Sumner Rhubarb Growers' Ass'n v. Commissioner
This text of 10 T.C.M. 465 (Sumner Rhubarb Growers' Ass'n 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
JOHNSON, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in income tax, excess profits tax and declared value excess-profits tax as follows:
| Excess | |||
| Profits | Declared Value | ||
| Year | Income Tax | Tax | Excess-Profits Tax |
| Fiscal period Jan. 1, 1939 to May 31, 1939 | $ 39.06 | $42.61 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1940 | 252.67 | $275.64 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1941 | 211.93 | 217.03 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1942 | 186.88 | 135.33 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1946 | 1,219.00 | ||
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1947 | 3,117.10 |
The sole issue is whether petitioner is exempt from income tax, excess profits tax and declared value excess-profits tax for the above taxable*230 years under
Findings of Fact
Petitioner is a corporation organized April 30, 1930, and existing under the laws of the State of Washington. The articles of incorporation stated that it was organized as a "cooperative association or corporation under Chapter XIX of the Laws of 1913 and the amendments thereto". Petitioner filed for the fiscal years ended May 31, 1944, May 31, 1945, May 31, 1946, and May 31, 1947, Form 990, information return of organizations "exempt from income tax under
Petitioner's articles of incorporation stated that the purposes for which petitioner was formed were:
"(a) To pack, process, can, store, warehouse, handle, and market fruit, vegetables, rhubard [rhubarb] and other agricultural and horticultural products grown in the State of Washington by any means and in any way whatsoever.
"(b) To buy, process, pack, handle and sell all kinds of agricultural and horticultural products, both for its own*231 account and on commission for others, and to contract accordingly, and to operate warehouses, canneries, cold storage plants and packing houses, wherever necessary or expedient in the carrying on of the company's business.
"(c) To lend money upon and to negotiate loans upon agricultural and horticultural products; to borrow money and to establish domestic and foreign agencies to carry on the general purposes of the corporation.
"(d) To buy or otherwise acquire, to own, operate, mortgage, lease, sell or otherwise dispose of any and all kinds of personal property.
"(e) To promote, do, acquire, hold and dispose of anything incidental to or necessary, convenient or proper to carry out any of the purposes aforesaid, or anything which may be useful, incidental or auxiliary to accomplish any of the purposes of the corporation.
"(f) To conduct public warehouses.
"(g) The primary purpose for the organization of this corporation is to handle the agricultural and horticultural products of its members upon a cooperative basis and to handle all of such products of members who shall sign the standard marketing agreement of the association upon the basis of actual cost to the association*232 and an amount apportioned over the entire operations of any one season, not to exceed eight per cent of the then issued common capital stock of this corporation, and an amount sufficient for proper reserves for advertising, general commercial hazards, betterments, development work, and other secondary charges."
The authorized capital of the corporation was 1,500 shares of capital stock of a par value of $1 per share. For its fiscal year ended May 31, 1947, petitioner had $1,214 of issued capital stock at the beginning of the year and $1,202 at the end of that year.
The by-laws of the corporation provided that its powers should be exercised by a board of trustees to be elected annually by the stockholders. The board of trustees was generally referred to as the board of directors. The directors' powers included the power to conduct, manage and control the affairs and business activities and to make necessary rules and regulations for guidance of its officers; to appoint a manager; to borrow money; to issue certificates of capital stock; to transfer stock and to purchase any and all of the shares of any stockholder at book value whenever any stockholder should fail to sign the marketing*233
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
JOHNSON, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in income tax, excess profits tax and declared value excess-profits tax as follows:
| Excess | |||
| Profits | Declared Value | ||
| Year | Income Tax | Tax | Excess-Profits Tax |
| Fiscal period Jan. 1, 1939 to May 31, 1939 | $ 39.06 | $42.61 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1940 | 252.67 | $275.64 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1941 | 211.93 | 217.03 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1942 | 186.88 | 135.33 | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1946 | 1,219.00 | ||
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1947 | 3,117.10 |
The sole issue is whether petitioner is exempt from income tax, excess profits tax and declared value excess-profits tax for the above taxable*230 years under
Findings of Fact
Petitioner is a corporation organized April 30, 1930, and existing under the laws of the State of Washington. The articles of incorporation stated that it was organized as a "cooperative association or corporation under Chapter XIX of the Laws of 1913 and the amendments thereto". Petitioner filed for the fiscal years ended May 31, 1944, May 31, 1945, May 31, 1946, and May 31, 1947, Form 990, information return of organizations "exempt from income tax under
Petitioner's articles of incorporation stated that the purposes for which petitioner was formed were:
"(a) To pack, process, can, store, warehouse, handle, and market fruit, vegetables, rhubard [rhubarb] and other agricultural and horticultural products grown in the State of Washington by any means and in any way whatsoever.
"(b) To buy, process, pack, handle and sell all kinds of agricultural and horticultural products, both for its own*231 account and on commission for others, and to contract accordingly, and to operate warehouses, canneries, cold storage plants and packing houses, wherever necessary or expedient in the carrying on of the company's business.
"(c) To lend money upon and to negotiate loans upon agricultural and horticultural products; to borrow money and to establish domestic and foreign agencies to carry on the general purposes of the corporation.
"(d) To buy or otherwise acquire, to own, operate, mortgage, lease, sell or otherwise dispose of any and all kinds of personal property.
"(e) To promote, do, acquire, hold and dispose of anything incidental to or necessary, convenient or proper to carry out any of the purposes aforesaid, or anything which may be useful, incidental or auxiliary to accomplish any of the purposes of the corporation.
"(f) To conduct public warehouses.
"(g) The primary purpose for the organization of this corporation is to handle the agricultural and horticultural products of its members upon a cooperative basis and to handle all of such products of members who shall sign the standard marketing agreement of the association upon the basis of actual cost to the association*232 and an amount apportioned over the entire operations of any one season, not to exceed eight per cent of the then issued common capital stock of this corporation, and an amount sufficient for proper reserves for advertising, general commercial hazards, betterments, development work, and other secondary charges."
The authorized capital of the corporation was 1,500 shares of capital stock of a par value of $1 per share. For its fiscal year ended May 31, 1947, petitioner had $1,214 of issued capital stock at the beginning of the year and $1,202 at the end of that year.
The by-laws of the corporation provided that its powers should be exercised by a board of trustees to be elected annually by the stockholders. The board of trustees was generally referred to as the board of directors. The directors' powers included the power to conduct, manage and control the affairs and business activities and to make necessary rules and regulations for guidance of its officers; to appoint a manager; to borrow money; to issue certificates of capital stock; to transfer stock and to purchase any and all of the shares of any stockholder at book value whenever any stockholder should fail to sign the marketing*233 agreement or cease to be engaged in the production of rhubarb. No stockholder could dispose of his stock without first offering it to the corporation. The directors receive no compensation but the manager receives a salary. The manager handles the sales.
By signing the standard marketing agreement as prescribed by the corporation and paying $1, a farmer (rhubarb grower) could thereby become a member and receive at least one share of capital stock.
The marketing agreements executed by petitioner and its members have been substantially the same for all years. They provided, among other things, as follows:
"1. The price to be paid by the Association shall be the market price as conclusively determined by the manager of the Association from time to time, f.o.b. cars, Summer, Pierce County, Washington, which price shall be paid to the grower from time to time as soon as returns from resales are available, less, however, a deduction of one cent per crate for all hothouse rhubarb delivered.
"2. From time to time there shall be issued to the Grower certificates of stock in the Association to the amount of the deductions made from the purchase price of the produce delivered by the Grower*234 as in the foregoing paragraph set forth, such stock to be issued at par and in such denominations as the Association may determine.
* * *
"6. This agreement shall be binding upon the Grower, his representatives, successors and assigns, during the period above mentioned, as long as he raises hothouse rhubarb directly or indirectly or has the legal right to exercise ownership or control of any thereof or any interest therein or any land on which such product is grown during the term of this contract.
"7. This agreement is one of a series generally similar in terms, comprising with all such agreements signed by individual Growers, one single contract between the Association and the said Growers, mutually and individually obligated under all the terms thereof. The Association shall be deemed to be acting, in its own name, for all of such Growers in any action or legal proceeding on or arising out of this contract."
The members of petitioner receive boxes at cost from petitioner for packing the rhubarb. Petitioner is able to buy the boxes in large quantities at cheaper prices than the individual grower would have to pay. The rhubarb is packed in boxes by the growers and turned*235 over to petitioner for shipping and marketing under petitioners' name. Each week during the harvesting season, which is from January to May of each year, the amount received by petitioner from sale of the rhubarb brought in by the members during that week is pooled and distributed according to the quantity each member brought in. The member receives back the full sale price of every box of rhubarb, minus a handling charge which has generally been 20 cents per box and minus a charge of one or two cents a box for a reserve for contingencies. The member pays in no money except the $1 it costs him to join petitioner. The gross sales price of the rhubarb is shown in petitioner's books. Petitioner keeps its own bank account for operating expenses.
On May 29, 1947, the Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue wrote petitioner, relative to claims of petitioner for refund in the total amount of $366.03 of employers' tax for the period from October 1, 1942, through June 30, 1946, "Although it is stated on your claims that your Association is a cooperative farming organization for marketing purposes and is exempt from income tax under
On July 25, 1947, petitioner executed Form 1024, affidavit for corporations claiming exemption under
On October 27, 1947, the Deputy Commissioner wrote petitioner that "Form 1024 does not appear to be the correct exemption affidavit to be used by an organization of your type" and requested that Form 1028, affidavit for corporations claiming exemption under
On November 6, 1947, petitioner, by its attorney-in-fact, E. S. Watts, C.P.A., wrote the Commissioner:
"It would seem senseless for us to execute the enclosed forms 1028 for exemption under
By letter dated December 15, 1947, the Deputy Commissioner renewed his request of October 27, 1947, that petitioner submit Form 1028 and other information.
On December 17, 1947, the collector of internal revenue at Tacoma, Washington, notified petitioner that it was on the delinquent list for an information return, Form 990, covering the fiscal year ended May 31, 1947.
On December 26, 1947, petitioner, by its attorney-in-fact, wrote the Commissioner again refusing to execute Form 1028, because "We will not agree that our income exemption should not be under
On March 12, 1948, the Deputy Commissioner wrote petitioner, referring*238 to their previous correspondence:
"The letters indicate that you do not intend to furnish the required information, since in your letter of January 21, 1948 it is stated that unless this Bureau is satisfied that you should have exemption from income tax under
"Since you have not shown that you are now being operated in such a manner as to be entitled to exemption from Federal income tax under
"The collector of internal revenue at Tacoma, Washington, is being instructed to take up the matter with you with a view to obtaining the required income tax returns."
On March 17, 1948, petitioner, *239 by its attorney-in-fact, wrote the Commissioner reiterating its position that it did "not wish to file exemption claim under
On May 19, 1948, the Deputy Commissioner wrote petitioner, stating that "As you have failed to submit the necessary information, Bureau ruling of March 12, 1948, revoking the ruling of September 3, 1931, * * * remains in effect."
On May 25, 1948, petitioner, by its attorney-in-fact, wrote the Commissioner again reiterating its position that "until disposition has been made of our pending claim for refund we do refuse to file application for exemption under
On July 1, 1948, petitioner, by its attorney-in-fact, wrote the Commissioner again reiterating its position that "since we claim income tax exemption under
On July 12, 1948, petitioner, by its attorney-in-fact, wrote the Commissioner:
"Now enclosed you will find the affidavit form 1028 which you will notice we have executed under
On November 4, 1948, petitioner, by its attorney-in-fact, wrote the Commissioner:
"There has been no change in our method of operations under which we were exempt from income tax from inception of the Corporation in 1931 down to date and since we have a case pending in Federal Court which should adjudicate our position under
Petitioner brought suit against Clark Squire, Collector of Internal Revenue, in the United States District Court of Western District of Washington, Southern Division, *241 to recover a refund of $89.14 in employment taxes for the years 1943 through 1946 which had been paid by petitioner upon the wages of its office personnel. The claims for refund had originally aggregated $366.03 but the Commissioner had allowed the claims insofar as they covered the tax on the wages of employees other than office employees. The District Court, after a hearing, held that under the provisions of
On appeal, in Squire v. Sumner Rhubarb Growers' Ass'n. (C.A. 9, 1950),
After notification by the Deputy Commissioner in his letter of March 12, 1948, above, that petitioner would "be required to file Federal income tax returns, beginning with the year 1939", the following corporation returns covering the years here in question were subsequently prepared and filed in petitioner's behalf by the deputy collector for the district of Washington:
| Year | Return |
| Fiscal period Jan. 1, 1939, to May 31, 1939 | Income, Declared Value Excess-Profits and De- |
| fense Tax | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1940 | Income, Declared Value Excess-Profits and De- |
| fense Tax | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1941 | Income, Declared Value Excess-Profits and De- |
| fense Tax | |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1942 | Income and Declared Value Excess-Profits Tax |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1946 | Income and Declared Value Excess-Profits Tax |
| Fiscal year ended May 31, 1947 | Income Tax |
Petitioner's balance sheet as of May 31, 1946, was as follows:
| BALANCE SHEET | ||||
| As at May 31, 1946 | ||||
| ASSETS | ||||
| Cash in Bank | $ 6,887.49 | |||
| Cash on Hand | 6.22 | $ 6,893.71 | ||
| State Unemployment Taxes - (Part) | 189.30 | |||
| Inventories: Floor Supplies | 787.53 | |||
| Advertising | 918.00 | |||
| Field Boxes | 2,233.89 | |||
| Hothouse Boxes | 5,011.20 | 8,950.62 | ||
| Current | $16,033.63 | |||
| Floor Equipment | $497.45 | |||
| Office Equipment | 748.25 | 1,245.70 | ||
| Less, Depreciation Reserve | 1,245.70 | |||
| Total Assets | $16,033.63 | |||
| LIABILITIES | ||||
| Social Security | $ 2.56 | |||
| Undistributed Proceeds (1944 Season) | 900.83 | |||
| Undistributed Proceeds | 4,282.25 | |||
| Current | $ 5,185.64 | |||
| EQUITIES | ||||
| Capital Stock Outstanding | $ 1,214.00 | |||
| Capital Surplus June 1, 1945 | $2,758.39 | |||
| Plus: Bank Error | $ .60 | |||
| Dormant Refund | 47.80 | 48.40 | 2,709.99 | |
| Reserve for Contingencies | 6,924.00 | |||
| Members' Equity | 10,847.99 | |||
| Total Liabilities and Equities | $16,033.63 | |||
*243 Petitioner's statement of operations and distributions for the year ended May 31, 1946, was as follows:
| STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS AND DISTRIBUTIONS | |||
| Year ended May 31, 1946 | |||
| Sales: Hothouse Rhubarb (92,193 Boxes) | $208,698.14 | ||
| Field Rhubarb | 13,677.65 | ||
| Price Adjustments - Net | 2,698.76 | $225,074.55 | |
| Adjustments by Charges to Growers: Hothouses | 434.06 | ||
| Field | 61.86 | 495.92 | |
| Outside Sales: Boxes and Supplies | 12.50 | ||
| Outside Discount Collected | 9.90 | ||
| Interest Charged Growers | 45.31 | ||
| Discount Earned | 109.15 | 164.36 | |
| Costs Charged to Growers: | |||
| Hothouse: Supplies | $ 273.82 | ||
| Advertising | 1,843.86 | ||
| Brokerage | 4,760.00 | ||
| Boxes | 13,677.57 | ||
| Handling | 13,828.95 | 34,384.20 | |
| Field: Supplies | 7.00 | ||
| Brokerage | 324.97 | ||
| Handling | 1,005.20 | ||
| Boxes | 1,581.79 | 2,918.96 | 37,303.16 |
| Total Revenue and Collected Costs | $263,050.49 | ||
| Direct Disbursements: | |||
| Hothouse: Advertising | $ 1,183.89 | ||
| Supplies | 1,350.13 | ||
| Brokerage | 5,101.61 | ||
| Boxes | 11,921.11 | 19,556.74 | |
| Field: Brokerage | 315.00 | ||
| Boxes | 1,569.74 | 1,884.74 | |
| Indirect Costs and Handling: | |||
| Freight and Express | $ 19.52 | ||
| Federal License and County Tax | 21.18 | ||
| Interest and Discount | 49.14 | ||
| Legal and Auditing | 90.00 | ||
| Treasurer's Fee | 100.00 | ||
| Donations, Dues and Advertising | 172.65 | ||
| Office Supplies and Postage | 240.98 | ||
| Precooling | 354.80 | ||
| Inspection | 494.15 | ||
| Insurance and Bond Premiums | 552.62 | ||
| Rent, Heat and Light | 684.42 | ||
| Telephone and Telegraph | 748.10 | ||
| Wages | 3,244.74 | ||
| Salaries | 7,107.50 | 13,879.80 | |
| Total Expense and Supply Disbursements | 35,321.28 | ||
| Balance | 227,729.21 | ||
| Less: Depreciation Reserve | 69.24 | ||
| Accounts Receivable Error | 80.00 | ||
| Reserve for Contingencies | 921.93 | 1,071.17 | |
| For Distribution to Member Growers | 226,658.04 | ||
| Distributions to Growers: Hothouse | 208,698.14 | ||
| Field | 13,677.65 | 222,375.79 | |
| Undistributed Proceeds | $ 4,282.25 | ||
*244 Petitioner's balance sheet as of May 31, 1947, was as follows:
| BALANCE SHEET | |||
| As at May 31, 1947 | |||
| ASSETS | |||
| Cash in Bank | $ 9,940.39 | ||
| Cash on Hand | 16.41 | $ 9,956.80 | |
| Hothouse Accounts Receivable | 8.00 | ||
| State Unemployment Department | 189.30 | ||
| Inventories: Floor Supplies | 236.35 | ||
| Advertising | 795.60 | ||
| Field Boxes | 225.20 | ||
| Cartons | 2,844.00 | ||
| Hothouse Boxes | 6,483.38 | 10,584.53 | |
| Current | 20,738.63 | ||
| Cold Room Equipment | 5,648.66 | ||
| Less: Depreciation Reserve | 564.87 | 5,083.79 | |
| Floor Equipment | $535.40 | ||
| Office Equipment | 748.25 | 1,283.65 | |
| Less: Depreciation Reserve | 1,245.70 | 37.95 | |
| Total Assets | $25,860.37 | ||
| LIABILITIES | |||
| Accounts Payable | $ 182.41 | ||
| Undistributed Proceeds (Prior Seasons) | 854.56 | ||
| Undistributed Proceeds | 11,885.39 | ||
| Current | $12,922.36 | ||
| EQUITIES | |||
| Capital Stock Outstanding | $ 1,202.00 | ||
| Capital Surplus | 2,709.99 | ||
| Reserve for Contingencies at June 1, 1946 | $6,924.00 | ||
| Addition at 2" per Box | 2,102.02 | 9,026.02 | |
| Members' Equity | 12,938.01 | ||
| Total Liabilities and Equities | $25,860.37 | ||
Petitioner's statement of operations and distributions for the year ended May 31 1947, was as follows: *245
| STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS AND DISTRIBUTIONS | |||
| Year ended May 31, 1947 | |||
| Sales: Hothouse Rhubarb (105,101 Boxes) | $180,220.46 | ||
| Field Rhubarb | 39,794.63 | ||
| Price Adjustments - Net | 3,203.22 | $223,218.31 | |
| Adjustments by Charges to Growers: Hothouses | 517.73 | ||
| Field | 202.04 | 719.77 | |
| Outside Sales: Boxes and Supplies | 10.00 | ||
| Advertising | 2.40 | ||
| Discount Earned | 223.27 | 225.67 | |
| Costs Charged to Growers: | |||
| Hothouse: Supplies | $ 382.64 | ||
| Pre-Package | 2,072.78 | ||
| Advertising | 2,102.02 | ||
| Brokerage | 5,654.51 | ||
| Handling | 21,020.20 | ||
| Boxes | 21,049.48 | 52,281.63 | |
| Field: Supplies | $ 7.20 | ||
| Brokerage | 1,118.03 | ||
| Handling | 4,663.20 | ||
| Boxes | 8,088.16 | 13,876.59 | 66,158.22 |
| Total Revenue and Collected Costs | $290,331.97 | ||
| Direct Disbursements: | |||
| Hothouse: Advertising | $ 862.02 | ||
| Supplies | 3,254.58 | ||
| Brokerage | 5,522.59 | ||
| Boxes | 18,720.68 | 28,359.87 | |
| Field: Brokerage | 905.00 | ||
| Boxes | 7,387.28 | 8,292.28 | |
| Cartons | 391.35 | ||
| Indirect Costs and Handling: | |||
| County Property Tax | 14.53 | ||
| Social Security | 16.34 | ||
| Treasurer's Fee | 100.00 | ||
| Insurance and Bond Premiums | 100.56 | ||
| Legal and Auditing | 101.25 | ||
| Office Supplies and Postage | 138.74 | ||
| Dues and Advertising | 165.50 | ||
| Interest and Discount | 313.71 | ||
| Inspection | 738.00 | ||
| Telephone and Telegraph | 1,066.91 | ||
| Rent, Heat and Light | 1,165.30 | ||
| Salaries | 6,585.25 | ||
| Wages | 6,894.29 | 17,400.38 | |
| Total Expense and Supply Disbursements | 54,443.88 | ||
| Balance | $235,888.09 | ||
| Less: Depreciation Reserve | 564.87 | ||
| Pre-Package allowances | 1,320.72 | ||
| Reserve for Contingencies | 2,102.02 | 3,987.61 | |
| For Distribution to Member Growers | 231,900.48 | ||
| Distributions for Growers: Hothouse | 180,220.46 | ||
| Field | 39,794.63 | 220,015.09 | |
| Undistributed Proceeds | $ 11,885.39 | ||
*246 The amount of $4,282.25 shown on the balance sheet and on the statement for the year ended May 31, 1946, as "Undistributed Proceeds" has since been distributed. Undistributed proceeds due the growers by agreement with the growers are sometimes left with petitioner during the winter to purchase supplies for the growers. The amounts due are then distributed in the spring. The cash in the bank of $9,940.39 shown on the balance sheet at May 31, 1947, was kept to be used toward the payment of $11,885.39 in undistributed proceeds due the members for the current season. The item on the balance sheet at May 31, 1946, of $900.83 for "Undistributed Proceeds (1944 Season)" was attributable to proceeds due members who had left the territory. Otherwise all proceeds from the sale of rhubard prior to that date had been distributed to members, less the cost of handling and additions to the contingent reserve. The operation of petitioner has been substantially the same from its inception in 1930.
In contingent reserve was maintained for unforeseen expenses such as, for instance, losses by freezes on carload shipments. The board of directors of petitioner determined each year the amount of reserve*247 to be set up. The average increase in the contingent reserve over the years of petitioner's operations has amounted to approximately $700 per year. The reserve was not all in cash but a part was in equipment and inventory.
In the fiscal year 1946 the amount reported under page 1, of Form 990, item 14(d), "Value of agricultural products marketed (or handled) for members (1) actually produced by such members" corresponded with the amount reported under item 7, page 2, of the form "Gross receipts from business activities," which included "Costs Charged Growers". In 1947 the amount reported under item 14(d), page 1 of Form 990, was only the gross receipts less costs charged growers, which latter were shown under item 7, page 2.
Petitioner was an exempt organization within the meaning of
Opinion
Petitioner corporation was originally granted exemption on September 3, 1931, under the provisions of section 103(12) of the Revenue Act of 1928 according exemption to farmers' and fruit growers' cooperatives. That section is in all material respects similar to the present provisions of
*249 The sole question is whether petitioner is entitled to exemption under
However, on the merits, we reach the same conclusion on the record here before us for the years here involved as did the Court of Appeals in the above proceeding involving other years, namely, that petitioner "fits exactly into the wording of this statute". (
Petitioner is an association of rhubarb growers who joined together in a group to facilitate the packing, processing, shipping and sale of their products. Petitioner's sales are handled by a salaried manager who is selected by the directors, the latter being members elected as directors annually and serving without compensation. The members receive boxes at cost from petitioner for packing the rhubarb. The rhubarb is packed in the boxes by the members and turned over to petitioner for shipping and sale under petitioner's name. Each week during the harvesting season, which is from January to May of each year, the amount received by petitioner from that week's sales of rhubarb is pooled and distributed according*251 to the quantity each member brought in. The member receives back the full sale price of every box of rhubarb, minus a handling charge which has generally been twenty cents per box and minus a charge of one or two cents a box for a reserve for contingencies. It is quite clear that these operations are within the requirements of
As we have said, there has been no change in petitioner's method of operation since its inception in 1930. Respondent, however, maintains that petitioner's Form 990, the information return for organizations exempt under
Respondent also contends that there is no satisfactory showing by petitioner of any consistent policy to distribute the proceeds of each year's operations to its members. The record does not support this contention. In the fiscal year 1946 of the amount of $226,658.04 for distribution to member growers (after deduction of costs of $35,321.28, and small amounts for reserves for depreciation and contingencies, from total revenue and collected costs for that year of $263,050.49), the amount of $222,375.79 was distributed in that fiscal year to growers. The balance of $4,282.25 in undistributed proceeds left after audit was shown as a liability on the balance sheet and distributed during the following season, being left temporarily with petitioner by agreement*253 with the growers to purchase supplies for the growers. The only proceeds carried over from any prior seasons consisted only of some $900.83 from the 1944 season (1945 fiscal year), also shown as a liability, attributable to proceeds due certain members who had left the territory. In the fiscal year 1947, of the amount of $231,900.48 for distribution to member growers, the amount of $220,015.09 was distributed in that year. The undistributed proceeds of $11,885.39 were set up as a liability, petitioner's auditor testifying that cash on hand as of the same date, May 31, 1947, in the amount of $9,940.39 was held toward the payment in the following season of the balance due the members. No period beyond May 31, 1947, is before us in this proceeding but we think petitioner has shown satisfactorily that its settled policy was to distribute to its members the proceeds of its operations.
Respondent maintains that there was no "legal obligation on the part of petitioner, prior to the receipt of its income, to return to its members all of the proceeds of sales and operations in excess of actual costs," and that such amounts were "subject to the control of the Board of Directors and depended*254 upon its determination as to if and when they should be distributed." Accordingly, respondent contends, citing
Respondent also mentions that "no credits were set up on the books of account in favor of the members with reference to such undistributed amounts", to support his contention that petitioner was under no legal obligation to return these undistributed amounts to*255 the members. The marketing agreements provided the legal obligation, as we have said. Furthermore, the total undistributed amounts were set up as liabilities by petitioner's auditor, as the facts show, the auditor testifying they were to be entered on petitioner's books in the same menner, the amounts due each member to be computed by petitioner on the basis of the number of boxes he turned in. Respondent's own regulations (Regulations 111, section 29.101(12)-1) state "The Code does not require, however, that the association keep ledger accounts with each producer selling through the association". Clearly, there is nothing in petitioner's method of handling distributions to its members, either in practice or on its balance sheets and books, to justify denial of exemption under
Respondent maintains that the annual deductions by petitioner from the proceeds of the produce sold for a "large and consistently growing" contingent reserve warrants inquiry as to petitioner's right to exemption under
We conclude that petitioner is entitled to exemption under
Decision will be entered for the petitioner.
Footnotes
1.
SEC. 101 . EXEMPTIONS FROM TAX ON CORPORATIONS.The following organizations shall be exempt from taxation under this chapter -
(12) Farmers', fruit growers', or like associations organized and operated on a cooperative basis (a) for the purpose of marketing the products of members or other producers, and turning back to them the proceeds of sales, less the necessary marketing expenses, on the basis of either the quantity or the value of the products furnished by them, or (b) for the purpose of purchasing supplies and equipment for the use of members or other persons, and turning over such supplies and equipment to them at actual cost, plus necessary expenses. * * * nor shall exemption be denied any such association because there is accumulated and maintained by it a reserve required by State law or a reasonable reserve for any necessary purpose. * * *↩
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
10 T.C.M. 465, 1951 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumner-rhubarb-growers-assn-v-commissioner-tax-1951.