Linehan v. Commissioner

35 T.C. 533, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 3
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1960
DocketDocket No. 71629
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 35 T.C. 533 (Linehan 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
Linehan v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. 533, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 3 (tax 1960).

Opinions

Wtthey, Judge:

Deficiencies have been determined by respondent against petitioners for the years and in the amounts Which follow:

Year Deficiency
1953_ $268.92
1954- 2,417. 81
1955- 1,978.20

The only issue for decision is whether respondent has erred in treating as ordinary income amounts received by petitioner Charles A. Linehan under certain contracts for the removal of sand and gravel from real property owned by him. Another issue raised by the pleadings was waived by petitioners at the trial.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Facts which have been stipulated are so found.

The petitioners are Charles A. Linehan and Marion S. Linehan, husband and wife, who reside at 10 Myrtle Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. They filed joint Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1953, 1954, and 1955 with the district director of internal revenue at Boston, Massachusetts.

Petitioner as hereinafter used has reference to Charles A. Linehan who, until his retirement in 1957, was employed for many years as a full-time schoolteacher.

During the taxable years here involved the petitioner owned approximately 17 acres of land, situated in Lexington, Massachusetts, and containing deposits of sand, gravel, and fill dirt. The property had been owned by petitioner’s father prior to and at the time of his death in or about 1904 and the deposits were used in a contracting business conducted by him. By will the petitioner’s father left the property to the petitioner and others, subject to a life estate therein by petitioner’s mother, with a provision that no division was to be made prior to her death. Following the death of the petitioner’s father the contracting business he had conducted was terminated and, except for a period of an undisclosed length about 1925, no deposits were removed from the property until 1943. The petitioner’s mother died in 1930 and thereupon the property became subject to division between the petitioner and five others. In that year the petitioner purchased the interests in the property of three of the others and about 1940 purchased the interests of the remaining other two. Since then and until the time of the trial herein the petitioner has continued to be the sole owner of the property. After petitioner became the sole owner of the property he was faced with making a decision as to what use or disposition he would make of it, namely, whether to sell it with the deposits contained therein or first take the deposits from the property obtaining as much as possible therefrom and then sell the property.

In 1943 an airport was being constructed at Bedford, Massachusetts, and petitioner’s property had been zoned by the town of Lexington for use for industrial purposes. At that time 5 or 6 acres of the property were covered with rows of sand which the petitioner estimated contained about 50,000 cubic yards of sand and which had been built up during prior extractions of deposits from the property. During 1943 the petitioner decided that his future course with respect to the property would be, first, to remove the deposits therefrom down t'o an elevation of about 125 feet above sea level, which was the elevation of a street contiguous to the property, and then offer the entire acreage as a whole for sale for development for industrial purposes. Thereafter, in 1943, the firm of Baer and Mong-hola contacted petitioner about obtaining sand from the property, and he entered into an arrangement of an undisclosed character with the firm under which the firm was to remove the above-mentioned rows of sand and then level off the acreage on which such sand was situated. During its operations on the property, the firm cut a “hole” to an elevation below 125 feet above sea level extending over an area upwards of 2 acres. The petitioner was away, busy with his schoolwork, and was unable to supervise the firm’s operations. However, when he was able to check the property and found the “hole,” he terminated the arrangement. Thereafter and until 1949 no deposits were extracted or removed from the property.

In 1949 Highland Sand and Gravel Company, sometimes hereinafter referred to as Highland, was “a big concern,” having sand and gravel property situated about one-half mile from petitioner’s property and also having on its property equipment and facilities for processing sand and gravel. During 1949 Highland contacted petitioner about obtaining all of the sand and gravel in petitioner’s property. The petitioner was unable to leave his schoolwork to supervise operations on his property. Because of that and because of the expenses that would be involved for surveying, removal of overburden, and other matters, the petitioner was unable to engage in extracting sand and gravel from the property and in making single sales of small quantities of those materials. Accordingly, he entered into an oral arrangement with Highland pursuant to which the latter, beginning in 1949 and continuing until April 1952, extracted and removed from the petitioner’s property sand and gravel overlying an elevation of 125 feet above sea level. Highland did no stockpiling and no processing of sand and gravel on the petitioner’s property.

At or near the end of Highland’s operations on the petitioner’s property, Highland extracted sand and gravel which constituted lateral support of a contiguous property not owned by petitioner. This caused sand and gravel to fall from the contiguous property and resulted in considerable controversy between the owner of the contiguous property and the petitioner and Highland.

The number of cubic yards of sand and gravel extracted and removed by Highland from the petitioner’s property was determined by quantity surveys of the property made by petitioner’s surveyor. Highland paid petitioner 10 cents a cubic yard with respect to the sand and gravel it extracted and removed prior to 1952 and 18 cents per cubic yard with respect to that extracted and removed during 1952.

In 1953 the petitioner received $3,055.86 from Highland on account of sand and gravel which it extracted and removed from his property during 1952. The petitioner paid $568.08 in 1953 for a survey of the property and for the collection of the $3,055.86, leaving net proceeds of $2,487.78 from the property for 1953. The delay in payment until 1953 resulted from the death in 1952 of Highland’s president.

From April 1952 until September 1954 no sand or gravel was extracted and removed from the petitioner’s property.

At the time Highland ceased its removal of sand and gravel from the property there remained about 4 acres of the property with sand and gravel overlying an elevation of 125 feet above sea level, the removal of which would take away the lateral support of adjacent land. The owner of the adjacent land had about the same acreage of land with sand and gravel similarly situated with respect to the petitioner’s 4 acres. In 1954 the owner of the adjacent land and the petitioner agreed to permit the removal of sand and gravel across their joint property line.

In 1954 Wes-Julian Construction Corporation, sometimes hereinafter referred to as Julian, had been engaged with respect to the construction of a nearby airport and was in need of sand and gravel in connection therewith.

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Dezendorf v. Commissioner
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Green v. Commissioner
35 T.C. 1065 (U.S. Tax Court, 1961)
Linehan v. Commissioner
35 T.C. 533 (U.S. Tax Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
35 T.C. 533, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linehan-v-commissioner-tax-1960.