Mesaba-Cliffs Min. Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

174 F.2d 857, 37 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1525, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4382
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 1949
DocketNo. 10796
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 174 F.2d 857 (Mesaba-Cliffs Min. Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mesaba-Cliffs Min. Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 174 F.2d 857, 37 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1525, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4382 (6th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Circuit Judge.

The Mesaba-Cliffs Mining Company, having become entitled to a credit for excess profits tax for the calendar year of 1940, sought to carry over and avail itself of such credit for the year 1941 in order to reduce its income subject to excess profits tax in the latter year. The Tax Court, sustaining the Commissioner, held that the company was not entitled to carry over such credit, and, as a consequence, determined a deficiency in excess profits tax for 1941 in the amount of $122,692.62. On appeal, the company contends that under Section 710 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S. C.A. § 710, it was entitled to deduct a carry-over of its stipulated 1940 unused excess profits credit in computing its income subject to excess profits tax for the year 1941.

A brief review of the nature of the mining company’s business and its operations in the past is helpful to an understanding [858]*858of the issue before the court and the contentions of the parties.

Petitioner is a mining corporation, owning and operating open pit iron ore mines in Minnesota. In compliance with its bylaws. it has, in the past, sold its entire production of ore each year to the eight iron ore and steel corporations which own its entire stock. Sales were made to these corporations • in proportion to their stock-holdings, at prices fixed from time to time by petitioner’s directors. For eight years prior to December 31, 1940, the ore was sold at cost to the stockholders, as determined by petitioner’s accountants. During that period, petitioner’s net income or deficit each year was only a small amount, resulting from variations in costs. In 1940, the Act imposing an excess profits tax on corporations became effective, and it became apparent that a continuance of petitioner’s practice of selling ore to its stockholders . at cost would subject petitioner and its stockholders to a substantial tax disadvantage, resulting from the fact that the benefit of the excess profits credit provided by statute on account of petitioner’s large invested capital would be largely lost. The board of directors of petitioner, therefore, determined that its ore should be sold during 1941 at specified prices above actual cost but not at more than fair market' value. Sales' to the stockholders were made in 1941, as in prior years, substantially in proportion to their stockholdings at these revised prices. As a result of these prices, • petitioner had a considerable excess profits net income in 1941, amounting to $542,902.39. Its 1941 excess profits credit, based on an equity-invested capital of $3,458,038.47, was about one-half this amount, or $276,643.08. Its 1940 excess profits credit, however, was in excess of its 1940 net income by $259,533.46, which amount, as was stipulated by the Commissioner, constituted petitioner’s “unused excess profits credit” for that year. The total 1940 and 1941 credits being almost equal to its excess profits net income, petitioner took the position that no excess profits tax was due for 1941, except a small deficiency conceded to be due on account of minor adjustments. However, the Commissioner determined that petitioner was not entitled to carry over its unused 1940 credit to 1941 and determined a deficiency in excess profits tax for 1941, as mentioned above, of $122,692.62. The foregoing recital brings us to the basis on which the tax in question is established.

The basis on which excess profits tax is levied, collected, and paid is declared to be the adjusted excess profits net income, Section 710(a) (1). The adjusted excess profits net income is, in Section 710(b), defined as the excess profits net income minus: (1) A specific exemption (not involved in this case); (2) the amount of the excess profits credit allowed under Section 712 (in this case, a sum which was stipulated for 1941) ; and (3) the amount of the unused excess profits credit adjustment for the taxable year, computed in accordance with Subsection (c). Subsection (c) sets forth that:' “(1) The unused excess profits credit adjustment for any taxable year shall be the aggregate of the unused excess profits credit carry-overs and unused excess profits credit carry-backs to such taxable year.”

Subsection (c) is the important provision in this case. The government contends that petitioner is not entitled to any credit adjustment under this section. Petitioner insists that it is entitled, by virtue of Subsection (c), to carry over its stipulated 1940 unused excess profits credit to compute its income subject to excess profits tax for 1941. The issue, therefore, is whether petitioner is entitled to include any amount as an excess profits credit adjustment under Subsection (c).

In the opinion of the Tax Court, it was declared that petitioner unquestionably would be entitled to the use of the stipulated unused excess profits credit carryover, in computing its 1941 excess profits net income, “if the excess profits provisions of the statute are to be given general application to all corporations, as the petitioner contends they should.” The Tax Court, however, held that “those provisions are not to be so construed, but that the facts of each case must be examined to determine whether the conditions which Congress sought to relieve actually obtain.” It then referred to its decision in Wier Long Leaf Lumber Co. v. Commissioner, 9 [859]*859T.C. 990, and quoted the following from its opinion in that case:

“ * * * the excess profits tax credit carry-back was intended by Congress to benefit only corporations which had been in active production throughout the war period and which had projected their activities to ‘peacetime years.’ The amendment was surely not adopted to permit a corporation during wartime years to cease all productive activity and obtain a substantial profit at the expense of the Federal revenue for doing nothing. Such an interpretation would permit a needless and unreasonable diversion of war-time revenue, would promote inflation, and would not assist reconversion to peacetime economy.”

Remarking that the principle of the Wier case should apply to the instant case, the Tax Court observed that petitioner was organized and was operated until 1941 as what might be termed a nonprofit corporation; that if it had continued to operate at cost, there would never have arisen any question of the excess profits credit carryover, or even excess profits; that in operations at cost, or without profit, petitioner would have passed on the profits to its stockholders in the form of lower prices for their ore and the stockholders would have received no benefit in the computation of their excess profits tax, on account of petitioner’s invested capital; and that the obvious reason for petitioner’s change of policy in 1941 was to take advantage of the invested capital provisions of the statute. It was stated, however, that petitioner was within its rights in adjusting its business operations to the tax advantage of its stockholders. But the Tax Court expressed the view that the legislative history illuminated the intention of Congress, and referred to the fact that the report of the Senate committee having the bill in charge declared that the statutory provision “relieves the hardships which may be caused by the sharply fluctuating earnings of many types of companies, the activities of which are dependent upon business cycles, by allowing unused excess-profits credits to be carried over into the two succeeding taxable years, thereby tending to level off the unusual effects due to rise and fall of income.

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174 F.2d 857, 37 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1525, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mesaba-cliffs-min-co-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca6-1949.