A.J. Taft Coal Co. v. United States

605 F. Supp. 366
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 22, 1984
DocketCiv. A. CV82-PT-2145-J
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 605 F. Supp. 366 (A.J. Taft Coal Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.J. Taft Coal Co. v. United States, 605 F. Supp. 366 (N.D. Ala. 1984).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

PROPST, District Judge.

UNDERLYING FACTS

During the years in question, April 1, 1978 through June 30, 1980, A.J. Taft Coal Company (Taft) was engaged in the business of surface mining coal in Walker County, Alabama (RT. 22). Taft’s only customer was Alabama Power Company, which also owned the mineral rights to the land mined by Taft (Plaintiff’s Exhibit [hereinafter “P.Ex.”] 3; RT. 22, 25).

. Taft sold coal on a washed and on an unwashed basis during the audit period (RT. 22). Coal to be sold on a washed basis was hauled by Taft trucks to the Bankhead washer where the trucks were weighed, loaded and unloaded, to determine tons of raw, unwashed coal (RT. 22). The Bank-head washer was neither owned nor operated by Taft, but rather was an independent facility (RT. 23). Alabama Power Company paid approximately $2.00 per ton to have Taft’s coal washed (RT. 124). After the coal reached the washer, a float-sink test was performed on the Taft coal to determine the ratio of coal to refuse (RT. 24). Using this ratio, Alabama Power Company estimated the tons of coal that would remain after washing, for which it paid Taft (RT. 128). Taft was paid nothing for the refuse separated from the coal in the washing process and the Internal Revenue Service (hereinafter “I.R.S.”) does not here seek to tax the refuse (RT. 50, 54).

Taft was paid based on the BTU content of the washed coal (RT. 82). The amount of BTU’s per ton of coal is a measure of the quality of said coal; coal having a higher number of BTU’s per ton is of better quality than coal with a lower number of BTU’s per ton. (Transcript, 83; 122-23). The quality of coal, and its ability to release BTU’s, is determined by the purity of said coal; the greater the amount of impurities in the coal, the fewer BTU’s will be produced per ton of coal. (Transcript 122-123; 138-139; 141-143). Sulfur, ash, dirt, rocks, and refuse are all considered to be impurities which reduce the quality of coal. Water has no BTU content. (Transcript 122-123; 224-225; 226; 292-294; 56; 60). In paying its Black Lung Tax, Taft reported to the I.R.S. based on the calculated dry *368 tons of coal which it sold to Alabama Power Company (RT. 50). Raymond Clemmons, the I.R.S. agent who audited Taft’s records, adjusted the tonnage reported by Taft for washed coal sold by increasing the tonnage by six percent (RT. 13, 51). Clemmons arrived at the six percent figure by estimation (RT. 13, 78). 1 The six percent gross up of the weight of washed coal resulted in the addition of 1325.68 tons to the 22,094.68 tons of coal already reported (RT. 308-311; P.Ex. 21). The addition of these tons caused an additional tax of $331.43 to be assessed against Taft (RT. 308; P.Ex. 21).

Coal sold on an unwashed basis was delivered to the Gorgas Steam Plant or the Segco Mine where it was weighed and sampled by Alabama Power Company (RT. 53, 55). Taft was paid for this coal on the basis of the BTU value of the coal determined by Alabama Power Company, the purchaser (RT. 55). The unwashed coal was not processed by Taft before delivery and was sampled and analyzed in its raw, as-received state (RT. 56). The contract under which the coal in question was sold provides, in reference to the unwashed coal, that

... Trucks delivering coal hereunder shall be weighed both loaded and empty, and the difference in weight shall be the governing weight hereunder.... The aggregate weights determined during any payment period shall be accepted as the quantity of coal sold and purchased during such period for which invoices are to be rendered and payments to be made.... (emphasis supplied).

The as-delivered weight of coal, as opposed to the dry weight, was used in determining the price paid Taft for unwashed coal (RT. 145). Taft paid its Black Lung Tax by eliminating, by mathematical calculation, all moisture in excess of 2.88%, which it estimated to be the inherent or bed moisture of the coal it mined (RT. 64). For purposes of the Federal excise tax, Taft originally reported gross tons of coal sold, without any adjustment for moisture. Only after, learning that the State of Alabama had decided to allow for severance tax purposes a “moisture adjustment” for all moisture in excess of 2.88 percent, did Taft attempt to claim an equivalent adjustment for federal tax purposes. (Transcript, 91). Agent Clemmons added back the 2.88% which Taft eliminated and recalculated the tax due (RT. 66). This adjustment resulted in the addition of 3,557.83 tons to the tons of coal previously reported by Taft and in the imposition of an additional tax due of $889.46 (P.Ex. 21).

The total tax adjustment resulting from Agent Clemmons’ changes was $1,220.89 (RT. 310). The difference between the Excise Tax Examination changes and the $1,400.80 additional excise tax levied against Taft is a result of the addition of interest.

Both the washed and unwashed coal in question was mined in the Warrior Basin coal field from the Pratt, America, Nickel Plate and Cob seams. Harry Raykes, Principal Mining Engineer for Southern Company Services, testifying as an expert witness, testified that these seams have been mined since the beginning of mining in Alabama (RT. 263). The seams cover an extensive area and have reasonably consistent bed moisture (RT. 264). 2 Based on Mr. Raykes’ experience in the Warrior Basin coal field, it was Mr. Raykes’ testimony that bed moisture in the seams in question would vary from 1.75% to 2.75% with an average moisture of 2.25% (RT. 249, 264-265). Mr. Raykes also testified that he performed a study for Alabama Power Company of the reserves later mined by Taft (RT. 265). Based on this study, it was Mr. Raykes’ opinion that the coal mined by Taft and involved in the audit in question had an average bed or inherent moisture of 2.25% (RT. 265).

*369 Jack Davis of Tuscaloosa Testing testified that he analyzed core samples from the Taft mine in question for total moisture (RT. 195). Mr. Davis utilized test procedures prescribed by ASTM, which is a reasonable standard accepted in the coal industry (RT. 192-193, 279). The analysis of 123 samples resulted in an average total moisture of 2.30% (RT. 199; P.Ex. 20).

The samples taken by Mr. Davis were obtained from the same seams from which the coal in question was mined. However, the samples were taken from different sections of the mine, since the coal in question had already been mined and sold at the time the samples were taken (RT. 175, 181— 185). Harry Raykes testified that the prior mining would not affect the average bed moisture of the unmined coal remaining in the area (RT. 272). Likewise, Mr. Raykes testified that the analysis on the remaining coal seams, performed by Jack Davis and Tuscaloosa Testing, would yield a reliable measure of the bed or inherent moisture of the coal involved in this case (RT. 271-272).

Coal lying in an undisturbed state contains inherent or bed moisture (P.Ex. 4, para. 2). The testimony of expert witnesses Raykes and Davis was to the effect that the Pratt, America, Nickel Plate, and Cobb seams are consistent in general with regard to bed moisture and could be expected to have an average bed moisture of 2.25% (RT. 200, 264).

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Bluebook (online)
605 F. Supp. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aj-taft-coal-co-v-united-states-alnd-1984.