Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Commissioner

7 B.T.A. 835, 1927 BTA LEXIS 3101
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 1927
DocketDocket Nos. 5763, 10456.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 B.T.A. 835 (Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Commissioner, 7 B.T.A. 835, 1927 BTA LEXIS 3101 (bta 1927).

Opinion

[841]*841OPINION.

Milliken:

The first issue relates to the action of respondent in holding that nothing of value which may be included in invested capital was paid in for petitioner’s common stock. Petitioner avers that the common stock was issued in part payment for land and plant assets, both being of substantial value. The problem is to determine the actual cash value of that which was paid in for the stock of petitioner. We must determine not the value of the stock in and of itself for invested capital purposes, but the actual cash value of the land and services paid for the same. There is not sufficient direct evidence upon which we may depend, in fixing a value of the property and personal services for which a large block of common [842]*842stock was issued. However, we are of the opinion, in this case, that we should take into account the various considerations that entered into the various transactions, by reason of which the stock was issued or sold, and from the same we will be enabled to determine the value of the preferred and common stock of petitioner, with a resultant value of the land and personal services paid in for the same.

We find cash of $30,000 was paid for 300 shares of preferred stock subscribed for at the date of incorporation, and petitioner caused to 'be issued to the subscribers 150 shares of common stock as a bonus. There were sold for cash in the open market, 15,350 shares of preferred stock and 7,675 shares of common stock, for $1,535,000. To Cowham and McCourtie were issued 1,850 shares of preferred and 5,300 shares of common in payment for 286 acres of land, and the petitioner, as their agent, sold in the open market for their account 1,850 shares of preferred and 925 shares of common, crediting the proceeds of $185,000 to their account. In addition to a cash payment, the Cowham Engineering & Construction Co. received 4,375 shares of common stock in payment for their services incident to the construction of the plant.

One of the most important assets which the petitioner acquired at date of incorporation was the valuable 286 acres of limestone lands, which McCourtie and Cowham had acquired. Only a short time elapsed after the date McCourtie and Cowham acquired the lands before they were transferred to petitioner. What was the cost of the lands to them? They purchased the lands on their own account, paying therefor, in cash, $247,000, and agreed to cause to be issued to the persons from whom they acquired the lands, 100 shares of preferred stock and 1,250 shares of common stock of a corporation to be organized. The persons from whom they purchased the lands were in a position to be informed as to their true value and certainly McCourtie and Cowham knew of their value when transferring the lands to the petitioner.

That which was paid in for one share of preferred stock and one-half share of common stock, is clearly evidenced by the sales in the open market and the sales of the 1,850 shares of preferred stock and 925 shares of common stock of Cowham and McCourtie, on the basis of $100 for the combination. If we had only the issuance of the 17,500 shares of preferred and 8,750 shares of common stock sold for cash at rate of one share preferred and one-half share of common for $100, our problem would be simple of solution, but we have an additional block of 8,750 shares of common stock, which were issued in part payment for land and services of substantial value.

Cowham and McCourtie paid for the 286 acres of mineral lands, $247,000 in cash and agreed to pay McNider $10,000, or a cost of [843]*843$257,000, and they received from petitioner, from the sale of 1,850 shares of preferred stock and 925 shares of common stock, $185,000. After the transaction incident to the sale was concluded, whereby all parties to the transaction had received the stock to which they were entitled, we find Cowham and McCourtie left with $185,000 in cash and 8,175 shares of common stock in payment for the transfer of the lands to the petitioner. The difference between $257,000 (cost to Cowham and McCourtie) and the cash received, $185,000, leaves an amount of $72,000, and we think this correctly reflects that which was paid in for the 3,175 shares of common stock held by them, and results in a value of $22.08 for each share of common stock. That which was paid for so large a block of common stock is also representative of that which was jKiid for the entire issue of common stock. We are of the opinion that the services of Cowham Engineering & Construction Co., being a part of the cost of the plant and for which 4,375 shares of common stock were issued, were of a value equal to $22.68 for each share of common stock, or a value for the services paid in of $99,225. It has been shown that large blocks of preferred stock were sold for $100 per share, with a bonus of one-half share of common stock. By subtracting from the sale price of $100, the value of one-half share of common stock, or $11.34, we find a value for the preferred stock of $88.66 per share. Application of the value per share of the common stock to the total issue, 17,500 shares, results in a value of $396,900, and application of the value per share of the preferred stock to the total issue of 17,500 shares, results in a value of $1,551,500, or a total value for both issues of stock of $1,948,450. Eespondent has allowed in invested capital only the par value of the preferred stock, or $1,750,000, thus understating invested capital for all the years by the difference here allowed, or $198,450.

The second issue relates to the value as of March 1, 1913, of the deposits of limestone and clay owned by the petitioner. The issue is common to all the years, due to the deductions allowable for depletion. The determination of quantity, as well as value, is involved.

We are satisfied that the survey of the petitioner’s properties, begun in 1922 and completed in 1924, was careful and thorough- — very much more so than the original prospecting- — and that the results shown satisfactorily establish the content in tons of the deposits of limestone and of clay. We have previously held that an accurate estimate of available reserves was acceptable for computations of depletion, notwithstanding that it was made several years subsequent to the basic date. Kehota Mining Co., 3 B. T. A. 885, and the principle is of evident application in the instant case, where the de[844]*844posits are fixed in character. Accordingly, the survey is accepted and the reserves are determined, as indicated in the findings of fact.

As to the values of the limestone and clay, on March 1, 1913, reliance by the petitioner rests on opinion evidence. The opinions are those of the promoter of the enterprise, and of an experienced dealer in real estate, who had resided all his life in the vicinity in which the property is located. Their opinions coincided in values of $5,000 per acre for both limestone and clay lands, as of March 1,1913. The real estate dealer testified that in 1912, representing the petitioner, he had offered as high as $5,000 an acre for land immediately south of petitioner’s quarry, but the offer was refused.

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Related

Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Commissioner
7 B.T.A. 835 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 B.T.A. 835, 1927 BTA LEXIS 3101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-states-portland-cement-co-v-commissioner-bta-1927.