Helvering v. Insular Sugar Refining Corp.

141 F.2d 713, 79 U.S. App. D.C. 4, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 472, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3778
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1944
DocketNo. 8226
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 141 F.2d 713 (Helvering v. Insular Sugar Refining Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helvering v. Insular Sugar Refining Corp., 141 F.2d 713, 79 U.S. App. D.C. 4, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 472, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3778 (D.C. Cir. 1944).

Opinions

GRONER, C. J.

This is a petition by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to have us review and reverse a decision of the Processing Tax Board of Review, determining that respondent is entitled to a refund of the sugar processing tax paid by it in the period September 12, 1934, to January 6, 1936, to the extent of $230,511.31. The case is this:

Respondent, which we shall call “claimant”, was at the time in question a Philippine corporation, with its office and refinery in the Islands. It purchased there its raw sugar, processed it, and sold its product as to about fifteen per cent (15%) locally and the remainder, or about eighty-five per cent (85%), in the United States. In the period in question it paid a tax amounting to $549,561.24. When later the tax was held illegal, Congress promptly passed an act to provide the manner and conditions of refund.1 By its terms, if the Commissioner denied refund, the taxpayer might have recourse to a statutory Board, with right of review in a Circuit Court of Appeals. In the latter case the court is authorized to affirm, reverse, or modify, if the decision of the Board “is not in accordance with law”.

In this case claim for refund was first made in the amount of approximately [714]*714$550,000 and denied by the Commissioner, after which claimant filed an amended claim with the Commissioner and later with the Board (on review) in the amount of $426,247.16.2 Extensive hearings were held; many witnesses testified, including Government auditors and accountants; claimant’s books, records and invoices were examined by Treasury accountants, as were also the books, records and invoices of claimant’s sales agent in the United States. The hearings extended over a considerable period of time, and the Board thereafter made findings of fact and decided (three members dissenting) that claimant was entitled to a refund in the amount of $230,511.31 for processing taxes paid, the burden of which the Board found claimant had not shifted to others “in any manner.” The Commissioner thereafter moved for rehearing and for additional findings, which after consideration the Board denied. The Commissioner then applied to this court for review.3

The procedural part of the Act makes the decision of the Board “final in the same manner that decisions of the Board of Tax Appeals become final under section 1005 of the Revenue Act of 1926, as amended.” 4 And of the finality of decisions of the Tax Board (now Tax Court), the Supreme Court has recently said:5 “All that we have said of the finality of administrative determination in other fields is applicable to determinations of the Tax Court.”

No more sweeping statement of finality could be made, for an examination of the cases in which the Supreme Court has applied the rule in “other fields” leaves nothing to the imagination, and is a clear and definite mandate to the courts not to reweigh the evidence or pass upon the credibility of witnesses. Due respect for the rule—which, in duty bound, we have imposed upon ourselves in circumstances when we thought its relaxation would have better met the ends of justice—requires us, we think, to accept without interference findings of a Board which, as is the case here, have support in the evidence. Hence, it has seemed to us that since it can not be doubted that the issue here is wholly factual, and the thirty-one separate findings cover the case like a blanket, a proper regard for the rule requires its application. But we also think that there are other factors in the case which, given fair consideration, compel the same result.

The Act of Congress we are considering provides that it shall be prima facie evidence that the burden of the tax was borne by the claimant, to the extent that the average margin per unit of commodity processed, figured by a formula which the Act prescribes, was lower during the tax period than the average margin was during the period before and after the tax period. On the other hand, if the average margin during the tax period was not lower, that fact is made prima facie evidence that no part of the tax was borne by the claimant, but was shifted. “Average margins” are comparative operating profits, ascertained by deducting the cost of the raw sugar from the market price of the refined sugar and eliminating from consideration overhead and other expenses of operation. Here the Board expressly found, and the fact is not only not disputed, but is admitted, that the average margin per unit (one pound of sugar) of the commodity processed was $.002244 lower during the tax period than the average margin per unit processed during the period before and after the tax.

We have, therefore, here a statutory prima facie case on which alone claimant is entitled to rely for refund until it is rebutted “by proof of the actual extent to which the claimant shifted to others the burden of the processing tax.” 6

[715]*715Careful examination of the record wholly fails to show—except as to sugar sold in the Islands, as to which the Board found claimant had not borne the burden of the tax—and except as to a few inconsequential sales in the United States—one jot or tittle of proof of the extent, “actual” or otherwise, to which claimant, as to all the other sales, aggregating in value more than four million dollars ($4,000,000), and on which a tax was paid in excess of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), had shifted the burden, or been reimbursed therefor. And this was also the conclusion of the Board. Viewed in this light, the Board found that the statutory formula should be applied and this resulted in an order of refund of about one-half the tax paid.

In the case of the Philippine sales, claimant’s invoices to customers showed as a separate item an amount equivalent to the amount paid by it as processing tax, and the Board held this enough to show that as to these sales the burden of the tax had been shifted. This applies to less than fifteen per cent (15%) of the sales. But the same condition did not apply in the case of American sales and the Board found, and the finding is not disputed, that in no instance did the processing tax appear as a separate item on any of the American invoices. The question then is— is there proof elsewhere that the tax burden was shifted? The Commissioner points to no instance and we find none. The course of business pursued by claimant was to ship its sugar by consignment to an agent in San Francisco, with branch offices and warehouses in various other ports on the Pacific Coast. As a result, claimant was authorized to draw on the agent by sight draft from eighty-five (85) to ninety (90) per cent of the San Francisco market value at time of shipment. These shipments did not begin until more than eight months after the tax became effective in the United States. For a part of the time after the imposition of the tax, claimant’s memoranda to its agent included an item denominated “processing tax.” But the uncontradicted evidence is, and the Board so found, that this item was disregarded in the sale of the sugar by the agent to the public, as well as in the monthly settlements between agent and claimant, and that payment was made to claimant on the basis of the actual sales price of sugar, less expenses and commissions, and that any excess or deficiency in the amount drawn by draft from Manila was adjusted by appropriate bookkeeping entries.

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141 F.2d 713, 79 U.S. App. D.C. 4, 32 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 472, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helvering-v-insular-sugar-refining-corp-cadc-1944.