Weinberg v. Commissioner

44 T.C. 233, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 80
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 28, 1965
DocketDocket Nos. 93361, 93353, 93354, 93362, 93363, 93364, 93365, 93366, 93367, 93368, 93369, 93370, 93371
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 44 T.C. 233 (Weinberg 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
Weinberg v. Commissioner, 44 T.C. 233, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 80 (tax 1965).

Opinion

Withey, Judge:

These proceedings involve income tax deficiencies and additions to tax under section 6651(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as follows:

Petitioner Taxable year Deficiency Addition to tax, sec. 6651(a)
Weinberg, Adolph, et ux„ docket No. 93361_ 1955_ 1956__ $316,348.02
Sugar Daddy, Inc., docket No. 93363_ 4/22-7/31/55. Ended 7/31/56... Ended 7/31/67... 5,041.67 3,880.61 None
Vegetable Panning Co., docket No. 93354_ 3/4-3/31/55_ Ended 3/31/56... 944.61 3,569.95 $413.42
A. W. Farms Co., docket No. 93362_ 3/9-6/30/55. Ended 6/30/56... Ended 6/30/57... 3,539.63 4,503.23 None
Best Lettuce Co., docket No. 93363_ 3/4-3/31/55. Ended 3/31/56... Ended 3/31/57... 4,319.58 1,020.30 696.39 1,405.66
Brookside Farms, Inc., docket No. 93364.. 4/22-6/30/55.. Ended 6/30/56... Ended 6/30/57... 45.93 1,523.87 2,909.36 432.41
Chief Farms, Inc., docket No. 93365.. 4/22-8/31/55. Ended 8/31/56... 2.529.81 240.41
Girard Farming Co., docket No. 93366_ Ended 4/30/57... 2,013.72
Imperial Lettuce Farms, Inc., docket No. 93367. 3/4-3/31/55_ Ended 3/31/56... Ended 3/31/57... 4.618.82 None 2.890.90 1,577.10
Lettuce Farming Co., docket No. 93368.. 3/4-3/31/55_ Ended 3/31/57... 4,678.46 4,114.00 3,296.78
Farms, Inc., docket No. 93369_ 4/22-8/31/55_ Ended None
Parsons Farms, Inc., docket No. 93370..... 4/22-6/30/55_ Ended 6/30/56... None 2,693.39 432.41
Shannon Farms, Inc., docket No. 93371_ 5/11-6/30/55_ Ended 6/30/56... 2,127.75 4,362.09

The deficiencies result from respondent’s determination that the several corporate petitioners are not recognizable tax entities and that the income from the sale of the crops which the individual petitioners allegedly assigned to them is taxable to the individual petitioners.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Petitioners Adolph and Etta Weinberg are husband and wife, residing at Norwalk, Calif. They filed joint returns for the calendar years 1955 and 1956. The term “petitioner,” as hereinafter used, will refer to Adolph Weinberg unless otherwise indicated. The other petitioners are California corporations with their principal offices located at the same business address as petitioner, 12948 South Pioneer Boulevard, Norwalk, Calif. All of the petitioners filed their returns with the director of internal revenue at Los Angeles. Their returns were made, and their books and records kept, on a cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting. The returns filed by petitioner and his wife were made on a calendar year basis and those for the corporate taxpayers were for fiscal years corresponding to their various accounting periods.

During the taxable years and at all times here material petitioner was engaged in farming in the Imperial Valley, county of Imperial, Calif. Most of his farming operations during 1955 and 1956 were conducted through a partnership composed of himself and his wife and known as the Adolph and Etta Weinberg partnership. This partnership will be referred to hereinafter as the Weinberg partnership.

Imperial Valley is a highly productive farming and citrus-growing area located about 200 miles south of Norwalk, Calif., and extending approximately 70 miles north and south and 30 miles east and west.

Petitioner has been engaged in farming and related business in that area for a number of years. He is president of Coast Grain Co., a corporation engaged in the dairy and cattlefeed business at Norwalk, and devotes most of his time to that business. Coast Grain Co. made loans in large amounts to its customers for financing their farm and livestock operations.

In his farming operations petitioner purchases or leases a tract of land and engages a farmer, either an individual, corporation, or partnership, to grow the crops, usually on a share-crop or profit-sharing basis.

In 1952 petitioner entered into a farming venture with another partnership, Holtville Vegetable Co. This partnership, hereinafter referred to as the Holtville partnership, was composed of three partners, unrelated to petitioner. Under the terms of the Holtville venture, petitioner was to finance certain farm operations and the partnership was to manage the farms and do all of the farmwork. The profits were to be divided 47*4 percent to petitioner and 52y2 percent to the partnership. About 1,100 acres of farmlands, known as the Coppinger properties, consisting of a number of different tracts of land, were involved. The land was then under lease to the Holtville partnership, which subleased it to petitioner. The Holtville venture agreement expired at the end of the 1955 crop year.

In 1952 petitioner leased other f armlands which he placed under the management of another grower, James Bedwell, on a salary basis.

The principal crops grown on the farms in which petitioner had an interest were cotton, sngar beets, alfalfa, flax, barley, lettuce, and carrots. For cotton, the land is prepared and seeded in January and February and the crops harvested in the same months of the following year. For the other crops, except alfalfa, the seeding is done in July, August, and September and the harvesting in the spring and early summer of the following year. Alfalfa is usually a 3-year crop with several annual cuttings over the period from January to September.

Farming in Imperial Yalley, as elsewhere, generally is a hazardous occupation depending on weather conditions, the adaptability of the soil to different types of crops planted thereon, the extent of insect infestation, and other factors. In the first 2 years of its existence, 1952 and 1953, the Holtville farming venture sustained operating losses, petitioner’s share of which amounted to approximately $100,000.

In February 1955, petitioner had a conference with his accountants and attorney for the purpose of reviewing and reorganizing his business affairs. His health was not of the best and, on his doctor’s advice, he was contemplating a trip of several months to Europe. It was decided at the conference that petitioner would turn over some of his farming business to a number of corporations to be organized for that purpose. Petitioner instructed his attorney to form the proposed corporations and stated that he would go to Imperial Yalley and analyze the remaining unharvested fields and would transfer certain growing crops and $1,000 in cash to each of the corporations in exchange for all of its capital stock. Accordingly, articles of incorporation for the proposed corporations were prepared by the attorney and were filed with the secretary of state of California. Thereafter, applications for the issuance of stock were filed by the corporations with the commissioner of corporations of the State of California, and all of their stock was issued to petitioner either in the latter part of 1955 or early in 1956 as shown below.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 T.C. 233, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinberg-v-commissioner-tax-1965.