The Biltmore Company v. The United States of America

228 F.2d 9, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 727, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4977
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1955
Docket7061
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 228 F.2d 9 (The Biltmore Company v. The United States of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Biltmore Company v. The United States of America, 228 F.2d 9, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 727, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4977 (4th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

BRYAN, District Judge.

This case involves the determination of the character, as ordinary income or capital gain for Federal tax purposes, of profits from the sale of livestock. The decisive question is whether bull-calves between six and eleven months of age,, and heifer-calves between six and twenty-four months old raised and sold by the appellant, a dairy cattle herder, were “property held * * * primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of * * * trade or business” or were “property used in * * * trade or business”. The District Court held, 129 F.Supp. 366, the profits were not capital gains and we agree. Accordingly,, we approve the judgment below denying The Biltmore Company, the appellant, recovery of the additional Federal income *10 taxes it paid for 1943, 1944, 1945 and 1946, by reason of the assessment of these profits as ordinary income instead of as capital gain.

The Biltmore Company Is a corporation and operates the Biltmore Dairy Farms. It has clearly shown that in the tax years it was not primarily a beef-maker or breeder, and maintained its herd of cows just for commercial milk production. Indisputably such a herd is a capital asset. But we do not find sustained in the evidence the major premise of appellant’s argument — that the calves it sold were from birth intended to provide replacements in its dairy herd and were, therefore, always a potential part of the herd.

In each of the tax years the Biltmore herd contained, on an average, 1133 head of dairy cattle, Jersey and Guernsey strain. Of these an average of 689 were cows of milking age and the remainder consisted of heifer-calves, heifers, bull-calves and bulls. For constancy of milk production and maintenance of the herd Biltmore aimed to have each cow calve every year; the annual increase normally was found to be between 500 and 600 offspring. Younglings are generally equally divided between male and female. When only a few days old 90-95% of the bull-calves were regularly sold to the packers; similar immediate disposition was made of such of the heifer-calves as then appeared to be abnormal, defective, or otherwise undesirable for raising. The others were retained and raised: the heifer-calves to grow into heifers and, through being bred, to become cows, themselves bearing calves and thereby producing milk, the bull-calves to mature into bulls and become sires in the herd.

Appellant did not breed its bulls until they were eleven months old or its heifers before they attained fourteen or fifteen months. As nine months is the gestation period, the heifer would not drop her calf and become a milker until she was approximately twenty-four months of age. Thus, eleven for bulls and twenty-four months for heifers were the ages adopted by the trial judge in fixing the times of their entry into the herd. It is the bull-calves between six and eleven months and the heifers between six and twenty-four months, sold in the tax years, that are the subject of the present controversy. Those sold before they reached six months, the taxpayer admits, could not be capital assets; bulls sold after reaching one year, and cows after reaching twenty-six months, were conceded by the United States to be capital items. The Government has not appealed in respect to the bulls sold between the age of eleven months and one year, or as to the heifers between twenty-four and twenty-six months.

Governing here is the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, as amended, sections 117(j) (1) and (2) 1 and the Revenue Act of 1951, section 324, amending 117 (j) (1), I.R.C. 2 As applicable these are the terms of 117 (j) (1):

“For the purposes of this subsection, the term ‘property used in the trade or business’ means property used in the trade or business, of a character which is * * * held for more than 6 months, * * * which is not * * * property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business * * *

By section 324, Revenue Act of 1951, retroactive to the present tax years, pertinent additions to 117 (j) (1) were enacted as follows:

“Such term [property used in the trade or business] also includes livestock, regardless of age, held by the taxpayer for draft, breeding, or dairy purposes, and held by him for 12 [made 6 for taxable years prior to 1951] months or more from the date of acquisition.”

*11 Biltmore’s point, enlarged, is this: that whether or not an animal is “used in the trade or business” depends upon the purpose for which it is, “regardless of age, held”; that use-in-fact and age were never conclusive gauges for ascertaining the tax-classification of livestock; that good dairy husbandry demanded the retention by appellant of all its calves six months on as recruits for the herd; that the recruits were not and could not be sold unless and until it was ascertained they would not be needed as replacements in the herd; and that, as recruits, they were a part of, or “held”, for the herd though they had not joined it as producers.

Contrary to the interpretation of the appellant, we do not understand that, in determining whether the animals should be classed as capital or stock in trade, the District Judge held that Fox v. Commissioner, 1952 in this court, 198 F.2d 719, compelled the classification to be made, as a matter of law, on the sole basis of the ages of the cattle sold. It appears to us that he approached the proper classification as a factual issue dependent upon many considerations. Indeed, he cited Fox as precedent therefor. He noted a possible conflict between our construction and the Second Circuit’s in McDonald v. Commissioner, 1954, 214 F.2d 341, of the “held * * * for” and “used” phrases of section 117(j) (1) when apposed to livestock. Only in this connection did he invoke the doctrine of stare decisis, never in the sense that Fox bound him to range the animals by age.

On the evidence there was ground enough for the District Judge to find that these head, when sold, were not in fact within the herd, the capital unit. The herd was an entity producing, or causing the production of, milk; it comprised the cows in-calf or in-milk and the bulls ready for service. Obviously the animals in dispute had never reached the stage of productivity. However, explains Biltmore, experience had proved that each year 25% to 30% of its milking or productive herd would be lost through injuries, fatalities, or sterility. Biltmore points out that this is the contingency the additional animals were held to meet; and that, in this stand-by role, they were so immediately a potential of the herd as to be considered in it. But, we find, Bilt-more’s experience had also proved that in none of the tax years were these animals needed. They were sold simply to avoid overstocking; for it was quite plain that not only would they not be required for the herd, they would never be required for the reserve. A surplus of animals, equal in quality and to the number sold, was readily identifiable from the time the annual calf crop was dropped.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 F.2d 9, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 727, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-biltmore-company-v-the-united-states-of-america-ca4-1955.