Albemarle Paper Mfg. Co. v. Renegotiation Board

35 T.C. 438, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 7
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1960
DocketDocket No. 946-R
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 T.C. 438 (Albemarle Paper Mfg. Co. v. Renegotiation Board) 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
Albemarle Paper Mfg. Co. v. Renegotiation Board, 35 T.C. 438, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 7 (tax 1960).

Opinion

Aeundell, Judge:

Petitioner contests a determination of excessive profits in the amount of $68,396 from contracts and subcontracts subject to the Renegotiation Act of 1951 for its fiscal year ended March 30, 1952, as set forth by the respondent in its notice of order after review, dated August 15,1956, and the order after review of the same date.

The parties have stipulated that:

The issue in this proceeding is limited to the question of whether Albemarle is entitled to a cost allowance under Section 106(b) of the Renegotiation Act of 1951 (herein referred to as the Act) measured by the market value of the wood-pulp (in mat form) used in the manufacture of the paper and paper products sold under contracts subject to renegotiation. If Albemarle is entitled to such cost allowance, respondent agrees that there are no excessive profits. If it is not entitled to such cost allowance, petitioner agrees that the amount of the excessive profits is $81,000 before the allowance for State income taxes and $73,352 after State income taxes, in both instances before the credit for federal income and excess profits taxes.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The stipulated facts are so found and are incorporated herein by this reference.

Albemarle Paper Manufacturing Company (herein referred to as Albemarle) is a Virginia corporation organized in 1887 with its principal office and place of business located in Richmond, Virginia. Albemarle owns all the outstanding capital stock of Halifax Paper Company, Inc. (herein referred to as Halifax), a Virginia corporation with its principal operating plant located in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Albemarle also owns all the outstanding capital stock of Seaboard Manufacturing Company (herein referred to as Seaboard), a Virginia corporation with its principal office and place of business located in Richmond. All such corporations are on a fiscal year accounting period ending on the last day of the' week closest to March 31. For the fiscal year ended March 30, 1952, renegotiation proceedings under the Renegotiation Act of 1951 were conducted on a consolidated basis, including Albemarle, Halifax, and Seaboard. The consolidated group will be referred to herein as petitioner.

Petitioner is engaged in the manufacture of pulp, kraft paper, and miscellaneous paper products. The paper is manufactured from woodpulp, which is impure cellulose composed of the vegetable fibers in the wood. ⅜

Woodpulp is manufactured principally from pine trees. Petitioner owns or controls by lease timberlands on which pine trees native to the area are cultivated and harvested for use at the Halifax pulpmill in Roanoke Rapids. In 1952 petitioner owned or controlled by lease approximately 120,000 acres of timberland.

With respect to petitioner, the pulp process starts with the pine seed. These seed are distributed and planted by nature in the majority of cases and grow without cultivation into pine trees. The present industry trend is to plant the pine seed and grow seedlings in a nursery. These seedlings are then transplanted on timberlands owned or controlled by petitioner or distributed to farmers within the wood procurement area of petitioner. The growing of pine trees as a crop provides a source of cellulose fiber or pulp within the general wood procurement area of petitioner.

After a growing period of 15 to 20 years, the trees are ready for their first harvest in the form of a pulpwood thinning cut. The trees are felled, cut into 5-foot lengths, and shipped to the pulpmill of Halifax for processing. Pulpwood cut into 5-foot lengths has an established market for use in the manufacture of pulp. Pulpwood is usually referred to simply as “pulpwood” or sometimes as “bolts” but not customarily as “logs”; logs contemplate in usual parlance in the timber industry lengths in excess of 5 feet, primarily for use in the sawtimber industry. The ownership of land and tree farming by petitioner is primarily to insure an available supply of cellulose fiber usable by the pulp and papermills when pulpwood from outside sources is in short supply. In order to conserve its own supply of pulpwood, only about 20 per cent of the pulpwood requirements of petitioner was filled from petitioner’s lands in 1952. The remaining pulpwood used by petitioner in that year was purchased from others.

Woodpulp is essentially cellulose, derived from coniferous wood, that has been chemically and physically separated out by a digestion and screening treatment to a commercial, salable state. The digestion process is the treatment of wood, in the form of chips, in a pressure vessel called a digester, under controlled conditions of temperature, pressure, and time, with the addition of a liquor composed mainly of an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide and sodium sulphide. The purpose of the digestion is to dissolve the interfiber bonding materials or the noncellulosic portion of the wood, leaving the cellulose as a fibrous residue. The pulp is then washed essentially free of spent liquor in countercurrent washers and further purified by means of special centrifugal screens that remove extraneous impurities of incompletely digested chips, bark, and dirt.

The resulting pulp stock, in a then semiliquid, slush state, can be pumped to paper machines or can be dewatered and collected in mats of about 48 inches by 24 inches and about one-half inch thick, consisting of a mass of cellulose fiber containing about 50 per cent water. In this form the pulp is customarily put on pallets and banded for shipment. The pulp in this matted form has an established market for use in the manufacture of paper, and petitioner from time to time purchases large quantities of pulp on the open market, including some quantities in 1952. Also, Halifax sold to unaffiliated purchasers 12,903 tons of pulp from the total of 85,271 tons which it produced in 1952.

Albemarle has no equipment in Richmond for extracting pulp from pulpwood and all its paper manufactured in Richmond is made from pulp mats shipped from the plant in Halifax or purchased on the open market.

Pulp, once dewatered, is subsequently put back into slush form by processing it through breaker beaters with the addition of water. After being put into slush form, pulp can be blended with various ingredients, and then the pulp flows onto the wire of the paper machines for subsequent dewatering, drying, calendering, and winding into rolls of finished kraft paper.

The pulpwood used in paper manufacture is cut from trees ranging in diameter from about 4 inches upwards to trees sometimes over 20 inches in diameter but ordinarily, as an economic matter, trees over 12 to 14 inches are usually sold to a sawmill rather than a paper manufacturer. Saw logs, or lumber, are generally cut from trees with diameters of 8 inches and upwards.

Of the total amount of southern pine cut in 1952 from the entire south, about 52 per cent went into saw logs, or lumber, 31 per cent into pulpwood, 11 per cent into fuelwood, 3 per cent into poles and piling, and the remaining 3 per cent into a large number of minor products.

In the year under review, about 64 per cent of the timber cut from southern pine in North Carolina, in which petitioners pulp plant was located, went into saw logs, about 18 per cent went into pulpwood, and about 18 per cent into other minor products.

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Albemarle Paper Mfg. Co. v. Renegotiation Board
35 T.C. 438 (U.S. Tax Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 T.C. 438, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albemarle-paper-mfg-co-v-renegotiation-board-tax-1960.