Woodlawn Cemetery Asso. v. Commissioner

28 B.T.A. 882, 1933 BTA LEXIS 1060
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedAugust 8, 1933
DocketDocket No. 65207.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 B.T.A. 882 (Woodlawn Cemetery Asso. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodlawn Cemetery Asso. v. Commissioner, 28 B.T.A. 882, 1933 BTA LEXIS 1060 (bta 1933).

Opinion

[884]*884OPINION.

Smith:

The petitioner’s principal contention is that it is entitled to deduct either as an ordinary and necessary business expense or as a loss in the years 1928 and 1929, the amounts paid over in those years to the Union Trust Co. as trustee for the perpetual care fund. The argument is made that the petitioner was under a bind[885]*885ing obligation to the purchasers of lots already sold to provide an adequate fund for perpetual care and also that the establishment of the fund Avas necessary as a means of meeting competition in the sale of other lots.

Prior to 1928, the petitioner’s sale contract contained no specific provision for a fund for perpetual care. All sales of lots were made subject to the petitioner’s rules and regulations, which guaranteed the present and future general care of all lots and stated that a portion (no specific portion) of the sale price would be set aside for that purpose. In 1928, after the trust fund had been created, a new sale contract Avas adopted which provided that approximately 25 cents per square foot of the purchase price of each lot sold would be paid into a perpetual care fund. As to the sales made under the new contract the specified amount of 25 cents per square foot on the lots sold Avas impressed Avith a trust upon its receipt and was therefore not income to the petitioner. Portland Cremation Assn. v. Commissioner, 31 Fed. (2d) 843; Los Angeles Cemetery Assn., 2 B.T.A. 495; Troost Ave. Cemetery Assn., 4 B.T.A. 1169; affd., 21 Fed. (2d) 194; New York & New Jersey Mausoleum Co., 26 B.T.A. 128,

HoAvever, as to the prior sales made under the old contract the petitioner Avas not obligated, either contractually or by law, to set aside any specific portion of the sales price for perpetual care and no part of such income was impressed with the trust. Cf. Portland Cremation Assn. v. Commissioner, supra.

The amount of $384,000 transferred to the perpetual care fund in 1928 included the $133,500 which the petitioner had in a reserve for perpetual care at the beginning of 1928. We do not know from Avhat source these funds were derived or what percentage of sales, if any, they represented. Presumably the amounts, except the $133,500 already held in reserve, were taken out of general surplus. The question here raised, however, is not whether the amount of $384,000 is includable in gross income as in the years of its receipt by the petitioner, but Avhether it is deductible from gross income in 1928 because of its transfer irrevocably to the trustee for the perpetual care fund in that year. This question was raised in Evergreen Cemetery Assn., 25 B.T.A. 544, but was not there decided, the facts proved in that case having been found insufficient to support a conclusion upon the question of law. A similar question was considered in New York & New Jersey Mausoleum Co., supra, where we said:

* * * Tlie cost of the mausoleum up to the years here involved was something over $200,000, and under the requirements of the law there should have been a trust fund in existence in excess of $20,000. How could this in any way reduce income in subsequent years? The statement in the sales [886]*886agreement to the effect that the purchase price would provide a perpetual care fund did not obligate petitioner to set aside any ascertainable sum which a purchaser could require to be administered as a trust. As a matter of fact ' the petitioner never treated any part of the receipts from sales as having been received by it as a trustee. The record is entirely bare of evidence that petitioner created a trust fund with the $15,000 it borrowed in 1921 and left on deposit with the bank as a “ special interest fund.” Even conceding that the borrowed money could somehow be regarded as a trust fund, it does not appear that there was any relation between that sum and petitioner’s income for the year 1921. It is obvious, we think, that the existence of a trust fund does not necessarily affect income one way or another. Such a fund may be created out of donations, surplus, or capital, with no effect whatever on current income. It is only in cases where sums that would otherwise be reflected in income are diverted from the use of the taxpayer, as in the cases above cited, that income is affected. When in 1921 the taxpayer paid off $10,000 of the loan it was merely liquidating a liability, which plainly could not serve to reduce income.
Inasmuch as the State law applicable to petitioner’s operations required the maintenance of a trust fund based on cost, and no connection whatever is shown between cost and sales, we are of the opinion that petitioner is not entitled to reduce income from sales by reason of its so-called trust fund. * * *

We are of the opinion tbat the amounts transferred to the perpetual care fund in 1928 and 1929 in excess of 25 cents per square foot on the lots sold during those years are not deductible either as ordinary and necessary business expenses of those years or as losses. The petitioner is entitled to deduct in each year as a business expense the amount actually paid out by it during such year for the care of the lots, but to the extent that the amounts paid into the trust fund in 1928 and 1929 represented a capital reserve or trust fund for future care of the lots they were in no sense an expense of the taxable years before us. There is no authorization at law for the deduction of the amounts set aside out of its earnings of prior years, or out of its current earnings, in excess of its contractual obligation, for the care of lots in future years. Income must be computed upon an annual basis and the tax liability of each year must be determined with reference to the receipts and expenditures of that year. Burnet v. Sanford & Brooks Co., 282 U.S. 359.

There was no element of a loss in the transaction by which the amounts in dispute were transferred to the trust fund. The entire net income from the fund was to be used in the care of the lots. This was an annual expense which the petitioner was obligated to meet in some manner. If there had been no trust fund established for that purpose, then the petitioner would have been required to pay the cost each year out of its own funds.

The petitioner in his brief refers to section 11166, Michigan Compiled Laws, 1915, which reads as follows:

[887]*887Sec. 7. It shall be the duty of such board of directors to preserve good order in the grounds of such cemetery; to provide for the laying out and embellishing of the same, and to see that they are well kept and in good condition.

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Related

Meadowlawn Memorial Gardens, Inc. v. United States
634 F.2d 1329 (Court of Claims, 1980)
Woodlawn Cemetery Asso. v. Commissioner
28 B.T.A. 882 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
28 B.T.A. 882, 1933 BTA LEXIS 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodlawn-cemetery-asso-v-commissioner-bta-1933.