50 F.2d 322 | D.C. Cir. | 1931
This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals holding petitioner liable for a deficiency of income excess profits taxes for 1920 in the amount of $51,475.23.
A brief statement of the facts is necessary. Petitioner is, and has been for more than thirty years, a planter and manufacturer of sugar, with a plantation and factory on one of the islands of the Hawaiian group. Its plantation is owned in fee by the territory of Hawaii, as successor of the kingdom of Hawaii. Up until May 31, 1920, it occupied its land as sublessee of one Knudsen and his assigns, and paid its rentals in percentages from 2% to 9 per cent, of the sugar produced from eane grown on the leased land. In actual practice, it paid the agreed percentages in dollars and cents. In its findings o-f fact, the Board of Tax Appeals says: “The petitioner, with the approval of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, has for many years kept its accounts and made its federal income-tax returns on the so-called ‘crop basis,’ as permitted by tbe Treasury Regulations. * * * ” In tries Hawaiian Islands, a crop of sugar cane is planted in tbe spring of one year, brought under cultivation in tbe fall of tbe following year, and
In 1918, petitioner paid as rental $114,-159.58, representing the market value of the sugar which the lessor was entitled to receive from the crop of that year. It charged one-third of that amount to the 1918 crop, one-third to the 1919 crop, and one-third to the 1920 crop, and, in its return for 1920, deducted the amount of the payment allocated to the 1920 crop-, and it is this deduction which the Commissioner refused to allow, and the correctness of this is the first question for our decision.
The Board sustained the Commissioner, saying: “In 1918 it paid $114,159.58 as the rental for that year. One-third of this was charged on its books to the 1920 crop and deducted in computing 1920 income. Petitioner contends that, sinee the plantation was used during 1918 for the cultivation of three crops this represented a rental for all of the land and that on the crop system of accounting it may properly allocate one-third of this rental to each of the three crops. The respondent (Commissioner), on the other hand, contends that such a rental payment is unlike other expenses of producing the crop and may not be allocated over three crop years, that the lease provides for a payment in kind which must necessarily be taken from the crop harvested, and that the rental may only be deducted as a part of the cost of such crop. We are of the opinion that the respondent is correct in his contention. The proof of this may be seen if we look at the situation in which the petitioner would have found itself had it not been able to secure the renewal of its leases beyond 1920. In such a situation, following the basis on which the 1918 rental was apportioned, the rental paid in 1919 would have been apportioned one-half fqr the crop of that year and one-half for the crop of 1920 and the rental paid for 1920 would all have been apportioned to the 1920 crop, for the petitioner would not have cultivated any 1921 or 1922 crops and could therefore not have charged any part of the rent for 1920 to such crops. The result would be that the 1920 crop would be charged as rental with one-third of the rent paid in 1918, one-half of the rent paid in 1919 and all of the rent paid in 1920. Such a situation would obviously work a distortion of income.”
And, in the argument before us, the'Commissioner insists, first, that the expenditure so made in 1918, which we understand to mean the rental paid in that year, had no relation to the 1920 crop; second, that to allow one-third of it as a deduction in 1920 would effect a distortion of income for that year; and, third, that in any event it was the payment of a general expense not identified with the crop or crops of any year or years.
We have given the subject careful consideration, and are unable to agree with the Commissioner in any of these contentions'. Section 212 of the Revenue Act of 1918 (40 Stat. 1057, 1064) provides: “(b) The net income shall be computed upon the basis of the taxpayer’s annual accounting period (fiscal year or calendar year, as the case may be) in accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed in keeping the books of such taxpayer; but if no such method of accounting has been so employed, or if the method employed does not clearly reflect the income, the computation shall be made upon such basis and in such manner as in the opinion of the Commissioner does clearly reflect the income.”
And section 234 (a) (1) provides that there may be a deduction of “all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year * * * including rentals or other payments required to be made as a condition to the continued use or possession of property. * * * ”
And Treasury Regulations 45, article 38, provides: “ * * * If a farmer is engaged in producing crops which take more than a year from the time of planting to the time of gathering and disposing, the income therefrom may be computed upon the crop basis; but in any (all) such cases the entire cost of producing the crop must be taken as a deduction in the year in which the gross income from the crop is realized.”
It is conceded that petitioner’s method ol
The next question involves an item of $30,000 claimed as an expense for 1920 under the following circumstances: Petitioner, as we have seen, held subleases expiring April 30, 1920. The term of its lessor ran until May 31 of the same year. At that time, there was in effect in Hawaii a law whieh gave the Commissioner of Lands the right to
"$240,000.00
"Honolulu, Hawaii, December 4th, 1918
“Received of American Factors, Limited two hundred and forty thousand dollars being the consideration for the assignment by Augustus F. Knudsen and Eric A. Knudsen to Kekaha Sugar Co., Ltd., of the balance and full remainder of the term of Government Lease No. 164, dated June 1,1890.
“-- “Bishop Tiust Co., Ltd.
“[Signed] by E. W. Sutton
“Vice Pres.
“Ledger Account
“Kekaha Sugar Company, Ltd.”
The Board found: “The agreement appeal’s to have been reached on the basis of a lump sum of $240,000 for the balance of the term and it is our opinion that the payment must be treated on this basis.”
The question whether any specific amount of the gross sum paid should be charged specifically to the month of May, 1920, is not. we think, free from doubt. That the possession of the property for this month was of importance to petitioner is perfectly clear, but it is by no means clear whether $30,000, or any other specific amount, may properly be said to represent that value. When the transaction was completed, it was, as we have seen, for a lump sum. The commuted value of the rent to accrue for the unexpired term of the lease was estimated by petitioner at $220,000. At what amount it was valued by lessor we do not know. Petitioner actually paid $20,000 in excess of this amount, but whether this $20,000 increase over its estimate is necessarily chargeable to the month of May, or to some other factor or inducement, is not disclosed in the record. So far as we can tell from a careful examination, the lessor and the lessee negotiated on a basis in which the element of speculation was necessarily involved. What different items of value pro and eon induced the one to demand and accept and the other to pay the $240,000 is not shown, and we do not think We should undertake by guesswork, or the application of any rule of our own, to supply this deficiency. The Board having found the entire $240,000 payable for a definite term, and counsel at the hearing apparently having agreed that that term covered a period of 29 months from January 1, 1919, to- May 31, 1921, and should properly be distributed over that period, except as petitioner is entitled to any portion of the total sum for the month of May, we are unable to say that the finding of the Board is not supported by substantial evidence, and we think we should not disturb it. See a discussion of this subject generally in Burnet v. Houston, 51 S. Ct. 413, 75 L. Ed.-, decided by the Supreme Court April 13, 1931.
This leaves for consideration only the decision of the Board in rejecting a claim for special assessment under sections 327 and 328 of the Act of 1918 (40 Stat. 1093). We think that, in the absence of a charge of fraud, abuse of discretion, or other irregularity, we are without jurisdiction to consider this question. The determination whether the taxpayer is entitled to the special assessment was confided by Congress to the Commissioner, with the right of review by the Board of Tax Appeals (Blair v. Machine Co., 275 U. S. 220, 48 S. Ct. 87, 72 L. Ed. 249), and on such review the Board acts, not as a court, but as an administrative agency, and we think the rule is well established that such discretionary aets may not be reviewed by appellate courts except in the special circumstances already mentioned. It has been
The decision of the Board will be modified in accordance with this opinion by allowing the item of $38,053.19 deduction for the taxable year 1920, and, as modified, affirmed and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Modified and affirmed.