Traction Cos. v. Collectors of Internal Revenue

223 F. 984, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 497, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1823
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1915
DocketNos. 2682-2687
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 223 F. 984 (Traction Cos. v. Collectors of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Traction Cos. v. Collectors of Internal Revenue, 223 F. 984, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 497, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1823 (6th Cir. 1915).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] Several decisions of the Supreme Court instruct us as to the meaning

tend and. expand the same with increase of profitable demand Cor transportation, and electric light and power; that it will from time to time at its own expense (except as otherwise provided in article ninth hereof), make all extensions, additions, alterations, improvements, renewals, and betterment» which may be necessary or proper with reference to the premises and property hereby demised and for the use and operation thereof, and will do and perform all other things necessary to make and maintain, said plants and systems as first-class modern and efficient street and Interurban street railway and cleeUlc light and power plants and systems, and that all lands, structures, improvements, betterments, and renewals added to or made upon Uie demised premises, and all rights, privileges, and franchises acquired by the lessee in connection with the demised premises, shall, upon payment therefor as hereinafter provided, become the property of the lessor, and be treated as part of the demised premises, and be subject to all the terms, conditions, and provisions of this indenture in like manner as if they had been vested in the lessor at the date of tills instrument. Provided, however, that upon the expiration of the term of this lease, or if before the expiratiou of the term thereof this lease be terminated for any cause other than the default of the lessee, then upon such termination, the lessor, shall pa.y to the lessee the actual value at the time of such expiration or termination of all additions, betterments, improvements, and renewals made by the lessee to and of the leased property, except such as shall have boon made out of the proceeds of the sale of or insurance on the property now owned by the lessor, or shall have been made in the renewal of or substitution for property existing at the commencement of the term of this lease, and thereafter worn out or destroyed, or shall have been paid for out of funds raised from ¡my bonds of said lessor issued under any of its mortgages, or which may in future'he issued for such purpose. ,f * * ”
‘‘Ninth. It is hereby agreed between the parties that all uncertified bonds of the lessor which may be in the hands of the trustee under its said mortgage of $0,250,000, hereinbefore mentioned in article second, need on 1, subdivision (f), and retained for the purpose of malting additions or ext («’..-¡ions or betterments to the system of the lessor, or acquiring new property, real or personal, may be used by the lessee for the purpose's provided in said mortgages, and to that end, whenever the lessee shall need funds for such purpose, it shall in writing- notify the lessor of the amount of money required, and the nui-poses Cor which it is desired, and such noiice shall be signed by the president or vice president of the lessee, attested by its secretary, and sworn to by one of the officers of the lessee, and shall state that (he proposed expenditure Is proper and necessary for such purposes, whereupon the lessor shall, by resolution of its board of directors, call upon the trustee under its said mortgage, in the manner provided in the mortgage, for the certification and delivery of an amount of bonds sufficient in the judgment o£ the lessee to provide the amount of money so required, and upon receipt of said bonds, the lessor shall either sell the same and pay the cash proceeds of ouch sale to the lessee, or deliver said bonds to the lessee to be used or sold by it for making the payments aforesaid as the lessee shall elect.”

[988]*988of the phrase “engaged in business” or “carrying on business,” as used in this law. Among them, three deserve special study. In the Park Realty Co. Case (Corporation Tax Cases, 220 U. S. 107, at page 170, 31 Sup. Ct. 342, 55 L. Ed. 389, Ann. Cas. 1912B, 1312), it appeared that the corporation was organized, among other purposes, to “manage or lease hotels,” and that it was managing and leasing a hotel, and was carrying on such business by continuing to-receive the rents. It was continuing to carry on a business for which it was organized,' in which it had been engaged, and which it had not discontinued. It was fulfilling one of the purposes of its organization. If it was not “carrying on business” at the time in question, it never ..had been. It had not been engaged in any business from which it had retired; ’ and it was not required to pay the tax. In a case simultaneously decided, Zonne v. Minneapolis Syndicate, 220 U. S. 187, 31 Sup. Ct. 361, 55 L. Ed. 428, a corporation of character very similar to the Park Realty Company had been carrying on an extensive business, but had turned its property and business over to another, assuming only the position of lessor; and, although it was thereafter doing about the same acts in about the same way as the Park Realty Company, it was not subjected to the tax.

Although the Park Realty Company had power to do other business than as a landlord, and the Minneapolis Syndicate had, by amending its charter, shorn itself of such broader powers, this cannot be the true distinction between the cases, because, as Mr. Justice Holmes says, in U. S. v. Emery-Bird-Thayer Co. (April 5, 1915) 237 U. S. 28, 35 Sup. Ct. 499, 59 L. Ed.-: “The question is rather what the corporation is doing thaffiwhat it could do.” When we compare these two cases, by themselves and as they have been interpreted in the McCoach Case, in U. S. v. Whitridge, 231 U. S. 144, 34 Sup. Ct. 24, 58 L. Ed. 159, and in U. S. v. Emery, etc., Co., we think the true test of distinction must be, as applied to corporations of this class, whether they are continuing the body and substance of the business for which they were organized and in which they set out, or whether they have substantially retired from it and turned it over to another.3 If the latter appears, then their tax exempt status must be tested by the further query whether they have, during the critical period, done only such acts as. are properly and normally incidental to the status of a mere lessor of such property, or whether they have exercised their peculiar corporate franchises outside of and beyond the fair scope of that status.' There is helpful analogy in observing an individual. It is not usually hard to decide whether he is still “in business,” or has retired; and, if the latter, he does not lose that character because here and there, in the receipt of his income, he does an item of business. When we come to apply this criterion to the circumstances which supposedly distinguish this case from the McCoach Case, we are satisfied that they are insufficient.

[989]*989[2] 1. Of course, buying and selling real estate may be a carrying on of business, but such acts of that nature as were here done cannot be so characterized from the standpoint of the lessor companies. These acts were merely incidental to the business carried on by the lessee companies; they were exceptional in nature and trifling in amount; the lessors did not negotiate the sales of the original nor the purchase of the substituted property.

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Bluebook (online)
223 F. 984, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 497, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traction-cos-v-collectors-of-internal-revenue-ca6-1915.