Haberman Farms, Inc. v. United States

182 F. Supp. 829, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1420, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4676
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedMarch 30, 1960
DocketCiv. 215L, 216L, 217L
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 182 F. Supp. 829 (Haberman Farms, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haberman Farms, Inc. v. United States, 182 F. Supp. 829, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1420, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4676 (D. Neb. 1960).

Opinion

VAN PELT, District Judge.

These three actions were consolidated and tried to the Court without a jury. Haberman Farms, Inc. is a corporation in which all of the stock is owned by *830 Hubert Haberman and his wife. George Haberman is the father of Rex and Hubert Haberman. George Haberman, Rex Haberman, and their wives, and Haber-man Farms, Inc. are the plaintiffs in these consolidated actions, and will hereinafter be referred to as “taxpayers.”

Findings of Fact

Taxpayers brought these actions to recover taxes collected by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. These taxes were assessed on the net income earned by Haberman Industries, Inc. during the years 1952, 1953, and 1954. The Commissioner allocated to taxpayers the entire net income derived by Haberman Industries, Inc., which income came wholly from farms and property deeded or leased by taxpayers to Haberman Industries, Inc. on March 1, 1952 for a term of five years. It is the contention of the defendant United States that Ha-berman Industries, Inc. acted as a mere sham and was utilized by the taxpayers for the sole purpose of tax avoidance during the years of question. It is the contention of the taxpayers that Haber-man Industries, Inc. served a legitimate •business purpose, was not a sham, and was utilized for more than mere tax avoidance.

Haberman Industries, Inc. (hereinafter referred to for convenience as “the corporation”) was duly organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska with its articles of incorporation having been filed in June of 1950. The corporation is still in existence and is and has continually been in good standing in the •office of the Secretary of State of the State of Nebraska. The stock of the corporation has at all times been held in •equal shares by George Haberman, Rex Haberman, and Hubert Haberman.

In 1950 and 1951, the corporation engaged in the manufacture of a machine called a “fogger.” This fogger was a •device for spraying insecticides. The ■corporation conducted extensive operations with inference to the fogger for more than a year after its organization. A number of machines were sold throughout the country. This business operation, however, became a failure as a. result of a malfunction of the machine which caused it to catch fire on use.

Rex Haberman, president of the corporation, spent approximately six months in Chicago around the middle of the year 1951 working on the corporation’s affairs with regard to the fogger, after which the fogging operations were essentially discontinued. Rex Haberman then returned to Nebraska sometime around August or September of 1951. Soon thereafter, the taxpayers along with a lawyer and an accountant began holding discussions with a view toward deciding what to do about the corporation. At this time, the corporation had a deficit of $74,818.73 approximately all of which was owing to the taxpayers who had invested $80,200 in the corporation up to that time.

The taxpayers owned certain farms which up until 1952, they rented on shares, except for some custom farming by George Haberman or the Farmers’ National Company, a farm management organization. Haberman Farms, Inc. owned a cold storage building. It was decided in the discussions of the taxpayers and their advisors that the taxpayers would lease, sell, or convey certain properties to the corporation. In carrying out this decision, leases on certain of these farms were executed by the taxpayers to the corporation. Certain grains, growing crops and seeds were sold to the corporation. A deed to the cold storage building belonging to Ha-berman Farms, Inc. was properly executed and delivered to the attorney and director for the corporation. This deed was never recorded. In March and April, 1952, bank accounts were opened in the City National Bank of Plastings, Nebraska, in the name of the corporation, and designated, “Haberman Industries Farm No. 1,” “Haberman Industries Farm No. 2, ” and “Haberman Industries Farm No. 3. ” All the receipts from the property described in the leases, bills of sale, and deed were deposited in these accounts during the years here involved. The *831 proceeds from George Haberman’s farms were deposited in Haberman Industries Farm No. 1, the proceeds from farms owned by Haberman Farms, Inc., and the rent from the cold-storage building were deposited in Haberman Industries Farm No. 2, and the proceeds from Rex Haberman’s farms were deposited in Haberman Industries Farm No. 3. At the time of the transfers of the property, the income and profits involved herein had not yet come into existence. The books and records of the corporation were kept separately from the books or records of the taxpayers.

The leases on the farms were, as mentioned, for a period of five years. Tlj^ rental to be paid by the corporation to the taxpayers was in the amount of $3.50 per acre, except for a portion of the farm lands leased by George Haberman which rental was at a rate of $4.50 per acre, the extra compensation in consideration for machinery and equipment leased on that portion. The rentals received from the farms and the cold-storage building were deposited in the Ha-berman Industries Farm accounts according to the properties from which they were derived, and the taxpayers could draw from the account wherein the moneys from their leased or conveyed property were deposited. In the case of Ha-berman Industries Farm Account No. 2, wherein moneys from Haberman Farms, Inc. (owned by Hubert Haberman and his wife) were deposited, both Hubert Haberman and his wife could make withdrawals. Withdrawals by the taxpayers were not necessarily limited to rentals. In the case of withdrawals in excess of rentals, this would be evidenced in the books of the corporation as a debit to the taxpayer’s account, which account included both rentals accrued and the amount the corporation was indebted to that taxpayer. Withdrawals were not made by any of the taxpayers to pay for personal items.

The corporation had no employees, paid no salaries (however certain amounts paid to custom farmers were shown on the tax returns as wages), did no farming or farm management, and did not engage in any activity or assume any functions different from that which existed prior to its acquiring leases on the land, other than to collect the rentals from the properties. Taxpayers continued to manage the property to the extent, they had previously. The Farmers National Company continued to custom farm certain of the lands, making its checks payable to Haberman Industries Farm Accounts Nos. 2 and 3 rather than to the taxpayers.

In 1953, George Haberman sold some of the farm land he had leased to the corporation. After the sale he collected rent for a time, evidently on the wheat that was growing on the land at the time of sale. The sale was made at an auction. The decision to go ahead and sell the land was made after consultation among all .of the taxpayers. No release was obtained from the corporation, nor was any consideration paid to it. An interest in the growing wheat was reserved by seller and the rent collected-by him.

On its tax returns for its fiscal years. 1952 through 1954, the corporation reported the rentals from the farms and the cold storage building as its own income and deducted the rentals to the taxpayers as expense. The taxpayers reported as income the rental from the corporation and claimed deductions for taxes, interest and depreciation on farm buildings and machinery.

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182 F. Supp. 829, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1420, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haberman-farms-inc-v-united-states-ned-1960.