Anaheim Union Water Co. v. Commissioner

35 T.C. 1072, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 195
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1961
DocketDocket Nos. 72128, 72129
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 35 T.C. 1072 (Anaheim Union Water Co. 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
Anaheim Union Water Co. v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. 1072, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 195 (tax 1961).

Opinions

OPINION.

Raum, Judge:

1. Although Anaheim was at one time an exempt corporation, it had ceased to be such for a number of years because of the substantial income which it had been receiving from oil royalties and other sources.1 There is no dispute between the parties that Anaheim is a taxable corporation, and this case must be decided upon that assumption. The Commissioner determined that Anaheim’s water costs or expenses incurred in the distribution of water to its shareholders were not deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses to the extent that they exceeded the revenue received by it from the sale of such water.

It is plain from the record before us that the directors deliberately fixed the water rates at such level that when the amounts paid by the shareholders for the water are added to the corporation’s income from oil and other sources the sum will be such that after subtracting the cost of supplying the water no net taxable income remains. In substance the corporation distributed its oil royalties and other income to its shareholders through the medium of charging them less than cost for water. Although the question for decision has been variously stated by the parties from time to time — and subtle differences may perhaps be thought to turn upon the form of the statement — we think that the real issue before us is whether the water costs or expenses incurred by Anaheim are ordinary and necessary expenses on this record to the extent that they exceeded the amounts which Anaheim obtained for such water from its shareholders. We hold that to the extent of such excess they do not qualify as “ordinary and necessary” expenses.

The question is not whether such expenses might be “ordinary and necessary” in other situations. The question rather is whether such expenditures in this case, known in advance to be in excess of what the corporation would obtain for the water sold to its shareholders, can fairly be classified as “ordinary and necessary.” We think that they are neither “ordinary” nor “necessary.” Indeed, it appears to ns to be “in a high degree extraordinary,” cf. Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111, 114, for a corporation to incur business expenses in connection with goods or services in an amount greatly in excess of what it knows it will obtain for such goods or services. To be sure, exceptional circumstances may exist in other situations that would justify the deduction where expenses exceed anticipated income. For example, extraordinarily large outlays may be made by a business when introducing a new product where the reasonable expectation exists that sales in later years will more than compensate for losses in the early years. But no such exceptional circumstances exist here. In essence, the entire setup is merely a device to distribute the oil and other unrelated income to the shareholders. Although Anaheim was clearly not incorporated for that purpose in 1884, the fact nevertheless remains that it has been used for that purpose in recent years.2 Cf. United States v. Joliet da Chicago Railroad Co., 315 U.S. 44, where the controlling indenture was executed in 1864. And we are of the opinion that the water expenses incurred herein in excess of the amounts which the directors reasonably expected to obtain for the water were not “ordinary and necessary” expenses, but were merely part of a plan to distribute otherwise taxable income to the shareholders.

We have not been directed to any decisions squarely in point. However, there are cases which, although perhaps distinguishable, nevertheless point the way to the proper disposition of this controversy. In International Trading Co. v. Commissioner, 275 F. 2d 578 (C.A. 7), affirming a Memorandum Opinion of this Court, a corporation was not allowed to deduct expenses in excess of rent received on certain lakeside property leased to its principal shareholders. It was held that the difference between expenses incurred and rents received was not an ordinary and necessary expense of the corporation, since (p. 585) “the property was purchased and improved with the knowledge that it would not earn a profit, and was not expected to earn a profit, but was maintained primarily for the personal benefit of the families of the corporation’s stockholders, without a corresponding benefit to tbe corporation * * Deduction for that portion of the expenses which did not exceed the rent was not contested.

Our own decision in Pomeroy Cooperative Grain Co., 31 T.C. 674, is also instructive. There a nonexempt cooperative carried on business with nonmembers as well as members. It was allowed to exclude from its gross income the amount of patronage dividends paid to its members that was based upon receipts from such members; but it was not permitted to eliminate from its gross income a similar amount equal to that portion of patronage dividends paid to its members that was based upon receipts obtained from nonmembers. In short, income obtained from nonmembers that was otherwise taxable could not in effect be distributed to the members through the medium of patronage dividends so as to render it tax free. Anaheim’s operations are similar in many respects to those of a cooperative and the question presented in Pomeroy of properly reflecting the taxable income obtained from transactions with nonmembers (though raised in the context of an income rather than expense problem) is not unlike the issue of properly reflecting Anaheim’s non-shareholder income from oil royalties and other sources. We think it no more appropriate to bury such income for tax purposes in Anaheim’s designedly insufficient water rates than in Pomeroy's so-called patronage dividends. Just as the Court in Pomeroy refused to treat the contested distributions as true patronage dividends, we similarly refuse to be misled by form in this case; for what might in other circumstances be an “ordinary and necessary” expense is here merely a device for distributing unrelated taxable income and is in fact not an “ordinary and necessary” expense on the record before us.

Glendirming, McLeish & Co., 24 B.T.A. 518, affirmed 61 F. 2d 950 (C.A. 2), and Horace E. Podems, 24 T.C. 21,. are also helpful in arriving at the correct answer in the present case. They dealt with the question whether deductions for “ordinary and necessary” expenses are allowable where the taxpayer might have obtained but in fact took no steps to receive reimbursement for the expenditures in issue. Anaheim’s purposeful arrangement of not seeking full reimbursement of its water costs from its shareholders makes the denial of deductions in those cases especially significant. Since Anaheim’s amended articles of incorporation provided that water was to be supplied to the shareholders “at cost,” it appears that there was ample authority for the directors to fix the rates so that the company would be fully reimbursed for its water expenses without regard to other income. Moreover, even if it be assumed that the directors had no such power by reason of changes in bylaws or otherwise, such lack of power would merely be a consequence of arrangements voluntarily accepted by Anaheim and would therefore be irrelevant here.

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Anaheim Union Water Co. v. Commissioner
35 T.C. 1072 (U.S. Tax Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
35 T.C. 1072, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anaheim-union-water-co-v-commissioner-tax-1961.