Little Cahaba Coal Co. v. United States

15 F.2d 863
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedNovember 9, 1926
DocketNos. 3153 and 3154
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 F.2d 863 (Little Cahaba Coal Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Little Cahaba Coal Co. v. United States, 15 F.2d 863 (N.D. Ala. 1926).

Opinion

CLAYTON, District Judge.

The above-stated suits were brought under paragraph 20, § 24, of the Judicial Code as amended, Comp. St. Supp. 1925, e. 2, § 991 (20a), and are for the recovery of income and profit taxes alleged to have been erroneously collected by the defendant from the plaintiff corporations for the tax year 1917. The taxes were assessed under the Revenue Act of that year. John D. McNeel was the collector of internal revenue who assessed and collected the taxes, and W. E. Snead, at the time of the entry of the suits, was his successor.

The eases were consolidated without objection and tried together. The stock ownership of each corporation, and the law and the material facts in each, are practically the same. After the amended complaints were filed, the demurrers to the originals were withdrawn, and the defendant pleaded in each case in short by consent the general issue. So that, -as a matter of law arising from the pleadings, it is conceded that the suits are well brought; 'and the cause is now upon the merits.

The questions are: (1) The amount at whi'eh the plaintiffs should be allowed t9 capitalize their three separate mining slopes; (2) The cost price at which they should be allowed to capitalize their tenant houses; and (3) whether plaintiffs’ exemption rate should be 9 per cent., the maximum allowed by the statute, or 7 per cent., the minimum.

The plaintiff corporations filed, as required by law, their respective federal income and profit tax returns for the year 1917, within the time prescribed by statute. The consolidated items in such returns are:

Total income and profits tax 1917..........$ 25,018 89
Income 1917.................................. 145,209 54
Invested capital 1917........................ 848,384 30

The corporations voluntarily paid the tax as calculated by them in this original return, $25,018.89, to McNeel, collector of internal revenue, on March 28, 1918. Notation is stamped across the face of the original return of the parent corporation, “Closed no tax due, Consolidated Returns Audit Division, Little Cahaba-Coal Company parent or principal company.” It may be inferred that this stamp was placed upon the return by one of the defendant’s auditors at Washington after the cases had been consolidated, and after the returns had been filed, for a photostatic copy of the original return had from the Washington bureau, and a part of the evidence here carries that stamp. It at least tends to show that at first the defendant found no tax due upon an audit of the taxpayer’s return at Washington after the consolidation of the two cases there. It is not controverted that the original returns as prepared by the taxpayer are in accord with the taxpayer’s books. Therefore it was necessary, before the government could collect the additional tax, the subject-matter of this controversy, for it to adjust and make changes in the taxpayer’s original books and figures and values.

Accordingly the defendant, by its agents Mobley and Perry, made a field audit and report upon the taxpayer corporations. On April 22, 1921, following the report of such revenue agents, defendant published a letter giving the following figures, divergent from those of the taxpayer’s books as shown by the original return, as its true income, capital and taxes for the year 1917. These are the figures as given by the taxpayer, as found by the defendant, and the difference:

Revenue Agents’
Taxpayer’s Figures. Figures. Difference.
Total tax..........8 25,018 89 $ 56,526 81 ? 31,507 92
Invested capital.. 848,384 30 586,531 68 261,852 62
Income ........... 145,209 54 197,522 20 52,312 66

The additional tax as shown above, $31,-507.92, results, of course, from the changes made by the defendant’s agents in the taxpayer’s book figures and their original returns. This additional tax was assessed, and was on July 15, 1921, paid to McNeel, then the collector of internal revenue. The consolidated suit is to recover of the United States the sums of $13,894.35 in behalf of the Little Cahaba Coal Company and $5,391.-08 in behalf of the Blockton Cahaba Coal Company, aggregating $19,295.43, alleged to have been wrongfully exacted, with interest thereon at the statutory rate of 6 per cent, from July 15, 1921, the date of payment.

The subject-matter of this suit involves the application of the provisions by which the deduction from income for the purpose of tax is measured by the “invested capital” of the taxpayer; and the provisions of the Act of October 3, 1917, relating to deductions are:

Section 203: “That for the purposes of this title the deduction shall be as follows, except as otherwise in this title provided—

“(a) In the case of a domestic corporation, the sum of (1) an amount equal to the same percentage of the invested capital for [865]*865the taxable year which the average amount of the annual net income of the trade or business during the prewar period was of the invested capital for the prewar period (but not less than seven or more than nine per centum of the invested capital for the taxable year), and (2) $3,000. * * * ” Comp. St. § 6336%d.

The provisions of the act relating to invested capital are:

Section 207: “That as used in this title, the term ‘invested capital’ for any year means the average invested capital for the year, as defined and limited in this title, averaged monthly. * * *

“(a) In the case of a corporation or partnership: (1) Actual cash paid in, (2) the actual cash value of tangible property paid in other than -cash, for stock or shares in such corporation or partnership, at the time of such payment (but in case such tangible property was paid in prior to January first, nineteen hundred and fourteen, the actual cash value of such property as of January first, nineteen hundred and fourteen, but in no case to exceed the par value of the original stock or shares specifically issued therefor), and (3) paid in or earned surplus and undivided profits used or employed in the business, exclusive of undivided profits earned during the taxable year. * * * ” Comp. St. § 6336%h.

Accordingly, Regulations 33 and 41 were adopted under the Acts of 1917, and it follows that under such regulations made' in pursuance of the acts this controversy must be tried.

Section 207 of the Revenue Act of 1917, subd. (a), quoted above, defines invested capital under three numbered headings, only two of which need be here discussed: “(1) Actual cash paid in;” and “(3) Paid in or earned surplus and undivided profits used or employed in the business, exclusive of undivided profits earned during the taxable year. * * * jjjg meaning of clause 1 is simple. Articles 62 and 64 of Treasury Department Regulations 41 define clause 3 as follows:

“Scope of Phrase ‘Surplus and Undivided Profits.’ — Clause (3) of subdivision (a) of section 207 authorized the inclusion in invested capital of earned surplus and undivided profits, used or employed in business.

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15 F.2d 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-cahaba-coal-co-v-united-states-alnd-1926.