McClintock v. Westover

167 F.2d 601, 2 C.B. 180, 36 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 966, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3906
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 1948
DocketNo. 11587
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 167 F.2d 601 (McClintock v. Westover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClintock v. Westover, 167 F.2d 601, 2 C.B. 180, 36 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 966, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3906 (9th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Circuit Judge.

L. H. McClintock and Florence L. McClintock, copartners, doing business as the McClintock Display Company, appeal from a judgment of the district court, denying them a recovery of taxes paid in accordance with an alleged illegal assessment of manufacturers’ sales taxes. The taxes were levied in March of 1943 by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for the thirteen months’ period from October 1, 1941, to October 31, 1942, inclusive. The taxes as levied were paid, and a claim for refund had been made and rejected.

The taxpayers operate a business in which they manufacture decorative trimmings made in part of rubber, simulating fresh parsley. The trimmings are used in meat markets and similar establishments in decorating displays of meat. The taxpayers entered into agreements with their customers, entitled “Rental Agreement”1 to let their products to their customers for limited periods, and in connection therewith to render certain services in the replacement or renovation of soiled or damaged trimmings. The service usually called for a replacement of 50% of all the trimmings approximately every sixty days.

The manufacturer’s excise taxes imposed and due on the transactions were computed by the Commissioner on the basis of the total gross revenue derived from the agreements for the taxable periods in question.

The appellant-taxpayers alleged that •they manufactured a taxable rubber article, and concede that it is within the scope of § 3406(a) (7), Internal Revenue Code, as it existed from October 1, 1941, to October 31, 1942, 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Code, § 3406(a) (7). They dispute, however, the manner in which the amount of the manufacturer’s excise tax was computed. The trial court, upon its conclusion that the rental agreements were leases, constituting taxable sales within the meaning of the taxing statute, held the computation to be made [603]*603Upon the proper basis. Appellants present a variety of contentions, none of which, in our opinion, are meritorious, and we treat them as briefly as seems possible to an understandable analysis of several .technical statutory tax provisions.

The primary question raised is whether the “Rental Agreement” constitutes a lease. Appellants argue that the “Rental Agreement” is a mere accounting slip and not a lease form.' It does not purport to contain the entire understanding of the parties, it does not describe any property leased to a customer for any particular period of time, nor is there in it, or was there in the applicable agreement, any requirement that appellants should furnish an article made of rubber.2

The government argues that the agreement in question is a lease and constitutes a taxable sale within the statute; that the excise taxes were therefore properly assessed upon the total gross revenues derived by the taxpayers; and that the taxpayers were “lessors” and not “users” of the rubber products manufactured and leased by them in operation of their business. The issue as set forth by the government’s brief is “whether the aggregate amount of the admitted ‘Gross Revenue’ received by the taxpayers under that single document which constituted a lease must be considered a statutory ‘taxable sale’ subject to tax on the total gross price for which the - taxpayers’ articles were thus leased.”

The government also argues that the rental agreement constituted a bailment for use, the soiling or destruction of the articles during such use being immaterial in that most personal property is worn out and depreciated by use over a short or long period of time. The fact that the supplying of renovated or new articles as the previously leased units became no longer usable was immaterial since the customers kept • them under a bailment for use and the taxpayers kept title thereto.

The trial court followed the contentions of the government in general.

Section 3406(a) (7) of the Internal Revenue Code imposes a tax on the sale of any taxable article. Section 3440 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 3440, imposes the tax on all articles leased instead of sold by providing that the lease of the article shall be considered a taxable sale. The rental agreement in the instant case gave the taxpayers’ customers the possession and use of the rubber products over a specified period of time in consideration of the rentals paid therefor, and, in our opinion, the court below properly held that such a transaction constituted a lease within the meaning of § 3440, as amended, and, hence, are taxable sales under § 3406(a) (7). The findings of the District Judge are fully supported by the evidence, and the conclusion that the rental agreement was a lease is borne out by the intent of the parties as well as the substance and form of the instrument used. It is clear that the taxpayers and the customers both intended and considered the instrument and its renewal to be a lease of an article distributed and serviced thereunder. The agreement contains all the essentials necessary to establish a valid lease — a definite agreement on the extent and boundary of the property leased, a definite and agreed term, a definite price of rental and the time and manner of payment. See Levin v. Saroff, 54 Cal.App. 285, 201 P. 961. The intention was present; there was a right of possession and use continuous in nature under the agreement; and there was specific property described — “Rubber Leaf 20-18 R.L. at 7f-$140.” See G.C.M. 11410, XII-1 Cum.Bull. 382, 384 (1933). Lease terms were continuously used by the party in the negotiations and discussions concerning the agreement, as well as in the testimony given by the taxpayers’ witnesses. [604]*604Thus the amount of gross revenues received from the agreements constituted rentals, as found by the trial judge, the services rendered being incidental thereto.

The taxpayers rely in their argument upon the case of People’s Outfitting Co. v. United States, 58 F.2d 847, 74 Ct.Cl. 419, which involves the question of whether a particular document constitutes a lease or a conditional sale. The court held that the transactions therein constituted conditional sales and not leases; thus, no excise tax was payable under the statute, § 604 of the 1924 Rev.Act, 26 Ú.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Acts, page 94, where final payment was not made before February 26, 1926, the date of the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1926.

It is our opinion that the cited case does not support appellants’ contentions, to the effect that although the statute says a lease — what was intended was a lease that amounted to a sale. The Act says “lease” and no limitations are provided. We are not at liberty to hold that Congress meant only those instruments resembling sales, i.e., an instrument designated a lease which provides that title shall pass on payment of rent reserved. We do not construe § 3440 as meaning that an excise tax accrues whether the article is sold or leased by an instrument which provides that title shall pass when the rent reserved is paid. The appellants mistakenly conclude that since ■title would never pass under the so-called rental agreement, it was not such a lease as would be within the purview of § 3440.

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167 F.2d 601, 2 C.B. 180, 36 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 966, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclintock-v-westover-ca9-1948.