Mississippi Valley Portland Cement Company v. United States

408 F.2d 827
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 9, 1969
Docket25618
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 408 F.2d 827 (Mississippi Valley Portland Cement Company v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi Valley Portland Cement Company v. United States, 408 F.2d 827 (5th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

The taxpayer, a nontax-exempt cooperative incorporated in Mississippi, sought to deduct distributions to its shareholders from its corporate income tax as “patronage dividends.” 1 These payments were made from the corporation’s net profits during the tax years in question. The district court, 280 F.Supp. 393, agreeing with the Commissioner, said that notwithstanding the cooperative camouflage, these payments were in reality no more than dividends paid to the corporation’s shareholders, and held that they were not deductible as patronage dividends. 2 We, like the district court, cannot sanction a masquerade wherein a dividend is costumed in the habiliments of a patronage dividend. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

I.

The relevant facts have been stipulated by the parties and may be summarized as follows:

The Mississippi Valley Portland Cement Company, the taxpayer, was incorporated in the State of Mississippi in 1956. Initially it issued 500,000 shares of stock, of which approximately 417,000 shares were issued to eight individuals, *829 and the balance to their friends, relatives, and employees. 3 In 1957 it issued an additional 1,400,000 shares which it sold to the general public in four southern states, with approximately ninety percent being sold in Mississippi.

The taxpayer was organized as a cooperative under Mississippi law to manufacture and sell cement. Its charter, as amended, provided that the record owner of every five shares of stock had a preferred patronage right to purchase one barrel of cement during each fiscal year. 4 The stockholders and their assigns would have to buy the cement at the prevailing market price; but, to the extent that the sales price exceeded the cost of production and sale, patronage refunds would be paid to the stockholders annually in proportion to the amount of cement allocated to them or to their assignees.

Pursuant to authority conferred upon it by the corporate charter, the taxpayer’s board of directors adopted resolutions in January of each relevant year, prior to the February 1 beginning of the taxpayer’s fiscal year, allocating the plant’s entire production of cement to the stockholder-patrons or their assigns on the basis of their stock ownership. These board resolutions also provided that any profit margins from the production of cement should belong to the stockholder-patrons of record at the end of each fiscal year, and that they would be refunded as a patronage rebate, either in cash or reserve certificates. The taxpayer’s obligation to produce cement and to allocate it to the shareholders was to be enforceable as a contract.

The resolutions additionally provided that sales of cement would be made to or for the account of Valley Cement Sales, Inc. 5 Valley Sales is a separate nontax-exempt cooperative corporation organized by several of Mississippi Valley Portland Cement Company’s officers, directors, and stockholders as a sales *830 agency for the stockholder-patrons. The taxpayer subsequently entered into contracts with Valley Sales whereby it assigned to the latter all patronage rights to cement produced by the taxpayer during the forthcoming fiscal year and not purchased by the stockholder-patrons or others. During the relevant year, all of the cement produced by the taxpayer was delivered to Valley Sales to be sold to the general public.

At the conclusion of each tax year, the net receipts from sales of cement over and above production costs were allocated and distributed by the taxpayer to its stockholders of record in proportion to each person’s stock ownership as of the year’s end. It was not shown that the taxpayer had any stockholders other than those designated by it as stockholder-patrons, or that it did any business except on behalf of its stockholder patrons.

In its income tax returns for its fiscal years ending January 31, 1962,1963, and 1964, the taxpayer excluded the following amounts from its gross income as patronage dividends either allocated or paid to its stockholder-patrons:

Margin allocated or paid to stockholder-patrons Year ended
$ 285,215.14 1-31-62
454,208.41 1-31-63
421,296.68 1-31-64
1,160,720.23

As a result of these exclusions, the taxpayer reported no taxable income for these years. The Commissioner, in reviewing the taxpayer’s return, determined that the distributions to shareholders did not qualify as patronage payments, and therefore that the taxpayer owed a total tax of $505,561.97 for the three years in question.

The taxpayer paid the assessment and then sued in the district court for a refund of that amount. In holding that the Commissioner’s assessment was correct and that the taxpayer was not entitled to a refund, the district court wrote as follows:

“There is nothing in the method of doing business by the taxpayer in this case that distinguishes it from the average or normal corporation doing business for profit, no matter that the taxpayer is called a cooperative, or that the dividends to stockholders are referred to as patronage rebates. Other characteristics of this taxpayer akin to that of a corporation for profit is that the dividends were* payable only to stockholders of record at the end of each fiscal year, leaving stockholders, who might have sold their shares prior thereto, with no entitlement to a rebate on the basis of earnings during the fiscal year; and the fact that, as stipulated, actually no stockholder used the cement produced. All allocations were assigned to a sales agency or sold by that agency. As further stipulated, any allocations and delivery of cement to a patron were discouraged.
“It is the opinion of this Court, after carefully scrutinizing the structure of this taxpayer and its method of doing business, that it was not doing business with its consumer patrons or assigns in the historical sense of a consumer cooperative, but that its stockholders are in no different category from that of any corporation interested in profits, no matter whether the source of that profit be from the production of cement or any other product, and that accordingly the sums paid here are not excludable from taxable income.”

II.

The sole question presented by this appeal is whether the district court erred in holding that the taxpayer’s distribution of its net profits in the years *831 in question could not be categorized as patronage dividends. 6 To answer this question we look first to the statutory-definition of a “patronage dividend.” Section 1388(a), as added by the Revenue Act of 1962, provides:

“(a) Patronage Dividend.

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Bluebook (online)
408 F.2d 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-valley-portland-cement-company-v-united-states-ca5-1969.