Welder v. United States

329 F. Supp. 739, 28 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5407, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12317
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 1971
DocketCiv. A. No. 68-V-5
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 329 F. Supp. 739 (Welder v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welder v. United States, 329 F. Supp. 739, 28 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5407, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12317 (S.D. Tex. 1971).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BUE, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, P. H. Welder and Katie Welder, are husband and wife and, since 1957, have resided on their Green Lake Ranch in Calhoun County, Texas. They are cash basis taxpayers. Joint federal income tax returns for each of the years 1958 through 1964 were timely filed by the taxpayers, and any tax shown to be due was timely paid each year. In 1965, a government audit of the taxpayers’ joint return for each of the years 1958 through 1964 was made, resulting in a determination by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue that tax deficiencies existed in the total sum of $1,219,741.14. Taxpayers promptly paid these deficiencies in tax and interest, and filed claims for refund. The disallowance of these claims necessitated the institution of this suit.1

During the years involved, taxpayers owned and operated three ranches. The Green Lake Ranch, located in Calhoun and Victoria Counties, Texas, covering approximately 17,700 acres, was used primarily for the grazing and pasturing of taxpayers’ breeding herd of Hereford cattle and for processing the calves produced by the herd. Feed crops were grown and processed on the Green Lake Ranch. The Sinton Ranch located in San Patricio County, Texas, was similarly used by taxpayers for grazing, pasturing and developing their breeding herd. They also used their 36,000 acre Cameron Ranch, located in LaSalle and McMillan Counties for their cattle raising operations, there pasturing and feeding steer calves for ultimate sale.2 Calves produced by the breeding herd, after weaning, were moved to the Green Lake Ranch for processing. Heifer calves were retained there for development to maturity and inclusion in the breeding herd. Steer calves were sold, and all bulls used for breeding purposes were acquired by purchase.

In addition to their cattle raising operations, taxpayers also received income from oil and gas royalties received from producing oil wells located on the Green Lake and Sinton Ranches. They consider their oil operations and ranching operations to be a single unified business, and have so treated all activities in their bookkeeping practices.3 The issues raised by this treatment and other disputed questions were deferred by the Court, since consideration and determi[741]*741nation of one issue at this time might obviate the need to decide the remainder. This one issue, if decided in the taxpayers’ favor, is determinative of the outcome of this suit. Thus, the single issue now before the Court is whether all or any part of taxpayers’ ranch expenses constitute “specially treated deductions” under § 270(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.

In order to follow the respective legal theories of able counsel in this highly complex and frequently confusing area of the tax law, the Internal Revenue Code which is the law and the Regulations which constitute the Commissioner’s interpretation of the tax law must be examined side by side. It may be of assistance at this point before commencing a detailed analysis of the various provisions of the Code, Regulations and supporting authorities to be alerted to the purpose, sequence and manner in which these provisions are urged upon the Court by the parties.

Section 270(a) of the Code is important in this case because it pertains to the limitations on permitted deductions to certain taxpayers for business purposes; § 270(b) is critical because it is an exception to the general rule limiting deductions attributable to such businesses. Plaintiffs, as taxpayers in the cattle ranching business, want the benefit of the exception in the Code, and the government as defendant denies its applicability. Going one step further, the taxpayers cite language in §§ 1.162-12 and 1.471-6 which they contend gives them the option to deduct certain expenses of raising livestock, when incurred, or to defer or capitalize them. The option provided under either of these sections, it is contended, would allow the taxpayers to claim these expenditures as specially treated deductions under the language of § 270(b) of the Code.

But there is more involved than the bare provisions of the Code and these Regulations. It is contended that there are and have been semantical difficulties in construing the Code and Regulations, particularly in the accounting field with reference to what constitutes capital expenditures in the cattle raising business. It is urged that generally accepted accounting principles as opposed to tax accounting concepts lead to different results, and the government contends that certain reported case law, specifically Sonnabend v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 377 F.2d 42 (1st Cir. 1967), has gone awry through a failure to recognize this distinction in considering the tax treatment to be afforded deductions under the Code. Taxpayers deny the accounting distinction and assert that the costs of raising livestock are clearly capital expenditures and that the admitted paucity of case authority on the point nevertheless supports their position.

This inquiry inevitably leads to a detailed examination of the legislative history of the Code in order to ascertain the precise intent of Congress, particularly in view of the government’s position that to accede to the taxpayers’ interpretation of the tax law is to render § 270(b) meaningless and, indeed, to place such section of the Code at serious odds with other tax provisions. This legislative history which was not amplified to the same extent at the trial as in the post-trial legal memoranda submitted to the Court does serve to cast beneficial light on this intricate combination of tax rules comprised of codal provisions, regulations and interpretations which Judge Learned Hand so aptly characterized years ago in the following terms:

In my own case the words of such an act as the Income Tax, for example, merely dance before my eyes in a meaningless procession: cross-reference to cross-reference, exception upon exception—couched in abstract terms that offer no handle to seize hold of —leave my mind only a confused sense of some vitally important, but successfully concealed, purport, which it is my duty to extract, but which is within my power, if at all, only after the most inordinate expenditure of time. I know that these monsters are the result of fabulous industry and ingenuity, plugging up this hole and [742]*742casting out that net, against all possible evasion; yet at times I cannot help recalling a saying of William James about certain passages of Hegel: that they were no doubt written with a passion of rationality; but that one cannot help wondering whether to the reader they have any significance save that the words are strung together with syntactical correctness. Much of the law is now as difficult to fathom, and more and more of it is likely to be so; for there is little doubt that we are entering a period of increasingly detailed regulation, and it will be the duty of judges to thread the path—for path there is —through these fantastic labyrinths. * * ->:•

Hand, Eulogy of Thomas Walter Swan, 57 Yale L.J. 167, 169 (1947).

I.

§ 270(a) OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE PERTAINING TO DEDUCTIONS ALLOWED TO INDIVIDUAL TAXPAYERS ENGAGED IN A TRADE OR BUSINESS

Section 270(a) of the 1954 Code provides :

If the deductions allowed by this chapter * * *

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Related

Ellis v. Commissioner
1984 T.C. Memo. 50 (U.S. Tax Court, 1984)
Haynes v. Commissioner
1979 T.C. Memo. 240 (U.S. Tax Court, 1979)
Duggar v. Commissioner
71 T.C. 147 (U.S. Tax Court, 1978)
Kuhn v. United States
392 F. Supp. 1229 (S.D. Texas, 1975)
Welder v. United States
461 F.2d 1269 (Fifth Circuit, 1972)
P. H. Welder and Katie Welder v. United States
461 F.2d 1269 (Fifth Circuit, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
329 F. Supp. 739, 28 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5407, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welder-v-united-states-txsd-1971.