delivered the opinion of the Court.
This proceeding seeks redetermination of petitioner’s excess profits tax, computed by the invested capital method, for the fiscal years ended 1942 and 1943.
1
The issues arise from the payment of cash and the transfer of other property to petitioner by certain community groups as an inducement to the location or expansion of petitioner’s factory operations in the communities. Petitioner claimed, and the Commissioner disallowed, (1) a deduction from gross income for depreciation on the property contributed and on the full cost of property acquired in part with contributed cash or equivalent funds, and (2) inclusion of the total value of the contributions in petitioner’s equity invested capital. The Tax Court reversed the Commissioner’s ruling in pаrt.
Two questions must be determined: First, whether petitioner in computing its normal-tax net income, which is adjusted in determining excess profits net income, is entitled to deductions for depreciation with respect to prоperty transferred to it from community groups or ac
The single transaction which was not based upon such contractual obligations involved a $10,000 cash bonus paid in 1914, according to the minutes of petitioner’s board of directors, “as a part of . . . organization expenses in starting the factory” in the particular town.
Thе cash sums received by petitioner from the groups were not earmarked for, or held intact and applied against, the plant acquisitions in the respective communities but were deposited in petitioner’s general bank account from which were paid general operating expenses and the cost of all assets acquired, including factory buildings and equipment in the towns involvеd. The cash payments were debited to cash account on the assets side of petitioner’s ledger and were credited to earned surplus either upon receipt or after having first been assigned to contributed surplus. The values of the buildings acquired were set up in a building account on the assets side and were credited to surplus. 5 In every instance the cash received by petitiоner from a community group was less than the amount expended by it for the acquisition or construction of the local factory building and equipment.
In computing its normal tax net income for the taxable years in controversy petitioner deducted depreciation on
The Commissioner disallowed depreciation deductions with respect to the buildings transferred (in the value of $85,471.56) and the properties acquired with cash to the extent paid to petitioner by the groups (in the value of $885,559.45).° In computing the amount of depreciаtion to be allowed, the Commissioner deducted that portion of the cost of the buildings, land and machinery which was paid with such contributed cash or equivalent funds. 6 7 The Commissioner in making such reductions allocated the cash contribution to each item, such as buildings, land if any had been purchased, and machinery in the proportion of the total cost of such item to the total cost of the рroject. The Commissioner also disallowed inclusion in equity invested capital of the total assets transferred, reducing such capital as computed by petitioner by $971,031.01.
The Tax Court reversed the Commissioner’s disallowance of depreciation with respect to that portion of the acquisitions paid for with cash. It concluded that these items had “cost” and therefore “basis” to petitioner, since they had been paid for from petitioner’s own unrestricted funds in which the cash contributions had been deposited without earmarking; as to the buildings transferred, the Court sustained the Commissioner on the ground that these transfers were not gifts and therefore the trans
We think the assets transferred to petitioner by the community groups represented “contributions to capital” within the meaning of § 113 (a) (8) (B) and required no reduction in the depreciation basis of the properties acquired.
10
The values which the taxpayer received were additions to “capital” as that term has commonly been understood in both business and accounting practice;
11
. . the assets received . . . are being used by the taxpayer in the operation of its business. They will in time wear out, and if [the taxpayer] is to continue in business, the physical plant must eventually be replaced. Looking as they do toward business continuity, the Internal Revenue Code’s depreciation provisions — and especially those which provide for a substituted rather than a cost basis — would seem to envision allowance of a depreciation dеduction in situations like this. . . .”
The decision of this Court in
LaBelle Iron Works
v.
United States,
To the extent that petitioner acquired property involved in this controversy after December 31, 1920, it is entitled to deductions on account of depreciation under §113 (a) (8) (B). It also may include the value of the contributions from community groups in equity invested capital under § 718 (a) (1) and (2). The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the case remanded with directions to remand to the Tax Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
Notes
The tax in controversy is imposed under the excess profits tax provisions of the Second Revenue Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 974, 975, as amended, I. R. C. § 710 et seq. The tax is levied upon excess profits net income remaining after allowance of a $5,000 specific exemption and an excеss profits credit representing a normal profit. The Act permitted computation of the credit on the basis either of average income over a base period or of “invested capital,” which includes equity invested capital and 50 percent of borrowed capital. The excess profits tax provisions of the Act were repealed in 1945. 59 Stat. 556, 568.
Section 23 (1) of the Cоde permits a deduction from gross income for depreciation of property, and § 23 (n) provides that the “basis” for depreciation shall be as provided in § 114, which adopts the “adjusted basis” provided in § 113 (b) for determining gain. This subsection in turn refers to § 113 (a), which provides that the “basis (unadjusted) ” shall be the “cost” of the property, with certain exceptions including the following: § 113 (a) (2) provides in relevant рart that “If the property was acquired by gift after December 31, 1920, the basis shall be the same as it would be in the hands of the donor or the last preceding owner by whom it was not acquired by gift . . . .”; § 113 (a) (8) provides that “If the property was acquired after December 31, 1920, by a corporation . . . (B) as paid-in surplus or as a contribution to capital, then the basis shall be the same as it would be in the hands of the transferor . . . .”
Section 718 (a) provided relevantly:
"... The equity invested capital for any day of any taxable year . . . shall be the sum of the following amounts, reduced as provided in subsection (b) — ■
“(1) . . . Money previously paid in for stock, or as paid-in surplus, or as a contribution to capital;
“(2) . . . Property (other than money) previously paid in (regardless of the time paid in) for stock, or as paid-in surplus, or as a contribution to capital. . . .
“(4) . . . The accumulated earnings and profits as of the beginning of such taxable year . . . .” 54 Stat. 974, 982, 26 U. S. C. (1940 ed.) §718 (a) (1), (2), (4).
The value of the land upon which the buildings were located was not included in petitioner’s books and is unimportant for this proceeding.
Both courts below and the Commissioner have expressly assumed, as petitioner asserts, that the receipts of property and cash were not taxed as income.
The Commissioner does not deny that such deductions were disallowed for the first time in 1943, following the decision in
Detroit Edison Co.
v.
Commissioner,
The amount thus disallowed on account of depreciation was $22,472.60 for the fiscal year ended 1942 and $24,307.10 for the fiscal year ended 1943. There was no determination by the Commissioner of a deficiency in petitioner’s normal tax for either year.
The Tax Court relied at this point upon
McKay Products Corp.,
For this result the Court of Appeals cited
Detroit Edison Co.
v.
Commissioner,
See O’Meara, Contributions to Capital by Non-shareholders, 3 Tax L. Rev. 568, 572 (1948).
No suggestion is made by the Commissioner that because the transfers were the subject of contract they were not “contributions” within the statute.
See, e.
g.,
Current Problems in Accounting — Proceedings of the Accounting Institute, 1941, p. 20 (Revised Statement by American Aсcounting Association of Accounting Principles underlying Corporate Financial Statements); Guthmann and Dougall, Corporate Financial Policy 525 (1940); Harvey, Some Indicia of Capital Transfers under the Federal Income Tax Laws, 37 Mich. L. Rev. 745, 747,
Treas. Reg. 86, Art. 113(a) (8) — 1; Treаs. Reg. 94, Art. 113 (a) (8) — 1; Treas. Reg. ,101, Art. 113 (a) (8) — 1; Treas. Reg. 103, § 19.113 (a) (8)-l; and Treas. Reg. Ill, § 29.113 (a) (8)-l have read in part: “In respect of property acquired by a corporation after December 31, 1920, from a shareholder as paid-in surplus, or from any person as a contribution to capital, the basis of the property in the hands of the corporation is the basis which the property would have had in the hands of the transferor if the transfer had not been made. . . .” The provision of § 113 (a) (8) (B), Revenue Act of 1932, in which the term “contribution to capital” first appeared in federal revenue legislation, was reenacted without change in the Act of 1934 and, following the above interpretation in the regulations, in the Acts of 1936 and 1938 and in the Internal Revenue Code.
Commissioner
v.
Arundel-Brooks Concrete Corp.,
See Brewster, The Federal Excess Profits Tax 110-111 (1941).
Treas. Reg. 109, §30.718-1; Treas. Reg. 112, §35.718-1.
The Commissioner agrees that the term “contribution to capital” is used with the same meaning in §§ 113 (a) (8) (B) and 718 (a).
See 2 Montgomery’s Federal Taxes — Corporations and Partnerships — 1946-47, p. 372.
In
Southern Pac. Co.
v.
Edwards,
