Epco, Inc. And Subsidiaries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

104 F.3d 170, 79 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 321, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 103, 1997 WL 2463
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1997
Docket96-1204
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 104 F.3d 170 (Epco, Inc. And Subsidiaries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epco, Inc. And Subsidiaries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 104 F.3d 170, 79 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 321, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 103, 1997 WL 2463 (8th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge.

Imperial Utility Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of EPCO, Inc., together with Brooks McArthy, a developer, paid for the construction of a sewer pipeline to service a tract of land owned by McArthy on which he planned to develop a mobile home park. McArthy contributed $200,000 to the construction of the sewer line, which is owned by Imperial. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue found a deficiency in EPCO’s 1989 federal income tax based on Imperial’s failure to report a portion of this contribution as gross income. (EPCO and its subsidiaries filed a consolidated return.) EPCO then petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination of the tax, and the Tax Court upheld the Commissioner’s determination. Upon EPCO’s motion, the Tax Court reconsidered its decision and again held for the Commissioner. This appeal followed. We affirm the Tax Court on the main substantive issue, whether McArthy’s contribution resulted in income to Imperial, but remand for further proceedings on the proper amount of that income.

I.

In the mid-1980s, Brooks McArthy began to develop a mobile home park upon a tract of land that he owned in Jefferson County, Missouri. To provide sewage service to the property, as Missouri law requires, McArthy had two feasible options. 1 First, he could have constructed, at his own expense, an on-site mechanical waste treatment facility. In the alternative, he could have had the waste treated at a plant, owned by Imperial, 2Jé miles north of the park. This option required the construction of a mainline extension from the plant to the park as well as the expansion of the plant to handle the additional sewage from the park. McArthy consulted with Imperial on which option to choose.

Each option had its disadvantages. The on-site facility would have been unsightly, somewhat noisy, and potentially malodorous. In addition, the facility would have discharged the treated waste into á so-called “losing stream,” which is defined as one which loses at least 30 per cent, of its flow into a groundwater system. As a result, “the discharge effluent ... would have emptied into a losing stream ... at a point upstream from preschool playgrounds, fishing lakes, homes, churches, and schools.” Appellee Br. 4. Because of this potential environmental hazard, the Missouri Department of Natural Resources preferred the mainline sewer extension, though it would have approved either method.

The primary disadvantage of the mainline-extension alternative was its cost, which turned out to be more than three times the $150,000 cost of the on-site facility. Imperial would have earned the same amount of income ($18 per month per mobile-home pad) from the McArthy property regardless of which method was chosen. 2 Nevertheless, McArthy and Imperial decided to build the sewer line and agreed to share the cost of construction. 3 McArthy placed $200,000 in an escrow account to be used to finance the construction of the line, and the balance of *172 the cost was to come from Imperial. Withdrawals from the escrow required the signatures of both McArthy and the president of Imperial, and owner of EPCO, Eugene Fri-bis. According to the contract, the $200,000 contribution was to replace “tap-on fees” that the Missouri Public Service Commission authorized Imperial to charge the owners of mobile-home pads for connecting their property to sewage service. Because the $200,-000 was likely to exceed the total of the authorized tap-on fees for the McArthy property, McArthy and Fribis also agreed to credit any excess contribution to the tap-on account of adjoining property owned by another corporation. 4

The total project cost $540,000. Imperial spent about $190,000 of its own money to expand the treatment capacity of its plant and $150,000 of its own money to construct the sewer line. The remaining contribution came from the escrowed funds which went to pay the general contractor and subcontractors who built the sewer line. In 1988 Imperial spent $164,375 of the $200,000 on the sewer line and reported the contribution as income. EPCO also took a depreciation deduction on the part of the sewer line that the contribution financed. In 1989, Imperial spent the remainder of the $200,000 but did not report the $35,625 as income and, consequently, also did not take the corresponding depreciation deduction.

II.

The Internal Revenue Code allows corporations to exclude both shareholder and nonshareholder contributions to capital from their gross income. 26 U.S.C. § 118(a). Under the 1986 Tax Reform Act, “the term ‘contribution to the capital of the taxpayer’ does not include any contribution in aid of construction or any other contribution as a customer or potential customer.” 26 U.S.C. § 118(b). The Report of the House Ways and Means Committee explained that the provision’s effect “is to require that a utility report as an item of gross income the value of any property, including money, that it receives to provide, or encourage ... the provision of, services to or for the benefit of the person transferring the property.” H.R.Rep. No. 99-426, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 644 (1985). The Tax Court found, and the Commissioner argues, that the $200,000 that McArthy contributed to the building of the sewer line was a contribution in aid of construction (CLAC) and that it thus constituted taxable income that EPCO should have reported.

Two things are clear. McArthy was a customer of EPCO (or at the very least was acting on behalf of potential customers of EPCO), and his contribution aided in the construction of a line which was to provide sewer service to McArthy’s development. EPCO, however, seizes upon language in the Committee’s Report that states that transfers of property to utilities by members of a particular group will normally be assumed “to encourage the provision of services ... unless it is clearly shown that the benefit of the public as a whole was the primary motivating factor in the transfers.” 5

The “public benefit” exception, as well as the general exclusion for contributions to capital, has its origin in a 1925 Supreme Court decision which held that cash subsidies as well as land and buildings provided by the government of Cuba to a railroad company to construct a railroad in Cuba were not income *173 within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment. 6 Edwards v. Cuba R.R., 268 U.S. 628, 46 S.Ct. 614, 69 L.Ed. 1124 (1925). The Court reached this conclusion because it found that the payments “were not made for services "rendered or to be rendered” and were not “profits or gains from the use or operation of the railroad.” Id. at 633, 45 S.Ct. at 615.

EPCO contends that McArthy’s contributions to the sewer line were not made to encourage service to McArthy’s property, but instead to benefit the public.

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Related

Epco, Inc. v. Commissioner
1999 T.C. Memo. 103 (U.S. Tax Court, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
104 F.3d 170, 79 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 321, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 103, 1997 WL 2463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epco-inc-and-subsidiaries-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca8-1997.