Consolidated Engineering Co. v. United States

201 F. Supp. 828, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1986, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5193
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedFebruary 8, 1962
DocketCiv. A. No. 12855
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 201 F. Supp. 828 (Consolidated Engineering Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Engineering Co. v. United States, 201 F. Supp. 828, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1986, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5193 (D. Md. 1962).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

The question in this case is whether the plaintiff, Consolidated Engineering Company, Inc., a Maryland corporation, is liable for the 3% transportation tax assessed by 26 U.S.C.A. § 4271, on account of the transactions hereinafter described. The transportation tax was repealed in 1958 but the transactions here involved occurred in 1956-57.

In 1958 the Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed taxes in the amount of $695.50 on the plaintiff. It denied liability and after conferences with the officials of the Internal Revenue Bureau, the imposition of the tax was finally approved by the Bureau and was thereafter promptly paid by the plaintiff which filed a petition for refund, except as to one item of $74.60, and which was in due course denied, and this suit was instituted by the plaintiff to recover the whole amount so paid less the admitted item which was wholly unrelated to the transaction on which the tax was based. There is no procedural question in issue and there is no evidence, and indeed no suggestion, that the taxpayer was in any way attempting to evade the proper tax.

It appears from the evidence that in 1956 the plaintiff bought a certain quantity of building materials from a seller named Dawson Groom, Inc., a local Maryland corporation, at a stated unit price, including delivery of the material at the job site at or near Union Bridge, Maryland, where the plaintiff was constructing a large cement plant building for the Le-high Portland Cement Co. The seller duly delivered the materials from time to time as directed, in a particular quantity at a time, at the job site.

The Government contends that although the seller was obliged to deliver the goods at the job site, to do so it had to transport the material from where it was in turn bought by the seller, for some miles to the job site. The seller rendered invoices for quantities delivered from time to time which were duly paid for by the purchaser, and did not include in the invoices any allocated or separate charge for transportation. The buyer [830]*830contends that it had no concern whatever with the carriage of the goods nor did it know, or had any reason to believe, that there was or would be a transportation tax, and that as the contract for purchase was in writing at a unit price for the material delivered to it, there was no tax properly assessed against it. On the whole evidence in the case I find the material facts to be as follows; stated chronologically as far as possible.

1. The Consolidated Engineering •Company has been engaged in large construction work in Baltimore City and •elsewhere for about fifty years. It is a well known enterprise and has constructed many large buildings in Baltimore City and in other States. It has had for some years an average gross income of about $20,000,000.

2. Prior to 1956 it entered into a contract to erect for the Lehigh Portland Cement Co. a cement plant at Union Bridge, Maryland, at a cost of about $15,000,000. or more. Thereafter, as •customarily, happens in such matters, it entered into various subcontracts or purchase orders or agreements with material men to supply various portions of the material needed in the construction of the plant. Among the latter was the contract for the purchase of a certain quantity of stone and sand from the Dawson Groom Company at a stated unit price per quantity delivered at the job site. Before making the agreement with the Dawson Groom Company for stone and sand, it naturally made inquiry as to where stone suitable to meet its contract specifications could be procured, and learned that about 8 miles away from the job site there was a stone quarry which might be able to furnish the required grade of stone (Md.No. 2) to meet the specifications. It inquired from that quarry company whether the latter could and would sell the quantity of stone desired but was informed that the quarry did not sell directly to purchasers but only indirectly to “dealers”. Thereupon Consolidated asked for a list of “dealers” from whom suitable stone could be purchased. The quarry gave a list of five or six different named “dealers” and Consolidated then invited bids from these several dealers and after receiving and considering them, awarded the purchase order to Dawson Groom Company which was the lowest bidder offering to supply the required kind of stone and sand for a unit price delivered at the job site. Exhibits 1 and 2 are typical of all such purchases and deliveries in this case. Invoices for the deliveries as made and at the agreed upon purchase price therefor, were rendered by the seller and paid for by the buyer. The invoices did not include any separate or additional item for the transportation involved.

3. Some time in 1957 after the conclusion of the contractual arrangements between buyer and seller, a Field Agent of the Internal Revenue Department visited the offices of Dawson Groom Co., made some examination of its books and apparently made a recommendation that the transportation tax should be assessed against the Dawson Groom Company for such part of the total sales as was determined allocable to the whole purchase price. Apparently this report was approved by higher authority in the Internal Revenue Department and shortly thereafter the same or another Field Agent called to see Dawson Groom Company and after some conferences with one or more of its officers, informed the latter that it should have made a computation of some portion of the total sales prices attributable to the service for transportation and delivery to the job site; and then and there the Field Agent made what he considered a proper allocation of that portion of the purchase price which he thought should be a transportation tax and instructed and directed the officer of Dawson Groom to forthwith make up an additional invoice for the transportation tax so computed and deliver it to the Consolidated. On receipt of this latter invoice an authorized officer of the Consolidated promptly communicated by telephone and later by letter to the Dawson Groom Company denying any liability for such a tax and saying: “At the time, we issued our pur[831]*831chase order, it was understood that we were to pay $2.15 per ton delivered at the job site (less discount) and that no transportation tax was involved as you would be exempt in delivery of your own materials”.

Counsel for the United States also stated that prior to the assessment against the Consolidated, the Internal Revenue Department had assessed a tax against the Dawson Groom Company, but later had abated it because considered erroneous on the basis of the Commissioner’s contention that the tax was properly assessable to the Consolidated.

4. The transportation tax of 26 U.S.C.A. § 4271, was first enacted as a war revenue measure during the 2nd World War in 1942. Mr. Bonsai, an executive and as assistant treasurer of Consolidated, testified that he had been employed by the Consolidated for more than 15 years and that the Company had never been asked to pay, or charged with payment or assessed, for a transportation tax in any transaction similar to the one here mentioned. It would seem to be clearly within the general knowledge with respect to building transactions of this character that there naturally must have been hundreds, if not thousands, of purchases of material by contractors such as Consolidated for the erection of large buildings.

5.

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201 F. Supp. 828, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1986, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-engineering-co-v-united-states-mdd-1962.