Ashland Iron & Mining Co. v. United States

56 F.2d 466, 74 Ct. Cl. 172
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 7, 1932
DocketNo. J-391
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 F.2d 466 (Ashland Iron & Mining 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
Ashland Iron & Mining Co. v. United States, 56 F.2d 466, 74 Ct. Cl. 172 (cc 1932).

Opinion

GREEN, Judge.

The Ashland Iron & Mining Company, now in the hands of John Russell, liquidating agent and trustee, is a corporation that during the year 1918 was engaged in manufacturing war facilities by means of an open hearth steel mill and accessories. It also had begun the construction of a plate and bar mill to be used for the production of war facilities in connection therewith. The corporation filed its income tax return for its fiscal year of 1918 ending June 30 of that year, and in this return and an amendment thereto claimed a certain amount of deductions and amortizations upon the two plans above referred to. Its returns showed a tax of $426,115.90, which was paid September 13, 1918. Afterwards the commissioner assessed an additional tax of $245,722.90 with a penalty of $61,430.73. The penalty was subsequently abated, but the additional tax was paid by the company in May, 1919. Thereafter, the plaintiff duly filed a claim for refund for $675,098.29, which amount includes income taxes of $3,259.49 paid by a subsidiary of the plaintiff. The grounds of the claim were stated to be “ * * * certain adjustments to income including Depreciation, Loss on Bar and Plate Mills, Inventory Adjustment, Donation to King’s Daughters Hospital, Amortization, Open Hearth Reserves and Sheet Mill Plant Adjustment. Also adjustment of invested capital based on reorganization in 1902.”

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue on July. 28, 1927, allowed $233,424.19 of the claim but rejected the balance. Plaintiff now brings this suit, alleging that the action of the Commissioner was erroneous, and that it is entitled to recover $384,906.91.

The plaintiff makes two contentions: First, that the Commissioner failed to allow as a deduction from net taxable income a loss of $970,702.61 sustained by the taxpayer in its fiscal year of 1918 by reason of the abandonment of its uncompleted project to construct a new bar and plate mill and equip it; second, that the Commissioner failed to allow as a deduction from net taxable income for said year a reasonable allowance for the amortization of the war facilities, consisting of an open hearth plant erected and installed [471]*471after April 6, 1917, for the production of articles contributing to the prosecution of the war against Germany, and plaintiff claims that the evidence establishes that this allowance should not have been less than $615,471.

Plaintiff alleges that the action of the Commissioner on these two items resulted in an overassessment of tax in the amount of $440,049.19.

The issue in the ease is as to whether this action of the Commissioner was correct. More specifically it should be said that the issue in relation to the deduction on account of the suspended construction of the plate and bar mill arises out of the fact that the commissioner allowed only one-half of the deduction for the fiscal year of 1918 and carried the remainder over into the following year in which plaintiff sustained a net loss and therefore got no benefit from the deduction. The defendant contends that this action of the Commissioner was proper in view of the facts and the law pertaining to the case.

With reference to the amortization on the open hearth plant, the contention of defendant in general is that there is no evidence in the case through or under which the amount of amortization provided by law can be ascertained, and therefore plaintiff’s claim must fail in this respect.

It will be seen that the parties to the action differ not so much as to the law as they do with reference to what is shown by the evidence. No exceptions were filed to the report of the Commissioner, who took the evidence in the case, but the defendant moves to strike out finding 32 of the Commissioner, reading: “This loss [the loss on the plate and bar mill] occurred within the taxable year beginning June 30, 1917, and ending June 30, 1918,” and also that pant of finding 31 to the effect that the abandonment of said mill and the ensuing loss were suffered “in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1918.” The grounds of the motion were that these findings involve a conclusion of law and are inconsistent with and contrary to the facts found by the Commissioner of this court.

The motion in this respect should be overruled. That a loss was thus sustained is conceded and the evidence shows plainly the amount thereof. This being the ease, the question of when the loss occurred is clearly a question of fact and not of law. No argument is presented to show that the findings under discussion are inconsistent with the other findings of the Commissioner, and in any event we do not find it necessary to determine this question as they are not inconsistent with the other findings made by the court.

The defendant also moves to strike finding 30 of the findings of the Commissioner to the effect that the contractors employed to construct the plate and bar mill acquiesced in its abandonment in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1918, and “thereafter no further steps were taken toward either the construction of the said bar and plate mills or the equipment thereof,” which is said to be a conclusion and inconsistent with the other facts as found. But we think it is an ultimate fact, and that the motion should be overruled.

The defendant also moves to strike finding 22 which states: “The plaintiff suffered a loss as shown by the sale of the said open hearth plant and facilities (war facilities) of $462,300.94, on December 31, 1921,” as a conclusion and not being supported by the evidence. This motion will be sustained on 'the ground that there is no evidence to support the finding. Our reasons for sustaining the motion will be more specifically stated hereinafter.

The first question to be determined is the proper place in plaintiff’s income tax for the loss sustained on the bar and plate mill, which is practically conceded to be $970,702.61. The Commissioner found that the mill was a war facility and that plaintiff was entitled to a deduction for the amount of this loss, but allowed it as amortization, one-half to the first six months of 1918, and the remainder to the last six months of that year. We see no good reason for this action, either on the facts or the law. The plaintiff was entitled to the deduction and it could take it either as a loss or as amortization, for in this particular ease the effect would be the same. In determining when the loss occurred, we find that the evidence shows that plaintiff commenced the construction of the bar and plate mill in 1916, that as the construction proceeded it became embarrassed for want of funds, and in the early part of 1918 it was unable to meet its obligations for work already done on the plant by contractors although only a portion of the work had been completed. It was also found that the design of the plant was not such that it could be profitably operated. Accordingly the project was abandoned, and the contractors notified to cease all operations thereon. The contractors acted in accordance with this notice and rendered bills to the plaintiff for. the work performed and for damages for cancellation of their contracts. It is true that after the expiration of the fiscal year of 1918, [472]*472the plaintiff’s officials had their hopes raised by some outside parties expressing themselves as favorable to extending a credit to install the plate mill, and an application was made to the War Finance Corporation to obtain a credit for that purpose, but these negotiations had no result. The loss of the company, in our opinion, dates from the time the project for the construction of the plate and bar mill was abandoned.

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Bluebook (online)
56 F.2d 466, 74 Ct. Cl. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-iron-mining-co-v-united-states-cc-1932.