Journal-Tribune Publishing Co. v. Commissioner

24 T.C. 1048, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 99
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1955
DocketDocket No. 32844
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 T.C. 1048 (Journal-Tribune Publishing 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
Journal-Tribune Publishing Co. v. Commissioner, 24 T.C. 1048, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 99 (tax 1955).

Opinion

OPINION.

FisheR, Judge:

The respondent concedes that petitioner qualifies for excess profits tax relief under section 722 (c) of the Internal Bev-enue Code (1939) and has made a partial allowance of the claims filed by petitioner, as set out in our findings of fact. The parties have stipulated that petitioner’s excess profits credit based on invested capital is an inadequate standard for determining excess profits for the fiscal years ended October 31,1942 to 1945, inclusive, because the business of petitioner was of a class in which intangible assets not includible in invested capital under section 718 of the Internal Revenue Code, made important contributions to income, and, further, because invested capital was abnormally low. Petitioner’s complaint is that the relief allowed by respondent is inadequate and does not reflect the use of a fair and just amount representing its constructive average base period earnings.

The application of section 722 (c) requires the determination of a constructive average base period net income under section 722 (a). The reconstruction procedure is substantially the same as in section 722 (b) (4) involving a change in the character of the business. See Regs. 112, sec. 35.722-4 (c) and the Bulletin on Section 722, p. 136. The fundamental problem before us involves the determination of what petitioner’s base period net earnings would have been if the merger of the Journal and Tribune had taken place and petitioner had begun operations two years before December 31, 1939, the end of the statutory base period.

In approaching the problem, we have before us detailed information concerning petitioner’s predecessor papers, the Journal and the Tribune, for each of the base period years. We likewise have detailed information establishing the nature and character of petitioner’s business from December 29, 1941 (the date on which it began publication of its papers as a consolidated organization), through so much of the post-1939 period as is here material. We have found that its operations reached the level of normalcy about January 1,1943. While the foregoing, and some of the data, information, and statistics with which the record abounds, are helpful in the solution of the issue, we cannot accept the views urged by either of the parties as determinative, and we must undertake the task of weighing the imponderables inherent in a problem the answer to which depends largely on inference, opinion, and judgment.

Following the merger of the Journal and the Tribune into the Journal-Tribune, there was a shrinkage in circulation, and increase in subscription and advertising rates, and a decrease in expenses. The actual shrinkage in circulation of the daily edition amounted to about 11.66 per cent in the city and 22 per cent in the country. At the same time, there was an increase in the circulation of petitioner’s Sunday paper over the circulation of the Sunday Journal. The Tribune did not publish a Sunday edition. The loss in circulation was offset in part by the increase in subscription rates which were put into effect soon after the merger.

Before the merger, the weekly subscription rates for carrier delivery of the dailies were 17% cents for the Journal and 18 cents for the Tribune. The Journal-Tribune rate at the start was 18 cents but it was raised to 20 cents in September 1942. The combined daily and Sunday rate of the Journal-Tribune started at 20 cents per week, the same as for the Journal, but was increased to 25 cents in September 1942. The rate for the single Sunday paper remained at 5 cents per copy. These rates are set out in tabular form in our findings as is also a table showing the gross income divided between circulation, advertising, and other income of the Journal, the Tribune, and the Journal-Tribune, for each of the years 1928 to 1945, inclusive. The circulation gross income of the Journal and Tribune combined was $495,281.59 in 1940 and $805,689 in 1941, while for the Journal-Tribune it was $508,486.32 in 1942 and $560,553.83 in 1943.

From the standpoint of advertising, the consolidation was followed by an increase in advertising rates, but a decrease in the amount of linage. The combined gross advertising income of the predecessor companies was $770,800 in 1940 and $723,750 for the 11-month period ended November 30, 1941, while petitioner’s gross advertising income was $661,138 for the 11-month period ended October 31, 1942, and $782,000 for the year 1943.

The factor of “other income” was not substantially affected by the consolidation.

Petitioner’s greatest benefits, financially, lay in the savings in operating expenses brought about by the consolidation. Indicative of this, for example, is the fact that in 1941 there was a combined gross income from the publication of the Journal and Tribune of $1,224,017.95, expenses of $1,240,169.95, and a net loss of $16,152, while in 1943 petitioner had a gross income of $1,366,112.17 and expenses of $1,137,829.42, allowing a net profit of $228,282.75.

An analysis and comparison of the expense accounts, as set out above, show that while there were increases in operating expenses in some of the departments after the consolidation, they amounted to considerably less than the savings in other departments. The over-all expenses of the Journal and Tribune combined were approximately $1,299,460 in 1940 and $1,240,170 in 1941, while for the Journal-Tribune they were approximately $1,015,572 for 11 months ended October 31, 1942, and $1,137,829 for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1943.

Both parties have submitted reconstructions of base period income purporting to reflect the earnings that petitioner would have had if it had been operating under the consolidated agreement during the base period. These reconstructions differ widely both as to the methods of computation used and the results. A constructive average base period net income of $65,798.34 is computed by respondent while petitioner’s reconstruction gives a constructive average base period net income of $364,062.49. In his partial disallowance of petitioner’s claims, the respondent had allowed a constructive average base period net income of $104,134.

Respondent’s approach is to reconstruct 1939 net income by taking petitioner’s 1943 experience and applying thereto certain percentage methods based on selected statistics. The statistics on circulation revenue are based on the experience of a selected group of newspapers said to be comparable to the Journal-Tribune. In his computation, respondent uses the 1939 circulation rates established by petitioner’s predecessors. For reconstructing advertising revenue, a discount factor based on indices derived from the volume of retail trade statistics in the Chicago Federal Reserve District is applied to 1943 and 1944 advertising income.

In adjusting “other income” the respondent has taken the approximate average of the actual 1939-1940 experience of petitioner’s predecessors. Respondent’s reconstructed gross income is circulation $404,722, advertising $520,000, and other income $20,000, making a total gross income of $944,722.

To arrive at net earnings, respondent has applied to gross income a percentage figure based on petitioner’s 1943-1944 operating profits, after certain adjustments said to be required to bring petitioner’s operation in line, profitwise, with that of other newspaper publishing companies.

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24 T.C. 1048, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/journal-tribune-publishing-co-v-commissioner-tax-1955.