Olson v. Commissioner

10 T.C. 458, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 243
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1948
DocketDocket No. 9201
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 T.C. 458 (Olson 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
Olson v. Commissioner, 10 T.C. 458, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 243 (tax 1948).

Opinion

Haklan, Judge:

This proceeding involves a deficiency in income Lax for the calendar year 1941 in the amount of $28,512.05.

We are asked to determine:

(1) Whether the Commissioner erred in determining that the stock of the Trask-Willamette Co. became worthless prior to 1941.

(2) Whether the Commissioner erred in disallowing a bad debt deduction in connection with the Trask-Willamette note.

(3) Whether the Commissioner erred in determining that the profit from the sale of the Keeler Creek logging contract was petitioner’s separate income.

(4) Whether the Commissioner erred in determining that the income from Priest River operation was part separate and part community income.

In the interest of clarity and convenience we shall consider the facts and the law pertaining to issues I and II together and issues III and IY separately.

ISSUES I AND II.-FINDINGS OP PACT.

Petitioner is an individual, residing in Spokane, Washington. He filed the income tax return involved herein with the collector of internal revenue at Tacoma, Washington.

For many years prior .to 1932 petitioner had been engaged in the logging and sawmill industry in the territory adjacent to Spokane, most of that time being spent as an employee of the Diamond Match Co. From 1932 to 1941 he was in the lumber business for himself and in the latter year formed a partnership.

In 1937 petitioner married a widow, Marion Burr, whose only separate property consisted of a very small income from a trust fund. At the time of the marriage petitioner had a lumbering plant in Idaho known as the Priest River operation, in which he had invested approximately $50,000. In addition thereto he had real property in Washington, notes, stocks, and bonds of an additional value of approximately $50,000.

In 1935 petitioner with two others incorporated the Trask-Willam-ette Co. for the purpose of logging timber partially damaged by fire in a tract in Oregon, and petitioner purchased 250 shares of its stock, of the value of $25,000. Much of the equipment procured by the company was covered by a chattel mortgage to the Bank of California. The other assets of the corporation consisted of the timber contract permitting the logging of the territory. This contract covered approximately a billion feet of fir timber at a very advantageous price to the corporation. The early operations of the corporation, however, resulted in a substantial operating deficit prior to 1939. In that year a second fire attacked the lumber tract and destroyed a number of railroad bridges on the only railroad supplying transportation to this tract. In this fire much of the corporation’s mortgaged equipment was destroyed. In September 1940 the bank brought foreclosure proceedings, and after the purchase of the equipment by the mortgagee at the foreclosure sale there was a deficiency approximating $24,000. The foreclosure sale was confirmed November 13, 1940. The equipment was not removed from the camp site until. June 1941. The resumption of this logging operation would have required additional capital to procure this equipment and either a rebuilding of the railroad or the procurement of trucks and a roadway for the shipment of logs.

At the end of 1940 the only asset retained by Trask-Willamette was the timber contract. During 1941 all prospects of repairing the railroad had vanished, the railway equipment was sold, the receiver discharged, and Trask-Willamette rejected the idea of constructing a road to remove the logs by truck. In March of 1941 petitioner disposed of his stock in the corporation to one of his associates in the enterprise for a nominal consideration of $1. He claimed a capital loss in 1941. The stock of Trask-Willamette became wholly worthless during 1941.

In 1935 petitioner also loaned Trask-Willamette $25,000 and received a note secured by a chattel mortgage on some of the logging equipment, together with an assignment of a one-half interest in a logging venture in Skamania, Washington.

Trask-Willamette and the Alaska Junk Co., who together owned the entire venture, had contracted with a lumber operator to log the timber and pay them stumpage. Because of the depressed price of lumber prior to and during 1941, the contractor had discontinued logging and disclaimed all future interest in the operation.

Prior to 1941 petitioner had realized funds from the sale of the mortgaged equipment, so that the unpaid balance in 1941 was $8,969.30. He endeavored to realize additional funds by selling his half interest in the Skamania logging venture to the owner of the other half, but the depressed condition of the lumber market made the project undesirable and no sale was effected.

Petitioner concluded that additional recovery on the note was not to be anticipated and charged off the balance due as a bad debt. However, in the period from 1942 to 1946, inclusive, our involvement in the World War and our subsequent recovery activities so improved the lumber business that petitioner began to realize payments on the Skamania project and was paid the final balance owing in 1946.

Based upon the facts available to petitioner during 1941 and prior to the filing of his income tax return for 1941, the security of his claim against Trask-Willamette growing out of his loan to that Company became worthless in 1941 and his claim also became worthless during that year.

Petitioner’s net taxable income for 1940 was $20,610.18. In 1941, if the capital loss and bad debt deductions were not allowed, his net taxable income would have been $23,228.23.

OPINION.

The petitioner testified that even after the 1939 fire and the sale of the equipment in 1940 he still thought the lumbering rights of Trask-Willamette were of such a profitable character that he considered the possibility of constructing a road into the site and removing the lumber by truck. The receiver of the railway company meantime was energetically endeavoring to refinance the railroad. He did not give up his efforts and file his final report until August of 1941.

All of the evidence shows that the petitioner was an outstanding man in the lumber business, whose judgment was considered sound by leaders in that field. Furthermore, in the case at bar, the petitioner gained no material tax advantage for himself by selling his stock in 1941 rather than in 1940, since his taxable income in those two years was substantially the same if the Trask-Willamette losses are not taken into consideration. Should we join with the Commissioner in a hindsight view, it does seem that after the equipment foreclosure sale in 1940 there was not much value left in Trask-Willamette stock. However, due to the advance of war prices in lumber and the advantageous price which Trask-Willamette had on stumpage, our hindsight now tells us that, if petitioner and his associates had persisted into the war years, Trask-Willamette would doubtless have been really profitable. In 1940 and 1941 all such questions were conjectures into the future and we would be most reluctant to say that the petitioner was not justified in taking his capital loss in 1941.

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Cherrydale Cement Block Co. v. Commissioner
1962 T.C. Memo. 262 (U.S. Tax Court, 1962)
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22 T.C. 995 (U.S. Tax Court, 1954)
Tolfree v. Commissioner
1954 T.C. Memo. 50 (U.S. Tax Court, 1954)
Olson v. Commissioner
10 T.C. 458 (U.S. Tax Court, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 T.C. 458, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olson-v-commissioner-tax-1948.