The Houston Corporation, a Corporation v. United States

219 F.2d 841
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 10, 1955
Docket13859
StatusPublished

This text of 219 F.2d 841 (The Houston Corporation, a Corporation 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
The Houston Corporation, a Corporation v. United States, 219 F.2d 841 (9th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

CHAMBERS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant sued (and lost) in the district court to recover from the United States excise taxes in the amount of $18,037.64 paid in the year 1948. The taxes were paid on the sales of 21 camera cranes, 21 sets of wheel locks and 21 camera tables. The three classes of objects were listed and taxed separately. But together a crane, table and set of wheel locks make up a unit upon which ordinarily a commercial studio motion picture camera is placed. Two persons usually sit on the table with the camera when operating the latter.

The camera crane is described as the third stage of development in bases for large motion picture cameras. First, there was the tripod. The dolly, a wheeled platform, came next. Lastly, the camera crane was developed. It is a counterbalanced arm on a sort of post pivot. It moves up and down or horizontally and seems to have many desirable attributes for filming pictures. Apparently the device has no commercial use except for motion picture work and for “live” television broadcasts 1 where a smaller interchangeable table is used on the crane.

We think it fair to say that here again we have another lawsuit precipitated by the revolution in the entertainment field called television. The plaintiff-appellant paid his taxes under Section 3406(a) (4) of the Internal Revenue Code as amended in the 1942 Revenue Act, 26 U.S.C.A., which reads as follows:

“(a) Imposition. There shall be imposed on the following articles, sold by the manufacturer, producer, or importer, a tax equivalent to the rate, on the price for which sold, set forth in the following paragraphs (including in each case parts or accessories of such articles sold on or in connection therewith, or with the sale thereof): (emphasis added) ####*#
“(4) Photographic apparatus.— Cameras (except cameras weighing more than four pounds exclusive of lens and accessories) and lenses, photographic apparatus and equipment, and any apparatus or equipment designed especially for use in the taking of photographs or motion pictures or in developing, printing, or enlarging photographs or motion pictures, 25 per centum; * * *.”

Not long after the tax was paid by the Houston Corporation for the 21 cranes and their accessories (the subject of this claim) made for motion picture producers, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue ruled that the self-same crane with a little different table, when manufactured for live television broadcasts using a television video camera was not subject to the excise tax required to be paid if the table should be manufactured for motion picture production. The *843 situation is further confounded by evidence that one movie producer prefers to use the television table on his cranes when he is making movies. And, if that is not trouble enough, it seems that the movie table could be used for live television broadcasts.

It should now be observed that under the 1951 Revenue Act, the apparatus here taxed is clearly not subject to taxation. So what we here decide is the matter of $18,037.64 and interest on this particular claim. The decision will have little value as precedent and will probably sink into the limbo of dead tax cases and legislation.

Appellant meticulously traces excise taxes on cameras from the First World War 2 through the 1951 Revenue Act, 3 now superseded by Sections 4171, 4172, and 4173 of the 1954 Revenue Act. 4 Appellant stoutly argues it is exempt. We think not. We agree with the district court.

If legislation were the field of this court, we could say that the tax was quite unfair to appellant and that the 1942 statute should have been changed. Somehow this was accomplished in the 1951 and 1954 acts. Certainly reason is poor for exempting from taxation the heavy motion picture camera and taxing the crane on which the camera sits. Without knowing, one may suspect that when the statute was being adopted persons interested, in buying and selling heavy motion picture cameras presented cogent reasons to the Congress for the exception of such cameras from excise taxes. Those manufacturing cranes and devices of the same class may not have presented their case for exemption to the committees of the Congress. And, of course, in 1942 when the 1941 act was revised television was not worth anyone’s bother as a source of revenue for the public treasury. 5

The parties have not pressed upon us the argument that if the statute taxes motion picture cranes and exempts a similar crane used for live television the statute is unconstitutional. We doubt if under the circumstances it was. Perhaps, if the discrimination had long continued (it is gone now) it might have achieved uneonstitutionality through time as did the 70 car law in Southern Pacific v. State of Arizona, ex rel., Sullivan, 325 U.S. 761, 65 S.Ct. 1515, 89 L.Ed. 1915.

Appellant argues that the exception for cameras weighing over four pounds in the 1942 act necessarily included camera accessories, apparatus, or equipment. We think the crane and its table and wheel locks were either photo- *844 graphic apparatus or. equipment. The exception is “except cameras weighing more than four pounds exclusive of lenses and accessories”. Suppose we say the crane is an apparatus. Still we can find no warrant for making the exception read, “except cameras weighing more than four pounds exclusive of lenses and accessories and except lenses and accessories (or apparatus)”. (Emphasis supplied.) In arriving at this conclusion we have carefully considered the legislative history of excise taxes on cameras and related items which appellant has so splendidly set forth in detail and also the contemporaneous statutes on excise taxes on refrigerators and washing machines. On those products generally the tax applied on the basic item and related items if the use was connected with personal living and not if the use was commercial. But for those items different language was used. Thus, a different rule resulted.

Hereinabove, we have discussed appellant’s argument that the cranes and their accessories should not have been taxed herein by the Treasury Department because the same department exempted practically the same article when manufactured for television video (live broadcast) cameras. Apparently, the argument was presented to Congress and Con- ' gress reacted favorably in passing the 1951 excise tax provisions. We think the express language of the 1942 act is too strong a barricade for us to break through and extend to motion picture cranes the exemption apparently there given to the same camera crane used in television.

. We think under the evidence the trial court was justified in finding, the camera cranes here taxed were designed for use in the taking of motion pictures. We think that is permissible when only two possible uses are shown. We cannot upset the finding. 6

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Related

Southern Pacific Co. v. Arizona Ex Rel. Sullivan
325 U.S. 761 (Supreme Court, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
219 F.2d 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-houston-corporation-a-corporation-v-united-states-ca9-1955.