Aluminum Products Co. v. United States

101 F. Supp. 373, 121 Ct. Cl. 187, 41 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 538, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 15
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 4, 1951
DocketNo. 49499
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 F. Supp. 373 (Aluminum Products Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aluminum Products Co. v. United States, 101 F. Supp. 373, 121 Ct. Cl. 187, 41 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 538, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 15 (cc 1951).

Opinion

Madden, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff sues to recover $34,677.14 of excess profits taxes paid by it for the calendar year 1944. Those taxes were properly collected in 1944 but the plaintiff claims that it was entitled to have them refunded when, in 1946, it had an unused excess profits credit which, it says, it was entitled, under the statutes, to carry back to 1944. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue denied the plaintiff’s claim for refund, and the plaintiff brought this suit.

During 1944, and for many years before that, the plaintiff' was an operating manufacturing company, making a variety. of aluminum and stainless steel products at its plants in [196]*196LaGrange and Lemont, Illinois. After negotiations begun in 1944 the plaintiff, in December 1945, sold its manufacturing business to the Eeynolds Metals Company, and agreed not to enter into any business competitive with that of the Eeynolds Company for 20 years. The plaintiff’s plan was to keep the funds which it received from Eeynolds available for investment in new business ventures, if desirable ones became available.

In 1946 the plaintiff’s only activity was the management of certain apartment houses owned by it. Its income was derived principally from interest, rents, and dividends. Since 94.48 percent of its common stock was owned by one person, it was a personal holding company, within the meaning of Section 501 of the Internal Eevenue Code which defines a personal holding company, and its income was personal holding company income as defined in Section 502. It filed its income tax return for 1946 on that basis and does not now contest that classification. The plaintiff contends that, although it was a personal holding company in 1946, and personal holding companies, because of the provisions of Section 727 of the Internal Eevenue Code, never were subject to the excess profits tax imposed by the Eevenue Act of 1940, Section 710 of the Internal Eevenue Code, and in effect during World War II, it was nevertheless entitled to carry back an excess profits tax credit, unused in 1946, to cancel out the excess profits tax which it had paid for 1944 when it was an operating company. The Government denies this contention, saying, in effect, that a corporation which has no excess profits tax to pay, and would have none, regardless of its profits, because it is not subject to the tax, cannot have an excess profits tax credit, for carry-back purposes or any purpose. The plaintiff counters this argument by pointing out that no corporation had any excess profits tax to pay for the year 1946 because the excess profits tax law had been repealed, for any taxable year beginning after December 31, 1945, by Section 122 of the Internal Eevenue Code, introduced by Chapter 453 of the Eevenue Act of 1945. However, Section 122 (c) had preserved the right of corporations to compute their income for 1946 as if the excess profits tax law were still in effect, and' if the computation showed a credit, to carry [197]*197that credit back to 1945 or 1944 and obtain refunds of taxes paid for those years.

The purpose of the excess profits tax law was, of course, to absorb by taxation most of any abnormal profits which the stimulation of business by the war might bring to corporations. Excess profits were those in excess of the average profits of certain prewar years, and in excess of a specified return on invested capital. But, in order to prevent the undue hardship which might result from taking by taxation practically all abnormal profits while maintenance and upkeep expenses were having to be deferred be’cause of shortages and wartime restrictions, leaving plants run down and no reserves to restore them, Congress in 1942 enacted Section 710 (c) (3) (A) of the Internal Bevenue Code providing for the carry-back of any unused excess profits tax credit to cancel out excess profits taxes incurred for the two preceding years. This meant, as we understand it, that if a corporation having had excess profits in a given year, in a later year had less than normal profits, measured by the prewar standard formula, it could carry this deficiency in profits back to balance its excess profits for one or both of the two preceding years. When, in 1945, Congress repealed the excess profits tax law, it thought that it was fair to continue, for the year 1946, the averaging out process embodied in the carry-back provision, so it left that provision in effect for the year 1946.

Looking at the purpose of the carry-back provision, it would seem that the plaintiff should not have the benefit of it. The reason that the plaintiff’s profits fell off in 1946 was, not that it had excessive charges for deferred maintenance, or that business was bad, but because it went out of its profitable business and put its money in the bank. The Tax Court, in two interesting decisions, sought to give effect to what it found to be the purpose of the law. In Wier Long Leaf Lumber Company v. Commissioner, 9 T. C. 990, 999, it denied excess profits carry-back to a corporation that was in liquidation. In Mesaba Cliffs Mining Company v. Commissioner, 10 T. C. 1010, it denied the comparable carry-forward privilege to a corporation which voluntarily changed its practice from that of selling to its stockholders at cost, and thus having no profits, to charging them a price which gave it an excess [198]*198profit, in order to get tlie advantage of another provision of the excess profits tax-law. But both these decisions were reversed on appeal, the Wier case by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, 173 F. (2d) 549, and the Mesaba, Cliffs case by the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, 174 F. (2d) 857. In both cases the courts held that the statute was so plain and unambiguous in giving the privilege claimed to the “taxpayer” and the “corporation,” that it was not permissible to go behind the words of the statute and restrict its meaning to some narrower purpose than its words expressed.

The plaintiff’s contention does not seem logical. How a corporation which was, in 1946, not even of the kind that would have had an excess profits tax to pay if it had made an excess profit, and if the excess profits tax had still been in effect, could somehow develop an unused excess profits tax credit, is hard to understand. The saving provision in the 1945 repeal of the excess profits tax statute, allowing.corporations to compute their excess profits tax status, not for the purpose of paying a tax, but for the purpose of obtaining a refund of taxes formerly paid, involved one hypothetical computation. But the plaintiff’s claim requires the imposition of one hypothesis upon another. If, however, the statutes give the plaintiff the privilege it claims, the lack of logic need not defeat its claim.

The plaintiff claims that it is covered by the language of the statutes relating to excess profits credits. It points to Sections 712, 713, and 714 of the Internal Revenue Code. Section 712 says, in part :

In the case of a domestic corporation which was in existence before January 1,1940, the excess profits credit for any taxable year shall be an amount computed under section 713 or section 714 * * *.

Sections 713 and 714 contain nothing more helpful. We think that the mere fact that in a statute relating to excess profits credits there is a reference to domestic corporations, does not show a statutory intention to allow every domestic corporation, whatever its nature and taxable status, to have an excess profits credit.

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101 F. Supp. 373, 121 Ct. Cl. 187, 41 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 538, 1951 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aluminum-products-co-v-united-states-cc-1951.