Morrow-Thomas Hardware Co. v. Commissioner

22 T.C. 781, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 157
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 30, 1954
DocketDocket No. 9566
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 T.C. 781 (Morrow-Thomas Hardware Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrow-Thomas Hardware Co. v. Commissioner, 22 T.C. 781, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 157 (tax 1954).

Opinion

OPINION.

Turnee, Judge:

By section 722 (a) of the Internal Kevenue Code,6 it is provided that if a taxpayer establishes that its excess profits tax, computed without the benefit of section 722, is excessive and discriminatory, and also establishes “what would be a fair and just amount representing normal earnings to be used as a constructive average base period net income for the purposes of an excess profits tax based upon a comparison of normal earnings and earnings during an excess profits tax period, the tax shall be determined by using such constructive average base period net income in lieu of the average base period net income otherwise determined” under the statute. By section 722 (b) (2) of the Code,6 it is provided that if the business of a taxpayer entitled to use the excess profits credit based on income pursuant to section 713 was depressed in the base period because of temporary-economic circumstances unusual to it, then its excess profits tax, computed without the benefit of section 722, “shall be considered to be excessive and discriminatory * * * if its average base period net income is an inadequate standard of normal earnings.”

It is the claim of the petitioner that, by reason of prolonged drought and dust storms, unusual in its trade area, its business was depressed during the base period, and as a consequence, its average base period net income was an inadequate standard of normal earnings within the meaning of section 722 (b) (2). It further claims that its average net earnings for the period 1915 to 1933, inclusive, is a fair and just amount to be used as its constructive average base period net income for the purposes herein.

It is the position of the respondent that dust storms and drought are not unusual in petitioner’s trade territory, that they did not therefore constitute temporary economic circumstances unusual in the case of petitioner, within the meaning of section 722 (b) (2), that the evidence does not show that petitioner’s business was depressed in the base period, and that its average base period net income is a fair and proper standard of normal earnings.

We have heretofore held that where a prolonged drought and resulting crop failures adversely affected a taxpayer’s base period earnings to such an extent that the average of such earnings was an inadequate standard of normal earnings, such taxpayer qualifies, under section 722 (b) (2), for such section 722 relief as may result from the determination of its excess profits tax by using the “constructive average base period net income” as established by the evidence, in lieu of the “average base period net income otherwise determined” under the

statute. S. N. Wolbach Sons, Inc., 22 T. C. 152. Cf. A. B. Premie Co., 19 T. C. 174. That there was a prolonged drought, with resulting crop failures and dust storms, which were unusual in duration and effect in petitioner’s trade territory, is definitely and clearly shown by the evidence, and we are thus brought to the question whether the petitioner’s business in the base period was depressed thereby and to such an extent that its average net income for the base period years was an inadequate standard of normal earnings, for the purposes of section 722.

As demonstrating that its business was depressed because of the drought and dust storms and that its average base period net income was accordingly an inadequate standard of normal earnings, petitioner, on brief, sums up its argument as follows:

The drought and dust storms experienced in petitioner’s trade territory during the years 1983 through 1939 curtailed agricultural production; the total annual cash farm income in said territory was seriously depressed; the income of petitioner was dependent upon agricultural production and income; the depression of agricultural production and income depressed petitioner’s income, * * *

While we find no fault with the stated syllogism, as such, the question for decision is not, on the record here, readily or reasonably susceptible of such simplification or disposition. In the first place, the income of petitioner was only partially dependent upon agriculture, and we are not advised whether that dependency, dollar- or profit-wise, was major or minor. In the second place, the volume of business done by petitioner during the base period was higher than for any prior 4 consecutive years as far back as 1915, except the period 1926 to 1929, inclusive, and with respect to that period, it is to be noted that oil had been discovered in petitioner’s trade territory in 1924, and 1926, for practical purposes, marked the beginning of oil and gas production on a substantial scale; and further, that in 1926 petitioner’s retail sales jumped to $171,358.65, as compared with $83,178.25 for 1925 and $89,384.33 for 1927, which were petitioner’s years of next highest retail sales volume.7 And while it is true that the percentage of net profits to sales was noticeably less in the base period than for most, if not all, other consecutive 4-year periods, except those covering the depression years of 1930 to 1935, inclusive, the petitioner has not undertaken to point out or demonstrate that its sales prices were ratably lower or that the increased or possibly added cost items, whichever brought about lower net profits for the base period in spite of the higher volume of sales, were attributable to or the result of the drought and dust storms.

The petitioner has shown, however, that for crop reporting districts 1-N, 1-S, and 2, in which the counties comprising its Texas trade territory were located, the farm income during the base period, though it had recovered to some extent from the depression period, was still substantially lower than it had been in years preceding the depression, and there is also evidence which convinces us that the same was true of counties comprising the Oklahoma Panhandle and that part of petitioner’s trade territory which was in northeastern New Mexico. The evidence further shows that in by far the greater portion of petitioner’s trade territory the business activities were chiefly farming and ranching, and the retail stores, which were petitioner’s customers in such area, drew their customers, directly or indirectly, from the farm and ranch trade; and as to the much smaller geographical area, in which oil and gas was produced, and in the 2 counties in which the 2 largest cities of the area, Amarillo and Lubbock, are located, the respondent has acceded to petitioner’s requested finding that 50 per cent or more of the customers of the retail stores, which in turn were petitioner’s customers, were similarly attributable to farming and ranching operations.

In addition to the above, the facts further show that following successive crop failures, resulting from the prolonged drought in the middle 1930’s, a very substantial portion of petitioner’s trade territory, along with southeastern Colorado and southwestern Kansas, was subjected to dust storms of such intensity and frequency as to become known as the Dust Bowl. And due in part to the actual land damage resulting from wind erosion and in part to fright and financial disaster, substantial acreage of the land under cultivation was abandoned, the acreage abandoned varying from a high of 30 per cent in some counties, to a fraction of 1 per cent in others, approximately 40 per cent of the abandonments being because of actual land damage and approximately 60 per cent to fright or other causes.

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Related

Morrow-Thomas Hardware Co. v. Commissioner
22 T.C. 781 (U.S. Tax Court, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 T.C. 781, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrow-thomas-hardware-co-v-commissioner-tax-1954.