Bing Crosby Productions, Inc. v. United States

588 F.2d 1293
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 1979
DocketNos. 76-1570, 76-2202 and 77-3054
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 588 F.2d 1293 (Bing Crosby Productions, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bing Crosby Productions, Inc. v. United States, 588 F.2d 1293 (9th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

J. BLAINE ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:

I. PROCEEDINGS BELOW

The companies involved in these appeals, Bing Crosby Productions (Bing Crosby or BCP), Sussex Pictures (Sussex), and MCA and Universal City Studios (MCA), brought refund suits in district court for their income taxes paid in the 1960’s. Jurisdiction of the district court was based on 28 U.S.C. § 1340. Summary judgment was granted in all three cases in favor of the taxpayers. They were found to be entitled to an investment credit pursuant to 26 U.S.C. §§ 38, 46-50 for various production costs incurred in the production of films for television and movie theaters. The government made timely appeals, and the jurisdiction of this court is based on 28 U.S.C. § 1291. All three cases present similar issues.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. OVERVIEW OF MOTION PICTURE AND TELEVISION INDUSTRY.

The different companies in the motion picture and television industry use a similar process in the production of the film which is ultimately shown at movie theaters, by the networks, or by individual television stations. However, some companies utilize a slightly distinguishable process in the storage and retention of the printing articles which are used in the manufacture of the exhibit prints which are then shown to the public. In the present cases, MCA uses a different technique than Bing Crosby or Sussex. On appeal, the government is attempting to make this distinction the determinative issue in answering the question as to whether motion picture and film companies are entitled to the investment credit. An explanation of the manufacturing process will clarify the issues presented by these appeals.

The manufacturing of the prints which are actually shown to the public should be viewed in a vertical framework. For explanation purposes, a three-step analysis best serves to illustrate this:

Step (1): When a program or movie is shot, the video and audio portions are each recorded and then edited separately. The sound portion consists of three parts (dialogue, music, and sound effects) which are combined and edited into a finished version referred to as the master sound tape or magnetic master. The visual portion is edited into a cut picture negative which is also referred to as the original picture negative. These final edited versions of the audio and visual portions are called the master negatives or simply the negative elements.

Step (2): From the respective master negatives, various intermediate or secondary film and tape articles are made. These consist of 16 and 35mm negatives of the video portion (duplicate picture negatives or duplicate action negatives). The sound portion is recorded on 16 and 35mm tapes (optical sound track negatives). Although they actually go a step further by combining the sound and picture, answer prints and protective masters are included within this category. Also included are various duplicate sound tapes which are made and retained by the production companies. The distinguishing feature of this category is that the films and tapes contained within it [1295]*1295are generally the ones which are either used by the company to manufacture the release prints in step # 3, or are items which are made from the master negatives and retained by the company to make other intermediate printing articles.

Step (3): The final step involves the actual manufacture of the release prints (exhibit or composite release prints). These combine the audio and visual portions onto a single property, which are then shown at movie theaters, by television networks, or by individual television stations. The release prints are generally struck from the different intermediate articles contained within step # 2.

The release prints in step # 3 generally have a short useful life which would preclude them from qualifying for the investment credit. They are shown several times and then retired. The intermediate prints in step # 2, on the other hand, may have'a useful life which satisfies the statutory requirement; although some companies use them so extensively for the manufacture of the exhibit prints that they are also retired short of the statutory period (both Walt Disney and MCA appear to do this). It should also be pointed out that some companies do not retain the master negatives in step # 1, since they instead rely on their negatives in step # 2 for the manufacture of all subsequent release prints. Because of these differing techniques, the different companies involved in these appeals claim that the investment credit should be applied to different printing articles retained by each. The chief distinction lies in the fact that MCA claims the credit for its printing articles in step # 1, and Bing Crosby and Sussex claim the credit should be allowed for various articles in step # 2.

B. BING CROSBY PRODUCTIONS, INC. v. UNITED STATES, No. 76-1570.

Bing Crosby brought this action for refund of federal income taxes for fiscal years 1962 through 1967. Bing Crosby claimed entitlement to investment tax credits in respect to the costs incurred in producing five television programs (Ben Casey, Breaking Point, The Bing Crosby Show, Hogan’s Heroes, and Slattery’s People). All five of the programs were broadcast on domestic networks and syndicated abroad. BCP claims the investment credit for the costs resulting from the production of six printing articles which it retains for each of the programs:

1. the original 35mm picture negative;
2. one 16mm duplicate picture negative;
3. the protective master;
4. one 16mm sound negative;
5. one 35mm sound negative; and
6. a magnetic sound tape.

The original 35mm picture negative (No. 1 above) is an article from the first step of the production process as previously explained. The other five articles are all considered secondary printing articles from the second step of the production process.

C. SUSSEX PICTURES, INC. v. UNITED STATES, No. 76-2202.

Sussex brought this action for refund of federal income taxes for fiscal years 1963 through 1970. Sussex claimed entitlement to an investment credit for the costs incurred in the production of several episodes of the “Rifleman,” a television series. Sussex claims the investment credit for the costs resulting from the production of five printing articles which it retains from each episode:

(1) the 35mm cut picture negative (the original edited negative containing only a picture);
(2) the 35mm protective master (a positive print containing both picture and sound);
(3) the 16mm reduction duplicate negative (a duplicate negative, containing only a picture);
(4) the 35mm optical sound negative (a negative containing only sound); and
(5) the 16mm optical sound negative (a negative containing only sound).

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588 F.2d 1293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bing-crosby-productions-inc-v-united-states-ca9-1979.