Faría Lugo v. Secretary of the Treasury

100 P.R. 449
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 3, 1972
DocketNo. R-70-332
StatusPublished

This text of 100 P.R. 449 (Faría Lugo v. Secretary of the Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faría Lugo v. Secretary of the Treasury, 100 P.R. 449 (prsupreme 1972).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Torres Rigual

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Section 130 of the Income Tax Act; 13 L.P.R.A. § 3130, limits the deductions that an individual can make on his income on account of losses in a trade or business under certain circumstances. Said section is aimed to prevent an individual from obtaining taxable profits if the deductions attributable to a trade or business carried on by him exceed by $10,000 annually the gross income derived with respect to such trade or business during five consecutive years.

In such cases the Secretary of the Treasury will recompute the net income of the taxpayer for each of the five years for the purpose of reducing the deduction attributable to the trade or business to $10,000 in each year.1

In the case at bar the controversy is whether or not, under the-aforementioned § 130, the capital gains derived from the sale of two properties pertaining to the appellee Juan A. Faria Lugo can be considered income derived from his business of agriculture. If it is decided in the affirmative, as was done by the trial court, the Secretary of the Treasury would not have power to make the reeompiitation that brought about the tax deficiency of $14,727.90 challenged by Faria Lugo. The pertinent facts to the question are the following:

The appellee, Juan A. Faria Lugo is a practicing attorney and agriculturist. In his income tax returns for the years [451]*4511957 to 1961 he reported losses amounting to $312,647.2 Said losses are broken down as follows:

Year Loss
(1) 1957 $60,971.65
(2) 1958 43,211.29
(3) 1959 44,851.47
(4) 1960 77,485.67
(5) 1961 46,044.66

In the income tax return for the year 1960, Faria Lugo reported, besides, an entry of $68,329.78 as income in the form of capital gains, resulting from the instalment sale of two properties located in Bayamón.3 The total gain of such sales was $297,819.10, but he reported only 25' percent of same availing himself of the provisions in force at that time in regard to capital gains.

The Secretary of the Treasury determined that the mentioned gain derived from the sale of the two properties was not attributable to his agricultural business and eliminated it from the income attributable to said business. Such determination showed an operating loss in said business for five consecutive years in excess of $10,000. Consequently, the Secretary applied the provisions of the mentioned § 130 of the Income Tax Act, recomputing the net income stated by Faria Lugo for each one of the said five years. The recomputation brought forth a tax deficiency of $14,727.90.

Faria Lugo’s contention, accepted by the trial court, is to the effect that the capital gains in the sale of the two properties constitute income derived from his agricultural business. In considering it as such, he argues, the claim of [452]*452five years of losses in such business would be interrupted in 1960 for which reason the cited § 130 is not applicable.

We do not agree. The sale of the properties in question were transactions outside the business of farming. By no means can it be considered that the income produced by such sales were derived from the agricultural business. Cf. Lazier v. United States, 170 F.2d 521 (1948); Sic v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 10 T.C. 1096.

In Lazier v. United States, supra, the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that the loss sustained by a taxpayer on the sale of a farm was not attributable to his agricultural business, and, that therefore, said loss could not be carried back to the preceding taxable years. This decision was rendered null and void when § 122 of the former law was modified by the Federal Code of Internal Revenue of 1954.4 See § 172(d) (4) (A), 26 U.S.C.A. § 172(d) (4) (A), New York University Institute of Federal Taxation, 1956, p. 1472, Magill & Kosmian, The Internal Revenue Code of 1954: Income, Deductions, Gains and Losses, 68 Harv. L. Rev. 214. Our Income Tax Act has not been amended in this respect, the text of § 122, 13 L.P.R.A. § 3122, being similar to that of § 122 of the Federal Internal Revenue Code of 1939 under which the Lazier and Sic cases, supra, were decided. That is why we think that the decisions in sa,id cases are useful.

Appellee points out that the trial court expressly refused to apply to the case at bar the reasoning in Lazier and Sic, supra, on the ground that “the problem analyzed there and the language used therein has as a juridical context, not the equivalent section of the Federal Code to our § 130, supra, but, ... § 122(d) (5) of the Federal Code, similar to our § 122(d) (4).”

[453]*453Such reasoning is not correct. Section 122 covers the net operating loss deduction in a trade or business and its carry-over and carry-back, defining “net operating loss” as the excess of the deductions allowed over the gross income. Section 130 covers the limitation on deductions allowed in excess of the gross income derived from a trade or business. Both cover, then, different aspects of similar concepts. So much so that the Reglamento Relativo a la Aplicación de la Ley de Contribución Sobre Ingresos

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Related

McDonald v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
214 F.2d 341 (Second Circuit, 1954)
Lazier v. United States
170 F.2d 521 (Eighth Circuit, 1948)
Sic v. Commissioner
10 T.C. 1096 (U.S. Tax Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
100 P.R. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faria-lugo-v-secretary-of-the-treasury-prsupreme-1972.