1932 BTA LEXIS 1086 | B.T.A. | 1932
Lead Opinion
In both petitions herein it is alleged that substantially all of the common stock of the Paper Company, Eealty Company and Power Company is now and was during all of 1923 owned or controlled by the same interests and that the Paper Company owns directly all of the stock of the Public Service Company. The respondent admitted such allegations in both answers.
* * * statement of facts shows conclusively that the four companies involved in these proceedings meet the statutory requirements for affiliation within the meaning of Section 240 of the Revenue Act of 1921, since the petition alleges and the answer admits that “ substantially all of the common stock of. the Flambeau Paper Company, the Wisconsin Realty Company and the Flambeau Power Company is now and was during all of 1923 owned or controlled by the same interests and the Flambeau Paper Company owns directly ail of the stock of the Flambeau Public Service Company.”
In view of the position taken by the parties and of our disposition of the issues raised, we deem it unnecessary to determine whether or not the four companies were affiliated.
However, the respondent, although admitting the affiliation of the four corporations, contends that the petitioners elected to file separate returns for the year 1922 and, therefore, having made an election to file separate returns for such year, under section 240 (a) of the Revenue Act of 1921,
. It appears that the question of the affiliation of the two petitioners and the Realty Company during the years 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920 and 1921, was before the Commissioner for consideration prior to 1922, and that the respondent by letter dated November 19, 1921, advised the Paper Company that it and the Public Service Company were affiliated for the years 1918, 1919 and 1920, but that the Realty Company was not so affiliated. While the affiliation issue of prior years was still pending, and before the income tax returns for 1922 were filed, E. P. Sherry, president of the four companies involved, by letter under date of February 20, 1923, in behalf of the Paper Company, requested a ruling from the Bureau of Internal Revenue as to the “ necessity or possibility of filing a consolidated income tax return ” for the four companies. In reply to this letter, under date of March 8, 1923, the Paper. Company was advised by the respondent that, during the year 1922, it and the Public Service Com
The petitioners contend that the ruling of the respondent with respect to 1922 “ effectively and legally deprived the petitioners of all choice, option or election ”; that in filing separate returns for 1922 they did not make an election under. the law, but filed such returns pursuant to respondent’s ruling; and that they were justified in accepting the respondent’s specific instructions.
The petitioners rely mainly on the case of Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co., 23 B. T. A. 227, in which the Board held that the filing of a separate return by one company under the peculiar facts in that proceeding was not an exercise of the option provided by section 240 (a), 1921 Act. However, that case is not controlling here and is distinguishable for the reason that it was impossible for taxpayer in that case to determine the fact of affiliation, because of litigation arising from the repudiation of a contract involving the properties of the Dexter Company and ownership of stock of subsidiaries, which litigation was instituted in 1921 and continued through 1922 and 1923. Such is not the situation here. As far as appears from the record, there was nothing which prevented the petitioners from determinining the status of the companies and from exercising their option either to make separate returns or a consolidated return, except the respondent’s letter of March 8, 1923. In our opinion, the respondent’s ruling did not deprive the petitioners of their right of election under section 240 (a). Pictorial Review Co., 26 B. T. A. 472; Radiant Glass Co., 16 B. T. A. 610. In Radiant Glass Go., supra, the petitioner based the deprivation of its right of election in 1922 on the Commissioner’s ruling of nonaffiliation for 1921. An appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, and the court, in Radiant Glass Co. v. Burnet, 54 Fed. (2d) 718, 719, affirmed the decision of the Board and in its opinion stated the following:
When appellant came to make out and file its return ior the year 1922, it was ■ entitled, if affiliated with the Times-Rec'ord Company, to file either a separate or consolidated return. The ruling of the Commissioner upon the*308 questionnaire in the prior years did not prevent or impair the free exercise of that right. Such a ruling Hoes not have the force of law; nor are the courts hound, l>y it. United States v. Hurst, D. C. 2 F. (2d) 73. The status of affiliated, to file a consolidated return if it so elected, and to appeal to the courts, and not By the Commissioner. Fidelity Nat. Bank v. Commissioner (C. C. A.) 39 F. (2d) 58, 61. Accordingly it was the right of appellant, if affiliated, to file a consolidated return if it so elected, and to appeal to the Board of Tats Appeals and to the courts for a judicial determination of its rights. * * * [Italics supplied.]
Although the Commissioner’s ruling in this proceeding applied to the taxable year in question, nevertheless, in our opinion, such ruling did not deprive the petitioners of their right of election.
There is no evidence that the petitioners, or E. P. Sherry, president of all the companies, were so influenced by the rulings of the Commissioner relative to 1922 or previous years as to deprive them of their right of election. On the contrary it appears that the ruling of the Commissioner was not considered binding upon them, as separate returns for the year 1922 were first filed in behalf of the Paper Company and the Public Service Company instead of a consolidated return as permitted under such ruling. Furthermore, E. P. Sherry testified that he could not recall the circumstances relative to the filing of separate returns for 1922 for the Paper Company and the Public Service Company instead of filing a consolidated return for such companies, and testified further that, “ In 1924, when we were considering the matter again ” the amended consolidated return for the year 1922 was filed.
Even if we were of the opinion that under the facts herein the petitioners were deprived of their right of election under section 240 (a) of the 1921 Act, and that the filing of the amended consolidated return for 1922 by the petitioners and the Realty Company and the consolidated return for 1923 by the same companies in March 1924, constituted an election, nevertheless, it would be necessary for the petitioners to file separate returns for such years, as the Power Company filed a separate return for both 1922 and 1923. Where one corporation which is a member of an affiliated group files a separate return, the remaining corporations may not file a consolidated return of their income, but must also file separate returns. Fontana Union Water Co., 24 B. T. A. 1045; Southern Power Co., 17 B. T. A. 962; affd., Duke Power Co., 44 Fed. (2d) 543; Apartment Corp., 17 B. T. A. 876.
The amended consolidated return for 1922 was filed by the petitioners and the Realty Company. The Power Company was organized in May, 1922, and filed a separate return for 1922. Again, for the year 1923 the petitioners and the Realty Company filed a consolidated return and the Power Company filed a separate return. A consolidated return must include the income of all members of an
The petitioners, having elected in 1923 to make separate returns for the year 1922, can not thereafter change the basis by filing an amended return for the same year and can not change the basis for subsequent years by filing a consolidated return, without permission of the Commissioner. Pictorial Review Co., supra; Pine Ridge Coal Co., 23 B. T. A. 489, 491, 492, and cases cited therein.
The petitioners contend in the alternative that the accounts of the petitioners, the Realty Company and the Power Company should be consolidated, under section 240 (d)
Section 240 (d) provides that accounts may be consolidated for the purpose therein stated “ in any case of two or more related trades or businesses * * * owned or controlled directly or indirectly by the same interests.” That the four companies were owned or controlled directly or indirectly by the same interests may be assumed for the purposes of this discussion.
On brief the petitioners stated that upon hearing there was “ no showing by petitioners of intercompany relations ” between the Public Service Company and the other three companies as the Public Service Company “ was operating- along an unrelated line of business ” and was involved only because of stock ownership and that consolidation of the accounts of such company with the accounts of the other three companies was a matter of indifference to the petitioners.
Petitioners argue that the books of account do not reflect true income because the Realty Company and the Power Company were created and existed for the benefit of and to serve the Paper Company to the detriment of the Realty Company and the Power Company and that the “intercompany relations” and particularly the “ intercompany leases ” resulted in distortion of income.
Petitioners apparently interpret “ related business ” to mean “ in-tercompany transactions ” or that businesses become “ related ” by transactions with each other. The term “ related business ” was discussed in Nowland Realty Co. v. Commissioner, 41 Fed. (2d)
The statute requires that the businesses be both related and owned by the same interests. Owned by the same interests they were, but it cannot be said that the two businesses were related. “ Related ” means “ standing in relation; connected; allied; akin.
E. P. Sherry testified that the Realty Company acquired power sites “ with the idea that they would be a benefit to the Flambeau Paper Company ultimately”; that the Realty Company’s investments in timber land, in lots and houses in Park Falls, most of which were rented to employees of the Paper Company, in the railroad from Park Falls to Pixley Water Power, used by the Paper Company under rental, in preferred stock of the Paper Company, in preferred stock of the Power Company, and in the collateral note of Waldo, were “ the principal investments ” of the Realty Company “ held for the benefit of ” the Paper Company. He testified that the Realty Company is “ more or less a holding company ” in the sense that it merely holds title to the investments referred to for the benefit of the Paper Company. That such investments were made and held “ for the benefit of ” the Paper Company is a conclusion of the witness.
The evidence does not support such a conclusion. The books of account of the Realty Company do not bear out this assertion. Each company kept separate books of account. There is no evidence showing that such books were inaccurate or that they did not correctly show the assets, income and expenses of each company. The books of account of the Realty Company did not show that any of its investments were made or held for the benefit of the Paper Company. The Paper Company was not a gratuitous recipient of property or money from the Realty Company or Power Company, but paid for what it received. It paid rent for the use of the railroad and for power furnished to it pursuant to agreements. It issued preferred stock for money advanced to it, upon which it paid during 1923 to the Realty Company a very substantial amount in dividends. The corporations were organized for business purposes and obviously because of certain advantages to be gained thereby. We can not disregard the separate entities of these corporations because transactions between the corporations dealing with each other as separate entities were more advantageous to one than the other. As stated in
The Public Service Company is engaged in the business of distributing electric power for light, heat and other purposes; the business activities of the Power Company consist of owning, developing and leasing water power; the Realty Company is engaged in buying and selling real estate and investments; and the Paper Company is engaged in the business of making paper. The businesses carried on by these four companies in our opinion are not related trades or businesses. Cf. Crossett Western Co., 27 B. T. A. 258; Starr Piano Co., 26 B. T. A. 835; Herald News Co., 26 B. T. A. 688; Western Hide & Fur Co., 26 B. T. A. 354; Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Co., 25 B. T. A. 915; Nowland Realty Co., 18 B. T. A. 405.
Furthermore, even if the four corporations here ■ involved were engaged in “ related trades or businesses ” and entitled to the benefit of section 240 (d), it is incumbent upon them to prove facts from which the Board can make an accurate distribution or apportionment. Starr Piano Co., supra; Herald News Co., supra; Western Hide & Fur Co., supra, Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Co., supra; Broadway Strand Theater Co., supra.
We turn then to a consideration of the evidence in this proceeding.
The consolidated return of the Paper Company, the Public Service Company and the Realty Company (respondent’s Ex. F) and the separate return of the Power Company (respondent’s Ex. E), both for the year 1923, are before us. The petitioners introduced in evidence the balance sheet and the profit and loss statement of the Realty Company (petitioners’ Exs. 7 and 9) and the balance sheet of the Power Company (petitioners’ Ex. 8). These statements were prepared by E. P. Sherry from the books of the respective companies. In such statements he allocated certain of the assets, liabilities, income and disbursements of the Realty Company and the Power Company, respectively, as “ for the benefit ” of the Paper Company. Although the totals on such statements agree with thé books of account of the respective companies, such allocation does not appear in the books of account of such respective companies, but represents the opinion and judgment of E. P. Sherry, nor do the books of account of the Realty Company indicate or contain an account showing that the assets as allocated were held for the benefit of the Paper Company. On the profit and loss statement of the Realty Company it appears that 84 per cent of the “ Milwaukee office expense,” “ General expenses ” and “ Interest paid ” were allocated to the Paper Company. He arrived at this percentage by
On the balance sheet of the Power Company (petitioners’ Ex. 8) Sherry allocated $288,555.37 out of the total assets of such company of $293,243.73 as of January .1, .1923, and $445,193.40 out of total assets of such company of $454,983.68 as of January 1, 1924, as held for the benefit of the Paper Company. The greater part of such amounts so allocated as held for the benefit of the Paper Company represents the cost of hydroelectric developments and the transmission line which were under lease to the Paper Company.
To the balance sheet of the Power Company (petitioners’ Ex. 8) there is attached a statement showing that the Power Company on July 1, 1922, leased to the Paper Company for 25 years the so-called “ Lower Power ” and “ Pixley Power ” and the transmission line for an annual rental of $22,000, $24,400, and $1,200, respectively, the lessee to pay all real estate taxes and repairs. There is no evidence from which we can determine -whether or not such rentals were fair or were not comparable to rentals paid for similar property by others. The only testimony in this regard is that such leases were very advantageous to the Paper Company. This is also true relative to the rent paid for the railroad.
Petitioners suggest on brief that a proper consolidation of the accounts would be to assign a percentage of the net income and net loss of the Realty Company and the Power Company to the Paper Company, but that they consider that the choice of actual methods may more properly be worked out under Rule 50.
In Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Co., supra, the Board stated:
* * Where some allocation is proper under section 240 (cl) it is incumbent upon a petitioner before this Board to prove a more accurate method*313 of distribution or allocation than those suggested by this petitioner or at least to show sufficient justification for failure to do so. Even if every other question in this case were decided in the petitioner’s favor, nevertheless, we could not make any allocation. We need decide nothing more.
In our opinion the petitioners have failed to prove a reasonably accurate method of distribution or allocation, nor have they proved sufficient facts to enable the Board to make a proper or reasonably accurate distribution or allocation. As, in our opinion, the petitioners, the Realty Company and the Power Company are not entitled to consolidation of accounts under section 240 (d), supra, it is unnecessary to decide the questions raised by the respondent that section 240 (d) applies only to corporations entitled to the benefits of section 262 of the Revenue Act of 1921, and that permitting the consolidation of accounts under section 240 (d) is within the sole discretion of the respondent. Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Co., supra.
The determination of the Commissioner is approved in all respects except as to disallowance of a deduction in the amount of $16,509.80, representing the excess of net loss sustained by the Flam-beau Paper Company in the year 1921 over the amount of such net loss applied to the taxable year 1922, as to which the Commissioner confessed error.
Reviewed by the Board.
As to petitioner Flambeau Public Service Company judgment will be entered for the respondent. As to petitioner Flambeau Paper Company judgment will be entered wider Buie 50.
See. 240. (d) Por the purposes of this section a corporation entitled to the benefits of section 262 shall be treated as a foreign corporation: Provided, That in any case of two or more related trades or businesses (whether unincorporated or incorporated and whether organized in the united States or not) owned or controlled directly or Indirectly by the same interests, the Commissioner may consolidate the accounts of such related trades and businesses, in any proper case, for the purpose of making an accurate distribution or apportionment of gains, profits, income, deductions, or capital between or among such related trades or businesses.