Vermont Transit Co. v. Commissioner

19 T.C. 1040, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 225
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1953
DocketDocket No. 34152
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 19 T.C. 1040 (Vermont Transit Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermont Transit Co. v. Commissioner, 19 T.C. 1040, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 225 (tax 1953).

Opinion

OPINION.

Raum, Judge:

The respondent determined deficiencies in the income tax of the petitioner for the years 1942 and 1943 in the amounts of $11.19 and $178.92, respectively. Petitioner contested the deficiencies and claimed overpayments for each year. Certain issues raised by the petitioner have since been abandoned. The sole remaining issue is whether amounts of $54,262.18 and $37,347.78 were properly included in its gross income for 1942 and 1943, and, if so, whether corresponding deductions in the same amounts should be allowed.

The facts have been stipulated and are so found. The petitioner, Vermont Transit Co., Inc., is a Vermont corporation organized in 1929. It has kept its books on the accrual method of accounting on a calendar year basis. It filed its returns for the years here involved with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Vermont.

The petitioner was engaged primarily in the business of a common carrier of passengers by motor vehicle over regular routes in Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maine, and New York. It operated under certificates granted by the Interstate Commerce Commission and some of the foregoing states. A portion of its routes was also served by a similar carrier, Frontier Coach Lines, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Frontier”).

Frontier, which for some time had been operating at a loss, approached petitioner in 1939 in an endeavor to negotiate a sale of some of its operating rights (hereinafter also referred to as the “rights” or “franchises”). Such a sale appeared to be advantageous to both parties. Absentee management and lack of proper maintenance facilities played an important role in Frontier’s losses. No such circumstances were present in the case of petitioner, and there was reasonable grounds for belief that petitioner could do better with these operating rights than Frontier had done. At some stage in the negotiations, Frontier indicated an asking price of $25,000 for the rights, which were valued, as intangible assets, on its books at $12,872. The petitioner insisted that the franchises had a nominal value only. Both parties desired to effectuate a purchase and sale, but they could not agree on a purchase price under the existing conditions.

It was, therefore, agreed on August 14, 1940, that Frontier would lease the rights to petitioner until December 31, 1945, granting petitioner an option to renew the lease for an additional 5 years. On August 26, 1940, the parties entered into a further agreement whereby petitioner was given an option to purchase the rights at a price to be agreed upon by the parties. An arbitration procedure was provided in the event that the parties failed to agree upon a purchase price. The pertinent provisions of the lease are summarized briefly as follows: Petitioner was to recover its expenses in operating the franchises on a stipulated amount per mile basis, the exact amount per mile depending on the passenger capacity of the buses used. This amount which was to be computed monthly was known as the “primary amount.” All revenues from operation of the routes in excess of the primary amount were to be deposited monthly into an escrow account, unless there were unrecovered deficits in the primary amounts computed in previous months in the same calendar year. An accounting was to be rendered annually before any withdrawals were made from the escrow account. Funds in excess of the primary amount were to be paid to Frontier on the basis of one cent per mile travelled in operation of the routes. That amount was known as the “secondary amount.” Any revenues remaining were to be apportioned 75 per cent to the petitioner and 25 per cent to Frontier. Frontier agreed to keep a certain line in operation in order to provide a connection with the routes leased by the petitioner. The lease was to go into effect when approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission (hereinafter called the “Commission”).

Petitioner made application to the Commission for approval of the lease and option to buy, and a hearing was given before an examiner. The examiner submitted a proposed report recommending denial of approval of the agreement because it was thought that Frontier’s predicament would only be increased if at the termination of the lease petitioner decided not to purchase the rights. The proposed denial of approval was without prejudice to the submission of an agreement pertaining to immediate purchase of the operating rights.

No exceptions were filed to the proposed report of thé examiner and a supplemental application was filed with the Commission on February 10, 1941. This application requested approval of a purchase agreement entered into on February 4, 1941, between petitioner and Frontier. The agreement referred to the parties as “buyer” and “seller.” The provisions of the purchase agreement were similar in many respects to the provisions of the lease. The seller was to “irrevocably transfer” the title to the operating rights 120 days after the Commission approved and authorized such transfer. The buyer, petitioner, was to pay $3,500 to the seller when title was transferred. The primary and secondary amounts were to be computed in the same manner as in the lease agreement except that the buyer was to recover $3,500 in excess of the primary amount prior to making any deposits into the escrow account. The funds remaining in excess of the primary and secondary amounts were to be divided equally between the parties. The arrangement for payments into escrow and the disposition of the funds so deposited, as outlined above, was to be operative for a period of 5 years. The seller reserved the right to inspect the books of the buyer. The seller again promised to maintain a connecting route with the buyer’s routes and the buyer ,promised not to change or discontinue any of the acquired routes without the seller’s approval. By an order dated May 4, 1941, the purchase was approved and authorized by the Commission; title to the rights was transferred on July 1, 1941; and an escrow agreement was entered into with a Burlington, Vermont, bank.

The following year a deviation in routes was agreed to by Frontier, in accordance with the requirement of the agreement. In February 1943, the parties agreed to raise the rate per mile used in computing the primary amount and the change was approved by the Commission.

The amounts of $54,262.18 and $37,347.78 represent the difference between the revenues paid into the escrow account in 1942 and 1943, and the amounts petitioner received back from escrow in those years. The petitioner asserts that it received no benefit from those funds since they were collected by petitioner for Frontier. It urges that Frontier reserved an economic interest in the operating rights and that therefore the inclusion of those amounts in gross income in 1942 and 1943 was an error. The respondent contends that the unrecovered revenues paid into escrow by petitioner were payments to Frontier of the purchase price of the franchises; that the money represented income to the petitioner when received and the subsequent payment to Frontier should not change their character. The respondent further asserts that as capital expenditures, the amounts are not deductible by petitioner.

The tax consequences of this transaction must be determined not only by the form in which it was cast, as petitioner urges, but also by the substance of what occurred.

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Vermont Transit Co. v. Commissioner
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 T.C. 1040, 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-transit-co-v-commissioner-tax-1953.