W. E. Cross, Trading as Virginia Tours and Gray Line of Richmond v. United States

311 F.2d 90, 11 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1922, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3329
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1962
Docket8709_1
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 311 F.2d 90 (W. E. Cross, Trading as Virginia Tours and Gray Line of Richmond v. United States) 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
W. E. Cross, Trading as Virginia Tours and Gray Line of Richmond v. United States, 311 F.2d 90, 11 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1922, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3329 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

ALBERT V. BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

The Federal 10% impost on transportation fares 1 , the District Court has concluded, was not assessable on the amounts paid the Gray Line of Richmond, Virginia, for its bus tours in sightseeing and visiting the City’s historic and other points of interest. Therefore, the Government is ordered to refund the “penalty” exacted by the tax statute and paid under protest by Gray Line for its failure to collect from the passengers and remit to the Government the excise claimed for 1957 and 1958. The United States appeals and, we hold, successfully.

Ground for his determination was found by the District Judge in these assertions of Gray Line:

1. While tour tickets were $3.00 for an adult and $1.50 for a child, the taxpayer’s books fairly show that no more than 60<j: of either was allocable to transportation, the remainder being for non-transportation or tour services, and no tax is levied on fares of 60^5 and less. 2

*92 2. In any case, the failure to collect the tax was not willful, the statutory prerequisite to liability for the penalty.

Gray Line of Richmond is a proprietorship of W. E. Cross, taxpayer-appellee here. In a related enterprise he trades as Virginia Tours. Buses and accompanying drivers as needed are rented by Gray Line from Virginia Tours. Either a 7-passenger Volkswagen or a 29-pas-senger Ford bus is engaged, as the number of tourists demands. For the Volkswagen Gray Line pays 20}! per mile and for the Ford 40}!. There are two trips daily, one in the morning, the other in the afternoon. Besides the individual tickets a group ticket is sold at a somewhat lower rate, but this difference is not significant in the case.

The tour is 10% miles; with travel to and from the garage it is 12 miles. En route the driver lectures and points out places of interest. Four stops are made, three historical sites and one at an important industry. The occupants of the bus are taken through the plant by hostesses it provides, while the driver and his bus wait. At the other attractions the driver is the guide. The whole trip occupies approximately 2% hours, during an hour of which the bus is in motion.

Prior to 1957 and since 1958 Gray Line has paid the toll out of the price of the ticket, reducing the price so that the flat rates of $3.00 and $1.50 remained constant. For 1957 and 1958 taxpayer Cross, as proprietor of Gray Line, entered each adult fare on his books as 60}! for transportation and $2.40 for tour service, and a corresponding breakdown was made of the child’s fare, 30^ to transportation and $1.20 to tour service.

Preliminarily the Government urges that “the sum of the services performed by the taxpayer for his passengers constituted ‘taxable transportation’ ” within the meaning of the tax statute, and therefore the fare was not subject to division between transportation and non-transportation phases of the trip, citing White House Sightseeing Corp. v. United States, 300 F.2d 449 (Ct.C1.1962); Armour & Co. v. United States, 169 F.Supp. 521, 144 Ct.Cl. 697, cert. denied, 361 U. S. 821, 80 S.Ct. 67, 4 L.Ed.2d 66 (1959). To the contrary, the taxpayer urges that the primary and overtopping purpose of the tour was sightseeing, or that at the most the Government could look only to such part of each fare as was allocable to transportation cost, citing Smith v. United States, 110 F.Supp. 892 (N.D.Fla. 1953); Treas.Reg. §§ 42.4261-2(d) and 42.4261-8 (f) post.

However, we need not resolve this dispute. Even if the fare is divisible between transportation and tour service,, as the taxpayer maintains, still he cannot prevail. Decisive of this case, as the Government next insists, is that the burden was the taxpayer’s to show also, and with precision, the correctness of his; divorcement of the two costs, and this he did not do. Reinecke v. Spalding, 280 U.S. 227, 232-233, 50 S.Ct. 96, 74 L.Ed. 385 (1930); United States v. Pfister, 205 F.2d 538, 542 (8 Cir. 1953); Lightsey v. Commissioner, 63 F.2d 254, 255 (4 Cir. 1933).

While the statute does not deal with segregation of the constituents of a fare, speaking directly to the problem are Treasury Regulations on Excise Taxes-(1954 Code):

“SEC. 42.4261-2 Rate and Application to Tax. — * * * *«-*** *
“(d) Where a payment covers-charges for nontransportation services as well as for transportation of a person, such as charges for meals,, hotel accommodations, etc., the-charges for the nontransportation services may be excluded in computing the tax payable with respect to such payment, provided such charges are separable and are shoion in the exact amounts thereof in the records pertaining to the transportation charge. If the charges for nontransportation services are not separable from the charge for transportation of the person, the tax must be computed upon the full amount of the payment.
*93 “SEC. 42.4261-8 Examples of Payments not Subject to Tax. — In addition to a payment specifically exempt the following are examples of payments not subject to tax:
*«*•»**
“(f) Miscellaneous charges.— Where the charge is separable from the payment for the transportation of a person and is shown in the exact amount thereof on the records pertaining to the transportation payment, the tax on the transportation of persons does not apply to the following and similar charges:
# # S #
“(4) Charges for admissions, guides, meals, hotel accommodations, and other nontransportation services, for example, where such items are included in a lump sum payment for an all-expense tour.
“(5) Charges in connection with the charter of a land, water, or air conveyance for the transportation of persons, such as for parking, icing, sanitation, ‘layover’ or ‘waiting time’, movement of equipment in deadhead service, dockage, wharfage, etc.” [Emphasis added.]

The basis of our denial of plaintiff’s suit, to repeat, is the absence of a showing in his records of the “exact amounts * * * pertaining to transportation”. The inexactness of his transportation cost figure is evinced in the taxpayer’s method of reckoning it. He testified that the 60$ and 30$ allocations were justified on “the mileage rate * * * charged per charter, the size of the bus, the number of passengers to be accommodated plus the fact that other companies operate at certain rates and [I figured] fixed cost and arrived from that”. By “per charter” he emphasizes, he means that the allocation by Gray Line is greater than the amount charged to other persons for the same equipment. He demonstrates the latter argument as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
311 F.2d 90, 11 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1922, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-e-cross-trading-as-virginia-tours-and-gray-line-of-richmond-v-united-ca4-1962.