Simon v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Docket No. 82173

Decision Date18 June 1937
Docket NumberDocket No. 82173,82174.
Citation36 BTA 184
PartiesWILLIAM H. SIMON, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT. FANCHON SIMON, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.
CourtU.S. Board of Tax Appeals

Elias J. Aye, Esq., and Gerald Bridges, Esq., for the petitioners.

Byron M. Coon, Esq., for the respondent.

OPINION.

STERNHAGEN:

The petitioners, husband and wife, residing in California, contest deficiencies determined in respect of their community income for 1933, amounting to $265.81 each. Of three items of adjustment, two have been amicably settled and only one remains to be decided. This is the correctness of a deduction of $1,125 on each return, or $2,250 in all, taken as interest paid, which the Commissioner disallowed:

* * * for the reason that the obligation on which the interest was paid was the obligation of the Namyl Company. It is held that, as the obligation is not your obligation and was paid in behalf of another, the amount paid is not deductible from your income. Citing P. P. Griffin, 7 B. T. A. 1094.

The facts were stipulated and need not be set forth in detail.

In April 1932 petitioner was president and a director of the Namyl Co.1 That corporation had become the owner of realty subject to a deed of trust to secure a note given by the preceding purchaser for $37,500, with interest at 7 percent. The last interest had not been paid. By agreement with the Title Insurance & Trust Co., which held the note, the maturity of the note was extended from September 28, 1932, to September 28, 1935, and the rate of interest reduced to 6 percent. Petitioner was individually a party to this agreement, and the provision relating to him is as follows:

4th. Simon hereby undertakes and agrees with the Trust Co. that he will pay for and on behalf of The Namyl Co., before the same become delinquent, the following designated taxes on said real property, to-wit:

(a) the second installment of the taxes for the fiscal year 1931-1932;
(b) both installments of the taxes for the fiscal year 1932-1933; and
(c) the first installment of the taxes for the fiscal year 1933-1934,

and Simon also undertakes and agrees with the Trust Co. to pay to the Trust Co. on behalf of The Namyl Co. when due each installment of the interest which accrues on said Thirty-seven Thousand Five Hundred Dollar note during the period of the two years next succeeding the date of this agreement, and Simon pays upon the execution hereof Five Hundred Sixty-two and 50/100 Dollars ($562.50), being the quarterly installment of interest on said Thirty-seven Thousand Five Hundred Dollar note which fell due on the 28th day of March, 1932, at, however, the reduced rate of six per cent effected hereby.

The Namyl Co. became insolvent in 1933, and petitioner, in 1933, "pursuant to the agreement", paid the interest, amounting to $2,250.

In 1934 the Namyl Co. reconveyed the property, its only asset, to the holder of the note in lieu of foreclosure, and the note was canceled.

The statutory deduction for interest is in the following language:

All interest paid or accrued within the taxable year on indebtedness, * * *. Revenue Act of 1932, sec. 23 (b).

So far as the stipulation shows, the principal indebtedness on the note was solely that of the Namyl Co., and the interest which petitioner undertook to pay was not interest on his indebtedness, and properly speaking may not as to him be called interest at all. See Morris Plan Co. of Binghamton, 26 B. T. A. 772, 777; Helen B. Sulzberger, 33 B. T. A. 1093, 1099; Harvey M. Toy, 34 B. T. A. 877, 881. Indeed, the nature of his payment can not, from the facts in evidence, be described except generally as the consideration for the noteholder's extension to the principal obligor of the maturity of the note and the reduction of the rate of interest. Although these considerations operated more directly to the Namyl Co., the obligor on the note, they also were enough to support the petitioner's promise. Still his promise was not one to pay interest on his indebtedness. See Sand Springs Railway Co., 21 B. T. A. 1291, 1310.

Congress meant to provide a deduction not of any payment that a taxpayer may...

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