Talache Mines v. United States

218 F.2d 491
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 1955
Docket13577_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 218 F.2d 491 (Talache Mines 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
Talache Mines v. United States, 218 F.2d 491 (9th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

218 F.2d 491

TALACHE MINES Incorporated, a Corporation, Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, John R. Viley, Individually and as Former Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Idaho, and Calvin E. Wright, Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Idaho, Appellees.

No. 13577.

United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.

December 28, 1954.

Rehearing Denied March 4, 1955.

W. H. Langroise, W. E. Sullivan, Boise, Idaho, for appellant.

H. Brian Holland, Asst. Atty. Gen., Ellis N. Slack, Alonzo W. Watson, Jr., A. F. Prescott, Melva M. Graney, Sp. Assts. to Atty. Gen., Sherman F. Furey, Jr., U. S. Atty., Boise, Idaho, Herman Rossi, Wallace, Idaho, Sylvan A. Jeppesen, Asst. U. S. Attys., Boise, Idaho, for appellees.

Before BONE, ORR and POPE, Circuit Judges.

BONE, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves federal income taxes (a deficiency assessment of $22,773.22 paid in 1946). Appellant sued for a refund after the Commissioner had rejected a claim therefor, and the lower court sustained the assessment and dismissed appellant's action. This appeal followed. The findings, conclusions and order for judgment of the lower court are set out in Talache Mines, Inc., v. United States, D.C., 108 F.Supp. 25.

A preliminary reference to the facts will be helpful. In 1917 and 1918, appellant acquired the Idaho mining properties referred to in the lower court's opinion but did not place these properties in production until 1922. It operated them until 1926 and thereafter leased them until the year 1941. Appellant's claim is that in 1942 it permanently abandoned and discarded these properties because unforeseen changes in business conditions terminated their usefulness and made them valueless to appellant. In its complaint below it averred that since this abandonment it has never used said properties in its (mining) business nor for any purpose, nor has any other person mined said property or removed mineral products therefrom.

Appellant claimed a deduction in its 1942 income tax return for loss resulting from this asserted adandonment in that year, as provided in title 26 U.S. C.A. § 23(f).1 The sum of $50,000 was finally allowed as a 1942 loss, but the further claimed sum of $169,773.57 was disallowed and rejected by the Commissioner, and as a result of the disallowance and rejection of this larger portion of appellant's claimed abandonment loss, the deficiency income tax above noted was assessed against appellant and collected.

On this appeal, appellant assails as error only one finding of fact (No. 9) of the lower court which reads as follows:

"That the plaintiff did not give any notice to the public at any time nor during the year in question, to wit, 1942, of his abandonment of the property, nor did plaintiff renounce the title or his interest in any of the unpatented mining claims nor do any affirmative act showing an abandonment of the mining claims, but retained title and exercised its claim and control over the property until the same was sold."

Appellant separately assails as errors of law the lower court's Conclusions of Law Nos. 2 to 5, inclusive. We assume that appellant charges such errors because these Conclusions failed to declare that the 1942 acts of appellant referred to in Finding No. 6 were affirmative acts which legally constituted a bona fide abandonment of the mining property.

In support of its contention that the lower court erred in the above particulars, appellant urges that it is not necessary under federal law that, in order to constitute an abandonment, the taxpayer must divorce itself from all interest of value in the property or that the property become worthless in the year of abandonment. This being the case, the property may be retained and later disposed of for salvage value, since the applicable law does not require complete severance or disposal of legal title of property before an abandonment loss may be claimed. This contention is advanced as a general proposition of law.

The Facts

Aside from one other witness whose brief testimony is not relevant to the issue of abandonment, Mr. Burroughs was the only witness testifying at the trial. He was president and general manager of appellant and since 1928 had been the owner of all of its capital stock. All of the corporate actions of appellant referred to below were performed by Burroughs for and on behalf of appellant, and he indicates as being its corporate action all that he did in respect to matters related to the claim of abandonment. He testified that the Talache mining property had shrunk in value up to 1942 to a point where it had become useless to the company; that it abandoned the mine by removal of equipment (after the fashion described by the lower court in Finding No. 6) and allowed it to cave in.

Burroughs further testified that a notice of abandonment was not posted in 1942, nor was such a notice published in any local newspaper in that year advising of the intention of appellant to abandon its mining property. He asserted that he did not "do any act" to show an "intention" of appellant to hold the property for mining purposes; he admitted that he was familiar with the provisions of federal statutes that permitted mining operators "to file a notice of intention to hold (unpatented claims) in lieu of assessment work"; he admitted that in 1942 (when he claimed that the mining property was abandoned) "we filed notice of intention to hold [the unpatented] mining claims," and that in each of the succeeding years of 1943 and 1944 the same kind of notice respecting these claims was filed. (These notices were filed with the County Recorder of Bonner County, Idaho in which County the claims were located, see Finding No. 7.) In its brief on appeal, appellant tells us that the "notices of intention" here referred to were filed "to hold the unpatented claims" — that "the reason for this action was to maintain the property intact in the effort to realize the salvage value through its recreational uses." In this connection, Burroughs also testified that if appellant wanted to hold (retain) the unpatented claims it "would have to do the assessment work or file the intention." He further testified that appellant "paid taxes on 18 patented claims for the years 1942 to 1945."

In his testimony Burroughs assigned as a reason for filing the "notice of intention" in 1942 that "when we abandoned the mine I set up on the books at that time a $30,000.00 as the valuation on the property up there for the purpose, primarily, recreational and perhaps among the claims that were unpatented there were some that surrounded this home and the development around there that Mr. Armstead had made about a mile from the mine * * *. I wanted to hold [all of] the property altogether to make it available if I could and to see if I could get the value of the tax instead of on the books." Apparently "this home" and the surrounding unpatented mining claims held by appellant represented a portion of the "interest" therein Burroughs wanted to retain after the claimed abandonment of the mining properties. He testified that this retention was not for any mining purpose but because the potential recreational worth of the home and site offered a chance for salvage through a later sale.

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Bluebook (online)
218 F.2d 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talache-mines-v-united-states-ca9-1955.