Livingston v. State Tax Commission

1 Or. Tax 461, 1964 Ore. Tax LEXIS 51
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Or. Tax 461 (Livingston v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston v. State Tax Commission, 1 Or. Tax 461, 1964 Ore. Tax LEXIS 51 (Or. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Peter M. Ounnar, Judge.

This is a suit to set aside State Tax Commission Opinion and Order No. 1-63-26, which disallowed the special treatment of capital gains claimed by plaintiffs on their 1960 joint personal income tax return. A decision on the issues raised by defendant’s general demurrer, now before the court, will dispose of the case.

On December 30, 1959, plaintiff dale Livingston, a cash-basis, calendar-year taxpayer, sold 50 shares of the capital stock of AsthmaNefrin Company, Inc., an Oregon corporation, under a written agreement dated December 24, 1959. The sales price was to be paid in installments over a period of six years. On their 1959 joint personal income tax return, plaintiffs validly elected to report the gain on the sale of the stock on the installment basis pursuant to ORS 316.190.

During 1960, plaintiff reinvested $62,595 of the installment payments received in 1960 in the capital stock of Paper Mills Agency of Oregon, Inc., an Oregon corporation which qualifies for capital reinvestment under ORS 316.426. In their joint income tax return for 1960, plaintiffs treated as a capital gain under ORS 316.406 to 316.450 that part of the gain realized on the 1960 installment payments which was reinvested in Oregon.

Defendant disallowed plaintiffs’ claim of special capital gains treatment for the year 1960 on the ground that, since the special capital gains treatment was to apply only to “tax years beginning after December 31, 1959,” the special capital gains treat *463 ment was inapplicable to this 1959 sale, even though the taxpayers were reporting their gain on the installment basis and the gains on the installments being taxed were received and reinvested in a qualifying investment in 1960.

The demurrer raises the issue of whether the law at the time of the consumation of the sale determines the applicability of the capital gains provisions, or whether the law prevailing in each subsequent year in which an installment is received is determinative of the tax treatment of that installment. Neither counsel nor the court has been able to find any Oregon case which is applicable to the facts of this case.

In the federal courts the rule is now settled that the law in effect during the year of an installment’s receipt determines the application of capital gain provisions to the realized gain included in that particular installment payment. Snell v. Com., 95 F2d 891, 38-2 USTC § 9417 (CCA 5 1938) and see also, Harry B. Golden, 47 BTA 94 (1942) and J. C. Manternach, BTA Memo Op., Dkt. 108096 (Sept. 23, 1942).

In the Snell case, supra, the taxpayer made an installment sale of real estate held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his business. In the year of the sale the gain from such sale was taxable at capital gains rates. Subsequently, the law was changed so that gains on sales of property held primarily for sale to customers were taxable at ordinary income rates. The taxpayer argued that the law in effect at the time of the sale was determinative with regard to the taxation of the gain to be recognized on each of the subsequent installments. But the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld the government’s contention that the law in *464 effect at the time the installment is received is determinative, and in so doing stated:

“As to the instalment sales made in 1923, the taxpayer might have elected to take his whole profit then and have had it taxed under the Revenue Act of 1921. He chose to defer realization of the profits on the deferred instalments. These thereby were left to fall under such provisions of the law as might be of force at their maturity. That the law might be changed, not only in the tax rate but in any other of its provisions, was a risk the taxpayer took in deferring the realization of his gains. The Board [now the United States Tax Court] rightly applied to them the law as it stood when the gains became taxable.” (Emphasis supplied)

In the Golden and Manternach cases, supra, the Board of Tax Appeals held that the capital gains rates in effect at the time of the collection of the installment, and not those rates in effect at the time of the installment sale, controlled the tax due for the tax year in which the installment obligation was satisfied. These cases support a holding that the law in effect at the time of receipt is applicable.

The 'State Tax Commission has presented us with no substantial reason to discard the federal rule. It claims that to allow the taxpayer the use of the capital gains treatment in this situation would result in a windfall to taxpayers who used the installment basis on pre-1960 sales. The word “windfall” in this context appears to mean anything that is left to a taxpayer after the tax collector is finished with him. See dissent of Mr. Justice Jackson in Arrowsmith v. Commissioner, 344 US 6, 11, 97 L ed 6, 11 (1952).

The State Tax Commission alludes to the theory that at the time of the sale in 1959, the sale could *465 not have been that of a capital asset because there was no such thing as a capital asset at that time, and therefore no capital gain could arise under ORS 316.410(1) which defines capital gain to mean the gain from the sale or exchange of capital assets. An argument of this type must fail under the authority of the Snell decision, supra. That decision holds that the asset sold must be categorized at the time the installment is received and that the categorization must be made under the law in effect at receipt. The sale in Snell occurred while the Eevenue Act of 1921 was operative. Section 206(a)'(6) of that act included in capital assets “property acquired and held by the taxpayer for profit or for investment for more than two years, (whether or not connected with his trade or business) but not i! * * stock in trade of the taxpayer or other property of a land which would properly be included in the inventory of the taxpayer if on hand at the close of the taxable year.” The installments were received while the Eevenue Acts of 1924 and 1926 operated. They added to the express words of exclusion “or property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale in the course of his trade or business.” Therefore, in Snell the court used language which was not in the taxing statute at the time of a sale to categorize the sale as giving rise to ordinary income upon the receipt of the installment. The Snell decision forces us to look at the language in the statute at the time of the receipt of the installment and since the statute noted the existence of a category of asset at that time which category could be denominated “capital,” then the sale could have been of a capital asset.

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Related

Kirby v. Department of Revenue
488 P.2d 801 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1971)
Kirby and Elder v. Dept. of Rev.
4 Or. Tax 213 (Oregon Tax Court, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Or. Tax 461, 1964 Ore. Tax LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-state-tax-commission-ortc-1964.