Gragg v. United States

551 F.2d 827, 213 Ct. Cl. 226, 39 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 980, 1977 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 11
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 23, 1977
DocketNo. 176-74
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 551 F.2d 827 (Gragg v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gragg v. United States, 551 F.2d 827, 213 Ct. Cl. 226, 39 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 980, 1977 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 11 (cc 1977).

Opinion

Nichols, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In this tax refund case, plaintiffs urge us to hold that § 1251 of the Internal Revenue Code is constitutionally invalid because in computing a taxpayer’s "farm net income” § 1251(e)(2)(B) excludes some gains from calculation of gross income that could otherwise be considered taxable "income” under the sixteenth amendment. Thus, [228]*228according to plaintiffs Congress has arbitrarily denied these gains their character as income, which plaintiffs contend is constitutionally mandated. For the reasons set forth below, we reject plaintiffs’ theory, we hold for the Government and deny plaintiffs’ claim for a refund of taxes paid.

The facts of the case are disarmingly straight-forward, especially in relation to the statutory law that applies to them. For many years, including taxable year 1970 which is the subject of this suit, plaintiffs maintained a large herd of breeding cattle incident to their ranching business. It was plaintiffs’ practice each November to round up their entire herd, and to segregate their yearling cattle (i.e., those over a year old) for closer observation, in order to evaluate their potential as future breeders. Yearlings that displayed physical characteristics that revealed to plaintiffs their good breeding potential were branded and considered a part of the breeding herd, to the extent needed to maintain the size and quality of that herd. Excess potential and branded breeders, along with other yearlings whose physical development was less desirable, were sold thereafter and not bred. The record shows that plaintiffs have sold yearlings in each year since 1960, at least, and that over the years, plaintiffs have acquired a reputation as suppliers of yearling cattle with good breeding potential. In 1970, plaintiffs sold 1,696 yearlings, which they had considered property used in their trade or business under § 1231(b)(3); as breeding cattle, and paid the tax on the proceeds as indicated for that amount of long-term capital gain, without regard to whether cattle were actually bred, but only with regard to whether they were branded. After auditing plaintiffs’ tax return for 1970, defendant imposed upon them an additional tax, based on the application of § 1251 to plaintiffs’ farm gains and previous farm losses.

Section 1251, added to the tax law as a part of the Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, 83 Stat. 487, § 211(a), aims to prevent taxpayers engaged in farming from, in effect, converting their ordinary income into capital gains in order to qualify for a lower rate of tax. See U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 1708-14 (1969). The Congress had [229]*229determined, evidently, that the application of certain statutory accounting rules to farming operations afforded some taxpayers an unfair advantage from the law’s comparatively lenient tax burden on capital gains. Such taxpayers could by express provision, § 1231(b) (3), treat livestock held for breeding, etc., purposes as property used in the trade or business, i.e., taxable when sold at capital gains rates. They could deduct from their nonfarm ordinary income, as current expenses, costs of the kind that would be capital in nature for taxpayers engaged in other businesses, for example the expenses of a breeding herd of livestock. See Treas. Reg. § 1.61-4, permitting farmers to apply the "cash method” of accounting to such activities. A typical business taxpayer would have to capitalize the expenses incurred, thus reducing the capital gains to be realized upon the eventual disposition of the asset, but causing no direct reduction of the taxpayer’s current tax liability. One who raises breeding livestock, however, may deduct as current expenses all of the costs incurred in raising the herd, plus depreciation. When the animals are later sold, although the gains realized cannot be reduced because the expenses incurred have already been recovered out of current income, the lower rate of tax imposed on capital gains generally represents a significant tax benefit to the taxpayer involved in farming. The advantage is magnified as a taxpayer enters the higher income brackets. That taxpayer could, in effect, elect to pay a lower tax upon his capital gains in order to avoid a higher rate of tax on his ordinary income during the years he held the assets.

Plaintiffs’ tax returns for the years 1965-69 reveal how beneficial this system was for them, in practice. With respect to their ranching business done during these years, the plaintiffs were cash-basis taxpayers who, as such, were allowed to deduct currently all the labor, feed, and other expenses incident to raising their breeding herd. From 1965 to 1969, plaintiffs reported , gross farm income of $157,319.10, but their accumulated expenses of $948,897.81 generated a net farm loss of $791,578.71. In the same years, plaintiffs reported gains from the sales of yearlings in the amount of $476,243.67, only half of which was taxable income under the treatment afforded long-term capital [230]*230gains. See § 1201. Adding the taxable portion of these gains, $238,121.83, to the income plaintiffs received during this period as interest and dividends, $664,439.08, the sum of plaintiffs’ ordinary income appears to have been $902,560.91. All but $110,982.20 of this income, however, was offset by plaintiffs’ farm losses, which were treated as ordinary deductions. In other words, plaintiffs’ investment income and ordinary income from ranching were wholly offset by their farm losses, relieving plaintiffs of any tax liability on those earnings. Plaintiffs’ only tax liability, except with respect to their separate business enterprises, was based on the income they derived from selling yearlings, and the tax assessed on that was, at capital gains rates, approximately one-half as much as it would have been on an equivalent amount of ordinary income. It is fair to say, in the broad view at least, that the coincidence of favorable accounting methods for farmers, and favorable tax treatment of capital gains enabled plaintiffs to realize large amounts of income from outside sources, pay no tax on those receipts, reinvest the proceeds in their breeding herd, and pay a tax — and a smaller one at that — only when they later sold some of their cattle. It is clear that this is exactly the situation that Congress viewed as affording an opportunity for abuse, and sought to remedy in § 1251 by restricting the availability of capital gains treatment for the proceeds of livestock sales. Our understanding is confirmed by § 1251 itself, insofar as it excuses from its provisions those farmers who agree to forgo their cash-basis deductions and elect to capitalize the expenses of raising their breeding herds. See § 1251(b)(4).

Congress’ cure was to deny capital gains treatment to gains from the sale of certain farm property, most frequently livestock, to the extent that the taxpayer had previously applied current deductions to offset current ordinary income. Such gains are said to be "recaptured” as ordinary income, and not capital gains, in the year the farm property is sold. Section 1251 had a dramatic effect on plaintiffs’ tax situation in the very first year of its operation, 1970. That year plaintiffs earned gross farm profits of $28,746.83, but their deductible farm expenses of $232,892.71 left them a net farm loss of $204,145.88. [231]*231Plaintiffs also received $95,256.83 from taxable dividends and interest in 1970, which was also wholly offset by. their excess deductions.

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Bluebook (online)
551 F.2d 827, 213 Ct. Cl. 226, 39 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 980, 1977 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gragg-v-united-states-cc-1977.