Orono Pulp & Paper Co. v. United States

34 F.2d 714, 8 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 9605, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1511, 8 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 9605
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedApril 22, 1929
Docket132-134, 189
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 714 (Orono Pulp & Paper Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orono Pulp & Paper Co. v. United States, 34 F.2d 714, 8 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 9605, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1511, 8 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 9605 (D. Me. 1929).

Opinion

PETERS, District Judge.

These are suits brought to recover for alleged over-payments by the plaintiff of income and profits taxes assessed against it and p-aid for the years 1917 to 1920, inclusive, and involve somewhat different questions as to different years.

The decision of one point will settle practically the whole dispute concerning the taxes of 1917 and 1918, and that will be considered first.

The plaintiff is a manufacturer of pulp and paper in Maine, and owns timberlands as a source of raw material. Patton & Gulnae, at one time a partnership, and later a corporation, were lumbermen or woods operators, so called. In January, 1917, they bad an option from the owners to purchase township 8, range 9, for the sum of $242,-000. Not being financially able to make the *715 purchase themselves, but desiring to reap some benefit from their option, and also to make a favorable contract in their line of business as operators, they opened negotiations with the plaintiff, which resulted in the purchase of the township by the plaintiff, and the acquisition of certain rights therein by Patton & Gulnac, the nature of which is to be determined from the contents of four documents, executed and delivered as a part of one transaction, together with such surrounding facts as throw light on the intention of the parties.

The documents are as follows:

(1) Agreement between plaintiff and Patton & Gulnac as follows:

“Memorandum of Agreement made and entered into this sixteenth day of January, 1917, by and between Henry Patton, of Albany, New York, and James Q. Gulnac of Bangor, Maine, parties of the first part, and the Orono Pulp & Paper Company, of Bangor, Maine, party of the second part.
“Witnesseth: Parties of the first part have an option from the Eastern Manufacturing Company to purchase of said Company Township 8, Range 9, W. E. L. S., Piscataquis County, State of Maine, exclusive of the Public Lot, for the sum of Two Hundred Forty-two Thousand Dollars ($242,000), reference to said option to be had, but parties of the first part have not the money to exercise said option and party of the second part agrees to furnish the money to exercise said option upon the terms and conditions herein contained.
“The title to said town is to be conveyed to the Orono Pulp & Paper Company and said Company is to keep an accurate account with said town, charging it with the original cost, and all sums paid out on account thereof which should properly be a charge against said town, including taxes and said town is to be credited with all sums received from said town from stump-age or otherwise. Interest is to be reckoned at five per cent, and yearly stops are to be made in said account, and the Orono Pulp & Paper Company agrees that when the town shall have paid for itself said Company will convey by quit-claim deed one-half of said town to said Patton & Gulnac.
“Said parties of the first part desire to operate for pulp wood and said party of the second part desires to obtain pulp wood for its mills, and the parties hereto agree to enter into a contract for thus cutting and obtaining pulp wood in the form hereto- annexed, said contract continuing for five years, but at the expiration of five years contracts of like tenor so far as applicable shall be entered into for a term of' three or five years as then to be agreed upon, except that the .amounts to be paid to party of the second part and the amounts to be retained for stumpage to be then agreed upon, and so on for terms of three to five years until said town shall have paid for itself.
“If in any year parties of the first part shall not operate on said town, party of the second part shall have the right to operate on the town itself or to hire others to operate for pulp wood.
“This agreement shall bind the parties hereto and their respective heirs, executors, administrators and successors, and insure to their benefit wherever the context so requires or admits.
“Signed in duplicate the day and year first above written.”

(2) Quitclaim deed from Eastern Manufacturing Company, the owner of the township, to Patton & Gulnac, to take up the option to purchase held by them.

(3) Quitclaim deed from Patton & Gulnac to Orono Pulp & Paper Company conveying the same township, and described as-being the same conveyed by Eastern Manufacturing Company to them. Both these deeds are in the form commonly used in Maine to pass title to timberlands.

(4) The stumpage contract, the form of which was referred to in the agreement under 1 above as being annexed, and which is as follows:

“This Memorandum of Agreement made this sixteenth day of January, 1917, beT tween Henry Patton of Albany, New York, and James Q. Gulnac of Bangor, Maine, parties of the first part, and the Orono Pulp & Paper Company, of Bangor, Maine, party of the second part,
“Witnesseth: Party of the second part owns T. 8, R. 9, W. E. L. S., in Piscataquis County, Maine, exclusive of the Public Lot. Parties of the first part agree to peel, cut and furnish to party of the second part not less than ten thousand cords nor more than fifteen thousand cords of peeled spruce pulpwood each year for five years from the date hereof from said township.- The wood to be delivered the first year shall be peeled during the season of 1917, and shipped during the following- winter, spring and summer, and so on each year for the five years.
“Party of the second part is to pay parties of the first part Nine Dollars and forty cents ($9.40) per cord, f. o. b. ears at any station on the Bangor & Aroostook Rail *716 road, the freight rates from which station to the mills of the party of the second part of Basin Mills, in Orono, Maine, shall not be higher than the rate from Masardis on said Bangor & Aroostook Railroad to said mills. »
“Simultaneously with the execution of this agreement another agreement is entered into between the parties hereto relative to said township, and out of said Nine Dollars and forty cents ($9.40) per cord Three Dollars ($3.00) is to be retained by party of the second part as .stumpage and applied as provided in said other contract, so that for really doing the work of peeling, cutting, hauling, driving and loading the wood on the cars parties of the first part are to receive Six Dollars and forty cents ($6.40) per cord, stumpage paid.
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“It is hereby agreed and parties of the first part warrant that the title to said wood shall be perfect and absolute in said party of the second part (except stumpage, that being taken care of as provided above) immediately upon the completed delivery and acceptance of the whole or any part of such wood, to the extent of the wood so delivered and accepted, and same shall likewise be free and clear from all claims, demands, liens and encumbrances whatever, except the lien or claim of the said Orono Pulp &

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Bluebook (online)
34 F.2d 714, 8 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 9605, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1511, 8 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 9605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orono-pulp-paper-co-v-united-states-med-1929.