Oahu Sugar Co. v. United States

156 Ct. Cl. 546
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 7, 1962
DocketNo. 422-58
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 156 Ct. Cl. 546 (Oahu Sugar Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oahu Sugar Co. v. United States, 156 Ct. Cl. 546 (cc 1962).

Opinion

Jones, Chief Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In this action, plaintiff, Oahu Sugar Company, Limited, sues for refund of additional income taxes in the amount of [548]*548$341,968.75, with interest, assessed and paid for the years 1950,1951, and 1952.

Since 1897, plaintiff has operated a sugar plantation, including a raw sugar mill, on the Island of Oahu in Hawaii.

The controversy is whether gains from plaintiff’s sales of certain unimproved land and land with houses thereon should be taxed as capital gains or as ordinary income.1 Plaintiff asserts the former; the defendant, of course, asserts the latter.

Condemnation by the United States for war purposes during World War II reduced plaintiff’s acreage under sugar cultivation from 11,238 acres to 9,919. As a consequence, production of sugar per year was reduced to a quantity 12,000 tons below the minimum 60,000 tons required for profitable operations.

An adjacent sugar plantation, Honolulu Plantation Company, was so similarly affected that in 1946 a decision was made to dissolve and sell its properties. Plaintiff was considered the logical buyer, as the land was contiguous and its utilization would enable plaintiff to produce raw sugar at a lower cost per ton. C. Brewer and Company, Limited, agent for Honolulu Plantation, instituted negotiations with American Factors, Limited, acting as plaintiff’s agent, for sale of the properties as a whole.

An independent report, the “Bond report,” assessing the efficacy of acquiring the properties, was prepared and presented to American Factors at the request of the plaintiff. This report appraised the properties; noted improvements necessary for the profitable production of sugarcane, and suggested that certain fee simple land in the Aiea homestead area, should the decision be made not to cultivate it for sugarcane, might be more valuable than as appraised in view of the interest in homesites there.

Plaintiff was a raw sugar producer with no inclination to enter the refining business. It was known that if plaintiff [549]*549were to acquire tlie properties, California and Hawaiian Sugar Refining Corporation, Limited (hereinafter referred to as C & H) was interested in purchasing from plaintiff the sugar refinery that Honolulu Plantation had formerly operated. The Bond report indicated that certain employee dwellings located in the New Mill Camp, and also desired by C & H, were the “cream of Honolulu Plantation Company village dwellings” and therefore advised against accepting C & H’s proposal in its entirety.

On January 1, 1947, plaintiff purchased Honolulu Plantation’s physical properties for $3,750,000. On April 9,1947, plaintiff conveyed to C & H at cost, pursuant to prior agreement, the refining mill and mill grounds. C & H also received plaintiff’s promise that plaintiff would rent houses in Aiea Village (included in the assets acquired by plaintiff) to C & H’s employees who operated the refinery.

Approximately 385 of the 14,631 acres acquired by plaintiff were held in fee simple — the remainder, under leasehold.

Capital outlays, occasioned by the aforementioned property acquisition and, in conjunction therewith, activities directed toward improving its entire operations, reduced plaintiff’s 1946 cash surplus of $3,750,000 to a deficit of $2,375,000 at the end of 1949, as reflected by bank borrowings.

Improvements were not confined to land use, but extended to employer-employee relations as well. The Longshoremen’s Union (ILWU) objected to the “perquisites system” as a form of “economic paternalism.” Perquisites were certain services provided employees free of charge, viz, housing, heat, light, water, and medical services. Union pressure in 1946 and 1947, including a strike demanding direct payment instead, culminated in plaintiff’s abolishment of perquisites. Union negotiations resulted in plaintiff’s decision to rent the houses which it had previously furnished free of charge. The nominal rate agreed upon was not sufficient to offset maintenance costs. Rental losses averaged about $140,000 per year for the period 1950 through 1952.

To eliminate these losses and to improve relations with employees, plaintiff, in April of 1947, began to investigate the possibility of selling these houses and of making land [550]*550available for sale to employees for the construction of new homes.

Having before them requested reports on the subject from independent parties, plaintiff’s directors authorized its management and American Factors, its agent, to prepare plans to subdivide for house lots about 220 acres of fee simple land adjacent the refinery mill at Aiea. This tract was located, generally, between the town of Aiea and Aiea Homesteads, two areas which were residential prior to their acquisition from Honolulu Plantation. Although it had been cultivated to sugarcane by Honolulu Plantation, as of the date of plaintiff’s purchase it had been recently harvested and for the most part not replanted. Primarily because of steepness of grade, plaintiff considered it uneconomical for raising sugarcane.

Plaintiff subdivided the Aiea area into three subdivisions and entered into a joint exclusive agency agreement for the sale of the land with Samuel W. King, an independent real estate broker, and Bishop Trust Company, Limited. From 1947 through 1949, plaintiff developed 438 lots in these three subdivisions and, by the end of 1949, 366 of the lots had been sold.

In 1949, plaintiff programed the sale of houses on campsites acquired from Honolulu Plantation. Arrangements similar to those made for the unimproved tract were agreed upon by plaintiff, Mr. King, and Bishop Trust Company. Houses and their lots within Campsite or Subdivision No. 4 were ready for sale in 1950. Plans for Subdivision No. 5 were completed about November 1952.

Applicable laws and regulations required plaintiff, as subdivider, to construct streets and sidewalks, sewerage and water facilities, and to install street lights. Independent civil engineers, assisted by Mr. King and employees of Bishop Trust Company, undertook the plotting and detailed planning of the subdivisions. All appearances before the Honolulu City Planning Commission were made by one of these men.

Plaintiff’s board of directors reviewed and approved the program as it progressed. Aonerican Factors coordinated the results of the engineering and sales program. The [551]*551board of directors on a general basis fixed the sales price of lots and of houses with lots. They determined the order in which the various tracts were to be made available for sale, the sales methods to be employed, and the terms of the sales.

By order of the board of directors, the first choice of residential lots was given to plaintiff’s employees who were allowed 30 days within which to exercise this privilege. Second preference was given to C & H employees, except that they were to have first opportunity to purchase the houses which they then occupied. Preference rights were then given to former employees of Honolulu Plantation and to the employees of American Factors before the lots were offered to the general public. If an employee living in a house did not wish to purchase it, he was to be given an opportunity of swapping houses with any employee who wished to buy. If the latter were not possible, the employee could remain until other housing was provided.

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Related

Miller v. United States
339 F.2d 661 (Court of Claims, 1964)

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156 Ct. Cl. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oahu-sugar-co-v-united-states-cc-1962.