Halquist v. Commissioner

33 T.C. 304, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1959
DocketDocket Nos. 65794, 71133
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 33 T.C. 304 (Halquist v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halquist v. Commissioner, 33 T.C. 304, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33 (tax 1959).

Opinion

Drennen, Judge:

Respondent has determined deficiencies in petitioners’ income tax in Docket No. 65794 for the years 1951, 1952, and 1953 in the amounts of $29,545.10, $32,134.08, and $17,974.86, respectively, and in Docket No. 71133 for the year 1954 in the amount of $24,957.92. By amended petition in Docket No. 65794, petitioners claimed overpayments of tax in 1951, 1952, and 1953 of $1,356.40, $56.94, and $4,609.30, respectively.

The issues for decision are: (1) In regard to the building and dimension stone produced and sold by petitioners, whether the gross income from the property for purposes of computing the percentage depletion allowance should be determined by reference to the sales price of the fully processed stone or by reference to the actual or representative market price of the stone in a less processed form; and (2) for years 1951, 1952, and 1953, whether petitioners are entitled under section 114(b)(4), I.R.C. 1939, to the 10 per cent depletion rate provided for dolomite or the 15 per cent rate provided for chemical or metallurgical grade limestone.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are incorporated herein by this reference.

Albin C. Halquist and Madeline E. Halquist, his wife, residing in the Town of Lisbon, Waukesha County, Wisconsin, throughout the years material hereto, were engaged in business as a partnership under the name of Halquist Lannon Stone Co. They filed joint and partnership income tax returns for each of said years on a calendar year accrual method of accounting with the district director of internal revenue at Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In addition, for each, of the taxable years 1952 and 1954 they filed amended joint income tax returns, and for 1954, an amended partnership return.

Throughout the taxable years the partnership owned and operated two stone quarries in Waukesha County, Wisconsin. One of them, their principal quarry, was located approximately 2 miles south of the Village of Sussex in the Town of Lisbon, and their smaller quarry, in the Village of Sussex. (Eeference will hereafter be made only to the principal quarry, our holdings concerning which will also include the smaller quarry and its production.)

The partnership engaged in the business of removing the stone, processing it, and selling it in the form of two principal products. These products were crushed and broken stone of various grades and sizes, and building or dimension stone in various shapes and sizes. In addition, the partnership produced and sold flagstone and drywall stone. The crushed and broken stone was sold for a variety of purposes, including riprap, ballast, road surfacing, and agricultural lime. The dimension stone, sometimes referred to herein as building stone, consisted of blocks and slabs of natural stone cut in definite shapes and sizes to be used primarily for building purposes. The principal dimension stone product produced by petitioners was house-veneer stone. In the building stone category, however, they also occasionally produced “specials,” sills, finished architectural stone, and other stone fabricated for special purposes according to specifications. Flagstone, generally used for landscaping purposes, is irregularly shaped stone approximately 2 inches thick and having at least one flat side. Drywall stone, usually 8 to 10 inches in width and from 2 to 4 inches in height, is generally used for laying up retaining walls without mortar joints.

The partnership also engaged in the purchase and resale of dimension stone produced by quarries in other parts of the United States.

Stone in petitioners’ quarries is known as “Lannon stone” taking its name from the Lannon district which consists of an area approximately 12 miles square, and lies within the portion of the Niagara dolomite formation adjacent to Lake Michigan in Wisconsin. Although the physical and chemical characteristics of all of the stone within the formation are about the same, the formation of the stone in petitioners’ quarry is found in two distinct phases. The uppermost strata consists of very thinly bedded slabs of dolomite which are broken by irregular vertical seams or joints so that pieces of stone occur naturally in blocks of a few square feet to perhaps 25 or 50 square feet in areal extent and 2 to 6 inches in thickness as a general rule. Since it can be taken out in blocks, the stone from this portion of the quarry, extending down about 15 feet in depth, referred to herein as the npper face, is particularly adaptable for the production of dimension stone suitable for building purposes. Also found in this higher strata, at its very upper level, is a thinner layer of stone which is suitable for producing flagstone and dry wall.

The lower face is exposed down to about 40 feet in the mine quarry and is characterized by horizontal bedding planes and vertical joints of a markedly different nature. It is more irregularly bedded and much more irregularly broken up by seams, and as a result, is suitable only for processing into crushed and broken stone and agricultural lime.

The horizontal layers of stone in the upper strata from which building stone was produced were extracted and processed in the following manner:

(1) Small holes were drilled vertically into the stone behind the upper face of the quarry, and a small quantity of black powder was inserted in these holes and detonated. The blast did not break up the rock, but the resulting gases followed the natural bed layers and seam faces and loosened the stone from the natural bed deposit. The slabs of stone, ranging from 2 to 3 square feet to extremes of 100 square feet in the horizontal plane (the smaller size pieces were more predominant in petitioners’ quarry), were loosened one from the other with crowbars and wedges.

(2) At the upper face blockmen broke the larger pieces of stone into irregularly shaped pieces using one of two methods — either by a blow from a hammer after first scoring along the line on which it was to be broken, or by plugging and feathering, which also involved scoring, then the drilling of holes on the scored line and, finally, the driving of wedges into the holes until the stone split.

(3) Using large steel pans the blockmen then sorted the pieces into three categories. Into one pan they placed waste; into the second pan, flagstone and dry wall requiring no further processing; and into the third pan they placed the pieces of stone suitable for processing into dimension and building stone. At this point, at the upper face of the quarry, there was approximately one pan of waste for each pan of flagstone, drywall, and stone to be further processed into dimension stone, resulting then in a waste factor of 40 to 50 per cent. The waste pans were hauled to the edge formed by the bed of the upper face and the top of the lower face, and the waste was dropped to the bed of the lower face to be picked up by mechanical shovels and fed to the crusher. Neither flagstone nor drywall was cut or dressed by cutters, but was broken into desired sizes by blockmen at the face and then merely set aside. The pans containing the stone suitable for processing into dimension stone were carried by trucks operated by blockmen to the cutters, who were arranged around the edge of the quarry mentioned above at a distance of from 50 to 250 feet from the place where the stone was quarried.

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Halquist v. Commissioner
33 T.C. 304 (U.S. Tax Court, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
33 T.C. 304, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halquist-v-commissioner-tax-1959.