Miller v. United States

98 F. Supp. 948, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1151, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2335
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedFebruary 19, 1951
DocketCiv. A. 14-50
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 98 F. Supp. 948 (Miller v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. United States, 98 F. Supp. 948, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1151, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2335 (D. Neb. 1951).

Opinion

DELEHANT, District Judge.

The plaintiffs, as the sole legatees of Freeman P. Mills, deceased, who died December 30, 1946, and as successors to him and to the personal representatives of his estate seek in this action to recover the sum of $5,344.03 1 with interest, as the aggregate amount of additional income taxes asserted wrongfully to have been assessed, paid and collected during the period of the administration of the estate in respect of the decedent’s income for the several years 1945 and 1946.

Without unnecessary enumeration, it may be observed that the conditions for such suit prescribed by Title 26 U.S.C. § 3772 have been met. And jurisdiction is claimed, conceded, and exists under Title 28 U.S.C. § 1346.

Essentially the question is whether the profits derived from the sale by Freeman P. Mills during the several years 1945 and 1946 of sundry cows, heifers and bulls were taxable, in the manner of his and his estate’s returns, as long term capital gains, or, in the manner of the defendant’s insistence, as ordinary income. If, and to the. extent that, the.former alternative is accepted,, the plaintiffs must prevail; otherwise, they may not recover.

The complaint 2 sets out in detail (which for present purposes need not be carried into this memorandum) the making of the taxpayer’s returns for the several years, the assessment and payment of additional taxes based upon the defendant’s theory of the taxable character of the profits now involved, and the presentation of claims for refunds, upon the basis of which (after elimination of the unrecoverable item of $252.89 identified in footnote 1) recovery is sought for alleged excessive' payments in respect of (a) the tax for 1945 in the sum of $2,278.88, paid as of September 17, 1948, (date corrected to correspond to stipulation) and (b) the tax for 1946 in the sum of $3,065.15, of which $117.64 was paid as of March 11, 1947 and $2,947.51 as of September 17, 1948. Answering the plaintiffs’ claim for recovery of the foregoing items, the defendant admits the making of the returns and the assessments and payments of additional taxes and the presentation of claims for refunds, but, by appropriate denials, reflects its persisting position in reliance on which the additional taxes were assessed, namely, that all of the profits arising from the sales of the animals above mentioned were taxable as ordinary income, and prays for the dismissal of the action.

The case has been tried upon its merits and has been submitted to the court upon (a) a written stipulation which has been made a part of the files of the case; (b) a short oral stipulation dictated by counsel at the opening of the trial and then allowed by the court; and (c) the testimony of two witnesses supplemented by two exhibits. which were received in evidence. Counsel have submitted typewritten briefs in' support of their respective positions 3 ; *950 and the action is before the court for final ruling.

By way of the announcement of its factual findings, the court first declares that it adopts and finds to be true the facts formally stipulated by the parties in the instrument filed October 11, 1950 (filing 4). They will neither be repeated in detail nor summarized, beyond the statement that they cover adequately, the Nebraska citizenship of the plaintiffs; the making to the Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Nebraska of returns for taxation in respect of the income of Freeman P. Mills for the several years 1945 and 1946; the payment with each return of the tax computed and returned therein; the assessments thereafter for the several years of the items of additional tax alleged and the payment of such items; the filing with the collector more than six months prior to the institution of this action of claims for refund in respect of the amounts in suit; the absence of action by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue on such claims; and the plaintiffs’ succession to the rights in the premises of the original taxpayer for each year.

Before the introduction of oral testimony, it was stipulated between counsel, with formal allowance by the court, that: “in the event that this court finds that the gains from the sales of cows, heifers and bulls sold by the taxpayer during the years 1945 and 1946 are to be treated as capital gains for income-tax purposes, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount sued for, as that amount has been amended by the stipulation and amendment agreed on in the pretrial conference” (see footnote 1).

Immediately before the dictation of that stipulation counsel for the several parties orally made opening statements which were stenographically reported by the official court reporter, of whose notes, presently available, an informal transcript has been made for the advice of the court in the present ruling.

Further facts established by the evidence and now found by the court are these. Freeman P. Mills was a Western Nebraska cattle rancher and operated two ranches in extent aggregating 20,000 acres in the vicinity of Gordon, Nebraska. In one of those operations from 1941 to and through 1946 he was in partnership with his son,. Milbourne W. Mills, who in the former year had succeeded to the interests of another partner of his father in that operation. In the other ranch operation,. Freeman P. Mills had had a partner until! about 1942 when the association was dissolved by a division of the cattle, with Mills remaining individually in the operation. Thereafter and until his death he conducted his operation of that ranch with a view to the rebuilding to its capacity of the cattle herd on it.

The elder Mills’ business was the breeding and raising of Hereford beef cattle. He operated generally in the following manner. On the several ranches he kept a large number of Hereford cows 4 for the production of calves. These cows were raised by him on the ranches. As sires,, he used no animals of his own raising, but rather purchased as they were required registered young Hereford bulls which were used for not more than three or four years, when, from considerations of efficiency and the avoidance of inbreeding, they were sold on the general livestock-market. Each year in the early part of' April, calves were born in large number. Of these the males were promptly castrated, and, after being kept and grazed as young-steers for a period of time considered to be to the greatest financial advantage of their owner, were sold on the market. 5 The- *951 females so born were retained without incident until they were approximately fourteen months old, when they were introduced, along with the cows and any retained heifers over two years old 6 into the breeding herd, placed in pastures with bulls and thus exposed to the incident of pregnancy. As a matter of practical experience, of bovine females thus circumstanced, some eighty or eighty-five percent conceive, carry through the nine and one-half month gestation period, and deliver, calves.

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Bluebook (online)
98 F. Supp. 948, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1151, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-united-states-ned-1951.