Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. Of Washington, D. C., Inc., a Corporation v. District of Columbia

337 F.2d 109, 119 U.S. App. D.C. 73, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5187
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1964
Docket18107
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 337 F.2d 109 (Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. Of Washington, D. C., Inc., a Corporation v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. Of Washington, D. C., Inc., a Corporation v. District of Columbia, 337 F.2d 109, 119 U.S. App. D.C. 73, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5187 (D.C. Cir. 1964).

Opinion

*110 McGOWAN, Circuit Judge:

The District of Columbia taxing system continues to make a personal property tax applicable to tangible personal property used in business enterprises. 1 The roots of that tax in an earlier and simpler stage of our economic evolution are suggested by its prescription that assessment shall be “at not less than the full and true value thereof in lawful money” on a fixed day in the year, i. e., July 1. The procedure for assessing the tax involves the printing and distribution by the D. C. Finance Officer of forms upon which the property-owner makes a return of his property and its value. The Finance Officer may reject that valuation and make an assessment of his own. In such event, the property-owner may appeal to the District of Columbia Tax Court. That has happened here, and the matter is before us on a petition by the taxpayer to review the Tax Court’s disposition of its appeal. We do not share the Tax Court’s view that it was compelled to deny relief by judicial authority binding upon it.

I

Petitioner is a corporation engaged in the business of making non-alcoholic beverages and selling them in the District of Columbia and adjoining areas of Maryland. In that business it uses vending machines placed at a large number of separate locations throughout its market area. The parties stipulated that approximately fifty-two per cent of the total number of machines used by petitioner were to be considered as located in the District of Columbia and therefore subject to the tax. The number of individual units involved is indicated by the showing that, in respect of the years 1960, 1961, and 1962, in issue here, the vending machines used by petitioner totalled 3200, 3500, and 5500, respectively. These numbers do not, of course, imply that there is no change in the identity of the physical units used. New machines are placed in service from time to time, and older machines are constantly being retired or taken out of service temporarily for repairs. This process, of course, is geared to the daily needs of the business and not to the “tax day” fixed for the assessment of personal property. Both petitioner and the Finance Officer considered, therefore, that assessment should be made on the basis of an averaging of the useful lives and residual values of the machines on hand on the critical date; and the Tax Court appeared to recognize the necessity for this approach. 2

The form distributed by the- Finance Officer contained this specific instruction:

“Office furniture * * * machinery and equipment * * * and all other depreciable tangible property * * * must be reported under the proper classification. The values as reported must be eonsis *111 tent with books of the taxpayer, except for property that is fully depreciated.”

In compliance with this direction, petitioner reported its machines in terms of the values shown on its books, that is to say, cost less depreciation. In making this computation, petitioner estimated that its machines had an average useful life of five years and an eight per cent residual value. The Finance Officer made a differing assessment. This difference, however, resided solely in the employment of an average useful life of eight years, rather than five, and a twenty-five per cent residual value, rather than eight per cent.

The parties initially confronted each other in the Tax Court, therefore, with no division between them as to the method used to ascertain the taxable value of the machines. They parted company only over the question, in applying that method, of the appropriate measure of average useful life and residual value. The evidence adduced in the Tax Court was directed to that issue. After the hearing was completed, the Tax Court made specific findings that the machines had an average useful life of six years, and a residual value of eight per cent.

One might think that this would conclude the recital of events preceding the invocation of our review jurisdiction, and that the issue now to be resolved by us is whether the Tax Court was justified in fixing upon a six-year useful life, as contrasted with the five and eight years used respectively by the parties. He would be wrong. The arcane mysteries of personal property assessment are not to be so airily ignored. Having resolved the only matter at issue between the taxpayer and the taxing authority, the Tax Court went on to hold that both were wrong in the method used to determine value. The consequence of this was, in the Tax Court’s view, to leave the assessment made by the Finance Officer standing, the burden of proof having been on the challenging taxpayer to show wherein the official assessment failed to reflect the statutory criterion of “full and true value * * * in lawful money.” Thus, having just found that the Finance Officer’s assessment was invalid because book value is not necessarily the same on “tax day” as the “full and true value” prescribed by the statute, the Tax Court then allowed the assessment, concededly reflecting depreciated cost, to stand because petitioner had failed to show that it was not the “full and true value” — and all this in the face of the Tax Court’s own determination, after hearing, that the Finance Officer had used an erroneous measure of average useful life. Thus, the Tax Court would seem to require that one challenging an assessment made by the Finance Officer, notwithstanding its incorrectness, must come forward with evidence of actual value on the tax day; and apparently this would mean physical appraisal of each machine or other evidence of what each piece of equipment would have sold for in the market on the tax day.

The Tax Court’s opinion is not lacking in recognition of its highly anomalous aspects. The Court purports to be “not unmindful that the ruling made herein will in many instances result in hardship, not only to taxpayers, but to the assessing authority as well.” But, in the light of the case law existing in this and other jurisdictions, the Tax Court concluded that no other result could “lawfully be reached.” Whatever may be true with respect to the law of personal property taxation as developed in other jurisdictions, either now or formerly afflicted with this increasingly archaic form of raising revenue, we believe that the Tax Court, at least upon the facts of this case, took too narrow a view of its area of maneuver under our decisions.

II

The constrictions felt by the Tax Court are attributed by it almost entirely to District of Columbia v. Morris, 81 U.S.App.D.C. 356, 159 F.2d 13 (1946). It points to the assertion made in that opinion that “fair cash value and cost depreciated on a straight-line basis are different concepts”; and deduces from *112 this that neither the District of Columbia nor a taxpayer may assess personal property tax by reference to book value. We note, however, that that statement was made in refutation of a claim by the District that the taxpayer was estopped from contending for any value other than that of cost less the annual depreciation allowances shown on the taxpayer’s income tax returns. In filing her personal property

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Bluebook (online)
337 F.2d 109, 119 U.S. App. D.C. 73, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pepsi-cola-bottling-co-of-washington-d-c-inc-a-corporation-v-cadc-1964.