Hamilton Mfg. Co. v. Wilkinson

19 F.2d 365, 6 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 6714, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1762
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 22, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 365 (Hamilton Mfg. Co. v. Wilkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton Mfg. Co. v. Wilkinson, 19 F.2d 365, 6 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 6714, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1762 (E.D. Wis. 1926).

Opinion

GEIGER, District Judge.

I shall give my reasons for the conclusion that the plaintiff must prevail. That the plaintiff suffered a loss on the Tubbs venture is not controverted; nor, when the elements making up the consideration paid by it are considered, can there be any doubt that, in 1909, when the transaction was consummated, and certainly in 1910, the plaintiff justifiably felt that it had sustained a loss, and attempted in good faith to then value what it had received upon the transaction, and thereby to assess its loss, or at least a part of it.

Now, considering the 1909 excise law, I am unwilling to accept the collector’s broad proposition that “losses,” to be available as deductions against 'the incomes here under review, can never be recognized, unless determined by the fact of sale of property claimed to be the subject of loss. The eases cited in support of this proposition, and claimed to be particularly pertinent under this 1909 excise law, fall far short thereof. In my judgment the Von Baumbach Case, 242 U. S. 524, 37 S. Ct. 201, 61 L. Ed. 460, like other cases dealing with reduction of capital assets by conversion, likewise the Fink Case (C. C. A.) 267 F. 968, and New York Life Insurance Co. v. Edwards (April 19, 1926) 271 U. S. 109, 46 S. Ct. 436, 70 L. Ed. 859, dealing with additions to amortization funds, do not support the broad proposition that losses can be evidenced solely by casting a sales price, as here, against a prior purchase price as the only determiner of “values.” Indeed, the Fink Case in its reference to Conn. General Life Ins. Co. v. Eaton (D. C.) 218 F. 188, indicates clearly, as does also the Edwards Case, that the objection to treating additions to' an amortization fund as “losses” arises inherently because of the failure to take cognizance of actual value, and thereby of actual loss, as either otherwise may be determined or determinable. These cases do not hold that, where an insurance company, or any one else subject to a tax law, has purchased bonds at 110, if, for five years they have steadily depreciated to and remained at 50, the owner is precluded from claiming or establishing a loss in the sense of the law.

On the other hand, if mere additions to an amortization fund, regardless of “value” of (and therefore possible “loss” upon) the amortized security, be recognized, we should have the absurd possibility of claiming “loss” on securities purchased at a premium which at the time of the addition to the amortization fund had advanced vn fact to a greater premium. And on a further consideration of the adjudicated cases it may be said: New York Life Ins. Co. v. Anderson (D. C.) 262 F. 215, dealt directly with the right, if not the duty, of a taxpayer (under the excise tax act) to value his property with a view of ascertaining “losses,” or, in any event, with a view of determining the de-ductibility of any sum by way of answer to the question which, as the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (263 F. 529) states it, “is not strictly whether depreciation in market value is a loss, but whether, when Congress specifically includes within 'losses actually sustained within the year * * * a reasonable allowance for depreciation of property,’ depreciation does not become a loss, no matter what persons other than Congress may think of the subject.” And the court added: “We have no doubt that this loss in market value is depreciation. The word means, by derivation and common usage, a 'fall in value;' [367]*367reduction of worth/ and it seems to us to require mention only to prove that the average citizen, for whom statutes are assumed to be made, would judge depreciation of his own bonds by the opinion of the public, however thoroughly convinced of the ultimate wisdom of holding onto what had depreciated.”

In N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Edwards (D. C.) 3 F.(2d) 280, instead of presenting the contention recognized in the Anderson Case respecting the revaluation right for the determination of losses, the plaintiff limited itself to the contention “that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue erroneously refused to permit the plaintiff to deduct from its- gross income the sum of $332,466.22, representing the amortization of the securities purchased by the plaintiff at a premium. The amortization was based on the actual purchase price, and" mathematically computed in and from the books of the plaintiff; it was not a revaluation of the securities to conform to market prices. Such amortization was not allowed as a deduction, under the aet of 1909, by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in Fink v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., 267 F. 968, on the ground that no loss had been actually 'ascertained, and that such amortization could not be regarded as depreciation, which, within the meaning of that aet, had reference only to the wear and tear and obsolescence of property, and did not even cover the depletion of mining property” (citing Yon Baumbach Case, supra).

The trial court further states and deals with the contentions thus:

“The government contends that the language of the act of 1913 (38 Stat. 114) on depreciation is even narrower than that of the act of 1909, except where express qualifications have been made, as in the ease of mines. In New York Life Insurance Co. v. Anderson, 263 F. 527, the Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit permitted the insurance company to revalue its securities in accordance with the prevailing market prices, and to deduct the loss as depreciation under the aet of 1909. The government’s position is that the latter decision is not in accord with the views expressed by the Supreme Court, and, whether right or wrong under the aet of 1909, which permitted ‘a reasonable allowance for depreciation of property/ would not hold under the aet of 1913, which permitted such allowance only ‘for depreciation by use, wear and tear of property.’ It has already been pointed out, however, that the amortization in question is not a revaluation to reflect market changes. It is a computation to distinguish the payment back of a portion of a capital investment from the interest or yield. It need not Be assimilated to depredation at afi.

“In computing the return or income from bonds purchased at a premium, as a matter of economics an allowance must be made from the nominal interest paid to permit the amortization of the premium of [at] maturity. In fact, a trustee for a life tenant and a remainderman is obligated, if he purchases bonds at a premium, to reserve from the ineome accruing to the life tenant sufficient sums to amortize the premiums paid so that the capital may be kept intact [citing cases]. If, in accordance with sound Business and accounting methods, the plaintiff has consistently distinguished between the yield of its investments and the amortization of its capital, I think that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue erroneously treated the amounts amortized as income.”

The Circuit Court of Appeals, in considering the foregoing (8 F.[2d] 858), apparently saw not the slightest occasion for disturbing its ruling in the Anderson Case, supra, but clearly based its reversal (of the Edwards Case) specifically upon the nonapplicability of the doctrine of the Anderson Case to a situation disclosing claims for deduction supported merely by computed amortization, and it says:

“But the language of the aet of 1913, which is the statute herein involved, differs somewhat from that which governed the Anderson Case.

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19 F.2d 365, 6 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 6714, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-mfg-co-v-wilkinson-wied-1926.