BARNES, Circuit Judge.
This is a timely petition for review of decisions of the Tax Court (32 T.C. 161) holding that certain additional taxes were payable for the years 1952 and 1953 by petitioning taxpayers, partners in the Trail Creek Lumber Co., a partnership, by reason of moneys received under the terms of a certain contract. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue had reduced the amounts of capital gams reported by that partnership, and to a similar extent, had increased its ordinary income. Such increase, of course, was payable by the individual partners.
The principal question before the Tax Court was the applicability of section 117(k) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 26 U.S.C.A. § 117(k) (2), which if applicable would authorize the taking of the income as capital gains. If that question were to be decided adversely to petitioners, there was an alternative assertion that the transaction amounted to a sale of capital assets under section 117 (a) (4) of the same Code.
The cases below were consolidated for trial, and tried on a stipulation of facts plus the testimony of Edmund W. Pease. While the returns here considered involve only the years Í.952 and 1953, chronologically petitioners’ story commences in 1946.
Early in 1946, George L. Jantzer, Emma E. Jantzer (his wife), Edmund W. Pease and Ethel E. Pease (his wife), were partners in the George L. Jantzer Lumber Co., a partnership (herein designated as partnership No. 1). On February 14, 1946, that partnership entered into a timber contract with Stanley W. Dwinnell. This is hereafter called the Dwinnell contract, and is Exhibit 14N in evidence.
Sometime prior to April 15, 1946, the four partners in the George L. Jantzer Lumber Co., together with Theodore G. and Lorraine Jantzer, formed the Trail Creek Lumber Co., a partnership (herein designated as partnership No. 2). On that date (April 15, 1946), the Dwinnell contract was assigned in writing by partnership No. 1 to partnership No. 2.
Dwinnell consented in writing. From April 15, 1946, until late 1949, this partnership No. 2 engaged in the business of logging, sawing and manufacturing of
lumber. On July 11, 1946, partnership No. 2 had leased certain timber land known as the Onn tract, and on March 22, 1951, acquired fee simple title to that tract. On December 19, 1949, the three male partners in partnership No. 2 (Trail Creek Lumber Co.) and Lewis L. Jantzer, organized a corporation, Trail Creek Lumber Co., Inc. (hereinafter referred to as the corporation).
From and after January 1, 1950, the corporation, pursuant to an oral arrangement between it and partnership No. 2, cut, removed and paid for the Dwinnell timber. On January 3, 1950, partnership No. 2 sold its manufacturing, logging, office equipment and sawmill site to the corporation.
On June 6, 1951, partnership No. 2 conveyed title to the Onn property to the corporation, reserving orally “the few remaining standing trees.”
In the taxable years 1952 and 1953, the Trail Creek corporation cut, removed and paid partnership No. 2 for timber on the Onn tract pursuant to an oral arrangement similar to the oral arrangement with respect to the Dwinnell contract.
The payments received by the partnership from the corporation on the amount of timber cut and removed from the Dwinnell and Onn tracts were as follows:
Year Payments Rec’d Costs Net Gain
1952 $108,095.91 $40,273.13 $ 67,822.78
1953 172,290.21 60,161.17 112,129.04
Of these aggregate payments received by the partnership in 1952 and 1953, the amounts of $787.52 and $555.36 represented payments with respect to the disposal of timber on the Onn tract.
The oral agreement under which the corporation took over the obligation of partnership No. 2 with Dwinnell is characterized by the government as a “loose oral arrangement which was terminable at the will of either party.” It was, says the government, in the nature of a continuing offer for the sale of so much of the Dwinnell timber as was cut and manufactured and “accepted by the corporation’s act of cutting and manufacturing with respect to each tree.”
To support this theory, the government points out that Dwinnell paid the state taxes on the Dwinnell tract; the corporation paid them on the Onn tract. No fire insurance was carried by partnership No. 2 on any timber. The Dwinnell contract did not require the partnership to carry insurance, but provided merely that if lumber were destroyed by fire, “any insurance that the Purchaser may carry thereon shall be paid to the parties herein pro rata as their interest may appear.”
The Tax Court found (a) that the Dwinnell contract conveyed no title to timber, and hence the partnership could not have held the timber it sold, as it was cut and manufactured, for more than six months before the sale; (b) that partnership No. 2 and the corporation entered into a loose, oral arrangement terminable at the will of either party, which did not constitute a binding contract;
(c) that after the partnership sold its equipment on January 3,
1950, it had no trade or business other than selling timber. The Dwinnell arrangement appears in the margin.
Petitioners urge they were entitled to treat the sums mentioned as capital gains, for several reasons:
first,
the Tax
• Court had approved of such treatment of moneys received under similar circumstances (even to an oral contract) in the L. D. Wilson ease, 26 T.C. 474;
second,
that Oregon law prevails, and that under it the partnership, as a conditional ven-dee, was the
equitable owner
of the timber, even though the
legal title
was held by the original owner, Dwinnell;
third,
and in the alternative, that even if § 117 (k) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, especially applicable to sale of timber, is held inapplicable because there was no “disposal” of that which was
“owned,” there was a sale of a capital asset held for more than six months, under § 117(a) (4) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.
The Internal Revenue Code of 1939, in § 117 — “Capital gains and losses” — provides in material part:
“ * * * (k)
Gain or loss in the case of timber or
coal.—
“(1) If the taxpayer so elects * * * the cutting of timber (for sale or for use in the taxpayer’s trade or business) * * * by the taxpayer who owns, or has a contract right to cut, such timber (providing he has owned such timber or has held such contract right for a period of more than six months * * *) shall be considered a sale or exchange of such timber cut * * .
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
BARNES, Circuit Judge.
This is a timely petition for review of decisions of the Tax Court (32 T.C. 161) holding that certain additional taxes were payable for the years 1952 and 1953 by petitioning taxpayers, partners in the Trail Creek Lumber Co., a partnership, by reason of moneys received under the terms of a certain contract. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue had reduced the amounts of capital gams reported by that partnership, and to a similar extent, had increased its ordinary income. Such increase, of course, was payable by the individual partners.
The principal question before the Tax Court was the applicability of section 117(k) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 26 U.S.C.A. § 117(k) (2), which if applicable would authorize the taking of the income as capital gains. If that question were to be decided adversely to petitioners, there was an alternative assertion that the transaction amounted to a sale of capital assets under section 117 (a) (4) of the same Code.
The cases below were consolidated for trial, and tried on a stipulation of facts plus the testimony of Edmund W. Pease. While the returns here considered involve only the years Í.952 and 1953, chronologically petitioners’ story commences in 1946.
Early in 1946, George L. Jantzer, Emma E. Jantzer (his wife), Edmund W. Pease and Ethel E. Pease (his wife), were partners in the George L. Jantzer Lumber Co., a partnership (herein designated as partnership No. 1). On February 14, 1946, that partnership entered into a timber contract with Stanley W. Dwinnell. This is hereafter called the Dwinnell contract, and is Exhibit 14N in evidence.
Sometime prior to April 15, 1946, the four partners in the George L. Jantzer Lumber Co., together with Theodore G. and Lorraine Jantzer, formed the Trail Creek Lumber Co., a partnership (herein designated as partnership No. 2). On that date (April 15, 1946), the Dwinnell contract was assigned in writing by partnership No. 1 to partnership No. 2.
Dwinnell consented in writing. From April 15, 1946, until late 1949, this partnership No. 2 engaged in the business of logging, sawing and manufacturing of
lumber. On July 11, 1946, partnership No. 2 had leased certain timber land known as the Onn tract, and on March 22, 1951, acquired fee simple title to that tract. On December 19, 1949, the three male partners in partnership No. 2 (Trail Creek Lumber Co.) and Lewis L. Jantzer, organized a corporation, Trail Creek Lumber Co., Inc. (hereinafter referred to as the corporation).
From and after January 1, 1950, the corporation, pursuant to an oral arrangement between it and partnership No. 2, cut, removed and paid for the Dwinnell timber. On January 3, 1950, partnership No. 2 sold its manufacturing, logging, office equipment and sawmill site to the corporation.
On June 6, 1951, partnership No. 2 conveyed title to the Onn property to the corporation, reserving orally “the few remaining standing trees.”
In the taxable years 1952 and 1953, the Trail Creek corporation cut, removed and paid partnership No. 2 for timber on the Onn tract pursuant to an oral arrangement similar to the oral arrangement with respect to the Dwinnell contract.
The payments received by the partnership from the corporation on the amount of timber cut and removed from the Dwinnell and Onn tracts were as follows:
Year Payments Rec’d Costs Net Gain
1952 $108,095.91 $40,273.13 $ 67,822.78
1953 172,290.21 60,161.17 112,129.04
Of these aggregate payments received by the partnership in 1952 and 1953, the amounts of $787.52 and $555.36 represented payments with respect to the disposal of timber on the Onn tract.
The oral agreement under which the corporation took over the obligation of partnership No. 2 with Dwinnell is characterized by the government as a “loose oral arrangement which was terminable at the will of either party.” It was, says the government, in the nature of a continuing offer for the sale of so much of the Dwinnell timber as was cut and manufactured and “accepted by the corporation’s act of cutting and manufacturing with respect to each tree.”
To support this theory, the government points out that Dwinnell paid the state taxes on the Dwinnell tract; the corporation paid them on the Onn tract. No fire insurance was carried by partnership No. 2 on any timber. The Dwinnell contract did not require the partnership to carry insurance, but provided merely that if lumber were destroyed by fire, “any insurance that the Purchaser may carry thereon shall be paid to the parties herein pro rata as their interest may appear.”
The Tax Court found (a) that the Dwinnell contract conveyed no title to timber, and hence the partnership could not have held the timber it sold, as it was cut and manufactured, for more than six months before the sale; (b) that partnership No. 2 and the corporation entered into a loose, oral arrangement terminable at the will of either party, which did not constitute a binding contract;
(c) that after the partnership sold its equipment on January 3,
1950, it had no trade or business other than selling timber. The Dwinnell arrangement appears in the margin.
Petitioners urge they were entitled to treat the sums mentioned as capital gains, for several reasons:
first,
the Tax
• Court had approved of such treatment of moneys received under similar circumstances (even to an oral contract) in the L. D. Wilson ease, 26 T.C. 474;
second,
that Oregon law prevails, and that under it the partnership, as a conditional ven-dee, was the
equitable owner
of the timber, even though the
legal title
was held by the original owner, Dwinnell;
third,
and in the alternative, that even if § 117 (k) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, especially applicable to sale of timber, is held inapplicable because there was no “disposal” of that which was
“owned,” there was a sale of a capital asset held for more than six months, under § 117(a) (4) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.
The Internal Revenue Code of 1939, in § 117 — “Capital gains and losses” — provides in material part:
“ * * * (k)
Gain or loss in the case of timber or
coal.—
“(1) If the taxpayer so elects * * * the cutting of timber (for sale or for use in the taxpayer’s trade or business) * * * by the taxpayer who owns, or has a contract right to cut, such timber (providing he has owned such timber or has held such contract right for a period of more than six months * * *) shall be considered a sale or exchange of such timber cut * * .
“(2) In the case of the disposal of timber * * * held for more than 6 months prior to such disposal, by the owner thereof under any form or type of contract by virtue of which the owner retains an economic interest in such timber * * * the adjusted depletion basis thereof shall be considered as though it were a gain or loss, as the case may be, upon the sale of such timber * * .” 26 U.S.C.1952 ed. § 117.
Section 117(a), “Definitions,” provides:
“117.
Capital gains and losses
“(a)
Definitions.
As used in this chapter—
“(1)
Capital assets.
— The term ‘capital assets’ means property held by the taxpayer (whether or not connected with his trade or business), but does not include—
“(A) stock in trade of the taxpayer or other property of a kind which would properly be included in the inventory of the taxpayer if on hand at the close of the taxable year, or property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business;
* * * * * •*
“(4)
Long-term capital
gain.— The term ‘long-term capital gain’ means gain from the sale or exchange of a capital asset held for more than 6 months, if and to the extent such gain is taken into account in computing gross income.”
Section 117(j) (as added by Sec. 151(b) of the Revenue Act of 1942, and amended by Sec. 127(b) of the Revenue Act of 1943, c. 63, 58 Stat. 21) provides in material part:
“Gains and losses from involuntary conversion and from the sale or exchange of certain property used in the trade or
business.—
“(1)
Definition of property used in the trade or business.
— For the purposes of this subsection, the term ‘property used in the trade or business’ * * * also includes timber or coal with respect to which subsection (k) (1) or (2) is applicable # #
“(2)
General rule.
— If, during the taxable year, the recognized gains upon sales or exchanges of property used in the trade or business, plus the recognized gains from the compulsory or involuntary conversion (as a result of destruction in whole or in part, theft or seizure, or an exercise of the power of requisition or condemnation or the threat or imminence thereof) of property used in the trade or business and capital assets held for more than 6 months into other property or money, exceed the recognized losses from such sales, exchanges, and conversions, such gains and losses shall be considered as gains and losses from sales or exchanges of capital assets held for more than 6 months * *.”
In the light of the law applicable, we examine the Dwinnell contract. Among its more important features are these:
1. Purchaser agreed to buy timber located on certain property.
2. Title to timber passed only when timber was cut, manufactured into lum
ber, and paid for, “anything herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding.”
3. If timber was cut and manufactured into lumber but was not paid for, title still remained in Dwinnell.
4. Under the provisions of the contract, fifty per cent of the price was paid to the vendor. Thus Dwinnell had the disadvantage (and advantage) of a lower (or higher) price for the lumber. Of course, the partnership, and later the corporation, shared such advantage and disadvantage.
5. The contract provided for a price geared to the going market price, to be adjusted up or down.
6. Nothing in the contract provided for the payment of taxes. The record discloses that Dwinnell paid taxes.
7. The provision that there should be no assignment by purchaser without consent of vendor is at variance with any ownership theory in the purchaser.
8. The purchaser was rendered liable only for loss due to fires caused by its negligence, or “in the origin or spread of which * * * could have [been] prevented by exercise of due care.”
We note that in L. D. Wilson, supra (June 7, 1956), the following differences existed between the Vaughn contract therein involved and the Dwinnell contract here involved. In the Vaughn contract, the price was a fixed price at $4.50 per thousand feet, delivered at the mill; payable on the 10th for all logs scaled the previous month; purchaser paid all taxes accruing forty days after the contract was entered into; there was no restriction on assignment; liability was on purchaser for loss by fire due to operations, and purchaser agreed to hold vendor harmless for claims for damages, and all damage to timber.
In Wilson, the contract was to be completely performed in six years; the Dwinnell contract was to be performed at the rate of three million board feet per year.
Despite these differences between the Vaughn contract and the Dwinnell contract, it is difficult to see how the decisions of the Tax Court in the two cases can be reconciled. But it is not our duty to attempt to reconcile decisions of the Tax Court. Nor is it our province to determine the question
de
novo; nor even to be influenced by what we may think our conclusion on the same or similar facts should be. We have but one matter to consider — Is the decision of the Tax Court clearly erroneous?
We note the L. D. Wilson case was not appealed. We have no way of knowing what the result of an appeal therein might have been, nor what emphasis was herein placed by the Tax Court on those facts which differ from the facts in the Wilson case. A considerable difference in the facts of the two cases exists. The difference in the provisions for the payment of the taxes, alone, might be a sufficient basis to require a difference in the result. The obligation to market
all
the timber, rather than a certain amount each year may have been important in determining whether the agreement was a lien or a sale. The liability for fires, which -is such a tremendous hazard in the timbering industry, may well have swayed the trial court to a different result. We do not know. But we do know we cannot say, as a matter of law, the Tax Court’s opinion was clearly erroneous.
Recent developments in Oregon case law may strengthen the Wilson decision, but they do not compel the conclusion that Wilson is indistinguishable from the case at bar. The Oregon court in Paullus v. Yarbrough, Or.1959, 347 P.2d 620, held that the equivalent of an interest in land passed to buyers under a contract requiring buyers to remove a certain quantity of timber within a limited time. Hence the Paullus case supports the Wilson case since there was a similar requirement in the Vaughn contract. In the instant case, while there was no specified time limit within which the work was to be done, there was a minimum requirement of three million board feet per year to be cut, and if not so cut, to be paid for in any event. This, say petitioners, is the equivalent of a time limit.
Thus it must be conceded that as to one consideration relevant here, the authority of Wilson has been enhanced. Nevertheless, the distinctions between Wilson and this case, previously noted, are still important. Especially notable is the fact that here, unlike Wilson and Paullus, the landowner paid the taxes, a matter which the Tax Court found to be extremely significant (1959, 32 T.C. 161). Hence it cannot be said that the Tax Court was clearly erroneous in distinguishing Wilson and in finding that there was no sale of realty in the case at bar, and hence the petitioners were not owners.
But, say petitioners, as we understand them, the word “owner” as employed by the Congress in section 117 (k) (2) embraces not only the usual sense of that term, but, as well, a holder of a contract right to cut timber who can dispose of it, or manufacture it, for his own account.
The government points out the difference between a cutting of timber which falls within section 117(k) (1) (where the taxpayer must “own”
or
“[have] a contract right to cut”) and section 117 (k) (2) (where there must be a disposal of timber by the owner, as that term is usually understood, under any form of contract
“by
virtue of which the owner retains an economic interest in such timber”). Thus an
owner
holding an economic interest in timber is not in the same category, tax wise, as a nonowner who holds a contract right to cut timber. The history of section 127 of the Revenue Act of 1943 supports such a distinction. The Senate Report issued when this legislation was enacted, states:
“The law discriminates against taxpayers who dispose of timber by cutting it as compared with those who sell timber outright. The income realized from the cutting of timber is now taxed as ordinary income at full income and excess profits tax rates and not at capital gain rates. In short, if the taxpayer cuts his own timber he loses the benefit of the capital gain rate which applies when he sells the same timber outright to another. Similarly owners who sell their timber on a so-called cutting contract under which the owner retains an economic interest in the property
are held to have leased
their property and are therefore not accorded under present law capital-gains treatment of any increase in value realized over the depletion basis.
* * » * *
This latter provision will afford relief
to those who have leased
their property under a contract whereby they retain an economic interest in the timber and are not entitled under the present law to capital gains treatment because of that fact.” S.Rep. 627, 78th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 25, 26 (1944 Cum.Bull. 973, 993). (Emphasis added.)
In other words, § 117(k) (1) applies to an owner
or to one,
who,
having a contract right to cut,
cuts his timber; § 117 (k) (2) applies only to
owners
who do not cut, but contract with others to cut, retaining an economic interest in the cut timber. Such an interpretation was followed in Island Creek Coal Co. v. Commissioner, 30 T.C. 370.
In Carlen v. Commissioner, 9 Cir., 1955, 220 F.2d 338, 340, this court said:
“The statute speaks of the cutting of timber for sale by a taxpayer who has a right to cut such timber. To us this means that the taxpayer who would claim the benefit of the statute must be the one who has not only the right to cut but also the right to sell on his own account. The taxpayers here were not such persons. We agree with the Com- ■ missioner that the statutory language does not cover a taxpayer who
cuts timber iu which he himself has no proprietary interest which he can dispose of by sale.
“ ‘Neither, in our opinion, can the petitioners qualify as taxpayers cutting the timber “for use in the taxpayer’s trade or business” as required by the statute.’ ”
We thus conclude that the Tax Court was correct in deciding that under the Dwinnell contract the taxpayers’ partnership was not the “owner” of the timber on the Dwinnell tract within the meaning of section 117 (k) (2). Cf. Anderson v. Moothart, 1953, 198 Or. 354, 256 P.2d 257; Coquille Mill & Tug Co. v. Robert Dollar Co., 1930, 132 Or. 453, 285 P. 244; Elliott v. Boyd, 1902, 40 Or. 326, 327, 67 P. 202.
We likewise agree with the Tax Court’s position that the oral agreement between the corporation and partnership No. 2 was in the nature of a continuing offer to sell, rather than an actual disposal. The court found no “disposal” until the timber was cut, manufactured and paid for. There was thus simultaneous payment and disposal, and no retaining of any economic interest after disposal, in any event. No written contract existed. The oral testimony clearly supports the finding of a continuing offer to sell.
Ah Pah Redwood Co. v. Commissioner, 9 Cir., 1957, 251 F.2d 163.
Under the interpretation of the agreements made by the Tax Court, and hereinabove supported, there was no holding of a capital asset by taxpayers for more than six months with respect to the Dwinnell contract. This is an essential element of § 117(a) (4). There had been no formal assignment of the Dwinnell contract from partnership No. 2 to the corporation (as there had been in assigning from partnership No. 1 to partnership No. 2), and there was no compliance with the terms of the Dwin-nell contract which required Dwinnell’s written consent to any assignment (again, as there had been in assigning the contract from partnership No. 1 to partnership No. 2).
Title to the Onn timber had been held for more than six months by the partnership. But it was, according to the Tax Court, “property held by the taxpayers primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of its trade or business,” and hence the products of its sale were ordinary income, and it was not a “capital asset” as defined in § 117(a) (1) (A). The Tax Court found that at least after the partnership sold everything it used to cut and manufacture timber, prior to January 3, 1950, it had no trade or business other than selling timber. Such a finding is not clearly erroneous on the record before us.
The decision of the Tax Court is affirmed.