Nichols v. Commissioner

43 T.C. 135, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1964
DocketDocket No. 84901
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 43 T.C. 135 (Nichols 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
Nichols v. Commissioner, 43 T.C. 135, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22 (tax 1964).

Opinions

Fax, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners’ income tax for the year 1955 in the amount of $25,682.62.

The sole issue for decision is whether, under the facts and circumstances of this case, petitioner C. L. Nichols was entitled to claim depreciation on various assets used by him in a quarrying and rock-crushing business in 1955, the year he contracted to sell these assets. All other issues raised by the pleadings have been conceded by the petitioners.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Petitioners, C. L. Nichols and Mildred H. Nichols, are husband and wife residing in Charlotte, Iowa. They filed a joint income tax return for the taxable year 1955 with the district director of internal revenue at Des Moines, Iowa. The wife, Mildred, is a party hereto solely by reason of her having joined in the filing of said joint return; and the term “petitioner” as hereinafter used will refer only to the husband, C. L. Nichols.

Petitioner, both during and for several years prior to the taxable year 1955 here involved, was engaged in the business of quarrying and rock crushing in Clinton County, Iowa. Prior to 1955, he had been associated in such business with a man named George F. Schrader. Their business operations had been conducted initially as a partnership, later for a time through a corporation, and then thereafter again as a partnership. On January 1, 1955, petitioner had acquired Schrader’s interest in the assets and operations of the business, by transferring to him certain real estate and cash, the aggregate value of which is not established by the evidence. Thereafter, during the year 1955, petitioner continued to operate said business as a sole proprietorship, under the former trade name of Nichols & Schrader.

The properties which petitioner employed during the year 1955 in his proprietorship business operations consisted principally of: Miscellaneous machinery and equipment, including such items as rock crushers, drills, compressors, shovels, pumps, bulldozers, trucks, and related units; several automobiles and trucks of various kinds; and four parcels of real estate which he owned, including two on which there were rock quarries and farm buildings, one on which there was a combination garage and office building, and one on which there were bulk oil, storage facilities. All of said land (together with the quarries and other improvements located thereon) and approximately 85 percent of said machinery and equipment had previously been used in the above-mentioned partnership between petitioner and Schrader. As to several of the depreciable items, the original cost thereof had been fully depreciated for income tax purposes prior to 1955. One of the above automobiles (an Oldsmobile) had been acquired by the partnership in 1954 and was partially depreciated during that year. Another automobile (a Dodge) and a pickup truck (also a Dodge) were acquired by petitioner in 1955.

In addition, petitioner during the year 1955 was a “lessee” under sis quarry lease agreements relating to land owned by various other persons on which rock quarries were situated. At least three of these agreements, as hereinafter shown, had been executed by him during the year 1955; and all had been obtained without payment of any “cost” or consideration, other than his agreement to pay specified royalties on the rock he removed, and to perform the other obligations imposed on him thereunder. The dates of these quarry lease agreements, the period for which they were to run, their costs to petitioner, and the amounts of the royalties which petitioner had contracted to pay to the lessors on the rock he removed, were as follows:

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1 Plus 100 tons of agricultural limestone per year.
3 Not established.

The ShafF lease, as to which the rock was of superior quality, contained a specific provision that “Second party [the petitioner] may not sublease this lease without consent of the first parties.” All the leases restricted petitioner’s rights thereunder to quarrying operations only, and did not permit farming operations.

The two quarries which petitioner owned and the six other quarries which he leased were all located in Clinton County, Iowa. Their juxtaposition was such that they formed an ellipse roughly similar to the borders of Clinton County. The result was that there was no portion of the county which was not relatively accessible from one of these eight quarries. Petitioner operated on each site from time to time by moving his machinery and equipment from one quarry to another, depending on the particular place or location in the county where he had to deliver the rock. Because of the strategic location of these eight quarries, petitioner had lower transportation costs and better access, generally, to potential purchasers in the county than other producers. This competitive advantage gave petitioner a virtual monopoly in the quarrying and rock-crushing business in Clinton County.

On or about December 15, 1955, petitioner was approached by Kenneth R. Farquhar (hereinafter referred to as Farquhar), who expressed an interest in buying most of the assets of petitioner’s business. Farquhar at that time either owned or was associated with the operation of businesses or a similar type in another part of Iowa. Petitioner bad not theretofore advertised or offered Ms own business for sale. In fact, prior to the time he was approached by Farquhar, petitioner had entertained no intention of selling Ms business or the operating assets used in it. The result of said negotiations with Farquhar was that (1) petitioner offered to sell all the assets of his business, except for the cash, the accounts receivable, and the aforesaid two automobiles and the pickup truck and (2) petitioner offered to assign in connection therewith his interests as “lessee” in the six quarry lease agreements, all for the aggregate price of $240,000. In addition, petitioner agreed to transfer Ms inventory of crushed rock on hand. The parties thereupon agreed that the value of this inventory of crushed rock was $9,000, thereby making the aggregate offering price for all said properties (other than the said items which petitioner was to retain) the amount of $249,000. Farquhar accepted this offer.

Thereupon, on December 20, 1955, two written contracts of sale were executed, which may be summarized in material part as follows:

One of said contracts of December 20, 1955, was executed by petitioner and his wife (as the “Seller”) and by Farquhar and an associate, O. W. Lawrence, in their individual capacities (as the “Buyer”). TMs contract pertained solely to the two parcels of real estate owned (not leased) by petitioner, on which rock quarries and certain farm bmldings were situated. The buyer agreed therein to pay the total sum of $35,000 for said two parcels of real estate as follows: $500 upon execution of the contract (the receipt of which was acknowledged); $2,000 on or before January 4, 1956; $500 on February 1, 1956; and $500 on the first day of each month thereafter until the whole amount of said purchase price of $35,000 was paid in full. Possession of the real estate was to be delivered to the buyer on January 4, 1956; but execution and delivery of warranty deeds therefor were to be deferred until all covenants and agreements of the buyer had been performed.

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Nichols v. Commissioner
43 T.C. 135 (U.S. Tax Court, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 T.C. 135, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-commissioner-tax-1964.