United States v. The Times-Mirror Company, a Corporation

231 F.2d 876, 49 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 532, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 5192
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 29, 1956
Docket17-16622
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 F.2d 876 (United States v. The Times-Mirror Company, a Corporation) 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
United States v. The Times-Mirror Company, a Corporation, 231 F.2d 876, 49 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 532, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 5192 (9th Cir. 1956).

Opinions

JAMES ALGER FEE, Circuit Judge.

On October 21, 1949, taxpayer, The Times-Mirror Company, paid excess profits taxes for the calendar years 1943 and 1944 in the sum of $62,357.30 plus interest. Claims for refund on the ground that expenditures for microfilming past issues of a newspaper in an emergency were current expenses were timely filed and were rejected. On November 20, 1952, taxpayer brought action in the District Court for claimed over-payments. The pre-trial order, approved by the attorneys for the respective parties and signed by the trial judge, sets out the issue as follows:

“Were the expenditures in question ordinary and necessary business expenses, or, on the other hand, were they capital expenditures?”

The parties are in agreement that the District Court found facts substantially as follows:

“Since its first publication of the Los Angeles Times in 1881 taxpayer has maintained bound copies of its printed newspapers. For the period subsequent to 1910 taxpayer has two sets of such bound editions, one of which is kept in a vault in its building and is not used. The other is kept in the vault and is used by taxpayer’s officers and employees in the day-to-day operation of its business and also by the public. For the period prior to 1910 various volumes are missing, due to a bombing of taxpayer’s plant in 1910, which also damaged certain of the volumes still on hand.
“During 1943 and 1944 taxpayer had these newspapers microfilmed. Of the total of 850,579 pages microfilmed at that time, 30,579 represented issues that were missing in its library and were borrowed for microfilming. There are several volumes of which taxpayer has no copies, either in the bound set or on microfilm. A negative and three positive prints were made. The negative is kept in a vault in its building. One positive print was donated to the Los Angeles Public Library and another to the Huntington Memorial Library. The third is kept by taxpayer in its building near the bound volumes.
“The expense of microfilming was $40,-000 in 1943 and $44,179.04 in 1944. Taxpayer deducted these amounts in its federal income tax and excess profits tax returns for those years as business expenses. The Commissioner disallowed the full amount for 1943 and $36,830.48 of the 1944 deduction was disallowed upon the ground that the amounts should be capitalized and recovered through amortization or depreciation deductions over a 25-year period; and as a result taxpayer was allowed an amortization deduction of $1,792.70 for the year 1944.
“Taxpayer has continued to the present time to microfilm its current newspapers, the filming being done once a month, and the expense thereof is allowed by the Commissioner as an ordinary and necessary business expense. Taxpayer also continues to bind two sets of its current newspapers.
“The court also found that on February 25, 1942, enemy aircraft were report[878]*878ed to have flown over the Los Angeles area and to have been driven off by antiaircraft defenses. Because of the fear of a bombing, discussions were commenced the following day between the then treasurer, secretary and comptroller of taxpayer (Mr. Downing) and his then assistant, the present treasurer and comptroller (Mr. Bowers) looking to the protection of taxpayer’s newspaper files, and from those discussions evolved the determination to microfilm the newspapers.
“The microfilming of the newspapers was not done to conserve space, inasmuch as taxpayer has ample space in its present vault to accommodate two sets of its newspapers for a period of 40 to 60 years in the future, and it can then eliminate one set and thus have sufficient space for some 80 to 100 years in the future. The microfilming was not done to protect taxpayer against deterioration of its bound volumes, to be used in lieu of the bound volumes, because deterioration is not rapid, particularly with respect to the set which is not used. The microfilm is never used by taxpayer whenever there is a bound volume. It is resorted to from two to six times a year by the chief librarian of the Los Angeles Times to answer inquiries from the public regarding a period so long ago that taxpayer does not have a bound volume. It was used occasionally for two years by two members of taxpayer’s editorial staff in preparing a column of what had appeared in the Times sixty years earlier, but this use occurred only when bound volumes were missing. Since 1950 the column was moved up to fifty years ago, and since bound volumes are available for all periods since 1910 the microfilm is no longer used for that purpose. The microfilm is difficult to read and cannot be used for long periods of time without resting. The . photographing ■ of the bound volumes makes reading difficult and at times impossible, ¡ because the binding was not broken and the material in the middle of the pages is not readable.
“The court finally found that the microfilming was not done to, nor did it, improve the original plant of the taxpayer, or increase, extend or prolong its useful life; that it was not done to, nor did it, increase the net or gross income of the taxpayer; that it was done solely as a means of protection against the threatened bombing, to permit taxpayer to maintain its business on the same scale, but not to increase it; that it did not create an asset or capital value; and that it was an ordinary and necessary business expense.”

The question presented is: Whether the findings of the District Court that the cost to taxpayer of microfilming its file of back issues of newspapers was an ordinary and necessary business expense were supported by substantial evidence and were not clearly erroneous ?

The question before us is one of mixed law and fact. There is no disagreement between the litigants as to the circumstances which are relevant to the determination. The basic facts are uncontroverted and are clearly established in the record. Congeries of facts may, however, require classification under a rule of law. In this sense, the cause before us presents a question of law. In the instant cause, the trial judge of the locality had before him a record relating to business practice in the community. Cogent arguments can be and have been made against the view which was taken. On this question of business practice in a locality in view of an emergency presented, the determination savors of the facts, and the decision of the trial court is highly persuasive. We are not convinced he was in error. There are many circumstances which support his conclusion.

The words of the statute are clear and unambiguous. There is no difficulty in understanding them. It is possible that any member of the court, with the statute as a guide, might have found to the contrary. But that is not the problem [879]*879here. This Court is only to determine whether the findings were clearly erroneous. The substantial evidence in the record sustains the findings. Taxpayer was acting in an emergency. It already possessed a library of back issues. If several copies of each of these issues had been preserved by it at the time of printing, it could have protected itself by placing these in security while the one volume necessary was kept in use. If microfilming had been in vogue when these files were made up, there would have been no problem. But taxpayer had experienced the effects of a bombing where only one set of back issues was available to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 F.2d 876, 49 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 532, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 5192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-the-times-mirror-company-a-corporation-ca9-1956.