Fidelity Storage Corp. v. Burnet

58 F.2d 526 | D.C. Cir. | 1932

VAN ORSDEL, Associate Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Board of Tax Appeals determining deficiency in income tax against the appellant corporation for the years 1918 to 1925, both inclusive.

The appellant conducts a storage business in a nine-story semifireproof building located at 1420 U Street N. W., Washington, D. C. About 1911 appellant leased a two-story brick and concrete addition to its warehouse to the Sealed Package lee Company. This company installed an ice plant in the leased premises, and operated the same for about six weeks during the year 1911. The company was forced into bank*527ruptcy on October 9, 1911, and a trustee was appointed. Tbe trustee, being unable to dispose of tbe assets of tbe bankrupt, finally effected, a sale to Mr. Karriek, the president of appellant company. Karriek agreed to pay all expenses of tbe bankruptcy proceedings, $1,479 in cash to cover 10 per cent, of all open and unsecured accounts, to release a claim of bis own in tbe amount of $11,120.74, and a claim of appellant corporation in tbe amount of $9,365.42, and to give a bond guaranteeing tbe trustee from any liability arising through claims which were then in litigation. On August 22, 1913, appellant company executed and delivered a release to tbe trustee in bankruptcy of all claims or demands of whatsoever description preferred or unpreferred, and discharged and released tbe trustee from all liability.

Tbe litigation which Karriek assumed continued until 1920. Appellant’s claim against tbe Ice Company was for rent, and it continued to charge rent at a rate of $375 per month until tbe year 1916, when $3,000 of tbe accumulated rent was charged off as a bad debt.

Tbe record discloses that, when Karriek .took over tbe equipment of tbe ice company in 1913, be placed a value on it of $40,000. Diligent efforts were made to dispose of this equipment, but without success. Tbe plant and equipment was finally disposed of in 1918 and 1920 at a price which forced appellant company in 1918 to write off a loss of $9,365.12, and, in 1920, a loss of $3,562.50. These amounts are respectively claimed as deductions in tbe.tax returns for the years 1918 and 1920. They were disallowed by tbe Board on tbe ground “that the transactions with the Sealed Package lee Company were closed in 1913, and that no loss arising therefrom was deductible in either 1918 or 1920.”

We think the Board was in error in this finding upon its own statement of facts. A loss or bad debt ean only be determined or ascertained when tbe transaction in which it occurs has been completely closed. Here tbe purchase was made in 1913 with tbe hope of a profit.

Appellant concurred in tbe purchase made by its president, Karriek, releasing its ■claims against tbe bankrupt estate, and took its chance of recovering tbe amount of its claims from tbe sale of tbe property. Diligent efforts were made to dispose of tbe property purchased, but sales were not effected until 1918 and 1920. It was not until then that tbe transaction was completed or that tbe amount of the loss could be determined. This loss was sustained through debts owing appellant company and embraced within the purchase of tbe Sealed lee Company equipment in 1913. Whether the debt was good or bad could not be ascertained until tbe sale of tbe property bad been completed. Under Revenue Act 1918, § 234 (a) (5), 40 Stat. 1078, debts ascertained to be worthless and charged off within tbe taxable year are deductible in computing tbe net income of a corporation subject to taxation. It logically follows that a loss can qnly be determined as of tbe time when tbe exact amount ean be ascertained. A bad debt is deductible at the time when tbe uneolleetable amount of tbe claim ean be definitely ascertained and determined. We are of opinion, therefore, that these claims should be allowed as proper deductions for the years 1918 and 1920, respectively.

Error is assigned on tbe valuation fixed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue on tbe building of appellant company as of March 1, 1913. There was considerable conflict in the evidence adduced at the bearing as to tbe value of this building on the date, in question. It appears that appellant company on May 29, 1914, wrote tbe taxing authorities of tbe District of Columbia that tbe value of tbe building on that date was $100,000 and that tbe building was for sale at that price. Karriek, tbe president of tbe company, in 1924, in a sworn affidavit to the Treasury Department, valued tbe building as of March 1, 1913, at $303,109.30, and appellant company carried the building on its books at $278,595.32. This was the valué fixed by tbe Commissioner, and, owing to the conflict in tbe testimony and this being purely an issue of fact, we do not feel justified in disturbing tbe finding of tbe Commissioner.

Error is also assigned on tbe refusal of the Board to allow any annual deduction due to obsolescence and storage uses of appellant’s building. Tbe Commissioner allowed for depreciation on the building a rate of 2% per cent, based upon tbe value found as of March 1, 1913, while tbe petitioner is contending, for a rate of 3% per cent, on a valuation of $450,000. We are of opinion that tbe facts justify the finding of tbe Commissioner in refusing any deduction for obsolescence and tbe amount allowed for de*528preeiation. As to these items, the finding of the Board is sustained.

Error is also assigned in the refusal of the Board to allow a deduction for certain alleged repairs claimed by the appellant company. As originally constructed, the building had iron grills across the front windows. In 1919 the cornice at the top of the building fell and damaged the original grills, which were replaced by new grills of a heavier design at a cost of $873.23.

The building as originally constructed had 17 skylights, which were raised above the roof level by parapets. By the year 1919 the skylights had become so deteriorated by the elements that reconstruction was necessary. The parapets were removed, the skylights were reset and reflashed at a cost of $2,800.

The same year $3,000'was expended on material and labor on the roof of the building. The roof was of concrete construction. Over the concrete were layers of roofing felt affixed with pitch or asphalt, and on the surface a layer of slag. It was found by the Board that a new felt and slag roof would cost approximately $4,500, and that the original felt was not entirely removed .in 1919. The exact extent of the replacements of felt and slag, says the Board, is not shown. It was held by the Commissioned and the Board “that the money expended on grills, skylights, and roof was not in the nature of repairs and should be capitalized.”

We think the finding was correct as to the grills, as no attempt was made to repair the original ones, but they were replaced by new grills of a different and heavier design. As to the skylights and roof, we think that this was clearly repair work. There was no substitution of a different material or structure., The new material was use,d where necessary to replace that which had become deteriorated by the elements and worthless. The «skylights were replaced and reflashed, the defects in the roof were repaired where necessary, by new felt and slag. This, we think, should clearly come within the classification of repair work. It was necessary to keep, the building in safe and efficient condition.

No allowance should be made for the grill work, but proper allowance should be made for the repairs on the skylight and the roof.

The decision of the Board is affirmed in part and reversed in part.