Stanley Works v. Commissioner

87 T.C. No. 22, 87 T.C. 389, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1986
DocketDocket No. 26475-83
StatusPublished
Cited by149 cases

This text of 87 T.C. No. 22 (Stanley Works 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
Stanley Works v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. No. 22, 87 T.C. 389, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65 (tax 1986).

Opinion

SWIFT, Judge-.

In a statutory notice of deficiency dated June 17, 1983, respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner’s Federal corporate income tax liabilities as follows:

TYE— Deficiencies
Jan. 1, 1978. $773,642
Dec. 31, 1978 . 1,138,709

The primary issue remaining for decision is the amount petitioner is entitled to deduct with respect to a charitable contribution of a conservation easement in 668 acres of land located adjacent to the Housatonic River in northwestern Connecticut. Also at issue is whether petitioner, under section 6621(d),1 is hable for the increased rate of interest imposed on substantial underpayments of tax attributable to tax motivated transactions.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly. The Stanley Works (hereinafter referred to as petitioner), is a Connecticut corporation with its principal place of business in New Britain, Connecticut. Petitioner and its wholly owned subsidiaries timely filed Federal consolidated corporate income tax returns for their taxable years ending January 1, 1978, and December 31, 1978.

Petitioner is a multimillion dollar corporation that principally is engaged in the manufacture and sale of hand tools and hardware. Between 1906 and 1916, petitioner acquired approximately 2,200 acres of unimproved land located on both sides of the Housatonic River in Litchfield County, Connecticut (hereinafter referred to as the Stanley Works property). Petitioner acquired the entire Stanley Works property for $48,582 and originally intended to dam the Housatonic River and to construct a hydroelectric power plant on the property. Petitioner intended to use the electricity generated at the proposed plant in one of its nearby manufacturing plants and to seh any excess electricity to local public utility companies.

Between 1918 and 1924, however, petitioner purchased a small Connecticut utility company, rebuilt the hydroelectric power plant owned by that company, and begem generating electricity therefrom in 1924 for use in petitioner’s Connecticut manufacturing plants. As a result thereof, petitioner did not pursue construction of a power plant on the Stanley Works property, and petitioner has not made any commercial or industrial use of the Stanley Works property since the time it was purchased. All 2,200 acres of the Stanley Works property constitute essentially a wilderness area with only a few old barns located thereon.

Two hydroelectric power plants were constructed on the Housatonic River in the 1920’s. One was located on the river above and one was located below the Stanley Works property. In the early 1960’s, the Connecticut Light & Power Co. offered to purchase the Stanley Works property for $500,000. It intended to construct thereon a hydroelectric power plant. Petitioner rejected the offer, but as a result of receiving the offer, petitioner in 1961 conducted a study of the feasibility at that time of constructing a hydroelectric power plant on the property. Petitioner’s 1961 study concluded that construction of a conventional hydroelectric power plant on the Stanley Works property would not be economical, but that the property would be suitable for the construction thereon of a particular type of hydroelectric power plant known as a pumped storage plant.

A pumped storage plant provides supplemental electrical power during periods of peak energy demand in the following manner. During evenings or weekends when electrical power demand is low, water is pumped from a lower reservoir — such as a river or lake — up to a storage reservoir at a significantly higher elevation than the lower reservoir. When supplemental electrical power is needed during periods of peak energy demand, water is released from the upper reservoir. As water flows back down to the lower reservoir it passes through tunnels wherein it turns hydraulic turbine generators, thereby producing electrical power. The electrical power produced as the water flows through the turbines obviates the need during peak-demand periods to purchase or to produce a similar amount of electrical power by other, more expensive methods. The size of the upper and lower water reservoirs and the difference in their elevations determine the amount of electrical power that can be produced by a pumped storage plant.

The construction of pumped storage plants requires a particular site or land topography because the location of the upper reservoir must be at a sufficiently high elevation in relation to the lower reservoir, but not be too distant laterally from the lower reservoir, to permit efficient operation. Pumped storage plants also must be built adjacent to large natural sources of water that readily can supply the water that is pumped to the upper reservoirs.

A decision of a utility company to construct a pumped storage plant is based, in part, on forecasts of future demand for peak-period electrical power. In planning to meet that demand, a utility company also must consider the 10- to 15-year “lead time” it takes to license and construct a power plant. Utility companies in a particular region form “power pools” to forecast future energy demand and to coordinate and plan future construction of electrical power plants. Power pools do not have authority to direct member utility companies to construct new plants. The construction of new power plants by utility companies, however, is significantly influenced by the future energy requirements forecasted by the power pools.

In the northeastern United States, approximately 250 utility companies are members of the New England Power Pool (NEPOOL), and in New York approximately 10 utility companies are members of the New York Power Pool (NYPP). During the 1960’s and early 1970’s, the forecasts by NEPOOL and NYPP of the long-term demand for peak-period electrical power was an increase of 8 percent per year. Pumped storage plants were highly regarded by the utility industry and by Federal regulatory agencies as a viable means of meeting that expected increase in demand for sources of power during peak-demand periods.

In 1977, when petitioner donated the easement at issue herein, NEPOOL had forecasted a 5.4-percent annual increase in peak-demand electrical power and a need for 5,500 megawatts of additional electrical generating capacity to be produced from seven or more new pumped storage plants in New England. The first was projected to be finished and operational by 1992. Also in 1977, NYPP had forecasted the need for 2,500 megawatts of additional electrical generating capacity to be produced from pumped storage plants within its region.

Neither NEPOOL nor NYPP in 1977 had recommended specific sites for the new pumped storage plants that were forecasted over the subsequent 15 years and it was reasonable to assume that the Stanley Works property could have been selected as such a site.

The Stanley Works property was suitable for a mid-sized (800 megawatt) pumped storage plant due primarily to the 950-foot rise in elevation from the floor of the Housatonic River — where the river would be dammed to provide a lower reservoir — to the area where the upper reservoir most likely would be constructed (referred to as Pine Swamp).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

David F. Hewitt & Tammy K. Hewitt v. Commissioner
2020 T.C. Memo. 89 (U.S. Tax Court, 2020)
Theron E. Johnson v. Commissioner
2020 T.C. Memo. 79 (U.S. Tax Court, 2020)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 T.C. No. 22, 87 T.C. 389, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-works-v-commissioner-tax-1986.