1958, respectively, in redemption of part of the shares of preferred stock which petitioner held*38  in said company, were essentially equivalent to dividends and hence are includable in his gross income as taxable dividends.FINDINGS OF FACTSome of the facts have been stipulated.  The stipulation of facts and all exhibits therein identified are incorporated herein by reference.Petitioners Isidore and Lillian Himmel are husband and wife residing in New Haven, Conn.  They filed a joint income tax return for each of the taxable years with the district director of internal revenue for the district of Connecticut.  Since the wife is a party to this proceeding solely by reason of having joined in the filing of said returns, the husband, Isidore Himmel, will hereinafter be referred to as the petitioner.The H. A. Leed Co. (herein called the corporation) was incorporated under the laws of Connecticut on or about January 1, 1946, to engage in the business of processing aluminum; and at all times since it has continued to so operate.  During the taxable years its principal place of business was in the town of Hamden near New Haven, Conn.  The original stockholders were: The petitioner; the petitioner's son-in-law, Leonard Goldfarb; and a relative of petitioner by marriage, Edward G. Schenfield. *39  The original capital of the corporation was $ 8,100, represented by 81 shares of common stock of the par value of $ 100 a share; and all of such shares were issued to said stockholders in equal amounts of 27 shares each.  Petitioner was the president, an office which he continued to hold at least until October 25, 1954.  At sometime thereafter, but prior to December 27, 1956, he was succeeded as president by Goldfarb.The corporation, from the beginning and for several years thereafter, found the amount of its capital to be insufficient for its business needs.  Accordingly, until at least 1949 petitioner guaranteed the accounts of the corporation's principal suppliers; and also either alone or in conjunction with the other stockholders, he endorsed the corporation's promissory notes which were delivered to banks in obtaining loans for business purposes.The stockholders also made loans of money to the corporation.  Prior to July 31, 1946, each of the stockholders loaned the corporation *64  $ 500 and received therefor the latter's promissory notes.  In addition to the foregoing loans, the petitioner individually made advances of money to the corporation on a continuous basis, *40  beginning on March 31, 1946, 3 months after the formation of the corporation, and continuing through November 6, 1948.  These advances were recorded in a liability account, "Loans Payable" on the corporation's books; and they totaled $ 38,150 during said period.  The corporation made only one repayment to petitioner with respect to said advances, in the amount of $ 550 on April 15, 1947.  The following is a transcript of the entries in such account during the above-mentioned period of March 31, 1946, to November 6, 1948, showing the advances (credits), the repayment (debit), and balances in the account at the dates indicated:DebitCreditBalance1946Mar. 14$ 3,000$ 3,000Apr. 51,5004,500Apr. 165,0009,500May 293,00012,500June 265,00017,500July 125,00022,500Sept. 102,50025,0001947Mar. 122,65027,650Apr. 15$ 55027,1001948June 302,50029,600Nov. 68,00037,600The funds thus advanced to the corporation by the petitioner were used by it in the day-to-day operations of its business.  Petitioner did not at any time receive any promissory notes, mortgages, or other evidences of indebtedness or security*41  respecting any of the above advances.  Also, he never received any payment of interest in respect to the same.  It was petitioner's understanding that he would receive repayment of the advances only at such time as the corporation might be financially able to do so.The following schedule presents in summary form the liabilities and stockholders' equity sections of the corporation's balance sheets at July 31, 1946, March 31, 1947, and December 31, 1947:July 31, 1946Mar. 31, 1947Dec. 31, 1947Current liabilities$ 14,998.07 $ 15,587.39 $ 13,183.43Other liabilities (Loans payableto petitioner22,500.00 27,650.00 27,100.00Total liabilities37,498.07 43,237.39 40,283.43Capital stock8,100.00 8,100.00 8,100.00Paid-in surplus25.00 25.00 25.00Earned surplus (or deficit)(3,773.90)(1,893.31)944.23Total stockholders' equity4,351.10 6,231.69 9,069.23*65  A condensed balance sheet of the corporation at December 31, 1948 (4 days after certain revisions in its capital structure, presently to be described), is as follows:AssetsCurrent assets$ 46,284.88Fixed assets (net after depreciation)22,268.06Prepayments and organization expense542.55Total assets69,095.49Liabilities and Stockholders' EquityCurrent liabilities13,617.87Stockholders' equity:Preferred stock$ 37,600.00Capital stock9,600.00Paid-in surplus25.00Earned surplus8,252.6255,477.62Total liabilities and stockholders' equity69,095.49*42  In December 1948, Schenfield and Goldfarb proposed to petitioner that he give consideration to accepting preferred stock from the corporation, in lieu of the amount carried on the corporation's books and financial statements as an open account indebtedness to him.  They advised petitioner that such a course of action would enhance the corporation's ability to secure credit from its suppliers without the necessity of petitioner guaranteeing payment thereof, and also would enable the corporation to borrow money from banks without petitioner endorsing the promissory notes evidencing such loans.  Schenfield and Goldfarb stated that the corporation would redeem such preferred stock at such times as it might be able to.  Petitioner was amenable to the proposals of his fellow stockholders; and accordingly on December 27, 1948, a special meeting of the stockholders was held, which was attended by all three stockholders, and at which petitioner as president presided.  Resolutions were then unanimously adopted with respect to revisions of the corporation's capital structure in line with the Schenfield-Goldfarb proposal, which were to the following effect:1. Provision was made for amendment*43  of certificate of incorporation, so that the amount of the authorized capital stock would thereafter be $ 50,000 divided into: 96 shares of authorized common capital stock of the par value of $ 100 per share; 294 shares of Class A preferred stock of the par value of $ 100 per share; and 110 shares of Class B preferred stock of the par value of $ 100 per share.Each of said classes of preferred stock would be entitled to dividends, out of earnings and profits and before any dividend was declared or paid on the common stock, at the rate of 2 percent per annum payable semi-annually; and such preferred dividends would be cumulative until paid.*66  The holders of the Class B preferred stock and the holders of the common stock would possess the same exclusive voting power, for the election of directors, making of by-laws, the management of business and all other purposes of the corporation; but the holders of the Class A preferred stock would have no voting powers.  Both classes of preferred stock would have preferential rights over the common stock in the event of liquidation.2. It was unanimously decided that 5 shares of the newly authorized common stock would be issued to each *44  of the then three shareholders in payment of the above-mentioned loan of $ 500 which each of these shareholders had theretofore made to the corporation prior to July 31, 1946; and that such loans, together with the promissory notes which had theretofore been issued to evidence the same, would thereby be cancelled.3. It was further unanimously decided, upon recommendation of the petitioner and in accordance with the prior suggestion of the other two stockholders, that 266 shares of the newly authorized Class A nonvoting 2 percent cumulative preferred stock of the aggregate par value of $ 26,600, and 110 shares of Class B voting 2 percent cumulative preferred stock of the aggregate par value of $ 11,000 (total par value of $ 37,600), would be issued to the petitioner in full satisfaction of the corporation's open account liability to him, amounting to $ 37,600, which had arisen as the result of petitioner's above-mentioned advances to the corporation to enable it to meet its needs for operating capital.It was further decided that with respect to the said shares of Class A nonvoting preferred stock, the corporation might at the option of the board of directors, redeem the whole or any*45  part of the same at any semi-annual dividend date, by giving at least 30 days' advance notice to the holders thereof, and by paying therefor $ 100 per share "plus all unpaid dividends accrued thereon to the date of redemption"; and as respects the shares of Class B voting preferred stock these might similarly be redeemed by the corporation at the option of the board of directors, provided that all shares of the Class A preferred stock had previously been redeemed.All of the above resolutions adopted at the special stockholders' meeting were given effect; and thereupon all of the shares of common stock and preferred stock authorized to be issued by the corporation, actually were issued in the manner provided.  Thereupon and effective as of December 27, 1948, the issued and outstanding shares of the corporation's capital stock were held as follows:Class AClass BShareholderCommonnonvotingvotingstockpreferredpreferredstockstockPetitioner32266110Leonard Goldfarb32NoneNoneEdward G. Schenfield32NoneNoneIn 1950, petitioner transferred by gift to each of his sons, Harold Himmel and Kenard Himmel, 16 shares of the common stock*46  of the corporation -- being all of the common shares which he then owned.  He continued to hold all of his 266 shares of class A nonvoting preferred stock, and all of his 110 shares of class B voting preferred *67  stock. Each of these latter shares had voting power equal to each share of the common stock; and therefore petitioner continued to hold more than 50 percent of the voting control of the corporation.In 1953 or 1954, stockholder Edward G. Schenfield died.  And thereafter, pursuant to resolutions adopted at a special meeting of the shareholders held on October 25, 1954, the corporation purchased and redeemed from the estate of said decedent, all of the 32 shares of common stock which the decedent had theretofore held.  The total price for said shares, which was paid partly in cash and partly in promissory notes and property of the corporation, was $ 15,000.On February 8, 1956, a special meeting of the corporation's board of directors was held, which was attended by petitioner and his son, Harold, and his son-in-law, Leonard Goldfarb -- being all the directors.  It was thereupon voted to instruct the treasurer to open a special checking account at the company's bank, *47  for the purpose of depositing therein a minimum of $ 3,000 per year, to be used solely for retiring the corporation's outstanding preferred stock, of the total par value of $ 37,600.Later in the year 1956, at a special meeting of the stockholders of the corporation held on December 17, the following action was taken:It was voted at the suggestion of Goldfarb that the corporation would redeem from the petitioner, 50 of the 266 shares of Class A nonvoting preferred stock of the corporation which he then held, by paying him therefor the sum of $ 100 per share (being the par value) with the understanding that petitioner would waive any and all dividends then due and unpaid thereon and also any dividend accruals thereon.It was further voted also that the corporation would enter into a written agreement with petitioner, under which the corporation would, in the event of petitioner's death, redeem all of the corporation's preferred stock which petitioner owned at the time of his death, provided that all dividends thereon then due and unpaid be waived; and that while petitioner remained alive, the corporation might redeem all or any part of such preferred stock, with the further proviso*48  that no Class B voting preferred be redeemed until all Class A nonvoting should have been redeemed.The corporation redeemed 50 shares of petitioner's class A nonvoting preferred stock on January 27, 1957, paying petitioner $ 5,000 therefor.  During 1958 the corporation redeemed at par, 70 additional of such shares (50 on April 28, and 20 on August 26), paying petitioner an aggregate of $ 7,000 therefor.The corporation's earned surplus account per books at December 31, 1956, 1957, and 1958, was $ 112,922.46, $ 129,327.02, and $ 145,201.45, respectively.The stockownership of the corporation as it appeared on its books, before and after the above-mentioned redemptions in 1957 and 1958, was as follows: *68 CommonPreferred APreferred BJan. 1, 1957Isidore Himmel266110Kenard Himmel16Harold Himmel16Leonard Goldfarb3264266110Jan. 1, 1958Isidore Himmel216110Kenard Himmel16Harold Himmel16Leonard Goldfarb3264216110Jan. 1, 1959Isidore Himmel146110Kenard Himmel16Harold Himmel16Leonard Goldfarb3264146110From the time of its organization through December 31, 1958, the corporation *49  has never formally declared or paid any dividend.Subsequent to the redemptions above mentioned, the corporation did not contract its business; nor did it at any time have or adopt any plan or policy of effecting any such contraction.Petitioners, in their joint Federal income tax return for each of the years 1957 and 1958, did not report the receipt of the above-mentioned amounts of $ 5,000 and $ 7,000 from the H. A. Leed Co.  The respondent, in his statutory notice of deficiency, determined that said amounts were distributions to which section 301 of the 1954 Code applied, i.e., that they were taxable dividends.OPINIONThe question we have here to answer has, we think not without some justification, been characterized as "vexing" ( Bradbury v. Commissioner, 298 F. 2d 111 (C.A. 1), affirming a Memorandum Opinion of this Court), and even "nightmarish" ( United States v. Fewell, 255 F. 2d 496 (C.A. 5)).  It is, as we stated above, whether the distributions made by the H. A. Leed Co. to the petitioner-husband, in connection with the redemptions by the corporation of portions of the petitioner's preferred nonvoting stock*50  in said corporation, were true redemptions for Federal income tax purposes, or whether they were the essential equivalents of dividends.The subject of redemptions of corporate stock is governed by section 302 of the 1954 Code, and certain other Code sections therein mentioned.  *69  Briefly, section 302(a) states that if a redemption transaction falls within one of four categories spelled out in section 302(b), then distributions made in connection therewith are to be treated as in part or full payment in exchange for the stock redeemed. Hence, any excess of the amount of the distributions over the shareholder's basis in the stock redeemed is entitled to the more favored tax treatment accorded capital gains.  The only subsection (b) category involved in this case is that contained in paragraph (1) thereof, which provides that a redemption will be governed by section 302(a) if "the redemption is not essentially equivalent to a dividend." Petitioner contends that the redemptions here involved were not essentially equivalent to dividends. For the respondent's position, we go to subsection (d) of 302, where we find that "if a corporation redeems its stock (within the meaning of*51  section 317(b)), 1 and if subsection (a) of this section does not apply, such redemption shall be treated as a distribution of property to which section 301 applies," which is to say, that the distributions will be treated as dividends, fully taxable as ordinary income, to the extent of the corporation's earnings and profits.  2 Respondent contends that the redemptions were equivalent to dividends; and accordingly that subsection (a) of section 302 does not apply, with the result that, as he has determined, the distributions are fully taxable as ordinary income.*52  One further comment on the statutory scheme seems appropriate.  Section 302(c) provides, in general, that in determining the ownership of stock for purposes of section 302, regard is to be had to the attribution of ownership rules laid down in section 318(a).  Turning to section 318(a), we find that an individual shall be considered as owning stock which is actually owned by, among others, his children.  Applied to the instant case, this means that petitioner is to be considered as owning the 32 shares of the common stock of the corporation (50 percent of the outstanding common stock) which he had, in the earlier year 1950, given to his 2 sons -- 16 shares to each.The courts are almost unanimous in holding that the question here involved is factual (see, for example, Genevra Heman, 32 T.C. 479">32 T.C. 479, 486, *70  affd.  283 F. 2d 227 (C.A. 8)), 3 dependent upon the particular facts and circumstances of each case.  Nevertheless, the courts have evolved certain criteria which they have applied in determining whether particular distributions are or are not equivalent to dividends. We listed the most frequently utilized of these criteria*53  in our Heman case, page 487:The presence or absence of a bona fide corporate business purpose; whether the action was initiated by the corporation or by the shareholders; did the corporation adopt any plan or policy of contraction, or did the transaction result in a contraction of the corporation's business; did the corporation continue to operate at a profit; whether the transaction resulted in any substantial change in the proportionate ownership of stock held by the shareholders; what were the amounts, frequency, and significance of dividends paid in the past; was there a sufficient accumulation of earned surplus to cover the distribution * * *We said further in the Heman case that there is "no sole decisive test." However, since the very essence of a true dividend is a pro rata distribution of earnings and profits among the shareholders which leaves them in the same or substantially the same relationship inter se and vis-a-vis the corporation, see Pullman, Inc., 8 T.C. 292">8 T.C. 292, 297, it has been said that of the factors above mentioned, the most important is whether the transaction resulted in any substantial change in the proportionate*54  ownership of stock held by the shareholders. See Bradbury v. Commissioner, supra, where the Court of Appeals stated:The extent to which the distribution is ratably shared by the stockholders has always been one of the most conspicuous determinants of dividend equivalency. See, e.g., Flanagan v. Helvering, 73 App. D.C. 46">73 App. D.C. 46, 116 F. 2d 937 (D.C. Cir., 1940); Brown v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 79 F. 2d 73 (3 Cir., 1935); R. W. Creech, 46 B.T.A. 93">46 B.T.A. 93 (1942). In sum "the most obvious earmarks of a dividend is the pro rata distribution of earnings and profit," Bittker and Redlich, Corporate Liquidations And The Income Tax, 5 Tax Law Review 437, 476 (1950), and must be regarded as the basic criterion of whether a particular distribution more closely equates a sale or a dividend. * * *It is obvious that where -- subsequent to a distribution of property -- there has been no real shift in intercorporate interest or no significant change in the economic interest of the parties involved, a proclivity towards dividend equivalence*55  usually results.Bearing the foregoing in mind, we turn to the facts of the instant case.  We note once*56  again the impact of section 318(a) upon the facts of this case, to wit, petitioner is to be considered as owning the 32 shares of common stock (50 percent of the corporation's outstanding *71  common stock) actually owned by his sons.  The following tabulation shows the percentage changes in the stockownership of the corporation prior to and following each of the redemptions, considering both the common stock deemed constructively owned by petitioner and the two classes of preferred stock:CommonPreferredA -- nonvotingStockholderNumberPercentageNumberPercentageof sharesof sharesPrior to first redemption:Petitioner3250266100Goldfarb3250Totals64100266100Percentage of totalshares outstandingowned by petitioner=92.74Percentage of votingshares outstandingowned by petitioner=75.89Following first redemption:Petitioner3250216100Goldfarb3250Totals64100216100Percentage of totalshares outstandingowned by petitioner=91.79Percentage of votingshares outstandingowned by petitioner=75.89Following second redemption:Petitioner3250146100Golfarb3250Totals64100146100Percentage of totalshares outstandingowned by petitioner=90.0Percentage of votingshares outstandingowned by petitioner=75.89*57 Preferred BStockholderNumberPercentageof sharesPrior to first redemption:Petitioner110100GoldfarbTotals110100Percentage of totalshares outstandingowned by petitioner=92.74Percentage of votingshares outstandingowned by petitioner=75.89Following first redemption:Petitioner110100GoldfarbTotals110100Percentage of totalshares outstandingowned by petitioner=91.79Percentage of votingshares outstandingowned by petitioner=75.89Following second redemption:Petitioner110100GolfarbTotals110100Percentage of totalshares outstandingowned by petitioner=90.0 Percentage of votingshares outstandingowned by petitioner=75.89The foregoing tabulation makes it at once evident that petitioner's rather heavy voting control over the affairs of the corporation was not diluted at all as the result of the redemptions; and that his percentage ownership of all the corporation's shares was lessened by only 2.74 percent as a result.  We cannot accord this small reduction sufficient substantiality to defeat dividend equivalency.Considering*58  the pro rata distribution factor, it is of course true that the distributions in redemption here involved, were not precisely pro rata; for stockholder Goldfarb received nothing, and petitioner received all.  But where (as here) the recipient stockholder is the owner of such a heavy percentage of the distributing corporation's stock, the courts have held that the distribution was substantially pro rata, and have found dividend equivalence. See, for example, Bradbury *72 v. Commissioner, supra. See also Keefe v. Cote, 213 F. 2d 651 (C.A. 1), where (although for other reasons dividend equivalence was not found) the First Circuit said:And, although the distribution was not pro rata, it was practically or essentially so in view of the very high percentage of the taxpayer's stockholdings.  Thus, under the strict logic of the [net effect] test it would be very doubtful whether the taxpayer could prevail.The corporation's earnings and profits were more than amply sufficient to cover the distributions to petitioner; and it must be noted that it had never declared a dividend. Also, there was no plan to contract*59  the corporation's business operations prior to the redemptions; nor did any contraction come about as a result thereof.  Further, the initiative for the redemptions came from the shareholders rather than the corporation.Thus far considered, all the factors point toward dividend equivalence. Petitioner relies largely upon an alleged corporate business purpose in the issuance and redemption of the preferred stock, to tip the scales in his favor.  His argument is, in brief, that the preferred stock was issued to take the place of a debt owed by the corporation to the petitioner, i.e., the open account liability to petitioner of $ 37,600 which was reflected in the corporation's books of account and in its financial statements.  He asserts that the alleged substitution was made in order to improve the corporation's credit standing by enabling it to obtain its raw materials from suppliers and cash loans from banks, without the necessity of petitioner having to act as guarantor of the corporation's payment to the suppliers and to the lender banks.The respondent counters this argument by the contention that the sums advanced by petitioner to the corporation aggregating $ 37,600 at December*60  27, 1948, were contributions of equity capital to the corporation, which did not give rise to a true debt.  Thus, he argues, when the preferred stock was issued, it was merely evidence of an equity investment by an equity instrument, rather than the substitution of an equity instrument in form to evidence what was in reality a debt.  We think the respondent is correct.  We stated in the case of Emanuel N. ( Manny) Kolkey, 27 T.C. 37">27 T.C. 37, 58, affd.  254 F. 2d 51 (C.A. 7), that the essential difference between an investor and a creditor was that the former intended to embark upon the corporate venture taking the risk of loss attendant upon it, while the latter intends to avoid such risks insofar as he is able to, and hence merely to lend the capital to others who will take the risks.  Appraising the circumstances surrounding petitioner's advances to the corporation, we believe that those advances constituted equity capital put at the risk of the business. The corporation was in its infancy and the investment in its capital stock was only $ 8,100.  It required considerably larger amounts *73  of funds for operating capital*61  in order to carry on the day-to-day operations of its business of processing aluminum.  And petitioner's advances were to meet this very need.  He was candid in testifying that he expected repayment only when the corporation was able to do so; and hence there was no definite and fixed obligation that he be repaid.  Moreover, petitioner neither sought nor received any interest on his advances.  To repeat then, we think that petitioner's advances constituted equity capital. It follows that when the preferred stock was redeemed, it was not in substance the repayment of a loan, as petitioner contends, but rather the distribution of earnings and profits to one who was stockholder in fact as well as in form.The fact that the preferred stock was issued to evidence an equity investment rather than a debt, serves, we think, to distinguish the instant case from such cases as Keefe v. Cote, supra,Estate of Henry A. Golwynne, 26 T.C. 1209">26 T.C. 1209, and G. E. Nicholson, 17 T.C. 1399">17 T.C. 1399, upon which petitioner relies.  In each of those cases, the court found that the preferred stock involved had been issued to take*62  the place of what was clearly a corporate debt to the shareholders -- done for the purpose of improving the corporation's credit standing.  The courts in those cases held that the issuance and redemption of the preferred stock there involved were for legitimate corporate business purposes; and that the distributions were not essentially equivalent to dividends. We believe those cases are distinguishable on their facts.Moreover, we add that recent cases in the Courts of Appeals have tended to place the "legitimate corporate business fact" in its proper perspective, as not the dominant factor to be considered in dividend equivalency cases, but rather as one factor to be considered along with all the others in such cases.  See United States v. Fewell, supra; and Bradbury v. Commissioner, supra.4 In the instant case, we are of the opinion that even if the preferred stock had been issued to take the place of a corporate debt, such circumstance would not be sufficient, in the light of all the other circumstances here pointing to dividend equivalency, to warrant a decision herein for petitioner.*63 Petitioner also urges that the two distributions in redemption here involved were but steps in a plan, the overall aim of which was a complete *74  elimination of petitioner's interest in the corporation.  He points to the action taken at the stockholders meeting of February 8, 1956, whereby the corporation's treasurer was instructed to open a special checking account for the purpose of depositing therein a minimum of $ 3,000 per year to be used solely for retiring petitioner's preferred stock; and to the agreement of December 17, 1956, wherein the corporation agreed to purchase all of his preferred stock in the event of his death, and, so far as it was able to do so, to make such redemptions as it desired of such stock during petitioner's lifetime.  The strongest case in support of petitioner's argument is that of In re Lukens Estate, 246 F. 2d 403 (C.A. 3), reversing 26 T.C. 900">26 T.C. 900. In the Lukens case, it appeared that the decedent-father had decided to terminate his interest in a corporation, in which the only other stockholders were his son and his daughter.  In 1946 he made a gift of a block of stock to each child; *64  in 1948 the corporation redeemed another portion of his stock, at the par value which the father had paid therefor, and applied the proceeds against his indebtedness to the corporation; and in 1950 he gave the remainder of his stock to his children, and thereby extinguished his interest in the corporation.  The Commissioner determined that the 1948 redemption was essentially equivalent to a dividend; and we sustained his determination.  The Court of Appeals, in reversing, stated that the 1948 "transaction was a significant step in a withdrawal, begun two years earlier and completed two years later," whereby his entire interest was eliminated.  The court had earlier pointed out that:where the fundamental fact appears that the stockholder is surrendering his entire interest, it is a contradiction of terms to characterize the transaction as a dividend which presupposes persisting ownership rights. * * *It is our judgment that the facts of the instant case are distinguishable from those of the Lukens case, and hence the decision in that case does not furnish precedent for the disposition of the case at bar.  Balance sheets of the corporation as of the ends of the years 1956 and*65  1957 reveal that it did have a special checking account (presumably the one called for by the February 7, 1956, resolution) at those two dates; but the balance sheet for December 31, 1958, does not contain among the assets any cash in a special checking account. We cannot be certain whether this points to an abandonment of the tentative steps taken to provide a fund for redemptions. We do note that there was no testimony that any further redemptions of petitioner's preferred stock were made, following those in 1957 and 1958 here involved.  It is also worth noting that the agreement entered into between petitioner and the H.A. Leed Co. on December 17, 1956, mentioned in our Findings of Fact, provides in substance and in here pertinent part, that so long as petitioner lives, the corporation may redeem his preferred shares at par, provided that it is "financially able to redeem same," if its *75  other shareholders desire that this be done.  The evidence in the instant case does not satisfy us that there was any firm and fixed plan to eliminate petitioner from the corporation, of which plan the redemptions here were but steps or parts.After considering and weighing all*66  the evidence, and after due and careful consideration of the authorities above cited, we are impelled to conclude and hold that the net effect of distributions in redemption of petitioner's preferred nonvoting stock during the years 1957 and 1958, was essentially equivalent to the distributions of corporate dividends. We therefore decide the case for the respondent.Decision will be entered for the respondent.  Footnotes*. Caption changed by Court order dated Jan. 6, 1964, to Isidore Himmel and Estate of Lillian Himmel, Isidore Himmel, Executor, Petitioners.↩1. Parenthetically, we note that there is no question raised as to the redemptions here involved falling within sec. 317(b): "stock shall be treated as redeemed by a corporation if the corporation acquires its stock from a shareholder in exchange for property, whether or not the stock so acquired is cancelled, retired, or held as treasury stock."↩2. In the instant case, our findings of fact reveal that the H. A. Leed Co. had earnings and profits far in excess of the amounts distributed to petitioner.  So that, if the distributions were essentially equivalent to dividends, the amounts thereof will be fully taxable to the petitioner as ordinary income.  Also, we note that the amounts of the distributions were exactly equal to petitioner's basis in the shares redeemed, so that if petitioner prevails, he will have no tax liability arising out of the distributions inasmuch as there would be no gain.↩3. In this connection the Fifth Circuit said in United States v. Fewell, 255 F. 2d 496:"The question whether or not a particular corporate transaction is essentially equivalent to the distribution of a taxable dividend is primarily a question of fact.  See Ferro v. Commissioner, 3 Cir., 1957, 242 F. 2d 838, and cases there cited, including Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Sullivan, 5 Cir., 1954, 210 F.2d 607">210 F. 2d 607. Holding contra, and apparently alone in so doing, is Northrup v. United States, 2 Cir., 1957, 240 F. 2d 304. * * *"Respondent's regulations provide that: "The question whether a distribution in redemption of stock of a shareholder is not essentially equivalent to a dividend under section 302(b)(1) depends upon the facts and circumstances of each case." Sec. 1.302-2(b), Income Tax Regs.↩4. The Second Circuit has taken an exceedingly dim view of the relevancy of the "legitimate corporate business purpose." See Northup v. United States, 240 F. 2d 304, where the court stated its views, as follows:"indeed, some courts still give weight to the presence of a legitimate corporate purpose, particularly where the redemption is contemporaneous with a contraction of corporate business. * * * [Citing cases.] Occasionally, comments on the lack of business purpose are thrown in as a sort of make-weight, where the conclusion is otherwise inescapable that the pro rata redemption of stock has precisely the same effect as would follow the declaration of a dividend. See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Roberts, 4 Cir., 203 F. 2d 304. In any event, in Kirschenbaum v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2 Cir., 155 F. 2d 23, we recognized that our earlier doctrine had been overruled.  Section 115(g) requires an examination of the net effect of the transaction as a whole, not an examination of the motives or purposes that prompted it.  Cf.  Flanagan v. Helvering, 73 App. D.C. 46">73 App. D.C. 46, 116 F. 2d 937, 939-940↩."