Stimson Mill Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

163 F.2d 269, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1628, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3354
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 1947
DocketNo. 11548
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 163 F.2d 269 (Stimson Mill Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) 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
Stimson Mill Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 163 F.2d 269, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1628, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3354 (9th Cir. 1947).

Opinion

ORR, Circuit Judge.

The question presented by this petition is whether § 713(e) (1) and § 722 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. Int. Rev.Code, §§ 713(e) (1), 722, in force in 1942, may both be used to determine the excess profits credit of a taxpayer for the year 1942, or whether the two sections are mutually exclusive.

We will refer herein to petitioner as taxpayer, and to respondent as the Government. The facts and the statutory provisions are both lengthy and complex. We therefore set them forth in some detail.

The statutory scheme of the now-repealed excess profits tax was to separate corporate profits earned during the war years into two classes, normal and excess, and to tax each class of profits at different rates.

Under the 1942 law, applicable here, a corporate taxpayer first determined its ordinary net income, or “normal tax income”, and then, by additions and subtractions to that figure, not material here, determined its “excess profits net income”. From this last item, certain deductions are made, the most important of which is the “excess profits credit”. This credit represents the statutory standard of normal earnings. Once this “excess profits credit” is determined it represents the profits (for 1942 in this case) which are subject to the normal tax, imposed at the rate of 40% of such profits. All of taxpayer’s earnings above the “excess profits credit” (with exceptions not material here) are subject to the excess profits tax imposed at the rate of 90% of such profits.1

In the computation of a taxpayer’s “excess profits credit” we have at least one instance in tax law where a taxpayer desires to have his normal profits as high as possible. For the higher the normal profits the greater the amount of taxpayer’s earnings that will be taxed at the 40% rate rather than the 90% rate.

All but a small fraction of the “excess profits credit” is made up in this case hy first taking taxpayer’s actual earnings for the four years 1936 to 1939, inclusive. § 713(b), I.R.C.

For those four years taxpayer earned the following amounts:

1936 $ 89,422.67

193763,705.57

193838,127.75

1939111,839.77

Total,$303,096.76

the earnings in the are automatically Under § 713(e) (1), lowest year (1938) raised by the “75% rule” to an amount equal to 75% of the average earnings of the other three years. This sum, ($66 242.25 in this case) is required to be substituted for the actual 1938 earnings. Considering this new figure for 1938, taxpayer’s total for the four year base period is increased to $331,-211.26, and the “average base period net income” is thus $82,802.82.

And when we take 95% of this “average base period net income”, or the sum of $78,662.68, we have computed the excess profits credit. § 713(a) (1) (A).2

Therefore, in the absence of any further facts, $78,662.68 of taxpayer’s 1942 earnings would be subject to the norma] tax and all of its earnings over that amount would be taxed as excess profits at the rate of 90%.3

In the instant case additional facts are present: Taxpayer claims relief under § 722 and in pursuance of that claim it is stipulated that taxpayer has established that its normal output was interrupted in 1937 by strikes “* * * events peculiar in its experience, as provided by § 722(b)(1), I.R.C.”. The Government has further stipulated that taxpayer has established that its actual 1937 earnings ($63,706.57) were abnormally low, and that “the fair and just amount representing normal earnings which would be used by [taxpayer] as its constructive average base period net income under the provisions of § 722 (exclusive of § 713), for the year 1942 would be determined after reconstructing earnings for the „ year 1937 [272]*272* * * from the actual amount * * * to the reconstructed amount of $85,263.34.” Section 722 provides that when a taxpayer establishes (as taxpayer here has done by stipulation) that “the tax computed under this subchapter (without the benefit of this section) results in an excessive and discriminatory tax and establishes what would be a fair and just amount representing normal earnings to be used as a .constructive average base period net income * * * the tax shall be determined by using such constructive average base period net income in lieu of the average base period net income otherwise determined under this subchapter" (Italics ours.)

It is also stipulated that taxpayer is not entitled to any other constructive adjustments to actual earnings under § 722 in the other three base period years.

Under § 722 taxpayer’s earnings for the base period considering the reconstructed figure for 1937 would be:

By this method of computing the excess profits credit (and to which method we shall refer as Method 2) where § 722 alone is used without raising the 1938 earnings by the 75% rule of § 713(e)(1), taxpayer receives a lower excess profits credit than if the Government’s method is adopted. Notwithstanding the fact that taxpayer has established its right to constructive earnings of $85,263.34 for 1937 under § 722, and its right to use a “constructive average base period net income in lieu of the average base period net income”, the Government has allowed use of the “average base period net income” under § 713(e)(1),'and the latter, or Government’s, method of computing the excess profits credit is to taxpayer’s advantage.

Thus far there is little dispute. Neither side desires to use Method 2. The crux of this case, however, lies in taxpayer’s contention that it is entitled to use both § 722 to raise its 1937 earnings, and § 713(e) (1) to raise its 1938 figures. By this third, or taxpayer’s method, as we shall hereafter refer to it, taxpayer’s earnings for the base period years would be:

The average of this total is $89,539.31, and 95% of that sum, or the excess profits credit, is $85,062.35, rather than the $78,-662.68 allowed by the Government’s method.

It is apparent that taxpayer’s method requires first, the use of § 722 to raise the 1937 figures, and, second, the use of § 713 (e)(1) to raise the 1938 figures, since one of the three years used to obtain the new 1938 figure is the reconstructed (not the actual) figure for 1937 obtained by the use of § 722.

The solution of this case resolves itself into a problem of statutory construction, the key to which lies in determining whether, in computing the “constructive average base period net income” under § 722, the 75% rule of the “average base period net income” of § 713(e)(1) may also be used, or whether the two are mutually exclusive.

[273]*273The Government determined a deficiency of $2,106.08 in taxpayer’s excess profits tax liability for the year 1942 as a result of denying taxpayer’s claimed relief under § 722. Resort was had to the Tax Court. In sustaining the Government’s contention that court placed its decision on two grounds: First, that § 713(e)(1) does not permit the use of earnings constructed under § 722 for any of the three years of the base period used in raising the lowest year; and, second, that § 722 provides that the “constructive average base period net income”, computed under that section shall be used “in lieu of” the “average base period net income”, computed under § 713(e) (D-

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Bluebook (online)
163 F.2d 269, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1628, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stimson-mill-co-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca9-1947.