Clement v. United States

580 F.2d 422, 217 Ct. Cl. 495, 42 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5434, 1978 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 197
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 14, 1978
DocketNo. 131-75
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 580 F.2d 422 (Clement 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
Clement v. United States, 580 F.2d 422, 217 Ct. Cl. 495, 42 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5434, 1978 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 197 (cc 1978).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is an income tax refund suit in which the issue is whether the taxpayers, limited partners in a cattle-feeding partnership, were entitled under the law as it stood in 1968 to deduct the cost of cattle feed bought in one year and consumed in the following year, as an ordinary and necessary business expense in the year of purchase. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue disallowed the $33,959 sought to be deducted, the taxpayers paid the deficiency and claimed a refund of $14,170, and this action followed the denial of the claim.

Trial Judge Schwartz, who held for the taxpayers, passed on three issues: (1) whether the prepayment for the feed in the purchase year was made for a business purpose and not for tax avoidance;1 (2) whether allowance of the deduction for the feed in the purchase year would result in a material distortion of income; and (3) whether, even if there would be such a material distortion of income, the taxpayers were nevertheless entitled as farmers to deduct the feed-prepayment in the purchase year. The trial judge held, first, that the prepayment was made for a business purpose; this determination is accepted by the defendant and not challenged before the court. The second holding in the Trial Division was that the prepayment would in fact result in a material distortion of income; this ruling is now accepted and not attacked by the taxpayers before the court. The only ruling of the trial judge which is disputed before us is that, despite the material distortion of income, taxpayers were nevertheless entitled as farmers to deduct the prepayment in the year of purchase.2 On that ultimate question we differ from the trial judge.

In Part One of this opinion, infra, we adopt and set forth those portions of the Trial Judge Schwartz’s opinion which [499]*499are accepted by both parties (see note 2, supra), i.e. the statement of the facts3 and of the issues, the decision on business purpose, and the determination that there would be material distortion of income if taxpayers were permitted to deduct the feed-prepayment in the purchase year.

In Part Two of the opinion, infra, we discuss the reasons why, in our view, the deduction is not allowable, given the now-unchallenged finding of material distortion of income.

part one

The Facts. The plaintiffs together constituted one of 10 limited partners in a California partnership known as Vanderbilt Group No. 2.4 The partnership was organized under an agreement filed on December 1, 1968, to engage in the business of buying, feeding and selling cattle. The taxpayers contributed $35,000 to the partnership’s initial capitalization of $321,000, entitling them to a 10.90342 percent share in the partnership profits and losses.

The partnership agreement provided that the single general partner should enter into a "Cattle Feeding Advisory and Services Agreement” with a Mr. R. C. Chapman, of Whittier, California, doing business as the Whittier Cattle Company. The agreement with Mr. Chapman, made in December 1968, vested him with management of the partnership’s operations. He was authorized to propose cattle and feed investment programs, buy and sell both feed and cattle, locate feedyards for cattle and arrange the feeding, keep the partnership’s accounts and manage its daily business.

Acting in his capacity as managing agent, Chapman on December 27, 1968 purchased $311,548 worth of cattle feed for the partnership in three lots:

1. 98,400 bushels of No. 2 yellow corn at $1.23 per bushel, a total of $121,032, bought from Cargill, Inc., Omaha, Nebraska, to be delivered to the Cargill warehouse at Omaha, Nebraska;
[500]*5002. 2,563 tons of milo at $1.82 per hundredweight or $36.40 per ton, a total of $93,298, bought from Western Beef Grain Co., Amarillo, Texas, to be delivered to the Alamo Feed Yard, Calpatria, California; and
3. 1,980 tons of milo at $49.10 per ton, a total of $97,218, bought from Cargill, at Omaha, Nebraska, to be delivered in California between January and March 1969.

The purchase price was paid and the check cleared before the end of the year. The grain purchased was in existence; the partnership obtained warehouse receipts for the entire amount. The purchase of grain was the partnership’s only business transaction in 1968.

The partnership filed an information return for 1968, reporting a gross profit of zero, a deduction of $311,548 on account of the purchase of grain and thus a net loss of $311,548. The plaintiffs’ 10.9 percent share of the loss was $33,959, the only loss in the adjusted gross income they reported in their cash basis joint return for 1968. The loss reduced their otherwise gross income from $76,009 to $42,051. The return showed the following gains and partnership loss:

Dividends $17,587
Interest ■ 4,993
Rental property income 5,902
Trust Income 17,820
Operation of hobby shop 3,959
Sale/exchange of property 23,948
Miscellaneous (trustee fee) ' 1,800
Vanderbilt No. 2 loss (33,959)
Adjusted Gross Income $42,051

The adjusted gross income of $42,051 was reduced by deductions and exemptions to a taxable income of $26,865. As already noted, the Commissioner’s disallowance of the loss of $33,959 is the basis of the present suit.

Chapman began to purchase cattle shortly after the beginning of the new year. It took about 2 weeks after the transaction for the cattle purchased to be delivered to the feedlot. While the dates of purchase are not clear on the record, cattle began arriving at the designated feedlots on or about January 15, 1969. The 4,268 head of cattle bought [501]*501by the partnership arrived in 17 lots at the following dates between January and July 1969:

January 15, 1969 573 head
January 17, 1969 124
January 23, 1969 92
March 24, 1969 100
March 28, 1969 121
April 21, 1969' 146
April 22, 1969 116
April 24, 1969 248
May 23, 1969 352
May 26, 1969 372.
May 28, 1969 279
June 2, 1969 244
June 5, 1969 ' 187
June 20, 1969 ■ 1,113
July 10, 1969 170
July 14, 1969 10
July 28, 1969 21
4,268 head

In the spring, Chapman exchanged the warehouse receipts for 44,000 of the 98,400 bushels of the partnership’s corn in Omaha, for the same amount delivered to an Oakland, Iowa feedyard, on payment of a transportation differential.

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Bluebook (online)
580 F.2d 422, 217 Ct. Cl. 495, 42 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5434, 1978 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-united-states-cc-1978.