Our income-tax law requires the payment annually of an income tax on the net income of property held or business done by corporations. Code § 92-3102 as amended. In the present case there is no contention that the taxpayer is not subject to the general provisions of the income-tax law, or that the tax claimed to be due the State was not in fact due under the provisions of § 92-3102 as amended. It is contended, however, that the taxpayer is entitled to calculate taxes due by it in the manner applicable to long-term capital gains pursuant to the provisions of Code (Ann.) § 92-3119 (Ga. L. 1952, p. 405, et seq.; Ga. L. 1953, Jan.-Feb. Sess., pp. 267-268).
Whether or not the “capital gains” provision of our income-tax law (enacted in 1952) was taken from the United States Internal Revenue Code, is not material as to the legal effect of the contract between the taxpayer and St. Regis Paper Company. The State law controls in determining the legal effect of a contract executed pursuant thereto (Poe
v.
Seaborn,
In the absence of fraud, accident, or mistake, a complete, unambiguous contract can not be enlarged or varied by parol evidence which is inconsistent with the written instrument.
DeLoach & Brother
v.
Smith & Anderson,
83
Ga.
665 (
Possession of the lands, and the right of possession, for a term of sixty years under the contract having been acquired by St. Regis Paper Company, the Court of Appeals correctly held the contract to be a lease of the lands described. Code §§ 85-801, 85-806. Under the general law, which is in harmony with the rule in Georgia, the contract between the parties is a lease,of the lands. 51 C. J. S. 804, § 202;
The requirements of the lease that St. Regis Paper Company shall employ good forestry practices in restocking “lands cut over,” by planting or otherwise, and limiting the amount of pulpwood to be removed annually to the “average annual growth,” support the holding by the Court of Appeals that it was “the intention to lease the land for sixty years for the purpose of pine-tree farming.”
As shown by the statement of facts in the Stark case, supra, the contract was one for the sale of standing timber, and the Board of Tax Appeals ruled against the contention of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue that the sale was from “property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business.” In both the Stark and Blodgett cases the contract was limited to the sale of standing timber, and there was no lease of the property for the growing of trees over a long period of years.
In Carroll v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra, the contract was one for the sale of standing timber, and it was held that, under the facts of that case, the standing timber was a capital asset. In United States v. Robinson, supra, the District Judge held that the timber was a capital asset and was not property held in the ordinary course of the taxpayer’s trade or business. The Circuit Court, in affirming the District Judge,, pointed out that the Government’s claim was one extreme in its nature, in that the property in question was inherited by the taxpayer, was sold by h§r for the purpose of liquidation, and that she had never been engaged in any kind of business.
Based upon our consideration of cases, the decision by a Federal court nearest in point with the essential facts of the present case is that of Commissioner of Internal Revenue
v.
Boeing, 106 Fed. 2d 305. In the Boeing case independent contractors or agents
It is provided by the lease in the present case that no title shall pass until the wood is cut, that it is to be sold by the cord, and that a cord shall contain 128 cubic feet of rough, stacked wood. Counsel for the taxpayer in their brief quote headnote 3 from the decision of this court in
Clarke Bros.
v.
McNatt,
132
Ga.
610 (
The contract is not one for the sale of timber, but is one for the sale of pulpwood, tat so much per cord, after it .is cut and stacked, and, as contended by counsel, is a, sale when consummated of personal property, since wood when cut and stacked is personalty.
Boyd v. Newton County,
23
Ga. App.
358 (
The taxpayer here wholly fails to show that the sales of pulpwood by the cord as personalty fall within the term “capital asset” as defined by Code § 92-3119, as amended, or that the pulpwood has been held for more than six months as a capital asset by the taxpayer as required by the statute. Standing timber is a part of the realty
(Coody
v.
Gress Lumber Co.,
82
Ga.
793,
Counsel for the taxpayer in their brief insist that, “It is common knowledge, which must be noticed by the court, that 15 to 25 years are required to grow a pulpwood tree.” The lease in the present case runs for a period of 60 years; and if it should be conceded that this contention is true, the lessee might cut many thousand cords of pulpwood from trees planted by it upon the land after the execution of the lease, ias clearly contemplated by the terms of the lease. If, however, the lease should be denominated an executory contract to sell, as contended by counsel for the taxpayer, then there can be no' valid contract to sell timber that was not planted and growing.
J. S. Noyes & Co.
v.
Jenkins,
55
Ga.
586;
Huntington
v.
Chisholm,
61
Ga.
270;
Forsyth Mfg. Co.
v.
Castlen,
112
Ga.
199 (
In so far as the 50 percent deduction from gross income as a “long term capital gain” may be construed as an exemption from income taxes, it falls within the principle that any exemption from taxation must be strictly construed in favor of the State; and the exception claimed will not be allowed unless it shall clearly appear that such was the intention of the General Assembly expressed in unambiguous terms.
Mayor &c. of Macon
v.
Central R. &c. Co.,
50
Ga.
620;
Hightower
v.
Beall, Spears &
Under the terms and conditions, of the lease involved in the present case, the taxpayer has executed a long-term lease of lands for timber growing, cutting of pulpwood, saw timber, and turpentining, and this lease includes all improvements on the land, as well as all other surface rights, grazing and game rights, the proceeds of which, like the proceeds of any lease, are rent, or in the nature of rent, and constitute income under Code § 92-3107 as amended. See, in this.connection,
Palmer Brick Co.
v.
Woodward,
138
Ga.
289, 295 (
Whether or not the taxpayer might be entitled to- claim a reasonable allowance for depletion of timber under the provisions of subsection (f) of section 1-A of an act approved February 27, 1953 (Ga. L. 1953, Jan.-Feb. Sess., pp. 274, 278), is a question not now before this court.
Subsection (k) of § 117 of the Federal Revenue Code of 1939 was not adopted by the General Assembly, and is not of effect in this State, and the terms and provisions of this subsection have no application in the present case.
Judgment affirmed.
