Pinkerton v. Commissioner

28 T.C. 910, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 128
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1957
DocketDocket Nos. 61435, 61436, 61437, 61485, 61488, 61511
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 28 T.C. 910 (Pinkerton 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
Pinkerton v. Commissioner, 28 T.C. 910, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 128 (tax 1957).

Opinion

Tietjens, Judge:

The Commissioner determined the following deficiencies in income tax and additions to tax:

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The questions for decision are as follows: (1) Did the Commissioner properly determine that income of a partnership reported by petitioners as long-term capital gains under section 117 (j) (1) and section 117 (k) (1), constitute ordinary income; and (2) was the failure of petitioners in Docket Nos. 61435 and 61511 to file declarations of estimated tax due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect?

findings of fact.

General and Section 117 {h) (1) Issue.

Some of the facts are stipulated and are so found.

Eagle Gorge Logging Company (hereafter called Eagle Gorge) is a partnership which was organized January 31, 1945. The following petitioners are all of the partners and the respective interests have remained the same since it was organized, except for the substitution of the Estate of Craig L. Spencer for Craig L. Spencer, who died April 2,1949, and the substitution of John W. Harvey, III, for John W. Harvey on March 31, 1945. John W. Harvey had become a member of the partnership for the benefit of his minor son, John W. Harvey, III. Their respective interests are as follows:

Per cent E. (Earl) 6. Peterson_16
B. B. (Blaine) Peterson_16
O. B. Peterson_16
V. (Volney) L. Pinkerton_16
John W. Harvey, III_16
Estate of Craig L. Spencer_20

The partners agreed to associate in a general logging business for a period of 10 years from February 1,1945. The capital contribution of each partner was $12,000, except that Craig L. Spencer was to contribute $15,000. Spencer was designated as general manager and vested with sole and complete authority in all matters of logging, transfers, and marketing of logs and timber products, and in the purchase and sale of timberlands, logs and forest products, equipment, and other personalty necessary and incident to the operation.

On February 1, 1947, the original agreement was revised. The partners stated that they had purchased from Buckley Logging Company certain of its timberland, logging equipment, and other personalty which were being employed in logging of the timberlands. E. G. Peterson, B. B. Peterson, and O. It. Peterson were designated to act as joint managers of all logging operations, and Craig L. Spencer was to act as sales manager. All other activities were to be managed and decided by a majority vote.

During the period of its existence Eagle Gorge has been engaged in the business of logging timber in King County, Washington, and selling the logs so produced.

During the calendar year 1950 Eagle Gorge cut timber from timber-lands owned by Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, a Washington corporation, thereby producing 15,819,630 board feet of logs. During the calendar year 1951 the partnership cut timber from timberlands owned by Weyerhaeuser Timber Company thereby producing 12,-719,520 board feet of logs.

All of the logs produced from the timber cut by Eagle Gorge from the Weyerhaeuser lands during the years 1950 and 1951 were sold by Eagle Gorge to Elliott Bay Mill Company and other log purchasers on the Puget Sound Log Market at the prices from time to time prevailing on the Puget Sound Log Market.

All of the timber cut by Eagle Gorge from Weyerhaeuser Timber Company lands during the years 1950 and 1951, and during all other times mentioned in these Findings of Fact, was cut from lands included in the description of the lands covered by an agreement dated August 1,1936, between Weyerhaeuser Timber Company and Buckley Logging Company known and designated as Weyerhaeuser Contract No. 61.

On August 1,1936, Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, a Washington corporation, as seller (hereinafter referred to as Weyerhaeuser), and Buckley Logging Company, a Washington corporation, as buyer (hereinafter referred to as Buckley), made and entered into a certain contract being, and hereinafter referred to as, Weyerhaeuser Contract No. 61. This contract provided that Weyerhaeuser granted to Buckley the right to enter all the lands described therein and log and remove the merchantable timber thereon and to sell the logs so produced; it provided that all logs removed from said lands should be shipped to the Puget Sound waters and sold by the buyer in the Puget Sound Log Market; the buyer was required to log the timber clean and to pay for all merchantable timber not logged, or destroyed, or damaged by fire, at a certain amount per thousand board feet; it further provided that with respect to the timber logged and sold by the buyer stumpage was to be paid Weyerhaeuser on the basis of certain percentages of the average gross selling price of the logs, 25 per cent in certain cases and 20 per cent in others, with certain minor variations depending on species.

Contemporaneously with the execution of Weyerhaeuser Contract No. 61, Buckley deposited with Weyerhaeuser the sum of $75,000 as a guarantee for the faithful performance of and full compliance with the terms and conditions of the contract. This sum was to be repaid Buckley upon the completion of Buckley’s obligations under the contract without default.

Thereafter, Weyerhaeuser Contract No. 61 was amended by supplemental agreement dated September 20, 1938, between Weyerhaeuser and Buckley, adding certain other timberlands. On September 30, 1939, a second supplemental agreement was made between Weyer-haeuser and Buckley pursuant to which the period within which the timber covered by Weyerhaeuser Contract No. 61 could be removed was extended from July 31,1946, to July 31,1951.

In the latter part of 1944 it was decided by its stockholders that Buckley Logging Company should be dissolved. The stockholders of Buckley, together with the percentage of stock held by each, were as follows:

Per cent Craig U. Spencer-66%
E. G. Peterson_11%
B. B. Peterson_11%
O. R. Peterson_11%

On January 2, 1945, Buckley assigned Weyerhaeuser Contract No. 61 to Craig L. Spencer. This assignment was made to Spencer for the benefit of Eagle Gorge.

Eagle Gorge was organized January 31, 1945, for the purpose of continuing the logging operations formerly carried on by Buckley including the marketing and sale of logs produced.

On February 1, 1945, Craig L. Spencer entered into an agreement with Eagle Gorge. This agreement stated that Spencer individually held certain licenses from Weyerhaeuser Timber Company to log and to market the logs from certain timberlands and desired to employ the partnership for the purpose of logging said timber and marketing the logs produced, and desired “to realize his benefits from said licenses by way of profits distributable to him as a member of said partnership.” The licenses referred to were Weyerhaeuser Contract No. 61.

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Neil v. Commissioner
1958 T.C. Memo. 88 (U.S. Tax Court, 1958)
Pinkerton v. Commissioner
28 T.C. 910 (U.S. Tax Court, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
28 T.C. 910, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinkerton-v-commissioner-tax-1957.