Powell v. United States

123 F.2d 472, 28 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 333, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4524
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 12, 1941
DocketNo. 9678
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 123 F.2d 472 (Powell v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. United States, 123 F.2d 472, 28 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 333, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4524 (9th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

PIANEY, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought to recover the amount paid by one Powell to Vierhus, then a Collector of Internal Revenue and Henricksen, an Acting Collector of Internal Revenue, as a tax, alleged to be illegally exacted.

Alaska Dredging Company, hereafter called the taxpayer, was incorporated in Washington on March 8, 1902. Prior to March 1, 1913, it acquired title to five mining claims and seven-eighths interest1 in another. On June 3, 1908, it entered into an agreement with Wonder Dredging Company, a Delaware corporation, hereafter called Wonder, by which it agreed to sell to Wonder, two claims and a half interest in another for 2,400 shares of $10 par stock in Wonder, and one-third of all gold recovered from the property so sold until the taxpayer had received $200,000. In 1911, Nome Consolidated Dredging Company succeeded to the interest of Wonder in the contract mentioned.

Apparently the contract was rescinded thereafter, because on November 12, 1915, taxpayer entered into an agreement to sell all six claims to Nome Holding Company, a Washington corporation, for $219,664 payable in specified installments. This agreement was apparently rescinded because on July 11, 1918, taxpayer entered into an agreement to sell all six claims to Alaska Mines Corporation, a Virginia corporation, for $233,393 to be paid in installments. This latter agreement was apparently rescinded because taxpayer on July 10, 1923, made another agreement to sell all six claims to Nome Dredging Trust, a common law trust, for $292,200 payable in installments. This latter agreement was apparently rescinded because on April 25, 1933, taxpayer gave an option to liammon Consolidated Gold Fields, giving the option to the latter to purchase all six claims, which option was exercised, and $32,838.88 paid to the taxpayer.

Between March 1, 1913, and the date of the sale, the taxpayer received $101,034.83 in royalties, which, with the sales price of $32,838.88, made a total received from the properties of $133,873.71.

The gain from sale of property is the excess of the amount received over the adjusted basis. Section 113(a) (13) of the Revenue Act of 1932, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev. Acts, page 517, provides that such basis shall be the cost of the property except that “In the case of property acquired before March 1, 1913, if the basis otherwise determined under this subsection, adjusted as provided in subsection (b), is less than the fair market value of the property as of March 1, 1913, then the basis shall be such fair market value”.

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined that the taxpayer derived a profit in 1933 of $17,624.79, arrived at as shown by his statement attached to the deficiency assessment, as follows:

“The contract [of June 3, 1908] owned on March 1, 1913 has been determined to have a value on that date of $115,984.43. There was due on the contract as at March 1, 1913 the sum of $174,397.73 which was discounted over a period of years indicating a net worth as at March 1, 1913 of $115,-984.43.
“Your corporation received in payments and royalties sums aggregating $101,034.83 [474]*474between 1913 and January 1, 1933 which leaves the sum of $14,949.60 to be recovered from the March 1, 1913 value. This amount plus $264.49, 1933 expense deducted from the sale price in 1933 of $32,838.88 leaves an amount representing net profit of $17,-624.79.”

The assessment was paid and claim for refund filed on the theory that while the value of $115,984.43 was satisfactory for the 2% claims sold by the 1908 contract, it included no value for the 3% claims not included in such contract. The claim for refund stated that the 3% claims not included in the contract of June 3, 1908, had a value of $45,246.27 or more on March 1, 1913, and that the total value of all claims was in excess of $219,644.00 on March 1,1913. The claim for refund contained the statement: “The taxpayer reserves the right to amend or add to his claim”, but mentioned no other basis for recovery.

The liquidating trustee of the taxpayer then sued the Collector and the United States to recover the amount assessed and paid, alleging that the claims not included in the contract had a value in excess of $20,000. The trial court indicated in an oral opinion that it was not shown that the 3% claims were not included in the 1908 contract. In examining the evidence, however, the court found an item of expense which had not been deducted from the profit as computed by the Commissioner, and allowed recovery therefor. The action was dismissed as to the Collector upon his motion. The liquidating trustee has appealed from that part of the judgment denying recovery for the full amount of the assessment and the United States has appealed from that part of the judgment allowing recovery.

Taxpayer’s Appeal.

The evidence was both oral and written. The minute book of the taxpayer discloses that on March 15, 1902, Powell Brothers offered to transfer to the taxpayer certain property for $199,198 in stock and $12,000 in bonds of the taxpayer; that the only claims mentioned in the offer were: Discovery Claim on Wonder Creek, and Mosquito Claim or No. 9 Below Discovery; and that on the same day the offer was accepted by the taxpayer. Minutes of a stockholders’ meeting on May 31, 1906, discloses that the taxpayer’s board of trustees was authorized to dispose of Claim No. 1 Below on Wonder Creek, an undivided half interest in Nugget Bench on Wonder Creek, and Discovery on Wonder Creek, but there is no indication as to how or when the taxpayer acquired Claim No. 1 Below, and the half interest in Nugget Bench, unless the description in the previous offer was erroneous. Certified minutes of a meeting of the directors of another corporation on October 4, 1906 indicate, however, that the taxpayer and one Spencer patented the Nugget claim. In the minute book, also, is a copy of an agreement dated November 7, 1906 between the taxpayer and one Whitehead covering the taxpayer’s interest in the last three mentioned claims.

There is contained in the minute book an annual statement dated July 9, 1909, wherein it is stated that the whole of taxpayer’s capital stock was paid for by transfer of Discovery Claim, No. 1 Below Discovery, and a half interest in the Nugget Claim. The same statement was made in an annual statement of July 1, 1910.

Minutes of a meeting of the taxpayer’s board of trustees on November 14, 1911, made a loan to Nome Consolidated Dredging Company “successors” to Wonder, and such trustees at a meeting on May 29, 1912, consented to the assignment from Wonder, and reduced the amount of royalties specified in the contract. Other meetings were had but there is no mention of the acquisition of any other claims. The other claims and the other half interest in the Nugget claim are nowhere mentioned until the contract of November 12, 1915, with Nome Holding Company. Thereafter, the only reference to any of the claims in the minute book, aside from the contracts mentioned, is a statement of the taxpayer’s general manager dated November 6, 1920, to the effect that he had paid $250 for a one-eighth interest in one claim.2

Oral testimony was to the effect that all claims had a fair market value in excess of the total amount received by the taxpayer therefrom. The liquidating trustee testified that contracts to purchase the claims in issue were made in the years 1901 to 1903, and that the titles thereto were cleared in the subsequent years ending about 1912.

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Bluebook (online)
123 F.2d 472, 28 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 333, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-united-states-ca9-1941.