United States v. Amherst Coal Company, Formerly Logan County Coal Corporation

272 F.2d 930, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 301, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5152
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1959
Docket7952_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 F.2d 930 (United States v. Amherst Coal Company, Formerly Logan County Coal Corporation) 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
United States v. Amherst Coal Company, Formerly Logan County Coal Corporation, 272 F.2d 930, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 301, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5152 (4th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

THOMSEN, District Judge.

This is an appeal by the government from a judgment in favor of taxpayer in an action to recover income taxes paid for the year 1951, alleged to have been erroneously assessed. The issue is whether taxpayer must capitalize certain expenditures made during that year for electrical substations, power lines and transformers in its Lundale Mine, or may treat them as ordinary and necessary business expenses under T.R. Ill, sec. 29.23(m)-15(b). 1 ******That issue, in this case, turns upon whether the expenditures were “necessary to maintain the normal output solely because of the recession of the working faces of the mine”, and whether they either “increase [d] the value of the mine” or “deerease[d] the cost of production of mineral units”, as those terms are used in the regulation. 2

The case was heard by the late Judge Ben Moore without a jury. A few days before his death he wrote an opinion letter, in which he said that he did not think it was necessary to “recite the general and underlying facts of the case, which are not in dispute between the parties”, and that it was “sufficient for the present purpose [to] make findings of fact on disputed questions and state conclusions of law”. This he did, as follows:

“Findings of Fact

“(1) The Lundale mine was a one unit operation, both as to the part situate in Logan County and the part situate in Wyoming County.

“(2) This mine had been fully developed prior to the expenditures in question in this case.

“(3) The work done in producing coal in 1950, 1951 and 1952 from that portion of the mine lying in Wyoming County was an extension of the working faces of the mine, and caused a recession of the working faces.

“(4) The installations, expenditures for which are in question in this case, were necessary to maintain the normal output of the mine, and were made so solely because of the recession of the working faces thereof.

“(5) These installations did not increase the value of the mine, nor did they decrease the cost of production of mineral units, nor did the cost thereof represent an amount expended in restoring any property or in making good the exhaustion thereof for which an allowance was or had been made.

*932 “Conclusion's of Law.'

■ “(1) Plaintiff had the right under Regulation 111, Section 29.23 (m)-15 to deduct the cost of the installations on its income tax return for the year 1951, as an ordinary and necessary business expense.

“(2) Defendant was in error in requiring plaintiff to treat the cost of these installations as capital expenditures.

“(3) Plaintiff is therefore entitled to a refund of the taxes erroneously assessed and collected from plaintiff, as set out in its complaint, with interest * * ' *.” 3

There is no serious dispute about the first three findings of fact; they are amply supported by the evidence. The fourth and fifth findings, however, are phrased in the language of the regulation, and depend upon basic facts which are seriously disputed and as to which the district judge made no findings.

Both sides have argued the case as though all of the items in dispute must be treated alike, either as -allowable deductions or as capital expenditures. Since we do not agree that they must be so treated, we are remanding the case for a new trial, in order that the district court may consider any additional evidence which may be adduced and may make additional findings of fact with respect to the several items. After hearing argument on the point, the district court may conclude from the evidence that some items should be capitalized and some allowed as expenses deductible during the year 1951.

The lands operated by taxpayer as the Lundale Mine in 1951 included: two tracts leased from Pardee Land Company, which accounted for over 50% of the mine’s total coal production; two tracts leased from others; and the land at Lundale on which the portal and the-tipple were located,, owned by taxpayer. The several tracts are contiguous and! were operated as a single mine.

We are concerned with the two Par dee-tracts. Together they form roughly a¿ pie-shaped wedge, with the apex at the-north near the tipple (marked (A) on the maps offered in evidence) almost four miles from the outer rim. The line-between Logan County on the north and' Wyoming County on the south follows the top of a ridge which crosses the-wedge about two-thirds of the way from-the apex to the rim. The Logan County tract (2,156 A.) has been under continuous lease to taxpayer since 1914. The-Wyoming County tract (c. 2,200 A.) was. originally leased to taxpayer in 1926; most of that tract (2,047 A.) was released by taxpayer in 1941, but in 1949 Par-dee gave taxpayer an option to lease the-2,047 A. again, and taxpayer exercised! that option on January 1, 1951.

Before 1937, while the mining operations were relatively near the portal and' the tipple (A), an electrical substation (B), located near the tipple, provided' power for the underground operations, converting power purchased at 4,000-volts AC from Appalachian Electric-Power Company to 250 volts DC for underground use. The substation also-provided 440 volts AC for use at the tipple. By 1937 the working faces had receded so far that a 4,000 volt AC line-(F) was constructed above ground, running 12,000 ft. from the Lundale substation (B) to a borehole and an underground substation (C) in the middle of the pie-shaped wedge, some 1,600 ft.. north of the county line.

From 1937 to 1951 taxpayer continued to purchase power from Appalachian-at 4,000 volts AC; transformers at substation (B) continued to make available-440 volts AC for use at the tipple, and! *933 250 volts DC for underground use. At underground substation (C) transformers and a rotary converter provided 250 volts DC for the haulage motors and mine machinery.

During the year 1948-50 some coal was being mined near substation (C), but coal was also being mined in the extreme southeast corner of the Logan County tract, so far from substation (C) that the available power was inadequate. 4 Taxpayer planned to continue mining the remaining coal in the southeast corner of the Logan County tract and to extend its operations into the Wyoming County tract, for which it had acquired an option in 1949. Little coal which could be profitably mined remained in the Logan County tract, but the development of the Wyoming County tract required the continued use of the principal haulways through the Logan County tract to the tipple (A). It was also necessary to provide an additional fan, because of the greater distances and areas to be ventilated. For these, and possibly for other reasons, taxpayer decided to purchase power at 12,000 volts rather than 4,000 volts, and to carry the 12,000 volts along the old line (F) from substation (B) at the tipple 12,000 ft. to the borehole above the old underground substation (C), then past the borehole (C) still above ground 6,400 ft. (H) to a new substation (E), located on Toney Fork, in the middle of the Wyoming County tract, where there was an outcrop of the seam. This was done in 1951.

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Related

Kennecott Copper Corporation v. The United States
347 F.2d 275 (Court of Claims, 1965)
Amherst Coal Co. v. United States
240 F. Supp. 977 (S.D. West Virginia, 1965)
United States Gypsum Co. v. United States
206 F. Supp. 744 (N.D. Illinois, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
272 F.2d 930, 5 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 301, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-amherst-coal-company-formerly-logan-county-coal-ca4-1959.