Kanawha Gas & Utilities Co. v. Commissioner

19 T.C. 1017, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 227
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1953
DocketDocket No. 25715
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 19 T.C. 1017 (Kanawha Gas & Utilities 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
Kanawha Gas & Utilities Co. v. Commissioner, 19 T.C. 1017, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 227 (tax 1953).

Opinion

OPINION.

Arundell, Judge:

These proceedings involve the question of basis with respect to gas properties that were sold by the petitioner in 1943, and incidentally some that were sold in 1941 and 1942 because of loss carry-overs from those years to 1943.

In 1929 the petitioner corporation acquired 194 operating gas properties, of which 62 were acquired by purchase from individuals and partnerships and 132 through the liquidation of 8 corporations whose stocks it had purchased. Of the total of $1,300,000 paid by the petitioner, the respondent has determined that $435,500 represents the cost, and basis, of 62 properties purchased. He has further determined that $132,000, or $1,000 for each of the other 132 properties, is the depreciated cost to the 8 former corporate owners and the basis to the petitioner.

The respondent’s position is that section 141 of the Bevenue Act of 1928 required as a condition of the privilege of filing consolidated returns that all members of the affiliated group consent to the consolidated return regulations prescribed by the Commissioner, with the approval of the Secretary, and that those regulations, and similar regulations subsequently promulgated, require the petitioner to use the basis of the 8 transferor corporations. Both parties quote from Regulations 75, which were applicable to the taxable year 1929 and subsequent years, as follows:

Art. 37. — Dissolutions—Recognition of Gain or Loss.
(a) During Consolidated Return Period.
Gain or loss shall not be recognized upon a distribution during a consolidated return period, by a member of an affiliated group to another member of such group, in cancellation or redemption of all or any portion of its stock; and any such distribution shall be considered an intercompany transaction.
Art. 38. — Basis of Property.
(a) General Rule.
Subject to the provisions of paragraph (6), the basis during a consolidated return period for determining the gain or loss from the sale or other disposition of property, or upon which exhaustion, wear and tear, obsolescence, and depletion are to be allowed, shall be determined and adjusted in the same manner as if the corporations were not affiliated (see sections 111 to 115, inclusive, of the Act), whether such property was acquired before or during a consolidated return period. Such basis immediately after a consolidated return period (whether the affiliation has been broken or whether the privilege to file a consolidated return is not exercised) shall be the same as immediately prior to close of such period.
(b) Intercompany Transactions.
The basis prescribed in paragraph (a) shall not be affected by reason of a transfer during a consolidated return period (whether by sale, gift, dividend, upon dissolution, or otherwise) from a member of the affiliated group to another member of such group.

The respondent further quotes from Internal Revenue Code section 113 (a) (11), which provides in material part that:

The basis in case of property acquired by a corporation during any period, in the taxable year 1929 or any subsequent taxable year, in respect of which a consolidated return is made by such corporation under section 141 of. * * * the Revenue Act of 1928, * * * shall be determined in accordance with regulations prescribed under section 141(b) of * * * the Revenue Act of 1928 * * *

The petitioner’s position is that it was the intended objective of Chase & Gilbert, Inc., to acquire all of 194 operating properties and place them in one corporation, and that the preceding transactions were interrelated and interdependent steps in a unitary plan. It says that where such facts exist the intended and attained objective of a series of transactions should be given that effect for tax purposes which the plan and objective require when viewed as a whole; that the several steps should not be treated as independent transactions at the cost of distorting the clear effect of the plan.

There are many decisions which, in the abstract, support the petitioner’s argument. See, for example, Schumacher Wall Board Corporation, 33 B. T. A. 1211, where the question of basis depended on whether there was control in the same persons before and immediately after the transfer of assets. Control did exist in an investment banking house, but at the time it received the stock it was bound by contract to convey it to others. In holding for the taxpayer in that case, we said, quoting from Wilbur F. Burns, 30 B. T. A. 163, that “the question of control is to be determined by the situation existing at the time of the completion of the plan rather than at the time of fulfillment of one of the intermediate steps.” The language was quoted with approval by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in affirming our decision at 93 F. 2d 79. The Circuit Court in that case also quoted the rule often announced by the Supreme Court that in matters of taxation it recognized the “importance of regarding matters of substance and disregarding forms * * *." See United States v. Phellis, 257 U. S. 156.

In the application of such general rules, proper regard must he had for the provisions of the particular statute and regulations under consideration and the facts of the case being decided compared with those in which the rules were announced. When this is done here, we think the issue in these proceedings must be decided for the respondent.

Under Revenue Acts prior to that of 1928, affiliated corporations were either required or permitted to file consolidated returns. However, none of the prior acts required consent to the regulations prescribed for the filing of such returns, nor specifically delegated to administrative officers the authority to prescribe such regulations as they might deem necessary in order to determine the tax liability of the group and of each corporation in the group both during and after the period of affiliation. Section 141 of the Revenue Act of 1928 required such consent and granted such authority. The provisions of section 141 were given careful consideration by the Congress in the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1928. The Senate Finance Committee, after referring to the history of consolidated return provisions under prior acts, said in part (S. Rept. No. 960, 70th Cong., 1st sess., p. 15; 1939-1 C. B. (Part 2) 409, 419):

Many difficult and complicated problems, however, have arisen in the administration of the provisions permitting the filing of consolidated returns. It is, obviously, of utmost importance that these questions be answered with certainty and a definite rule be prescribed. Frequently, the particular policy is comparatively immaterial, so long as the rule to be applied is known. The committee believes it to be impracticable to attempt by legislation to prescribe the various detailed and complicated rules necessary to meet the many differing and complicated situations. Accordingly, it has found it necessary to delegate power to the Commissioner to prescribe regulations legislative in character covering them.

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Kanawha Gas & Utilities Co. v. Commissioner
19 T.C. 1017 (U.S. Tax Court, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 T.C. 1017, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kanawha-gas-utilities-co-v-commissioner-tax-1953.