James G. Smyth, Collector of Internal Revenue v. George G. Cole and Myrtle N. Cole

218 F.2d 667, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1540, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5245
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 19, 1955
Docket13080_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 218 F.2d 667 (James G. Smyth, Collector of Internal Revenue v. George G. Cole and Myrtle N. Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James G. Smyth, Collector of Internal Revenue v. George G. Cole and Myrtle N. Cole, 218 F.2d 667, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1540, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5245 (9th Cir. 1955).

Opinions

BONE, Circuit Judge.

Appellees are husband and wife whose only income was community income which was reported on a community and calendar year cash basis. The tax year here involved was 1944, and each taxpayer filed a separate return for that year.

Appellees owned two parcels of California land used for the purpose of growing oranges. On January 3, 1944, they conveyed both parcels (called orange groves) to their son. The consideration (stated in what appears to have been a separate “agreement”) was $25,000 for both “groves,” $12,500 being allocated to each. Possession passed to the son on this date. At the time of this sale, a crop of green Valencia oranges was growing on fruit trees. They were harvested in the following May and sold for $33,248.14.

The income taxes here in dispute were paid on April 23, 1948, and this appeal grew out of a suit resulting from a rejection by the Commissioner of claims for refund timely filed by each taxpayer. The lower court agreed with taxpayers in their suit for a refund of the taxes paid by each amounting to $2,758.78 with interest thereon amounting to $474.87, and entered judgment in favor of each. The taxes here specifically involved arose out of a deficiency assessment resting on an “appraisement” and determination of the Commissioner. In this “determination” he asserted that the total value of the two groves (land and trees) had been appraised by him as $43,123.50 (they having sold for $25,000 to the son), and he also “valued” the crop of green oranges then on the trees at an additional $7,356.75, making a total “appraisement” for the land, trees and orange crop of $50,480.25.

The Commissioner then “determined” that there was a “gift” to the son of the difference between the selling price ($25,000) and his appraised price ($50,-480.25) to wit, a “gift” of $25,480.25. On the face of this sort of allocation, ap-praisement and determination, it might appear that the Commissioner was holding that the son had received a “gift” from the parents amounting to $25,-480.25. But the record makes abundantly plain that the Commissioner proceeded to include in the ordinary income of appellees-taxpayers the sum of $7,-356.75, which he claims these taxpayers “realized” as “ordinary income” from the “sale” of the oranges growing on the trees when the land was sold to the son, hence it seems clear that whatever the “gift tax” (if any) arising out of the sale of the land and trees to the son, it did not include, and was not imposed upon, a greater sum than one-half of $43,123.50, or upon a “gift” of $21,-561.75. For the reasons here noted1 the matter of the gift tax is out of this case, and the controversy is confined to the issue of the income tax imposed on the claimed income of $7,356.75.

The instant case therefore has to do solely with appellees’ claim for refund of income taxes they paid on the basis of “ordinary income” to the community amounting to $7,356.75.

In this connection, appellees concede that (under the doctrine of Watson v. Commissioner, 345 U.S. 544, 73 S.Ct. 848, 852, 97 L.Ed. 1232) the tax on the crop, if any, should have been based up[669]*669on, and attributable to, its “market value” on the date of sale to the son. Ap-pellees appear to agree that the Watson case requires an allocation of the sellers’ “gain” arising from the sale of an “un-matured” crop, this wholly apart from the value of the land and trees. They concede that in the Watson case the court held that regardless of its stage of development, the unharvested and unma-tured crop constitutes “property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of the taxpayer’s trade or business.”

The crux of appellees’ argument is that the green and unmatured oranges then on the trees simply had no “market value” on January 3, 1944, hence no part of the selling price of the land to the son could have been attributed or “allocated” to the crop. They assert that the real and only “value” involved in the sale to the son was represented by the land and trees which concededly qualify as real property used in appellees’ trade or business within the meaning of Section 117 (j) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. This view is reflected in a contention of their counsel at trial that “you cannot hold green oranges for sale, and plaintiffs [appel-lees] do not sell green oranges; it isn’t in the ordinary course of business to sell green oranges.” And further, “nobody sells green oranges nowadays in the ordinary course of their business * * it would be an extraordinary thing indeed * * * the statute2 says primarily held for sale.” (Emphasis ours.)

The Findings and Conclusions

The lower court made no specific finding on the question of the value of the growing and unmatured orange crop as of the date of the sale to the son.3 It is obvious from the record that it regarded the land value (including the trees) as including the value of the green oranges then on the trees. As we have noted, it did find (footnote 3) as a fact that as of the date of the sale the growing Valencia oranges were small and green; that they were subject to serious risk of frost damage in the following months; that “it was not feasible” on January 3rd to estimate what the production of the two groves would be in 1944; that on the sale date, “no market existed” for the crop of growing oranges; that during the calendar year 1944, there were no known cash sales of orange crops “prior to maturity” in the County where the groves were located. (See footnote 3 referring to the absence of a specific finding on the question of value of the growing crop.)

The court also found that in their respective income tax returns for the taxable year taxpayers-appellees treated the entire amount of $25,000 as proceeds of a capital asset held more than six months and they computed and paid their taxes, on this basis. It also found that in reviewing their tax returns, the Commissioner had allocated a portion of the amount paid by the son for the two parcels of land, to wit, the total sum of $7,356.75, to the unmatured crop of Valencia oranges existing on the date of the [670]*670sale, and caused one-half of this allocated sum to be taxed as ordinary income to each óf appellees-taxpayers.

The court further found that based on this allocation there was a deficiency in income taxes of each of these taxpayers for 1944 in the sum of $2,758.78, and that each of these taxpayers paid the sums so assessed (on April 23, 1948) along with interest thereon in the amount of $474.87.

Based on the findings above outlined, the court concluded, inter alia, that the entire amount of $25,000 realized by the taxpayers-appellees on their sale of the two orange groves resulted from the sale of real property used in their trade or business and constituted proceeds from the sale of a capital asset held for more than six months prior to the date of sale, under Section 117(j), Internal Revenue Code. Judgment went accordingly.

Appellant says that the substance of its contentions here is that the lower court erred in taxing as capital gain the portion of the gain ($7,356.75) realized by appellees “which was attributable to the existing crop of fruit.” It urges that the holding in Watson v.

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Davis v. Commissioner
1965 T.C. Memo. 30 (U.S. Tax Court, 1965)
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148 F. Supp. 689 (D. Delaware, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
218 F.2d 667, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1540, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-g-smyth-collector-of-internal-revenue-v-george-g-cole-and-myrtle-ca9-1955.