North Carolina Granite Corp. v. Commissioner

43 T.C. 149, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 20
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1964
DocketDocket No. 93770
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 43 T.C. 149 (North Carolina Granite Corp. 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
North Carolina Granite Corp. v. Commissioner, 43 T.C. 149, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 20 (tax 1964).

Opinion

Forrester, Judge:

Respondent has determined deficiencies in petitioner’s income taxes for the years 1956,1957, and 1958 in the respective amounts of $29,962.33, $17,188.20, and $30,317.73. Petitioner in its amended petition claims overpayments for the same years of $58,564.10, $3,049.12, and $37,512.28, respectively.

The only issues remaining for decision are the following:

(1) What was petitioner’s “gross income from the property” for computing percentage depletion with respect to crushed granite sold for use as poultry grit ?

(2) Is petitioner, in calculating “taxable income from the property” for tbe 50-percent limitation on percentage depletion, entitled to make adjustments in its expense deductions to reflect annual inventory changes ?

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.

Petitioner, a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware and having its principal place of business in Mount Airy, N.C., filed its income tax returns for the years in question with the district director of internal revenue for the district of North Carolina. It is engaged in the business of extracting and selling granite from its large quarry in Mount Airy. Petitioner’s quarry produces a uniformly light-gray granite known as White Mount Airy granite.

Issue 1

During all relevant times petitioner sold its granite as dimension stone, ornamental stone, riprap, rubble, poultry grit, roofing stone, gravestone, and road material. The granite sold as dimension stone and ornamental stone either was sold directly from petitioner’s quarry in the form of rough blocks or was processed in petitioner’s stone-cutting and stone-sawing sheds. The granite which petitioner sold as riprap 1 and rubble2 was sold directly from its quarry without processing at the cutting sheds. The granite sold for use as poultry grit, roofing stone,3 gravestone,4 and road material was processed in petitioner’s crusher.

“Poultry grit,” or “grit,” is a term applied in the poultry-raising industry! to stone that will not be attacked or dissolved by the digestive juices of poultry. Its function is to grind food in the gizzards of poultry, and simultaneously to strengthen the digestive system of the bird. Grit serves to increase feed efficiency,5 develop a stronger, larger, and more efficient digestive system, increase resistance to disease, and reduce bird mortality.

Poultry have no teeth. They “chew” their food by grinding it up in the organ known as the gizzard, which is the muscular part of tbe stomach. Grit is fed to the bird along with its food. As the rhythmic contractions of the gizzard apply pressure to the material inside it, the food is broken down into small particles by the grit. It is then possible for enzymes to break down the complex molecules of the food into simple nutrients which can be absorbed through the walls of the digestive system. Since enzymes operate only upon the surface of food, it is important that the food be rapidly broken down into small particles, to increase the surface area, otherwise much of the food will pass through the relatively short digestive system without being absorbed and will be excreted. This would result in higher costs because of reduced feed efficiency.

Besides grinding the food, grit also stimulates the gizzard to contract, further improving digestion. This muscle exercise helps develop a strong gizzard, which enables the rest of the digestive system to become well developed.

Not all substances are equally well suited for use as poultry grit. The material must be insoluble in the digestive juices of poultry, or it would not remain in the system long enough to perform its function as a grinding agent. For similar reasons, a good grit must not be friable; otherwise, the pressure of the gizzard contractions would break it into very small pieces. It would then pass out of the gizzard and be excreted without grinding the food.

In addition, a good grit must not adversely affect a bird’s bodily chemistry, by adding harmful or toxic elements, by causing the elimination of necessary elements through chemical combination, or by changing the acid concentration of the stomach. It must have rough, abrasive surfaces, to achieve maximum grinding efficiency.

Finally, a good grit must be of a color which will appeal to the bird. Experiments by poultry scientists have established that chickens and turkeys have color preferences in grit. It has been found that the birds prefer light, metallic colors. If the material does not have a color which is preferred by the birds, they will refuse to eat it and thus will not get enough grit.

As early as 1930, poultry scientists concluded that light-gray crushed granite was the best material for poultry grit. At the time of trial, no better substance had yet been discovered. Producers of poultry feed advise their customers to use insoluble granite grit in order to obtain high feed efficiency. Petitioner’s granite is a light-gray insoluble granite and is ideal for poultry grit. There are only four or five commercial producers of poultry grit in the United States. All produce light-gray insoluble granite.

Boad material is used in the building of streets and highways. To be suitable for use as road material, a stone need only possess strength, i.e., nonfriability, and bulk. It must also be cheap. Suitable materials are widely available, there being thousands of producers in the United States and several in the immediate vicinity of petitioner’s quarry. Stone other than granite makes quite satisfactory road material.

Processing in the crusher is not the only step in the production of crushed granite. After the stone passes through the crusher, it is screened into several different sizes. At least 90 percent of the product of the crushing process will remain on a No. 45 screen (U.S. Standard Sieve Series).

The crushing and screening processes yield poultry grit and road material simultaneously. The crushed granite destined for use as poultry grit, of which there are five sizes, is fed from the screens’ downspouts to the bagging room. That which is to be used as road material is recombined with other sizes and sent through a chute to a pile outside the crusher building. Koadstone is composed of various sizes of crushed stone, the precise formula used in North Carolina being determined by specifications of the State Highway Commission. Crushed granite of a size suitable for use as poultry grit is included in the mixtures used for roads.

The crushing and screening processes applied in petitioner’s crusher are the processes ordinarily applied by producers of crushed granite. The crushed granite produced by petitioner’s crusher is in the form in which crushed granite is normally sold and is salable for use as poultry grit, gravestone, roofing stone, or roadstone without requiring any additional processing to obtain one from the other.

When crushed granite is sold for use as roadstone, it is sold and shipped in bulk. When sold as poultry grit, it is packed in bags of 80-, 50-, or 25-pound capacity.

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Bluebook (online)
43 T.C. 149, 1964 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-carolina-granite-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1964.