Court Opinion

ID: 4592603
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:08:20.653117+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:50:53.579796
License: Public Domain

BURDETT STRYKER, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Stryker v. CommissionerDocket No. 36783.United States Board of Tax Appeals21 B.T.A. 561; 1930 BTA LEXIS 1840; December 3, 1930, Promulgated *1840  1.  Where a taxpayer who traded entirely on margin made numerous purchases and sales of stock during the taxable year and, in the case of each sale, ordered his broker to sell the shares purchased on a certain date, and the broker sold the number of shares specified, held, assuming that the broker sold as directed, that the orders to the broker could be given no force as an identification of the stock sold so as to render article 39, Regulations 65, inapplicable in the determination of his taxable income, since the shares were never specifically owned or possessed by the taxpayer.  2.  Article 39, Regulations 65, prescribing the method of computing gain on sales of stock made from lots purchased at different dates and at different prices, where identity of the lots can not be determined, is reasonable and within the full scope of the administrative regulations contemplated by the statute.  F. A. Woodis, Esq., for the petitioner.  Lloyd W. Creason, Esq., for the respondent.  STERNHAGEN *561  This proceeding involves a deficiency of $1,890.27 in income taxes for 1925.  Petitioner contends that his profits from certain stock transactions should*1841  not be computed in accordance with article 39, Regulations 65.  FINDINGS OF FACT.  Petitioner is an individual residing at Washington, D.C.  During 1925 he traded extensively in stocks, maintaining a trading account with a local brokerage firm under the style of "Burdett Stryker and Frank J. Stryker either or the survivor." On this joint account were bought and sold on margin numerous securities; among them, stock of the Southern Railway Co.  The following schedule reflects the transactions for the year in Southern Railway Co. stock: PurchasesSalesDateSharesCostDateSharesSale Price1925Jan. 16200$16,090.00Feb. 5200$18,077Feb. 2530027,585.00Mar. 620018,190.00May 180074,608Do30027,285.00May 920018,315.00May 111009,145.00July 230029,328May 2020018,415.00May 2830028,110.00do50048,880Aug. 2230031,087.50Sept. 930031,938Do20020,725.00Aug. 2710010,650.00Sept. 1030031,825Nov. 1020022,300.00Do30033,487.50Nov. 1650056,855Nov. 1250057,062.50do50056,855*562  Petitioner gave his selling instructions*1842  by telephone, confirming them thereafter by letter.  In each instance, he specified that the particular stocks to be sold be those purchased at a given date and price, the groupings of purchases and sales in the above schedule reflecting his instructions in this respect.  In addition to the above stocks, petitioner also purchased in 1925 the following Southern Railway Co. shares: DateSharesCostAug. 22100$10,362.50Nov. 1050055,987.50He received no certificates representing the stock purchased, all of it being bought on margin.  OPINION.  STERNHAGEN: Apparently (although not certainly) the Commissioner determined this petitioner's taxable income in respect of his stock transactions for 1925 in accordance with article 39, Regulations 65, which is, so far as pertinent, as follows: ART. 39.  Sale of stock and rights. - When shares of stock in a corporation are sold from lots purchased at different dates and at different prices and the identity of the lots can not be determined, the stock sold shall be charged against the earliest purchases of such stock.  The excess of the amount realized on the sale over the cost or other basis of the stock*1843  will constitute gain.  * * * The petitioner contends that he has established the identity of the lots of stock which were sold so as to make article 39 inapplicable; and that the Commissioner's method as set forth therein is unauthorized.  *563  So far as the evidence indicates, the petitioner traded entirely on margin, maintaining a joint brokerage account with his brother; the account of 1925 is a continuation from earlier years; during the year in question, the petitioner ordered his broker from time to time to sell on this account shares of Southern Railway; in each order he specified that the shares to be sold were those which had been purchased on certain dates, and the broker sold the number of shares which the petitioner directed.  There is no evidence that the broker paid any attention to the designation or that the shares sold were in fact those which had been purchased on the date specified, and no evidence, such as that introduced in , of a custom or understanding of the broker.  From the broker's standpoint, there was manifestly a substantial fulfillment of the customer's order, irrespective of the specific designation*1844  of the stock.  But since the petitioner insists that the fact of identification has been established, it may be said that the evidence is insufficient to establish that in fact the broker sold as the petitioner directed.  This decision need not, however, be predicated merely upon a lack of direct evidence, for it may perhaps be conceded that the broker's compliance was as broad as petitioner's order.  In our opinion, the order specifying the shares to be sold as those which had been purchased on certain dates was entirely without substance and can be given no force as an identification of the stock sold.  Trading as he did on margin, the petitioner did not receive possession of the shares, nor did he, without a special contract, have the right to receive them prior to payment.  Even assuming that the broker actually held certificates of the purchased shares for his account, it does not appear whether the broker likewise held similar shares purchased on the same day for others.  In bankruptcy proceedings it has been authoritatively held that shares in the same corporation are not subject to identification one from the other so as to justify the specific reclamation of a particular*1845  number of shares deposited as collateral security as against other claimants of equal rank.  ; ; ; . Reclamation has been allowed of a single claim where there were no other claimants of similar stock, but this was because the claim was free from confusion and conflict, and the decision transcended the recognition of the fact that there could be no identification.  It would seem a fortiori that there can be no identification where the shares were never specifically owned or possessed by the customer and the only evidence consists of the open account and the pretended description in the order to sell.  Such an attempted identification is a sham and must be disregarded.  We can not, *564  therefore, find as a fact, as did the District Court in the case affirmed in , that the lots of stock sold were identified as petitioner claims, and without it there is no basis for his computation of gain or loss.  *1846  There is no reason to say that the method used by the respondent and provided in article 39 was not authorized by the statute.  Section 1001, Revenue Act of 1924, authorized regulations "needful * * * for the enforcement of this Act." In the nature of marginal transactions there is complexity and difficulty in the annual determination of profit and loss.  In the interest of uniform and clear administration, it is entirely reasonable and, we think, within the full scope of the administrative regulations contemplated by the statute that the Commissioner should prescribe a simple and uniform method of computation in such cases.  This method does not effect a modification of the statute or, in the instant case, go contrary to fact, and there is nothing to justify the special computation of gain or loss which this petitioner claims.  ; ; ; . The evidence includes periodical statements of a joint trading account of petitioner and Frank J. Stryker.  In the absence of any proof by way*1847  of explanation, these accounts may not be treated as if they applied to petitioner alone.  Reviewed by the Board.  Judgment will be entered for the respondent.