San Francisco Stevedoring Co. v. Commissioner

8 T.C. 222, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 296
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1947
DocketDocket No. 7775
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 8 T.C. 222 (San Francisco Stevedoring Co. 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
San Francisco Stevedoring Co. v. Commissioner, 8 T.C. 222, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 296 (tax 1947).

Opinion

OPINION.

Murdock, Judge'.

The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $2,928.81 in the petitioner’s excess profits tax for the calendar year 1942. The first issue for decision is whether $5,499.24 should have been accrued as income for the year 1939, thus increasing the income of the base period. The facts have been stipulated and the stipulation is adopted as the findings of fact.

The petitioner is a California corporation. Its return for 1942 was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the northern district of California.

The petitioner kept its books and made its returns at all times material hereto upon a calendar year basis, using an accrual method of accounting.

The petitioner was a member in 1939 of the Waterfront Employers Association of San Francisco (hereinafter referred to as San Francisco) . San Francisco was a nonprofit California corporation organized in 1935 for the purpose of representing its members in their relations with labor. The petitioner was also a member in 1939 of the Waterfront Employers Association of the Pacific Coast (hereinafter referred to as Coast). Coast was a nonprofit California corporation organized in 1937 for the purpose of representing its members in their relations with labor. Its membership was similar to that of San Francisco, except that it covered a wider area. A number of the directors of San Francisco in 1939 were also directors of Coast.

San Francisco had on hand in 1939 a surplus of $145,000, accumulated from dues and assessments. Its activities had been restricted by reason of the formation of Coast. The directors of Coast, ou February 9,1939, authorized a committee of Coast to meet with representatives of San Francisco to work out a plan for transferring to Coast the surplus of San Francisco, which would revert upon the liquidation of San Francisco to the individual members of Coast. A committee of San Francisco wrote a letter to the members of San Francisco, including the petitioner, on June 1,1939, advising them of the efforts being made to transfer the San Francisco surplus to Coast, “to enable the latter to more effectively carry on its activities and replace the existing deficit in its treasury.” The letter was in part as follows:

The San Francisco directors feel that such a transfer should be effected. The San Francisco directors also feel that the debt should be repaid by the Coast Association to the members of the San Francisco Association who contributed to the reserve as and when the Coast Board of Directors feels that conditions permit. This cannot be done without the consent of the members of the San Francisco Association, because it will result In a distribution of assets to the extent that repayment is made to members individually.
The effect of such a plan, if carried out, would be the following:
(1) The immediate creation of a substantial cash reserve for the Coast Association;
(2) An orderly method of liquidating the loan by payments to members of the San Francisco Association instead of the Association itself over a period, in proportion to their respective contributions to the funds of the San Francisco Association.
If the foregoing plan is acceptable to the membership, Price, Waterhouse & Company will be employed to assure that payments to members will be proportioned to their various contributions to the San Francisco surplus.
While the Board of Directors feels that it is within the power of the Association to make Contributions to the Coast Association for the purpose of carrying on its activities, it seems equitable that provision should be made for che San Francisco members to ultimately receive the benefit of their respective contributions to the San Francisco surplus rather than to leave the surplus with the Coast Association or provide for its return to the San Francisco Association’s treasury.
In order that the distribution to the members may be carried out it is necessary to secure the consent of the membership.
Your approximate share in the San Francisco surplus, subject to later verification by the auditors, is $-.
Enclosed is a self-addressed envelope together with a form for your approval. Please fill in and return at your earliest convenience.

All members of San Francisco, including the petitioner, returned signed consents by August 8,1939. Each member agreed in the consent to the transfer of the funds to Coast, “in consideration of the undertaking by the Coast Association to repay said funds to the present members of the San Francisco Association as long as they shall continue to be such members, such repayments to be made as and when the Board of Directors of the Coast Association shall deem it advisable and practicable to make such repayments.” The consent also authorized the directors of San Francisco to take such action as they deemed proper to transfer the funds to Coast and to provide for repayment by Coast “to the present members of the San Francisco Association in lieu of the latter Association itself” and “to provide specifically with the Coast Association that if any present member of the San Francisco Association shall cease to retain its membership while any balance of said funds remain [sic] unpaid to such former member, then such balance shall be paid to the San Francisco Association in lieu of being paid to such' former member.”

The firm of accountants rendered a report on July 19,1939, showing the exact portion of the total of $145,000 to which each member of San Francisco would be entitled. The share of the petitioner was shown to be $5,499.24.

A. Boyd, secretary-treasurer of both San Francisco and Coast, sent a copy of the accountants’ report of July 19, 1939, to the petitioner and to every other member of San Francisco and of Coast, together with a letter stating that the share of each member of San Francisco in the surplus being transferred to Coast as a loan was shown in the accountants’ report, consents had been received from all the members of San Francisco authorizing the transfer, the amount transferred would appear on the books of Coast as a loan from members of San Francisco, and credits would be set up on the books of Coast to the individual members of San Francisco, and when funds became available and the Coast Board determined to liquidate the loan, in whole or in part, payments would be made to the individual companies in proportion to their respective contributions as set forth in the accountants’ report.

The $145,000 was carried on the books of Coast as a liability and shown on the balance sheet as “Advanced by members — W. E. A. of S. F.”

Coast eventually paid the $145,000, without interest, to the members of San Francisco in four payments of 25 per cent each. The petitioner received payments of $1,374.81 on each of the following dates: February 14,1941, October 20, 1943, January 17, 1944, and February 14, 1944. The petitioner did not accrue on its books or report in its return the $5,499.24 as income in 1939, but it reported each payment as income when received in the later years.

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San Francisco Stevedoring Co. v. Commissioner
8 T.C. 222 (U.S. Tax Court, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 T.C. 222, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-francisco-stevedoring-co-v-commissioner-tax-1947.