Certified Grocers of California, Ltd. v. Commissioner

88 T.C. No. 15, 88 T.C. 238, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 15
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1987
DocketDocket No. 22517-83
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 88 T.C. No. 15 (Certified Grocers of California, Ltd. 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
Certified Grocers of California, Ltd. v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. No. 15, 88 T.C. 238, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 15 (tax 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

KÓRNER, Judge:2

Respondent determined deficiencies in Federal income taxes for petitioner and certain consolidated subsidiaries for the 1979, 1980, and 1981 taxable years3 as follows:

Taxable year Deficiency
1979 . $2,042,782
1980 . 1,005,038
1981 . 2,825,142

After concessions, the issues for decision are: (1) Whether interest income earned by petitioner from its surplus cash constituted “patronage-sourced” income within the meaning of subchapter T, to any extent;4 (2) if not, whether petitioner can offset the nonpatronage-sourced interest income with a portion of its patronage-sourced interest expense, in the computation of its income from patronage and nonpatronage sources; and (3) for the year 1980, whether petitioner is entitled to offset the income of its noncooperative subsidiaries with its claimed net operating loss on its consolidated Federal Income Tax Return.

This case was submitted for decision on fully stipulated facts pursuant to Rule 122.5 The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.

Certified Grocers of California, Ltd. (hereinafter petitioner), is a California corporation organized in 1925.6 Petitioner’s principal office was located in Los Angeles, California, when it filed its petition herein.

Petitioner is a nonexempt cooperative within the meaning of section 1381(a)(2). Its patrons operate retail grocery stores and supermarkets, principally in southern California. Petitioner’s function is to purchase food and related nonfood items in large volume to enable its patrons to receive the benefit of price discounts and favorable terms available to volume purchasers.7 Petitioner warehouses the goods until it sells and delivers them to its patrons who then sell them at their retail establishments. Petitioner also manufactures bakery and dairy products that it sells to its patrons. Petitioner, as a cooperative, operates at cost and renders services to its patrons at as low a cost as possible.

Petitioner is an accrual basis taxpayer. It filed consolidated Federal income tax returns (Forms 1120) with some or all of the following subsidiaries for the taxable years at issue, in which the following amounts of taxable income were reported:

Taxable year
Entity 1979 1980 1981
Certified Grocers of California, Ltd. $7,200 ($172,759) $1,467,042
Grocers Equipment Co. 159,168 874,393 133,302
Grocers & Merchants Insurance Service, Inc. 200,224 403,860 312,410
Grocers Capital Co. 66,744 74,931 189,409
Spartan Grocers, Inc. 21,762
Grocers Specialty Co. --- (617,999)
Toted consolidated income reported 455,098 1,180,425 1,484,164

Petitioner’s reported $172,759 loss for 1980 resulted from the issuance of patronage dividends based on book income that exceeded taxable income by that amount.8

None of petitioner’s subsidiaries was a cooperative within the meaning of section 1381, and none was a patron of petitioner. The income earned by the subsidiaries was not income from patronage and could not have been the basis for the issuance or the deduction of patronage dividends pursuant to sections 1382(b) and 1388, either by petitioner or by any of the subsidiaries.

Petitioner needed cash to fund its operations and finance its inventory.9 During the years at issue, petitioner obtained cash principally from deposits required from patrons, excess patron deposits, and borrowings from banks.10

During the years at issue, petitioner incurred and deducted the following interest expenses:

Taxable year
Interest on: 1979 1980 1981
Patron’s deposits $1,268,393 $1,632,755 $1,968,358
Commercial borrowing 570,293 1,637,946 3,831,247
Adjustment for rounding _(3) _(1) _(1)
Total interest 1,838,683 3,270,700 5,799,604

All of petitioner’s interest expense for the years at issue was patronage-sourced, as it was directly related to its principal function as a cooperative: purchasing, warehousing, and distributing food and food-related products.

During the years at issue, petitioner occasionally had cash on hand it did not immediately need to use in its business. Petitioner used such excess cash to purchase short-term instruments such as bankers’ acceptances, certificates of deposit, and repurchase agreements.11 Petitioner obtained the instruments from commercial banks that were not its patrons, and earned the following amounts of interest on the various instruments:

Taxable year
Instrument 1979 1980 1981
Bankers’ acceptances $330,410 $69,764
Certificates of deposit 133,530 293,743
Repurchase agreements 292,891 1,057,407 $362,528
Total interest from bank instruments 756,831 1,420,914 362,528

Petitioner reported the interest that it earned from its bank instruments as patronage income on its consolidated Federal Corporation income tax returns for the years at issue, with one exception. The $1,420,914 of interest from bank instruments earned during taxable year 1980 included $186,454 allocable to funds borrowed to finance construction of a mechanized warehouse for use in petitioner’s food and food-related purchasing and distribution business, and temporarily reinvested until needed. In reporting its gross income from interest for 1980, petitioner reduced the amount reported by $186,454, but restored it to the full amount of $1,420,914 in computing the allowable amount of patronage dividend for which it claimed a deduction.

Although petitioner chose to use its excess cash to purchase bank instruments in an effort to manage its money efficiently, it was not required to do so in order to obtain loans from banks.

Petitioner deducted patronage dividends of $23,462,693, $29,017,057, and $27,637,752 for its taxable years 1979, 1980, and 1981, respectively, in arriving at its taxable income for those years.

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Certified Grocers of California, Ltd. v. Commissioner
88 T.C. No. 15 (U.S. Tax Court, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
88 T.C. No. 15, 88 T.C. 238, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/certified-grocers-of-california-ltd-v-commissioner-tax-1987.