Dann v. Commissioner

30 T.C. 499, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 179
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 29, 1958
DocketDocket No. 55959
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 30 T.C. 499 (Dann 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
Dann v. Commissioner, 30 T.C. 499, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 179 (tax 1958).

Opinions

PieRCe, Judge:

The respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ income taxes in the amounts of $3,047.70 for the year 1951, and $3,799.40 for the year 1952.

Most of the adjustments made by respondent in his notice of deficiency were not contested.

The sole issue for decision is whether sums which petitioners received from a contractor for all of the usable soil from certain tracts of their farmlands, which was used by the contractor as fill dirt in the construction of nearby levees and a relocated railroad right-of-way, constituted proceeds from the sale of capital assets, or ordinary income.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts were stipulated. The stipulation, together with the exhibits therein identified and therewith admitted in evidence, is incorporated in these findings by this reference.

Petitioners Eobert M. Dann and Helen B. Dann are husband and wife, who reside on a farm near Painted Post, New York. They filed a joint income tax return for each of the years involved with the collector or director of internal revenue at Buffalo, New York.

During each of the years 1951 and 1952 and for more than 20 years prior thereto, Dann had engaged in the business of dairy farming, under the name of Dann’s Dairy. The land, used for such purpose, was owned by the petitioners jointly. It had been acquired by them in various parcels, from time to time since the year 1932; and all of the parcels here involved had been held by them for a period of more than 6 months prior to the beginning of the year 1950.

In 1950 the State of New York Department of Public Works began construction of a grade-crossing elimination and relocation of the main line of the Erie Eailroad in the vicinity of petitioners’ farmlands; and it contracted with the Lane Construction Corporation of Meriden, Connecticut (hereinafter called Lane), to act as general contractor to handle the construction work. In connection with this work, the State of New York appropriated certain portions of petitioners’ lands, to provide for tlie new donble-track right-of-way and also for certain levees to protect such right-of-way from the overflow of an adjacent river.

Lane required large amounts of fill dirt with which to build the new right-of-way and levees; and its representatives contacted Dann with a view to procuring such fill dirt from the petitioners’ farmlands. Thereupon a verbal arrangement was made, under which petitioners agreed to sell to Lane soil from a certain tract known, after excavation, as Pit No. 1. This tract was approximately 1,750 feet long and approximately 750 feet wide, and it had an area of approximately 30 acres.

At the time of making such arrangement, the parties knew and intended that Lane would remove from the tract for its fill dirt needs, all of the soil from the surface down to the top of the water table. They knew the precise surface area to be excavated; but they could not determine in advance the precise number of cubic yards of soil to be removed, because the depth of the water table below the surface varied from about 30 feet to zero, owing to the rolling contour of the land, and it was not practicable for Lane to excavate under water. The material to be removed did not have any particular mineral content; it was simply earth or dirt, containing some loam, sand, clay, and gravel.

After Lane had moved onto the property to begin excavation, a one-page written agreement relating to the tract was prepared in Lane’s office, and was there executed by the parties under date of May 17, 1950. Such written agreement described the perimeter of the tract to be excavated by metes and bounds; and it granted Lane the right to enter upon the tract and to remove the soil (in the agreement referred to as “material”) for use in its construction work. The agreement also provided that Lane would pay for the soil removed at the rate of 5 cents per cubic yard; that the quantity of the removed soil would be measured by engineers employed by the State Highway Department ; and that the measurements determined by them would be final and binding on all parties. Among several miscellaneous provisions contained in the last paragraph of the agreement was one requiring Lane to leave the bottom of the pit reasonably smooth, in order to care for drainage and to prevent the formation of pools of water; and another provision required Lane to slope the back edge of the pit in a prescribed manner, so as to prevent cave-in of the adjacent property. Dann insisted on the first of these miscellaneous provisions because of his desire to prevent the creation of possible attractive nuisances in the form of pools of water where neighborhood children might come to swim, with the concomitant danger of their drowning.

Thereafter, in July 1950, Lane and petitioners executed a second of these printed agreements pursuant to similar arrangements, relating to a second tract which was therein described by metes and bounds, which had dimensions of 650 by 750 feet, and which contained approximately 11 acres. This tract, after excavation, was known as Pit No. 2. This second agreement likewise provided for measurement of the quantity of soil removed, by State engineers; and, by its terms, Lane was to pay for the soil so determined to have been removed at the rate of 12% cents per cubic yard. The agreement, like the preceding one, also included miscellaneous so-called “special provisions” which required Lane to leave the bottom of the pit smooth and draining in a specified direction, and which also required it to leave the back edge of the pit sloped in a specified manner.

Lane, finding that the soil to be excavated from Pits No. 1 and 2 would be insufficient for its needs, caused its representatives to again approach Dann with a view to purchasing additional soil. Among the tracts then owned by Dann and his wife was one of approximately 40 acres lying adjacent to the river. The State of New York had theretofore appropriated a strip of this tract, running east and west, for use as the relocated right-of-way, and also a strip running from south to north along the eastern edge of the tract for construction thereon of one of the above-mentioned protecting levees. Petitioners orally contracted to sell to Lane the usable soil from this parcel, lying south of the right-of-way and between it and the river; but before excavation thereof was begun, the State authorities refused to grant permission for this to be done, unless Lane would agree to “rip rap” the embankment of the relocated right-of-way with concrete, for protection from the river. Lane did not wish to meet this requirement, and accordingly no soil was removed from this parcel, pursuant to said oral contract.

Lane’s representatives then sought to purchase from petitioners usable soil from another parcel owned by them, lying to the north of the relocated right-of-way, between it and the old right-of-way. Petitioners reluctantly agreed to sell the soil from this parcel, designated after excavation as Pit No. 3. Thereafter in August 1950, a third printed-form agreement was executed by petitioners and Lane under arrangements similar to those previously made, wherein the perimeter of the tract, comprising approximately 12 acres, was described by metes and bounds.

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Bluebook (online)
30 T.C. 499, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dann-v-commissioner-tax-1958.