Union Metal Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner

1 B.T.A. 395, 1925 BTA LEXIS 2949
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1925
DocketDocket No. 35.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1 B.T.A. 395 (Union Metal Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Metal Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner, 1 B.T.A. 395, 1925 BTA LEXIS 2949 (bta 1925).

Opinion

OPINION.

Ivins :

The taxpayer was the owner of certain patents used in its business of manufacturing articles of metal work. In its original income and profits tax return for 1918 it claimed no deduction for the exhaustion of these patents. It later proposed to claim such a deduction based on the value of the patents at March 1, 1913, but the Commissioner refused to permit the deduction to be then taken, and determined a deficiency. From this determination the taxpayer has appealed.

Counsel for the taxpayer and the Commissioner, and numerous amici curios, in their arguments and briefs in this appeal, have constantly referred to the deduction in dispute as one for depreciation. [397]*397This word, as it was used in the Corporation Tax Act of 1909, was explained by the Supreme Court in Von Baumbach v. Sargent Land Company, 242 U. S. 503, 524, wlren it said:

What was here meant by depreciation of property”? We think Congress used the expression in its ordinary and usual sense as understood by business men. It is common knowledge that business concerns usually keep a depreciation account, in which is charged off the annual losses for wear and tear and obsolescence of structures, machinery, and personalty in use in the business.

But the word has been regarded by some courts as having a broader meaning, as we point out in Appeal of Even Realty Company, 1 B. T. A. 355, and a certain amount of confusion has resulted. This confusion seems to us probably responsible for some of the inconsistencies in rulings made by the Treasury Department in the past few years, and for the position taken by the Commissioner in the instant appeal.

In arguing that patents do not necessarily depreciate, the Commissioner urges that during portions of their lives they may give rise to appreciation in the value of good will. It is pointed out that certain authorities on accountancy recognize the practice of lumping patents and good will in one account and carrying that account undiminished from year to year upon the theory that it simplifies bookkeeping. This is undoubtedly true. It is much easier to appraise all intangibles together than separately — for the appraisement is usually made by subtracting a reasonable return on the tangible investment from the returns of the entire business and capitalizing the balance. The combination of patents and good will is proper enough in computing invested capital under those provisions of the statutes in which patents and good will are treated alike, but it does not follow that the same practice will work properly in computing deductions for exhaustion, for patents are by nature exhaustible and good will ordinarily is not.

It may be true that the exercise of a monopoly, under a patent, may tend to build up a good will increasing in value as rapidly or more rapidly than the patent is exhausted. Good will is something that grows out of the general conduct of the business. It is attributable under different circumstances to any or all of several items: patent monopoly, trade mark monopoly, a recognized location of the place of business, superior quality of goods, reputation for business integrity, courtesy or liberality, advertising, etc. And nothing in the statutes requires or permits the increase in good will value to be offset, in the computation of annual income, against the deductions allowed for wear and tear of the machinery or the cost of materials entering into superior products, the rent or wear andtear of a favorably located place of business, the salaries paid to secure integrity or courtesy of officers and employees, the cost of advertising, or the exhaustion of patents. The only reason for tying the growth of good will up with the exhaustion of patents, rather than with rents, salaries, wear and tear of machinery, or advertising costs, is that good will and patent values are both intangible and are more difficult of separate appraisal than the other items. To our minds this is no justification for failing to apply the statutes according to their intent. It is frequently difficult to attribute the value of real estate [398]*398to land and structures or to land and timber, respectively, but that does not justify a contention that the buildings are not subject to wear and tear nor the timber to depletion. If wear and tear in a building can not be offset by appreciation in value of the asset itself (as we held in the Even Realty Go. appeal), a fortiori, exhaustion of a patent cannot be offset by appreciation in a different asset, good will.

The Commissioner urges that in some cases the value of patents diminishes with the lapse of time and in others it does not; that the taxpayer’s judgment is, at least prima facie, the test of whether a particular patent or group of patents belongs in one class or the other; and that the taxpayer’s original return for a given year constitutes an irrevocable classification. But he follows A. B. M. 209 — C. B. 1-1, 176 — which holds that the taxpayer’s classification of a patent in one year is not binding in a subsequent year. This means that the same patent may partake of the nature of an exhaustible or wasting asset in 1916, a non-wasting asset in 1917, a wasting asset in 1918, and so on, without any change in the nature of the patent, the nature of its use, the nature of the business, and without any other reason but the ignorance or carelessness of a clerk in preparing tax returns.

It is unnecessary for us to dwell upon the unsoundness of a rule that the nature of a capital asset may depend upon the mistake of a bookkeeper, for we do not concede that a patent can have more than one nature. It is, of necessity, a wasting asset. It is a monopoly with a definitely and strictly limited life. The benefits derived under a patent may in effect be prolonged by the issuance of new patents, just as the benefits of a lease may be prolonged by new leases — but after the expiration of the original patent, as after the expiration of the original lease, the benefits and values are not attributable to it but to the new ones.

We have been shown nothing in any of the revenue acts nor in general rules of law to the effect that deductions for exhaustion, wear and tear or obsolescence in the computation of taxable income should be-governed by one rule in the case of tangible assets and leases and by another rule in the case of patents. The theory of these deductions is the allowance of a return to the taxpayer of his capital investment before taxing him on a profit derived in part from the exhaustion or using up of his capital. Cf. Appeal of W. J. Ostheimer, 1 B. T. A. 18, Appeal of Brevoort Hotel Co., 1 B. T. A. 132. If we are taxing a yam, then

In order to determine whether there has been gain or loss, and the amount of gain, if any, we must withdraw from the gross proceeds an amount sufficient to restore the capital value that existed at the commencement of the period under consideration. Doyle v. Mitchell Bros. Co., 247 U. S. 179, 185.

Section 214 (a) (8) of the Bevenue Act of 1918 provides for the deduction of a reasonable allowance for exhaustion, etc., of property used in the trade or business. We know of no ground for holding that this means all property except patents.

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Union Metal Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner
1 B.T.A. 395 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
1 B.T.A. 395, 1925 BTA LEXIS 2949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-metal-mfg-co-v-commissioner-bta-1925.