Interstate Milling Co. v. Commissioner

32 T.C. 1038, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 106
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1959
DocketDocket No. 27955
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 T.C. 1038 (Interstate Milling Co. 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
Interstate Milling Co. v. Commissioner, 32 T.C. 1038, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 106 (tax 1959).

Opinion

Atkins, Judge:

The respondent disallowed the petitioner’s applications for relief under section 722 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, for the calendar years 1942,1943,1944, and 1945, and the related claims for refund. The petitioner seeks refund of excess profits taxes for those years in the respective amounts of $7,665.15, $52,346.11, $16,678.11, and $26,897.09. The petitioner at the hearing limited its claim to the ground that its business was depressed during the base period because of temporary economic circumstances unusual in its case, within the meaning of section 722(b) (2).

FINDINGS OF FACT.

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

The petitioner is a corporation organized under the laws of North Carolina in 1915 with its office and plant located in Charlotte, North Carolina. It filed its income and excess profits tax returns for all years in question on a calendar year basis and an accrual method, with the collector of internal revenue at Greensboro, North Carolina.

The petitioner in 1916 commenced the business of milling and sale of Hour. Its capital stock up to 1939 was $400,000. In that year $100,000 of its stock was retired. During the base period years and the years in issue the petitioner was engaged in the milling and sale of flour, mixed feed, cornmeal, and corn grits. Through the years and up to and including the base period years the petitioner’s principal product was wheat flour, the bulk of which was milled from soft red wheat and used primarily for home baking of biscuits, cakes, and pastries. The product was sold under brand names during the period 1930 through 1939 to wholesalers and chain stores, and to retail stores within trucking distance of petitioner’s plant. The areas in which the product was sold included North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.

The petitioner generally purchased its wheat, through wheat brokers, from the States of North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and Kentucky. The wheat purchased was delivered to the petitioner by rail under milling in transit rates, whereby the same rate is charged for delivery of the wheat and delivery of the finished product, the process of milling the wheat into flour being considered merely a stopover.

The petitioner first cleaned the wheat and then, by a process of cracking and separation, it was milled into flour. Then through a blending process the petitioner added self-rising ingredients to about 75 per cent of the flour it sold.

A byproduct of the cracking and separation was mill feed, which was packaged and sold for feed. About 1934 the petitioner commenced the production of corn grits and cornmeal. The volume, shown in short tons, of flour, feed, grits, meal, and mill feed sold by the petitioner during the period 1929 through 1945, was as follows:

Year Flour Feed Grits Meal Mill feed Total of all sales Per cent of flour sales to total sales

Tons

1929-13,747 0 0 0 13,747 100

1930-12.197 5,854 0 0 18,051 68

1931-11.197 8,569 0 0 19,766 57

1932-12,059 6,174 0 0 18,233 66

1933-13,873 5,398 0 0 19,271 72

1934-15,715 5,436 1,423 0 22,574 70

1935-13,628 6,119 1,710 1,774 23,231 59

1936-10,520 6,759 1,821 1,844 20,944 50

1937-6, 992 8,935 1,676 1,609 19,212 36

1938-9,006 6,248 1,149 1,190 17,593 51

1939-10,514 5,881 1,285 2,944 20,624 51

1940-7,465 4,790 2,065 6,932 3,313 24,565 30

1941-7,122 6,143 2,309 4,135 2,995 22,704 31

1942-7,753 7,265 1,785 4,359 21,162 36

1943-6,220 13,131 37m 826 20,548^ 30

1944-5,605 10,983 414 901 7,190 25,093 22

1945-8,110 12,391 1,236 850 4,932 27,519 29

Base period average — 47 per cent.

Post base period average — 30 per cent.

There were a number of local millers, located in the States of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee, who were in competition with the petitioner. These competitors also had the advantage of mining in transit shipping rates, and the market for family flour in the area was very competitive in the 1920’s and 1930’s. The petitioner also in the 1930’s had some competition from national flour manufacturers, but it was not substantial except in certain cities, as for example, J acksonville, Florida.

During the early 1920’s the world markets were profitable for the United States flour mills and wheat growers because much of the wheat-producing land in Europe had gone out of production and some flour mills had been destroyed during World War I. However, about the mid-1920’s many European countries embarked on policies of economic nationalism, which included increased production of wheat in countries which previously had been considered large importers of wheat and flour. By 1930 the prices of wheat were very low.

The United States flour mill industry is generally divided into four areas, one of which is the southeastern area, where soft red wheat is milled, and another of which is the Pacific Northwest, where soft white wheat is milled. The Pacific Northwest mills were located mainly in the States of Washington and Oregon, and during the 1930’s were newer, larger, and more efficient than the southeastern mills. However, their wage rates were higher than those paid by the southeastern millers. They had large production capacity and approximately one-half of their flour was intended for export, the principal export area being the Orient. Prior to 1930 and during part of the 1930’s the Pacific Northwest mills did not market to any substantial degree in any of the other areas of the United States. Starting in about 1933 the exports of flour from the Pacific Northwest to the Orient declined drastically to a low point in 1935. This situation continued through 1938, but by 1939 the exports to the Orient had again reached the pre-1933 level. The following table shows the amount of wheat flour, in thousands of barrels, exported from the customs districts of Washington and Oregon:

mi im 19S3 1934. 1935 me mi ms 1939

3,149 2,312 975 1,210 447 507 1,058 1, 656 3, 613

This experience of the Pacific Northwest area was in substantial accord with the total of exports from the United States of wheat flour, in thousands of barrels, to the following countries in the Orient during the years indicated:

1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939

China.... 1,142 41 350 6 18 225 1,347

Hongkong.. 754 479 298 182 69 32 205 229 390

Philippine Islands-. 678 574 507 248 363 527 879 1,059

Japan — .. 49 5 1 5 2 7 1 187

Total-. 2,623 2,156 isi7 1,022 330 403 757 1,334 2,983

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Related

United States Steel Corp. v. United States
305 F. Supp. 497 (S.D. New York, 1969)
Orangeburg Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner
37 T.C. 251 (U.S. Tax Court, 1961)
Interstate Milling Co. v. Commissioner
32 T.C. 1038 (U.S. Tax Court, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
32 T.C. 1038, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-milling-co-v-commissioner-tax-1959.