Maid of the Mist Corporation and Affiliated Corporations v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

594 F.2d 919
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 1979
DocketDocket 77-4213
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 594 F.2d 919 (Maid of the Mist Corporation and Affiliated Corporations v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maid of the Mist Corporation and Affiliated Corporations v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 594 F.2d 919 (2d Cir. 1979).

Opinion

MOORE, Circuit Judge:

I

Maid of the Mist Corporation (“taxpayer”) is a New York corporation with its main office located at Niagara Falls, New York. Its principal business is the operation of excursion boats at the foot of Niagara Falls. Sometime prior to December 16, 1971, taxpayer decided to expand its fleet of excursion boats. On December 16, 1971, James V. Glynn (“Glynn”), taxpayer’s president, met in Port Dover, Ontario, with representatives of Hike Metal Products, Ltd. (“Hike”), a Canadian shipbuilding concern which had previously built excursion boats for taxpayer. At this meeting, a contract between Hike and taxpayer 1 for the construction and purchase of an excursion boat was signed. The contract had been drafted by taxpayer’s counsel two days before the meeting and was apparently the result of prior negotiations between the parties. The purchase price was $129,737.32.

The contract provided that “Title to and property in the Vessel shall be vested in the Shipowner [i. e., taxpayer] from the signing of this contract.” The contract also provided .that $3,000 of the purchase price was to be paid to Hike when the contract was signed. However, Glynn did not pay Hike the $3,000 at that time, despite the fact that he had a check for that amount — dated December 16, 1971, and made payable to Hike — in his possession during the December 16 meeting. Instead, Glynn delivered the signed contract to Hike, together with a letter which read as follows:

“We hand you herewith original and duplicate copy of contract for the construction of a vessel, duly executed by the Ship Owner.
This contract is conditionally delivered to you and such delivery shall become final when you are in receipt of the Ship Owner’s [i. e., taxpayer’s] check payable to your order in the sum of $3,000.00.
*921 As you are aware, this contract contemplates the building of a ship which Ship Owner will be able to place in the Niagara River beneath the Falls of Niagara by the use of cranes. As of this date, the contract for such delivery has not been executed and it is anticipated that it will be executed within the next few days and, upon the acceptance of that contract, the undersigned will forward to you the above-mentioned check.
In the event that delivery of the contemplated vessel is not possible by crane, then it will be necessary for us to enter into a new contract, which will call for the building of the vessel and the delivery in parts to the Maid of the Mist Landing and its reassemblage at that point before launching. Therefore, the necessity of conditioning this delivery this date.”

On December 18, 1971, taxpayer and Modern Crane Rentals, Ltd., signed a contract in Niagara Falls, Ontario for the delivery of the excursion boat by crane to the bottom of the Niagara River Gorge. On that same day Glynn mailed the $3,000 check to Hike from an Ontario, Canada, post office box. Hike received this check on December 21, 1971. The excursion boat was delivered to taxpayer in June, 1972.

In its income tax return for the year 1972, taxpayer claimed a seven percent investment tax credit for the purchase of the Maid.of the Mist III. The Commissioner, however, disallowed the credit on the ground that the excursion boat was acquired pursuant to an “order” placed between August 16, 1971 and December 20, 1971 — when the investment tax credit provisions were suspended with respect to foreign-manufactured goods pursuant to § 48(a)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. In a memorandum opinion, containing findings of fact, Judge Theodore Tannenwald, Jr., of the United States Tax Court, upheld the Commissioner’s determination. The decision, entered by Judge Wiles on August 11, 1977, sustained a deficiency in income tax for the year 1972 in the amount of $11,881.61. From that adverse decision, taxpayer brings this appeal. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

II

On August 15, 1971, the President of the United States, in an effort to reduce the country’s balance-of-payments deficit and to strengthen its economic position, issued Proclamation 4074, 3 C.F.R. 60 (1971-1975 Compilation), reprinted in 85 Stat. 926 (1971). The Proclamation, which became effective the following day, imposed a ten percent import surcharge on foreign-produced goods brought into the United States. In a related move, Congress thereafter enacted § 48(a)(7) 2 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 which temporarily limited the investment tax credit (see I.R.C. § 38) to items produced in the United States. Section 48(a)(7) denied the investment tax credit to foreign-made goods “acquired pursuant to an order placed on or before the date of termination of Proclamation 4074 ..” On December 20,1971, the President terminated Proclamation 4074. See Presidential Proclamation 4098, 3 C.F.R. 94 (1971-1975 Compilation), reprinted in 86 Stat. 1591 (1971). Thus, foreign-manufactured goods acquired pursuant to an “order” placed between August 16, 1971, and *922 December 20, 1971, are ineligible for the investment tax credit.

The sole issue presented by this appeal is whether taxpayer “ordered” the Maid of the Mist III on or before December 20, .1971, or at a time during which the investment tax credit on foreign-produced goods was suspended. The applicable Treasury Regulations describe an “order” as follows:

“An order is any directive, written or oral, to another person reasonably designed to effect the acquisition of property at a later date. An order need not be a binding contract.”

Treas.Reg. § 1.48-l(o)(2)(i) (1972).

Taxpayer argues that an “order” does not arise until there has been a sufficient commitment by a purchaser to a supplier to justify the supplier’s generation of economic activity as a result of the purchaser’s actions. See BNA Tax Management Portfolio 192-2nd, 1971 at A-43-A-44. In taxpayer’s view, the contract was not reasonably designed to effect the acquisition of the ship until Hike received the $3,000 down payment. In other words, the only event upon which the shipbuilder would have acted and did act in commencing construction of the vessel was the receipt of the $3,000 check on December'21. The Government responds that it is anomalous that under a regulation providing that “[a]n order need not be a binding contract,” a binding contract should not be an order.

If we regard the difference between a “contract” and an “order” in this case as the controlling issue, the case could go either way. The case could be regarded as a contract case in which the specific condition precedent to the liability of the shipbuilder was the actual receipt of the check. See 5 Williston on Contracts §§ 663, 666A (3d ed. 1961); 3A Corbin on Contracts §§ 627, 628 (2d ed. 1960).

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