Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Union Pac. R. Co

188 F.2d 950, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 497, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4181
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 7, 1951
Docket221-227, Dockets 21907-21913
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 188 F.2d 950 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Union Pac. R. Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Union Pac. R. Co, 188 F.2d 950, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 497, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4181 (2d Cir. 1951).

Opinions

L. HAND, Chief Judge.

This appeal concerns the deductions-, from income taxes taken by the Union Pacific Railroad during four years; there are six other appeals affecting that road and four affiliated roads, but, since all turn on the same questions, we shall discuss this one alone. Those questions are (1) whether the road, to which the Interstate Commerce Commission had until 1942 given-leave to keep its books on a “Retirement Accounting” system, in computing deductions for depreciation, was obliged to conform to § 113(b)(1)(C) of the Internal' Revenue Code;1 and (2) whether the Tax; Court was right in assuming .that the Commissioner had stipulated that he would accept the road’s capital account in its books, on which it based its deductions. Section-23 (f) allows a corporate taxpayer to deduct “losses sustained” during the year, and’ § 23 (i) provides that the “basis for determining the amount of deduction for losses-, sustained * * * shall be the adjusted. basis provided in section 113(b) for determining the loss from the sale or other disposition of property.” Section 23(1) allows-as a deduction “Depreciation. A reasonable allowance for * * * exhaustion,, wear and tear (including a reasonable allowance for obsolescence)”. Section 114-(a) provides that the “basis” for depreciation shall be the “adjusted basis” under § 113(b); and we understand that both sides-agree that that section makes § 113(b) applicable to the deductions here at issue.

Theoretically, the ideal way to compute-the depreciation of -a road’s “ways and1, structures” would be to appraise the value • of each item at the beginning and at the end; of its. fiscal year, and to subtract the difference. That would be a practical impossibility, and no one suggests its propriety. Another way would be to estimate: [951]*951the life of each item and assume that in every year its depreciation was the same— “Straight Line Depreciation.” While this might not be accurate for any single item, differences would be cancelled out, when there were a great many. It would also be possible to group together a number of similar items, to assume that each had the same longevity, and to make a collective proportional deduction for all. “Retirement Accounting” was an alternative: it made no deduction for the depreciation of any item, or group of items, until it, or they, were abandoned; and then it credited to depreciation the original cost, plus additions chargeable to capital, deducting any salvage. Thus, in any year the road got no credit for actual depreciation during that year upon any but abandoned items; but in its stead it got a cumulative credit made up of all past depreciations of abandoned items. The assumption was that the aggregate of actual annual depreciations upon items not abandoned, which the road did not deduct, would, if the system lasted long enough, match the aggregate of the original costs and capital increments of all abandoned items. If the number of items was great enough, the result in the case of a stable system was probably about the same under this method as under “Straight Line Depreciation.”

The Commissioner’s argument is that any deduction taken for an abandoned item in “Retirement Accounting” must be limited to its cost, properly reduced for depreciation before 1913. The road answers that this would falsify the theory upon which that system of accounting proceeded. For example, if a bridge having a life of fifty years were abandoned in 1914, upon the Commissioner’s theory the road would be allowed a deduction of only two per cent of its cost, and would not be allowed any deduction for the indubitable depreciation in that year of any other items. It may be answered that, even so, that would not finally forfeit the road’s right to the actual depreciation in that year of an item not then abandoned; but that it would only suspend the deduction until the item >was itself abandoned, when the aggregate of all its past annual depreciations would be allowed at once. There are, however, two answers to such an argument. It is true that, if “Retirement Accounting” had gone on indefinitely, in the end the road would have got credit for all the suspended annual increments of depreciation of an item, when that item was in its turn abandoned. Suppose, however, that “Retirement Accounting” was discontinued in a given year, as in fact happened in the year 1942. In that year there were many items which had not been abandoned, and although each of these had depreciated in all the preceding years, the road would be finally deprived of all this aggregate depreciation, for it would start in the year 1943 with “Straight Line Depreciation.” True, it would have been fair to forfeit any deductions for these depreciations, accumulated before 1942, if the system had started in 1913 with an allowance of the whole cost of the items abandoned in that year, because the depreciations before 1913 so deducted would have been the equivalent of those which would be lost by the abolition of “Retirement Accounting” ; but only in case' the depreciations before 1913 should have been allowed. Besides, there would have been another objection. Even though the “Retirement Accounting” had been allowed to go on indefinitely and though all deductions upon items not abandoned had, though suspended, been eventually allowed, they would not have been allowed in the year in which they had occurred. That is contrary to the underlying basis of all income taxation. It is plain from the foregoing ' that the Commissioner’s position is neither “Straight Line Depreciation,” nor “Retirement Accounting”; but an unjust and illogical hybrid.

The Commissioner’s position must therefore depend upon whether § 113(b)(1)(C) inexorably required a road, which had adopted “Retirement Accounting” with the leave of the Interstate Commerce Commission, so to mutilate it — for that is not too strong a word — in application. During the years in question the Regulations 2 provided as the “Method of computing depreciation allowance” that “The capital sum to be recovered shall be charged off over the useful life of the property, either in [952]*952equal installments” — “Straight Line Depreciation” — “or in accordance with any other recognized trade practice.” The Bureau of Internal Revenue during the same years implemented this regulation by means of “Bulletin F,” which read as follows: “in general the rates of depreciation on physical property of common carriers * * * will be governed by the action taken by the commission in its application of the provisions of section 20, paragraph 5, of the Interstate Commerce Act.” 3 This referred to the section which gives power to the Commission to prescribe the forms in which railways may keep their accounts. If the “Bulletin” had stopped with these words, we cannot understand how anyone could doubt that the Treasury accepted “Retirement Accounting” with all its incidents as “proper adjustment” within the meaning of § 113(b)(1).

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Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Union Pac. R. Co
188 F.2d 950 (Second Circuit, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
188 F.2d 950, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 497, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-union-pac-r-co-ca2-1951.