Brouwer v. Commissioner
This text of 10 T.C.M. 109 (Brouwer 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Opinion
JOHNSON, Judge: In these proceedings, consolidated for hearing and opinion, respondent determined deficiencies in each petitioner's income tax for the calendar year 1946 as follows:
| Docket $6,no. | Petitioner | Deficiency |
| 27345 | Arie Brouwer | $1,592.55 |
| 28428 | Ernest Ostermeier | 731.40 |
| 28429 | Gearhart Graves | 216.45 |
| 28430 | C. E. Gilliland | 91.00 |
| 28431 | Chris Nettinga | 71.94 |
| 28432 | Albert Grootwassink | 205.15 |
| 28433 | William Sluis | 251.68 |
| 28587 | Ellis Hoyme and Clara Hoyme. | 260.00 |
The sole issue in dispute is whether the gains realized by each petitioner from the sales of certain farm animals which were culled from either their dairy herds or hogbreeding herds, or both, were taxable under
[The Facts]
All of the facts in each proceeding were stipulated and submitted upon a separate stipulation of the parties, and are hereby found accordingly, and made a part hereof.
Petitioners are individuals engaged in farming, all of whom reside in Pipestone County, Minnesota, except in 28587, Ellis Hoyme and Clara Hoyme, and 28429, Gearhart Graves, are residents of Sherman, South Dakota, and each petitioner filed and income tax return for the calendar year 1946 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Minnesota at St. Paul, Minnesota.
There was no business connection between the petitioners, and the proceedings were consolidated because the material facts in each were substantially the same, and the issue involved was identically the same, and the issue involved was identically the same, with this exception, viz: in seven of the docket numbers the petitioner was "on the cash receipts and disbursements basis" of*337 accounting, while in Docket No. 28432, Albert Grootwassink, the petitioner was "on an inventory basis of accounting".
The animals sold by petitioners were from either their dairy or hog-breeding herds, and had been held by them primarily for dairy or breeding purposes for more than six months.
[Opinion]
The material facts in each proceeding here are the same as those in
Our holding in the Isaac Emerson case, supra, was based upon
Respondent cites Birkbeck v. Thomas and Finch v. Arnold, both United States District Court cases in the Northern District of Texas, in support of his contention, but since respondent's brief was filed, these cases on appeal were consolidated by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit with the John M. Bennett case, supra, and they were both reversed by that Court, while the Bennett case, wherein the lower court had held for the taxpayer, was affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
10 T.C.M. 109, 1951 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brouwer-v-commissioner-tax-1951.