Deering Milliken, Inc. v. Commissioner

59 T.C. 469, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 5
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1972
DocketDocket No. 7497-70
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 T.C. 469 (Deering Milliken, Inc. 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
Deering Milliken, Inc. v. Commissioner, 59 T.C. 469, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 5 (tax 1972).

Opinion

OPINION

Tannenwald, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency of $138,-024.29 in petitioner’s income tax for the year ending November 29, 1964. The question presented is whether a corporation, created in a consolidation, is entitled to amortize as organizational expenditures under section 2481 the costs of an appraisal proceeding brought against it by stockholders of the consolidating corporations who dissented from the consolidation.

All of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, is incorporated herein by this reference.

The petitioner had its principal place of business in New York, N. Y., at the time it filed the petition herein. It is the successor by merger in 1967 to Pacolet Industries, Inc. (hereinafter called Pacolet).

Pacolet was organized as a South Carolina corporation on December 3, 1962, in the course of implementing an agreement to consolidate five existing South Carolina corporations. Some of the stockholders of the consolidating corporations dissented from the consolidation and did not receive any stock of Pacolet. Under sections 12-459 and 12-460 of the South Carolina Code (1962), Pacolet was required to pay such dissenting stockholders the value of their stock in the consolidating corporations as of the date of consolidation. An appraisal proceeding was instituted by the dissenters against Pacolet and was settled in July 1964. Pursuant to the settlement, Pacolet paid the dissenters the appraised value of their stock in the consolidating corporations and interest thereon as required by South Carolina law.

During its fiscal year 1964, Pacolet also paid the dissenters $167,035.44 as their attorneys’ fees and other costs of the proceeding and $7,862.52 to the court-appointed appraisers as their fees and expenses. Other costs incurred by Pacolet in connection with the suit included the fees it paid its own attorneys, appraisers, witnesses, and the court reporter in the amount of $14,223.51 in fiscal year 1963 and $194,155.51 in fiscal year 1964.

Pacolet began business in December 1962. In a statement attached to its Federal income tax return for the taxable year beginning December 3, 1962, and ending December 1, 1963, Pacolet elected under section 248 to treat its organizational expenditures as deferred expenses deductible ratably over a period of 60 months. Pacolet included among its purported organizational expenditures, treated in accordance with such election, the $14,223.51 of costs it incurred during that fiscal year in connection with the appraisal proceeding.

On its income tax return for the taxable year beginning December 2, 1963, and ending November 29, 1964, Pacolet claimed as a current deduction the $369,053.77 of costs it incurred during that fiscal year in connection with the appraisal proceeding. In computing its net operating loss carryover from the taxable year 1963 and its net operating loss deduction for the taxable year 1964, Pacolet claimed as a current deduction in taxable year 1963 the $14,223.51 of costs which it had treated on its previous year’s return as organizational expenditures under section 248.

Respondent determined that the $14,223.51 and $369,053.77 amounts were not allowable as current deductions for the taxable years 1963 and 1964 and further determined that such amounts were capital expenditures which did not qualify for amortization under section 248.

Petitioner having conceded that the amounts in question are not allowable as current deductions,2 the sole issue before us is whether they are amortizable as “organizational expenditures” under section 248.3

Initially, we note that petitioner seeks to prevail on the ground that respondent in his answer conceded its right to amortize the expenditures in question. We are satisfied from our examination of respondent’s answer, in the context of the pleadings as a whole, that no such concession occurred.

Organizational expenditures must be incurred “incident to the creation of the corporation.” Sec. 248(b)(1).4 Petitioner’s principal argument is that the proper criterion for judging whether litigation costs meet this requirement is the “origin of the claim” test enunciated by the Supreme Court in United States v. Gilmore, 372 U.S. 39, 48-49 (1963), and most recently applied by that Court in the companion cases of Woodward v. Commissioner, 397 U.S. 572, 577-578 (1970), and United States v. Hilton Hotels, 397 U.S. 580, 583 (1970). Petitioner’s position is that “but for” the creation of Pacolet, no appraisal litigation would have occurred and the costs attendant upon such litigation would not have been generated.

While we agree with petitioner’s articulation of the standards to be applied, we do not agree with the conclusion he asks us to reach. The critical question is “but for” wbat? In Qilmore, there was a marriage, a divorce, and a property settlement; the Supreme Court held that the “origin of the claim” relating to expenses incurred in connection with the property settlement was the marriage, i.e., “but for” the marriage the other events would not have occurred. Here, there was an agreement to consolidate, the creation of Pacolet in implementation of that agreement, and the appraisal proceedings. In Woodward and Hilton Hotels, essentially the same events 5 occurred. In both cases, the Supreme Court found that the expenses of the appraisal proceedings originated in the agreement to consolidate and the resulting rights of the dissenters to have their interests acquired, i.e., “but for” that agreement, none of the subsequent events would have occurred and the expenditures of the appraisal proceedings would not have been made.

The Supreme Court put the matter succinctly when it stated in Woodward v. Commissioner, supra at 578-579:

The standard here pronounced may, like any standard, present borderline cases, in which it is difficult to determine whether the origin of particular litigation lies in the process of acquisition.7 This is not such a borderline case. Here state law required taxpayers to “purchase” the stock owned by the dissenter. In the absence of agreement on the price at which the purchase was to be made, litigation was required to fix the price. Where property is acquired by purchase, nothing is more clearly part of the process of acquisition than the establishment of a purchase price.8 Thus the expenses incurred in that litigation were properly treated as part of the cost of the stock that the taxpayers acquired. [Footnotes omitted.]

We think this • approach dictates a decision for respondent herein. Under section 12-457 of the South Carolina Code (1962), a new corporation resulting from the consolidation of existing corporations commences its existence whether or not the dissenting stockholders, if any, seek an appraisal of their stock.

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Related

Deering Milliken, Inc. v. Commissioner
59 T.C. 469 (U.S. Tax Court, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 T.C. 469, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deering-milliken-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1972.