Gem, Incorporated v. United States

192 F. Supp. 841, 7 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1123, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5486
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedMarch 31, 1961
DocketW-C-18-60
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 F. Supp. 841 (Gem, Incorporated v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gem, Incorporated v. United States, 192 F. Supp. 841, 7 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1123, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5486 (N.D. Miss. 1961).

Opinion

CLAYTON, District Judge.

In this action tried to the court and submitted on briefs, plaintiff seeks to recover from the United States income taxes and interest which it claims were wrongfully assessed and collected in the following amounts for each of the following years, to wit:

1954 $ 436.67

1955 $1,473.59

1956 $2,988.06

Plaintiff also seeks to recover interest from the date of the payment of said sums which date is fixed at February 9, 1959.

*842 On July 11, 1952, plaintiff executed as lessee a lease contract with Marshall County, Mississippi, for a primary term of twenty years with options to renew for three additional twenty-year periods and one additional nineteen-year period. Marshall County issued $100,000 worth of its general obligation bonds which were dated October 1, 1952, and these were sold. On October 11, 1952, the lessor county acquired title to approximately 8% acres of land and built a building on this property in accordance with plaintiff’s plans and specifications. This building contained approximately 20.000 square feet and is a tilt-up concrete and steel structure. Plaintiff, acting independently, purchased with its own funds approximately 8% acres of land adjoining the land owned by the county and also arranged with the City of Byhalia, Mississippi, to have a water tank built adjoining the plant, agreeing to pay one-half the cost thereof by water bills over a twenty-year period.

On January 14, 1955, plaintiff executed a contract with the Third Supervisors District of Marshall County, Mississippi, and thereafter general obligation bonds of that district were issued and sold in the amount of $50,000 to finance construction of an addition of approximately 18.000 square feet to the original building. Plaintiff executed as lessee a lease contract with said Third Supervisors District on March 13, 1957, for this addition with a primary term of seventeen years extending from the 1st day of October, 1955, and with renewal options coinciding with the renewal options of the lease of the original building. A short time after this, plaintiff again expanded its facilities.

These projects were undertaken under the provisions of the Mississippi Balance Agriculture With Industry legislation (§§ 8936-8936-41, Mississippi Code 1942, Recompiled). This law is administered by the Mississippi Agricultural and Industrial Board, and the contracts and leases in question were executed in conformity with the established general policy of said Board, which was and is to require that lessees, under such contracts, should be required to pay such annual sums as would enable the public agencies issuing the bonds, to pay the principal and interest on such bonds as they mature. Thus, in the leases and bonds with which we are concerned, maturity schedules and rental payments were so arranged that with respect to the first lease, rental payments would completely pay and retire the bonds and the interest coupons thereon over the twenty-year primary term therefor and with respect to the second lease, rental payments required would pay the bonds and the interest coupons thereon over its seventeen-year primary term.

In addition to its obligation to pay the rent, the lease agreements placed upon plaintiff the obligation of continued operation of a manufacturing plant of the character described by the leases so as to provide employment in the community. This is the over-riding public purpose of the state laws aforementioned and is an obligation read into such contracts by the Supreme Court of Mississippi, even in those instances where no reference is made to continued operation in the actual written contract itself. In the leading case, in which the constitutionality of said laws was established, Albritton v. City of Winona, 181 Miss. 75, 105-106, 178 So. 799, 807, 115 A.L.R. 1436; appeal dismissed, Allbritton v. City of Winona, Miss., 303 U.S. 627, 58 S.Ct. 766, 82 L.Ed. 1088, the Supreme Court of Mississippi said:

“If the statute permits a lease of the property that would strip it of the purpose for which the statute permits its acquisition, as herein-before outlined, and permitted it to be devoted wholly to private purposes, the tax to be levied in order to pay the bonds, by the sale of which the money for purchasing the property is to be obtained, would then not be for a public purpose but in aid of private individuals, which under due process of law cannot be done. The statute does not so permit, for in all its parts it contem *843 plates that the proposed industry shall be operated for the accomplishment of the purposes outlined therein, either by the municipality itself or, if the municipal authorities and the Mississippi Industrial Commission 1 deem best, by a lessee under a lease containing ‘such terms and conditions and with such safeguards as will best promote and protect the public interest’. The lease, therefore, must be of such character as will insure the continued operation of the proposed industry with power in the municipality, under the supervision and control of the Mississippi Industrial Commission, to enforce the continued operation; in other words, the character of the lease is to be such as, in effect, to constitute the lessee the municipality’s agent for operating the industry without liability on the municipality to others growing thereout.” (Emphasis added.)

The Court further observed:

“We are not called on, and are without authority, to here specifically set forth and limit the provisions of such leases, and we must presume that the municipal officers and the Mississippi Industrial Commission will take care that the provisions of the leases will meet the requirements of the statute. If they do not, the leases will be void. It may not be amiss, however, to say that one effectual method for preventing the lessee from holding the property without carrying out the purposes for which it was acquired would be to insert in the lease a clause setting forth the character and capacity of the proposed industry, and providing for the determination of the lease if the lessee fails within a specified time to equip and operate the industry as described in the lease or discontinues for a specified time thereafter to so operate it.” (Emphasis added.)

The contracts and leases with which we are here concerned were drafted with this language in mind. Paragraph “m” of Section 10 of the original contract between plaintiff and Marshall County provides that the lease shall terminate if the premises should be abandoned or the industry cease to operate for a period of one continuous year.

Plaintiff treated the payments made under these lease contracts, for the three years aforementioned, as rental and deducted them in making its return and in computing its income tax liability for those years. A part of these deductions were disallowed and the sums so disallowed were later collected on deficiency assessments, with interest to the date of payment. Refund claims timely filed were denied.

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Rust Engineering Co. v. State
243 So. 2d 695 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1971)
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224 F. Supp. 171 (W.D. Arkansas, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
192 F. Supp. 841, 7 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1123, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gem-incorporated-v-united-states-msnd-1961.