Palda v. Commissioner

253 F.2d 302
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1958
DocketNos. 15771-15773
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 F.2d 302 (Palda v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palda v. Commissioner, 253 F.2d 302 (8th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

These consolidated petitions for review involve income and victory tax deficiencies for the year 1943, in the total amount of $1,232,049.89, and are taken from decisions of the Tax Court, reviewed by the full court, and entered on December 4, 1956, reported at 27 T.C. 445, as modified by amended decision entered January 2, 1957. The Tax Court declared the sole issue before it to be whether the taxpayers, claiming exemption from tax on their income from a business conducted in the Panama Canal Zone by their partnership as a joint venture with another company, properly excluded from gross income their distributive shares of profits from the joint venture.

The taxpayers contended before the Tax Court, and now contend on these petitions for review of that court’s decision, that they as individual citizens of the United States were entitled to include only their distributive shares of the net income of the partnership for the purpose of determining their taxable income.

The Tax Court’s holding, as summarized in the syllabus of its decision, was:

“In computing the percentage of gross income required by Section 251, Internal Revenue Code of 1939, relating to income from United States possessions, held, a partner’s gross income includes his distributive share of gross income of the partnership.”

The facts as found by the Tax Court are not disputed. They are set forth in the report of the decision and have been restated by Government counsel, without dispute, as follows:

“The three taxpayers (Charles H. Palda, S. R. Okes, and Day Okes (now deceased)) are United States citizens who engaged in the construction business under the name of Okes Construction Company, a partnership (hereinafter referred to as such) which maintained its books and filed its partnership returns (Form 1065) according to the percentage of completion-accrual method of accounting. The partnership filed those returns on a fiscal year basis for the year ended February 28, 1942, but when the Commissioner granted permission to change to [304]*304the calendar year basis it filed an information return for the period March 1, 1942, to December 31, 1942, and thereafter filed its information returns on the calendar year basis. Taxpayers each filed their income tax returns according to the cash receipt and disbursement method. Each 1943 return contained a Form 1040-E.
“As of October 4, 1940, the Washington D. C., office of the Panama Canal invited bids for the furnishing of all plant, labor and materials and performance of work required for the excavation of an approach channel, a lock structure and a drainage canal, and for grading a raih’oad relocation, all in connection with the construction of a third set of locks on the Atlantic side of the Panama Canal in the Panama Canal Zone, a United States possession. Taxpayers’ partnership and Martin Wun-derlich Company, another partnership also engaged in the construction business, jointly submitted a bid to do the work and the bid was accepted. On January 6, 1941, the United States entered into a contract with the joint venture at a price of $8,517,100. Subsequent change orders and supplemental agreements changed and enlarged the contract so that the total price exceeded $12,000,000. In 1943 the joint venture at various times also contracted with the United States to do certain other work in the Panama Canal Zone for final amounts total-ling $252,728.51. Except for certain work in Nicaragua, the joint venture engaged in and performed all work in the Canal Zone.
“The joint venture commenced operations under the main contract early in 1941 and completed work under the Canal Zone contracts in October 1943. It finally .concluded its business on December 31, 1943. The used construction equipment was sold to the United States, in conformity to the usual custom and usage of the trade.
“The joint venture maintained its books and filed information returns on Form 1065 acording to the percentage of completion-accrual method. Its first fiscal year ended January 31, 1942, but, after receiving permission from the Commissioner to change to the calendar year basis of reporting, it filed an information return for the period February 1, 1942, to December 31, 1942, and thereafter filed its returns on the calendar year basis.
“Taxpayers’ partnership had a 25 per cent interest in the joint venture. Taxpayers Day Okes and S. R. Okes each had a 40 per cent interest, and taxpayer Charles H. Pal-da a 20 per cent interest, in all income received by their partnership from the Canal Zone joint venture. After February 28, 1942, the income from sources other than the joint venture were shared equally by the three taxpayer-partners.
“During the fiscal year ended February 28, 1942, taxpayers’ partnership received gross income from the projects within the United States and Canada amounting to $658,350.14, including miscellaneous receipts of $8,200.71. For the period ended December 31, 1942, the partnership’s gross income from such projects was $381,891.57, including miscellaneous receipts of $13,277.10. For the calendar year 1943, the gross income of the partnership from such projects was $160,278.55, including miscellaneous receipts of $8,294.94.
“It is stipulated that, if taxpayers’ ‘gross income’ under Section 251(a) of the 1939 Code, 26 U.S.C. § 251(a) was their proportionate shares of their partnership’s gross income (from the Canal Zone joint venture and projects within the United States and Canada), taxpayers’ gross income from the Canal [305]*305Zone venture was not 80 per cent or more of their total gross income. It is further stipulated that, if taxpayers’ ‘gross income’ under Section 251(a) was their proportionate shares of their partnership’s net income and the partnership’s net income includes long term capital gain from sales of equipment by the joint venture, each taxpayer’s gross income for the pertinent period from the Canal Zone joint venture was 80 per cent or more of his total gross income. Further, if the partnership net income is treated as taxpayer’s ‘gross income’ for the purposes of Section 251(a) but the capital gains from sales of equipment by the joint venture are excluded, taxpayers Day Okes and S. R. Okes’ gross income from the Canal Zone venture was 80 per cent or more of their total gross income but taxpayer Charles H. Palda’s was 80 per cent or more only for 1942.”

As an ultimate fact, the Tax Court found that—

“Each petitioner derived less than 80 per cent of his gross income for the applicable part of the 3 year periods immediately preceding the close of 1942 and 1943 from the active conduct of a trade or business within a possession of the United States, namely, the Canal Zone.”

As facts bearing on the source and receipt of the income by taxpayers from the Canal Zone joint venture, the Tax Court found the following:

“On December 24, 1940, which was shortly before the United States entered into the contract with the joint venture for the Canal Zone work, the joint venture opened a bank account with the First National Bank of St. Louis, Missouri, and deposited $850,000, consisting of the capital contributions of Martin Wunderlich Company of $637,500, and of taxpayers’ partnership of $212,500. It referred to this account as Special Account.

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253 F.2d 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palda-v-commissioner-ca8-1958.