Illinois Pipe Line Co. v. Commissioner

37 B.T.A. 1070
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJune 21, 1938
DocketDocket No. 74525
StatusPublished

This text of 37 B.T.A. 1070 (Illinois Pipe Line Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Pipe Line Co. v. Commissioner, 37 B.T.A. 1070 (bta 1938).

Opinion

[1077]*1077OPINION.

MuRdock:

The first issue is whether the petitioner’s basis for depreciation upon the depreciable assets which it acquired on January 1, 1915, from Ohio was, in the beginning, $18,799,415, as claimed by the petitioner, or was $10,191,412.14, the amount used by the Commissioner in determining the deficiency.1 The petitioner claimed certain deductions for depreciation on its returns and the Commissioner disallowed the part thereof which was computed upon the assets acquired on January 1, 1915, from Ohio. He allowed the deductions claimed upon the remaining assets of the petitioner and approved the 5 percent rate used by the petitioner, which was the same rate used in all prior years. The reason which he gave for disallowing the deductions upon the assets acquired from Ohio on January 1, 1915, was that the petitioner, through deductions for depreciation and retirement losses on those assets in years prior to the taxable years, had recovered an amount in excess of $10,191,412.14, and, consequently, the petitioner was not entitled to further recoveries on those assets. The amount actually recovered in prior years [1078]*1078through depreciation and retirement losses on those assets is not disputed. The Commissioner was apparently satisfied that the petitioner had applied the 5 percent rate to the correct adjusted bases in computing deductions which it claimed for the two taxable periods here involved if the original cost was $18,799,415. The parties are agreed that the cost .to the petitioner of the assets obtained by it on January 1, 1915, was the value of the stock given in exchange for them. They also agree that the petitioner’s basis for depreciation on the depreciable assets obtained in that exchange is that portion of the total cost of all of the assets which may properly be allocated to the depreciable assets. Thus, if the petitioner establishes that cost, it has met its full burden of proof on the first issue. This conclusion is stated advisedly as the only fair and reasonable one to be drawn from a study of the notice of deficiency, the pleadings, the briefs, and the statements and attitude of counsel during the trial.

The Commissioner stated in the notice of deficiency that $10,191,-412.14 was the cost, less depreciation, of the depreciable assets to Ohio, as shown by the books of Ohio, at the time Ohio transferred those assets to the petitioner. The evidence shows that the book value of the assets, as shown by the books of Ohio at the close of 1914, was somewhat less, but the difference will in no way affect the result in this case.

The petitioner paid for the assets with all of its own stock. That stock was to be distributed to the Ohio stockholders. There is evidence of sales of the stock of the petitioner at prices in excess of par near the critical date of January 1, 1915. Those sales are substantial evidence that the stock which was transferred to Ohio in exchange for the assets was worth at least $20,000,000. There is also evidence in thej record to indicate that the value of the assets transferred to the petitioner at that time was at least $20,000,000. The Commissioner conceded in the notice of deficiency that the total value of all of the assets paid in for stock on January 1, 1915, probably was $20,000,000. It is fair to assume that the stock was worth as much as the assets which were behind it. Swiss Oil Corporation, 32 B. T. A. 777, 786, 787. The petitioner does not claim a total cost in excess of $20,000,000, and it may fairly be concluded for the purposes of this proceeding that the cost to the petitioner of all of the assets which it acquired on January 1, 1915, was $20,000,000.

However, error in the determination of the Commissioner on this first point is not shown by the conclusion that $20,000,000 was the cost of all of the assets. There remains the question of the cost of the depreciable assets, or the question of what part of the entire cost may properly be allocated to the depreciable assets. The Commissioner apparently attributed to “going concern” value the dif[1079]*1079ference between $20,000,000 and $10,191,412.14. He would allow no depreciation based upon the cost of “going concern value” on the ground that it represents the cost of an asset not subject to depreciation. However, error in his determination may be shown in several ways. For example, it might be shown that there was no intangible value such as “going concern value” or good will attached to or inherent in the pipe line system which the petitioner obtained through the purchase from Ohio on January 1, 1915, or it might be shown that no part of the consideration was paid for any such intangible value, or it might be shown that the intangible value disappeared ratably as the economic life of the tangible assets gradually drew to a close.

The parties to the transaction whereby the pipe line was transferred to the petitioner considered the question of the value of the various assets to be transferred in arriving at the figure of $20,000,-000, yet they did not mention any intangible value or attribute any part of the value to intangibles. The petitioner, after it received the assets, spent a great deal of time and effort in preparing a careful inventory and in appraising the items of that inventory for the purpose of distributing the total cost to the various assets on its books. There was never any mention in that process of any intangible asset, and no part of the cost was ever allocated to any intangible asset. While we are not called upon to approve or disapprove of each step in the appraisal, and while there may be some parts of the process about which we have some doubt, nevertheless, after due allowance is made for all uncertainties, the inventory and appraisal strongly indicate that the value of the tangible assets was at least $18,799,415. The evidence also shows that no part of the purchase price was paid for intangibles and, further, that any “going concern value” attached to the line exhausted with the line itself. Thus, even if there was some valuable intangible asset transferred, nevertheless it is proper to allocate to the tangible assets a cost of at least $18,799,415. The evidence supports and the Commissioner does not seriously question the method of allocating the cost of $18,799,415 to the various depreciable assets which the petitioner used on its books and in computing the deductions in question. Hazeltine Corporation, 32 B. T. A. 4, 19; affd., 89 Fed. (2d) 513, 520. Decision on the first point must be for the petitioner.

The Commissioner, by amended answers, has made two contentions in regard to the rate of depreciation on all of the depreciable assets of the petitioner. The first amended answer claimed that a rate of 3% percent was proper instead of the rate of 5 percent which was used. He filed a second amended answer at the close of the hearing in which he alleged that if the 3% percent rate was not to be applied [1080]*1080as a composite rate to all of tlie depreciable assets of the petitioner, then a rate of 2 percent should be applied to buildings and a rate of 2y2 percent should be applied to line pipe laid, line pipe construction, and tanks. He made claim for the increased deficiencies which might result and he recognizes that he has the burden of proof to establish the correct rates.

Witnesses for the petitioner have testified, and the petitioner concedes, that certain parts of the plant of this pipe line company have a physical life of substantially more than 20 years.

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Bluebook (online)
37 B.T.A. 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-pipe-line-co-v-commissioner-bta-1938.