Agro-Jal Farming Enters. v. Commissioner

145 T.C. No. 5, 145 T.C. 145, 2015 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 30, 2015
DocketDocket Nos. 15103-10, 3924-11.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 T.C. No. 5 (Agro-Jal Farming Enters. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agro-Jal Farming Enters. v. Commissioner, 145 T.C. No. 5, 145 T.C. 145, 2015 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33 (tax 2015).

Opinion

AGRO-JAL FARMING ENTERPRISES, INC., ET AL.,1 Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Agro-Jal Farming Enters. v. Commissioner
Docket Nos. 15103-10, 3924-11.
United States Tax Court
145 T.C. 145; 2015 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33; 145 T.C. No. 5;
July 30, 2015, Filed

An appropriate order will be issued granting petitioners' motion and denying respondent's motion.

P--a farming corporation--deducted the cost of various field-packing materials for the year in which it bought them. R contends that under IRC section 464 and 26 CFR section 1.162-3 P may deduct the cost of those materials only for the year in which P uses them.

Held: The class of items described under section 464 as "feed, seed, fertilizer, or other similar farm supplies," does not include packing materials as "similar farm supplies."

Held, further, the "provided that" clause of section 1.162-3 for the years at issue means that the cost of materials and supplies must be deducted as the items are used or consumed, on the condition that they haven't been deducted for any prior year. P may therefore deduct the cost of field-packing materials for the year of purchase.

*33 Robert Warren Wood and Craig A. Houghton, for petitioner.
Chong S. Hong and Thomas R. Mackinson, for respondent.
HOLMES, Judge.

HOLMES

*145 HOLMES, Judge: Agro-Jal Farming Enterprises, Inc. is a farming corporation in Santa Maria, California that grows strawberries and vegetables. When it harvests them, it uses field-packing materials--plastic clamshell containers for the strawberries and cardboard trays and cartons for the other produce. Agro-Jal has always used the cash method of accounting for these materials--which means that it deducts their full purchase price in the year it buys them instead of deducting them bit-by-bit as they are used. The Commissioner *146 insists that Agro-Jal may deduct the cost of only those field-packing materials that it actually uses each tax year, and that it must defer deduction of the rest. Agro-Jal disagrees. Who is right depends on our interpretation of section 464 of the Code and section 1.162-3 of the regulations.2

This is apparently an issue never before addressed by any court.

BackgroundI. Agro-Jal's Business

Agro-Jal was incorporated in 1996, but it is still in many ways the Maldonaldo family farm,*34 whose patriarch founded it many years ago. The business has grown greatly over the years, and most of its income now comes from the efficient production of a few crops--strawberries, broccoli, cauliflower, iceberg and romaine lettuce, and celery. It is a year-round business but somewhat unpredictable because of the farmer's oldest adversary, the weather, as well as fluctuations in market demand.

Strawberry plants can produce several crops before they decline in productivity, so Agro-Jal plants new strawberry plants each October and harvests their fresh fruit between March and June, picks and freezes strawberries between July and August, and passes through the fields for a last crop of fresh fruit a year later between October and December. Broccoli and cauliflower come in throughout the year about 90 to 110 days after planting, and harvesting takes about two weeks at the end of each cycle. Lettuce is more regular: planted each January and harvested about 24 weeks later during a frantic seven days. Celery is also regular, sown in September and October and harvested during May and June.

California's climate lets Agro-Jal stay busy planting and harvesting throughout the year, and once each*35 crop fully matures, Agro-Jal has to be ready with the right combination of trays, cartons, and clamshell containers to pack the produce and get it to market.

*147 Agro-Jal does not just cut and pile produce when the time comes--its workers go into the field to trim, inspect, grade, and pack it. They pack fresh strawberries into prelabeled plastic clamshells in various sizes (pint, one pound, two pounds, etc.) and then place the clamshells in preassembled cardboard trays. These clamshells aren't exotic--they're identical to what shoppers find when they buy strawberries at the local grocery store. But they are very important to Agro-Jal because packing in the fields drastically reduces processing times, lets cool air move through the packages and chill the product before it is shipped, and allows ethylene gas to escape.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 T.C. No. 5, 145 T.C. 145, 2015 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agro-jal-farming-enters-v-commissioner-tax-2015.