Keller Street Dev. Co. v. Commissioner

37 T.C. 559, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1961
DocketDocket No. 71919
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 37 T.C. 559 (Keller Street Dev. 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
Keller Street Dev. Co. v. Commissioner, 37 T.C. 559, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6 (tax 1961).

Opinion

Fat, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in the petitioner’s income taxes, as follows:

Taxable year ended ⅜ Amount
Oct. 31, 1952_$183, 897.17
Oct. 31, 1953_ 194, 552. 69
Dec. 31, 1953_ 15,069.53
Dec. 31, 1954_ 27,593.87

Some of the issues have been conceded by the parties. The issues remaining for decision are as follows:

(1) Is the petitioner entitled to an obsolescence deduction on its brewhouse building and equipment in each of the taxable years under consideration and an obsolescence deduction in the taxable year ended December 31,1954, on certain bottling machinery purchased but never used?

(2) Were certain expenses incurred by the petitioner in some of the taxable years so intimately connected with a betterment program of its plant that they must be treated as capital expenditures ?

(3) Is the petitioner entitled to additional depreciation on certain machinery and equipment for the taxable years in question ?

(4) Is the petitioner entitled to additional depreciation on a steel warehouse for the year ended December 31,1954 ?

FINDINGS OF FACT.

A few of the facts have been stipulated and are found as stipulated.

The petitioner was, during the taxable years with which we are concerned, in the business of brewing and selling beer.

The Maier Brewing Company was founded in Los Angeles, California, as a proprietorship in 1875. It was incorporated in California in 1907 to form the petitioner, and operated as a successful brewery until the advent of prohibition, when it ceased operations. It returned to the brewing business after the repeal of prohibition but encountered financial difficulties. Sometime in the mid-1930’s it became bankrupt. It emerged from bankruptcy in about 1943 under new management and continued in the brewing business under the name Maier Brewing Company until October 15, 1958, on which date it officially changed its name to the Keller Street Development Company.

The petitioner filed its income tax returns for the taxable years in question with the director of internal revenue, Los Angeles, California.

I. Obsolescence on Brewhouse Building, Machinery, and Equipment and the Machinery Bought for a New. Bottlehouse.

The petitioner operated a brewery in the city of Los Angeles, California. The brewing plant comprised two buildings or unified complexes of buildings. One of these was the brewhouse, the other was the bottlehouse. Both of these buildings were on a single tract of land but were separated by Aliso Street which ran along an easement on the tract which had been taken by the City in the last century. The petitioner retained the fee in the street and carried on its unified operation of brewing and bottling beer by piping it from the brew-house through a tunnel under the street to the bottlehouse.

Aliso Street was undistinguished among the other city streets in the area. Although it bore a considerable amount of traffic it was not unusually heavily traveled. It was therefore possible to walk across the street from the brewhouse to the bottlehouse. It was also possible to go by vehicle directly from the brewhouse to the bottle-house. This could be done by driving on Vignes Street, a street which ran across Aliso Street along the east side of the petitioner’s plant. It could also be done by crossing Aliso Street from an alley on the petitioner’s brewhouse property to Lyon Street, which extended to the north along the east side of the petitioner’s bottlehouse property.

The petitioner made use of the easy access from one building to the other. Its trucks would occasionally stop at the bottlehouse to pick up a load of bottled beer and then drive across Aliso Street to the brewhouse property to load kegs of beer which were to be delivered on the same trip. In addition, a number of the petitioner’s managerial and maintenance employees worked in both areas and walked from one building to the other across Aliso Street at various times during the working day.

Both the brewhouse and the bottlehouse were essential to the petitioner’s business, and it would be unable to continue its business in the absence of either.

In August 1951 it came to the attention of the petitioner’s officers that the State was contemplating making Aliso Street part of a freeway and widening it to encroach upon petitioner’s property. Upon making inquiries, the petitioner learned that the State had settled upon a plan to run the Santa Ana Freeway along Aliso Street and to widen the roadway in a manner that would require the taking of 18 feet of the petitioner’s bottlehouse. In September 1951 conversations began between representatives of the petitioner and those of the State concerning the settlement to be made by the State.

Negotiators for the petitioner explained to the State’s representatives that the brewhouse building would be useless without the bottle-house and that the machinery and equipment in both buildings were so adapted to the systems of which they were a part and the buildings in which they were installed that they would be of negligible value unless installed as a unit in a building especially constructed to accommodate them. These representations were, in fact, true.

In view of these facts, the representatives of the State indicated that they might include as part of the settlement for the property taken a transfer to tbe petitioner of a piece of property to the west of the brewhouse property which could be used for a bottlehouse. Representatives of the State indicated the likelihood that the bottlehouse property would be taken in about 8 months.

The petitioner, therefore, had plans drawn up for a bottlehouse that could be built on the State’s land west of the brewhouse. In December 1951 the petitioner ordered more than one-half million dollars’ worth of bottlehouse machinery and equipment which was to be especially designed and built for the planned building.

In the early part of 1952 the negotiations with the State continued but little progress was made toward reaching a settlement. In addition, a commitment had been made by the State to reserve the land west of the brewhouse for the use of a railroad company should the railroad company desire it, and a substantial portion of the western end of this parcel was to be used for an access ramp for the freeway. Because of these facts, the petitioner’s officers then reasonably believed it would be unlikely that they could obtain the land west of the brew-house in an amicable settlement with the State.

Therefore, the petitioner in April or May 1952 acquired a parcel of land across Vignes Street and immediately east of its brewhouse. Shortly after this land was acquired, the petitioner learned that the State planned to take portions from each end of this parcel for an access ramp on the east end and a tunnel under the freeway on the west end. The remaining part of the land would be too small to be used for a bottlehouse.

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Keller Street Dev. Co. v. Commissioner
37 T.C. 559 (U.S. Tax Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
37 T.C. 559, 1961 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-street-dev-co-v-commissioner-tax-1961.