DocketNumber: Docket No. 37357
Judges: Harkon
Filed Date: 6/25/1954
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*167
Petitioner, in a tax-free reorganization of two railroad corporations, acquired the roadway assets of its predecessors on February 1, 1944. The predecessors had used the retirement method of accounting. Under
It is
(1) That petitioner, a new taxable entity, is entitled to adopt the straight-line depreciation method of accounting without obtaining prior consent of the Commissioner; it is not obliged to use the retirement method.
(2) That petitioner is entitled to recover through equal annual depreciation allowances over the useful life of the assets remaining unexpired at February 1, 1944, the basis in its hands of the assets acquired in the tax-free reorganization without a 30 per cent adjustment of the basis of the predecessors for pre-February 1, 1944, depreciation; adjustment of substituted basis under
(3) That for the computation of retirement loss deductions in 1944 and 1945, the predecessors' basis in petitioner's hands is not to be adjusted for pre-March 1, 1913, depreciation*169 sustained,
*649 The Commissioner determined deficiencies in income tax for the taxable periods ending on December 31 of the years 1944 through 1949, as are set forth below. The first taxable period of the petitioner was from February 1 through December 31, 1944.
Taxable period | Deficiency |
1944 | $ 10,343.72 |
1945 | 9,035.40 |
1946 | 2,029.03 |
1947 | 10,054.27 |
1948 | 9,441.31 |
1949 | 14,408.57 |
$ 55,312.30 |
The petitioner claims that it has made overpayments of income tax for each of the taxable periods involved except 1949.
The Commissioner has made claims for increases in the deficiencies in the event it is held that petitioner is required to use the retirement method of accounting.
The petitioner, a new corporation, *171 acquired the roadway assets of two railroad corporations in a tax-free reorganization under section 77 of the National Bankruptcy Act, as amended. The predecessor corporations used the retirement method of accounting. Since its organization petitioner has used the straight-line depreciation method of accounting and contends that it is proper for it to use that method. Respondent contends that it should be required to use the *650 retirement method. A question for decision is whether petitioner must use the retirement method of accounting. If it is held that petitioner may use the straight-line depreciation method a further question for decision is: For the purpose of computing deductions for depreciation of acquired roadway assets, is it "proper" under
The petitioner, in its taxable periods ended on December 31, 1944 and 1945, retired some of the roadway assets which it acquired from the predecessor corporations. The properties were acquired by the predecessors*172 before March 1, 1913. Petitioner is entitled to deductions for losses upon the retirement of the properties. The parties disagree upon the amount of the basis for the purpose of the loss deduction. The question for decision is: Whether, for the purpose of computing losses sustained in 1944 and 1945, the basis of the property which was retired shall properly be adjusted for depreciation sustained prior to March 1, 1913, under
All of the facts have been stipulated.
The petitioner filed its returns with the collector for the eighteenth district of Ohio.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The facts stipulated are hereby found accordingly. The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
The petitioner is a new corporation. It commenced business on February 1, 1944. On that date it acquired the roadway assets of two predecessor railroad corporations in a nontaxable reorganization. The petitioner has used at all times the so-called straight-line depreciation method of accounting which is an approved standard method of accounting.
Petitioner's predecessors were The Northern Ohio Railroad Company, which was organized on August 14, *173 1895, and The Akron, Canton & Youngstown Railway Company, which was organized on June 6, 1907. Both were organized under the laws of Ohio.
The predecessor corporations were in reorganization under section 77 of the National Bankruptcy Act, as amended, under the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio from April 3, 1933, until their consolidation on February 1, 1944. All of the properties of the predecessor corporations were transferred to the petitioner on February 1, 1944, under court order, to effectuate a plan of reorganization approved by the court in the reorganization proceedings. The petitioner is a new corporation *651 resulting from a statutory consolidation of the two predecessor corporations under section 9025,
The predecessor corporations at all times used the retirement method of accounting which is an approved standard system of accounting used by many railroads as well as by other utilities, and which is and was recognized by the Commissioner as a proper method of accounting for income tax purposes. Under this method of accounting, referred to hereinafter as the retirement method, *174 (1) the cost of original items of property is charged to the appropriate asset account; (2) the cost of items costing less than a specified sum (said limit ranging from $ 100 to $ 500 at various times prior to February 1, 1944) and the cost of items which do not constitute a major part or which are not in excess of 50 per cent of the value of the unit of property affected is expensed against income regardless of the useful life of such items; (3) the cost of renewals, replacements, additions, and betterments (other than those expensed as aforesaid) is charged to the appropriate asset account; (4) upon retirement, the cost of the original item of property plus the cost of any renewals, replacements, additions, and betterments as were, under the system, charged to the asset account, is credited to the asset account and such cost, less salvage, is charged against income in the year of retirement; and (5) no depreciation account is maintained and no allowance for exhaustion, wear and tear, or obsolescence is charged to income with respect to any item or group of items of property.
The cost of the predecessors' roadway assets, hereinafter referred to as the assets, which petitioner acquired*175 from them in the tax-free reorganization was $ 2,141,980. Immediately before petitioner acquired the assets, i. e., on January 31, 1944, the assets were carried in the capital accounts of the predecessor corporations at their cost, $ 2,141,980. Since there are no annual depreciation charges, as such, under the retirement method, no annual adjustments ever were made by the predecessor corporations on their books in the book value of the assets.
At all times since February 1, 1944, petitioner has kept its books and filed its Federal income tax returns deducting against income with respect to roadway assets an amount designated "depreciation" computed on an annual basis equal to the predecessors' basis, or cost, adjusted for additions, betterments, and retirements made by petitioner after February 1, 1944, less estimated salvage, divided by the number of years of useful life unexpired at February 1, 1944.
The straight-line depreciation method of accounting is and was a standard approved system of accounting, recognized by the respondent as a proper method of accounting for income tax purposes. Under this method of accounting, deduction for exhaustion, wear and *652 tear, or obsolescence*176 is charged against income annually and is computed by writing off and deducting against income in equal amounts over the period of the assets' estimated useful life the basis adjusted for additions, betterments, and retirements, less estimated salvage.
Petitioner did not ask for or obtain the Commissioner's permission to use the straight-line depreciation method.
The respondent determined that the basis of the assets in the hands of the predecessor corporations, the substituted basis in petitioner's hands, should be reduced by 30 per cent for "depreciation accrued" prior to February 1, 1944. Accordingly, he set up a "reserve for past depreciation" in the amount of 30 per cent of the predecessors' basis with resulting decreases in the amounts of the allowances for annual depreciation. He reduced the depreciation deductions which petitioner took in its returns, for the taxable periods ended on December 31, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, and 1949 by $ 52,122.95, $ 62,392.48, $ 60,501.53, $ 51,563.11, $ 35,708.86, and $ 40,685, respectively.
During the taxable periods ended December 31, 1944 and 1945, respectively, petitioner retired certain roadway assets which had been acquired by *177 the predecessor corporations prior to March 1, 1913. In its income tax returns, the petitioner claimed deductions for loss on the retirements in amounts equal to the predecessors' basis of the assets, minus depreciation claimed by petitioner for the period February 1, 1944, to the respective dates of retirement, and minus estimated salvage. The respondent determined that the predecessors' basis for the assets retired should be adjusted to reflect depreciation sustained prior to March 1, 1913. Accordingly, respondent reduced the amounts of the retirement loss deductions claimed by petitioner by $ 469.14, and $ 501.22, respectively.
On June 12, 1930, one of petitioner's predecessors, The Akron, Canton & Youngstown Railway Company, purchased 274 shares of stock in The Akron Industrial Foundation, Inc., at a cost of $ 27,400. Neither petitioner nor its predecessor corporation received any distribution on account of the 274 shares except that on December 29, 1948, petitioner received $ 1,370 cash as its share of the distribution in complete liquidation of the foundation and in complete cancellation and redemption of the 274 shares, resulting in a long-term capital loss of $ 26,030 to*178 the petitioner for the calendar year 1948.
OPINION.
The Commissioner originally did not question the right of petitioner to use the straight-line depreciation method. He proceeded, in determining the deficiencies, upon the premise that petitioner had the right to use that method. He reduced the basis of the assets acquired from the predecessor corporations by 30 per cent *653 for "depreciation accrued" during the period February 28, 1913, to February 1, 1944. As a result, he decreased the annual deductions for depreciation. He made his determination under section 41 of the Code.
The Commissioner now regards petitioner's use of the straight-line depreciation method as involving
1.
This proceeding does not involve an effort of a railroad taxpayer to change its method of accounting from the retirement method to the straight-line depreciation method, or to adopt a hybrid method of accounting. Cf.
In
The respondent takes a position here which is inconsistent with that which he took in
2.
The question to be decided is whether an adjustment to the predecessor corporations' basis, which is the ledger cost of roadway assets apparently maintained on their books from the dates of acquisition, is a "proper adjustment" with respect to the period after February 28, 1913, through January 31, 1944, to compensate for depreciation actually sustained after February 28, 1913, the predecessor corporations having used the retirement method of accounting at all times. The period before March 1, 1913, is not involved.
The petitioner did not make any adjustment of the substituted basis for past depreciation because of its understanding that under the retirement method of accounting (which the predecessor corporations used), "although no depreciation is charged, as such, the capital accounts will as reasonably reflect the current investment in roadway properties
Petitioner's basis for the assets is the same as in the hands of its predecessors under
Whenever it appears that the basis of property in the hands of the taxpayer is a substituted basis, then the adjustments provided*183 in paragraph (1) of this subsection shall be made after first making in respect of such substituted basis proper adjustments of a similar nature in respect of the period during which the property was held by the transferor * * *.
In considering the question we must take into account first the provisions of
The respondent, in disallowing part of the deduction for depreciation for each taxable year which petitioner took in its returns, adjusted the substituted basis of the acquired assets in petitioner's hands by setting up as a "reserve for past depreciation," 30 per cent of the substituted basis. This represented the respondent's view that the ledger cost of the acquired assets which was carried over to petitioner, namely, $ 2,141,980, did not reflect depreciation allowed (but not less than the amount allowable) with respect to the period after February 28, 1913, through January 31, 1944. In making this adjustment the respondent has refused to accept the theory underlying the retirement *657 method which was an approved standard method of accounting of railroad companies. He has made this adjustment in this case in spite of the principle which has now received repeated judicial approval that, as stated in
the underlying theory of*188 the retirement method is that the charges to expense on account of all the items replaced or retired in any particular year are taken as a rough equivalent of what would be a proper depreciation allowance for all the working assets of the company for that year.
Under this theory of retirement accounting, therefore, the figure of $ 2,141,980 on January 31, 1944, reflects the proper depreciation allowances for the period February 28, 1913, through January 31, 1944, for all the roadway assets as a unit, as of January 31, 1944, and (B) of
Also, the respondent's adjustment, the setting up of a 30 per cent "reserve for past depreciation," would have the effect of requiring petitioner to make an adjustment to the substituted basis for past depreciation which would, in effect, duplicate what already was done by its predecessors under the retirement method. See
Another reason why the respondent's determination is wrong is because *189 it fails to restore to the capital accounts of the predecessor corporations expenditures for renewals, restorations, additions, replacements, and betterments which were charged directly to current expense, and were deducted as expense, and were never reflected in the capital account under the retirement method during the period after February 28, 1913, through January 31, 1944. Paraphrasing what we said in
A further reason why the respondent's determination is wrong is that his establishment of a so-called "reserve for past depreciation" (30 per cent) actually reduces the substituted basis by 30 per cent allowing petitioner the right to recover through depreciation deductions only 70 per cent of the substituted basis. On this point we agree with petitioner. The petitioner is required by
In allowing petitioner to use the substituted basis which it has taken from its predecessors, without any adjustment for alleged past depreciation, it will not follow that annual depreciation allowances spread over the remaining useful life of the assets unexpired on February 1, 1944, will result in any double recovery of capital which, of course, is what
Also, in allowing petitioner to use the substituted basis without the adjustment which the respondent has made, the annual depreciation deductions which petitioner will take under the straight-line depreciation method will not constitute "an effort to make up for the failure to take any prior yearly 'depreciation' * * *" on the assets.
It is held that under the circumstances here present, the adjustment of the basis of the predecessor corporations which the respondent has made is not "proper" under (B) of
All of the contentions of each party have been considered. The briefs of each party are exhaustive and thorough. It is not necessary in order to decide the question to set forth all of petitioner's or all of respondent's contentions. The foregoing covers the chief points involved in disposing of this issue.
*660 3.
This question is controlled by the
we think it well settled that where the retirement method of accounting is properly and correctly established and maintained the original cost of items of roadway property installed prior to March 1, 1913, is not to be reduced by depreciation sustained to that date in computing and determining the amount of deduction to which a railroad is entitled upon the retirement of such property. The reason is that an accounting has already been made for the depreciation sustained through the direct charge to expense or profit and loss of expenditures which under other methods of accounting would have been capitalized and through the prior retirement, over the life of the property currently being retired, of other items of roadway property at their original costs. * * * To hold in such circumstances that the original cost of the items currently being retired must also be reduced for depreciation sustained to March 1, 1913, would, in effect, be to require a railroad to make a double adjustment of the basis of its properties for depreciation.
Under the above reasoning, this proceeding is not distinguishable*197 from the
The pleadings present the question whether the petitioner is entitled to a deduction in 1948 in the amount of $ 26,030 because of a long-term capital loss *198 sustained in that amount in 1948. The question arises under section 117 (d) (1) of the Code. The respondent asserts that the deduction claimed for 1948 was properly disallowed because of *661 the provisions of section 117 (d) which limits deduction for capital losses to the amount of capital gains in the same period. The respondent points out, also, that the question of whether the capital loss does or does not result in a capital loss carry-over to another taxable period under section 117 (e) is not an issue in this proceeding. Since the petitioner's brief does not deal with these questions, and since the parties have entered into a stipulation under this issue, we understand that the matter will be taken care of in a Rule 50 computation.
A computation under Rule 50 will be necessary since other adjustments made by the respondent are conceded as proper by the petitioner.
1.
(b) Adjusted Basis. -- The adjusted basis for determining the gain or loss from the sale or other disposition of property, whenever acquired, shall be the basis determined under subsection (a), adjusted as hereinafter provided. (1) General rule. -- Proper adjustment in respect of the property shall in all cases be made -- * * * * (B) in respect of any period since February 28, 1913, for exhaustion, wear and tear, obsolescence, amortization, and depletion, to the extent of the amount -- (i) allowed as deductions in computing net income under this chapter or prior income tax laws, * * * * * * * but not less than the amount allowable under this chapter or prior income tax laws * * * * * * * (C) in respect of any period prior to March 1, 1913, for exhaustion, wear and tear, obsolescence, amortization, and depletion, to the extent sustained; * * * * (2) Substituted basis. -- The term "substituted basis" as used in this subsection means a basis determined under any provision of subsection (a) of this section or under any corresponding provision of a prior income tax law, providing that the basis shall be determined -- (A) by reference to the basis in the hands of a transferor, donor, or grantor, * * * * * * * Whenever it appears that the basis of property in the hands of the taxpayer is a substituted basis, then the adjustments provided in paragraph (1) of this subsection shall be made after first making in respect of such substituted basis proper adjustments of a similar nature in respect of the period during which the property was held by the transferor, donor, or grantor, or during which the other property was held by the person for whom the basis is to be determined. A similar rule shall be applied in the case of a series of substituted bases.↩