DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 5040-63, 2209-64
Citation Numbers: 45 T.C. 54, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26
Judges: Dawson
Filed Date: 10/14/1965
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Petitioners, who use the cash method of accounting, made substantial end-of-year payments to cattle-feeding companies for feed and services to be supplied in subsequent years. Petitioners were not required to pay in advance; there was no shortage of feed; the payments secured no preferential treatment; they were charged the current market price for feed and services; the cost of both feed and services was charged against their credit balances at the cattle-feeding companies; and they received refunds in 1961 from one of the companies.
*54 In these consolidated proceedings respondent determined the following deficiencies and additions to tax:
Additions to tax | |||||
Petitioners | Docket | Year | Tax | ||
No. | |||||
Sec. 6651(a) | Sec. 6653(a) | ||||
Tim W. Lillie and Ingeborg | 5040-63 | 1956 | $ 1,228.88 | $ 61.44 | |
V. Lillie | |||||
1959 | 4,200.80 | 210.04 | |||
1960 | 2,546.69 | $ 254.17 | 127.33 | ||
1961 | 3,552.23 | 177.61 | |||
Pearl Lillie | 2209-64 | 1960 | 7,607.38 |
*27 All issues except one in docket No. 5040-63 have been settled by the parties and will be given effect in the Rule 50 computation. The only issue remaining for decision, which is common to both proceedings, is whether large end-of-year payments made by petitioners to cattle-feeding companies are deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated by the parties and are hereby found accordingly.
Tim W. and Ingeborg V. Lillie are husband and wife, residing in San Diego County, Calif. Pearl Lillie, mother of Tim, also resides in San Diego County, Calif. Since Ingeborg is a party to this action *55 only because she filed joint income tax returns with her husband, only Tim and Pearl will sometimes hereinafter be referred to as petitioners.
Petitioners keep their books and prepare their Federal income returns on a calendar year basis and on the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting. For the taxable years 1956 through 1961 the petitioners filed *28 their Federal income tax returns with the district director of internal revenue at Los Angeles, Calif.
Tim is a dentist, and during the years in issue he had a successful practice in the San Diego area. He reported net income from his dental practice as follows:
Year | Amount |
1956 | $ 26,778.25 |
1957 | 31,490.72 |
1958 | 28,058.91 |
1959 | 24,647.67 |
1960 | 10,244.54 |
1961 | 19,115.32 |
Tim reported net losses from a cattle business as follows:
Amount | |
Year | of net (loss) |
1959 | ($ 29,176.83) |
1960 | (18,458.46) |
1961 | (6,683.84) |
Tim's aggregate net income from his dental practice for the years 1959 through 1961 was approximately $ 54,000 and his aggregate net loss from his cattle business for the same years was also approximately $ 54,000.
Pearl reported income in 1960 of $ 21,226.93, which included interest payments received from Tim in the amount of $ 18,444. On her 1960 income tax return she also reported a net loss from cattle operations of $ 20,402.12 of which $ 19,700 was due to cattle-feeding payments.
During the years 1959, 1960, and 1961 Tim fed cattle for profit in Imperial County, Calif. Pearl joined him in this venture in 1960 and both have actively engaged in the cattle business ever since.
The cattle owned by petitioners during *29 these years were physically located in the commercial feedyards of Heber Cattle Feeders, Heber, Calif., and McCabe Cattle Co., on the Dahlia Canal near El Centro, Calif.McCabe and Heber are cattle-servicing companies whose principal source of income is derived from the sale of cattlefeeds and services to their customers. To increase sales, these companies perform such complete services that some cattle owners never see their stock. McCabe and Heber purchase cattle for their customers and direct shipment to the company yards. When the cattle arrive, they are unloaded, branded, dipped, and weighed. Bulls are dehorned and castrated. The cattle are also recorded and placed in proper *56 feeding pens. Throughout the months during which the cattle are being fattened, company employees mix the proper feeds and deliver them to the herds twice daily. After sale, the companies load the cattle and direct shipment to the purchasing meatpacking houses.
The value of such services is substantial, but, rather than reflect them as such when billing customers, companies engaged in the cattle-feeding business have developed the general practice of including the cost of services in the sales price *30 of their feeds. The most frequently used feeds are silage, a basic feed used in the early growing stages, and finishing mixes, a name given to various blends of feed used to fatten steers to their maximum weight. The contents of these finishing feeds vary from company to company and can generally be said to grow more expensive as they contain those elements which add the greatest finishing weight to the steer.
Between December 13, 1959, and August 21, 1960, Tim maintained a herd of varying size at Heber Cattle Feeders, identified as lot No. 2. On December 21, 1959, Tim made a payment of $ 25,000 to Heber and received an invoice reading, in part, as follows:
for your purchase of the five hundred (500) tons of Number 1 feed for the cattle which you have placed with us to feed in our Lot #2 here at Heber Cattle Feeders.
* * * *
So that you may inform your bookkeeper or accountant of your transactions here in El Centro and Heber, I am listing below your account as of this date with us:
Feed (paid) | 500 tons, #1 mix | $ 25,000.00 |
(Stored in east warehouse -- Heber) |
By December 31, 1959, Tim's cattle had consumed at Heber only $ 657.65 of feed. During the year 1960 the cattle fed at Heber *31 consumed $ 32,704.74 of feed and Tim paid an additional sum of $ 8,362.39 to Heber.
Between November 14, 1960, and May 13, 1961, Tim maintained two herds of varying size at McCabe Cattle Co., identified as lots 117 and 137. On November 18 and December 31, 1960, Tim made payments of $ 15,000 and $ 27,160 respectively to McCabe, who recorded these amounts as feed sold to Tim in its books. The cattle in lots 117 and 137 consumed $ 3,244.59 of feed in 1960 and $ 12,774.84 of feed in 1961 before being sold.
During 1961 Tim had a disagreement with the managers of McCabe Cattle Co. Since he thought he could obtain more favorable treatment at Heber, he decided to transfer all of his business there. Consequently, on or about July 10, 1961, some 2 months after the last of the cattle in lots 117 and 137 had been sold, McCabe gave Tim a check for $ 26,140.57, which represented the difference between Tim's payments, totaling $ 42,160, and the total amount ($ 16,009.94) of feed consumed *57 by lots 117 and 137 during 1960 and 1961. *32 of the sums paid by Tim in November and December of 1960 had been made with McCabe. The check issued by McCabe represented the "credit balance due and payable" to Tim as shown on McCabe's statement of account dated July 10, 1961.
Between July 5, 1961, and January 29, 1962, Tim maintained a herd of varying size at Heber, identified as lot No. 1. Between November 8, 1961, and May 14, 1962, he kept an additional herd at Heber identified as lot No. 3. On December 29, 1961, Tim made a payment of $ 52,520.23 to Heber. The cattle in lots 1 and 3 consumed $ 10,344.01 of feed in 1961. The balance of $ 42,176.22, credited to Tim's account on December 31, 1961, was used for feed and services supplied in 1962.
On December 31, 1960, Pearl owned approximately 133 head of cattle which were identified as lot 144 at McCabe Cattle Co. On December 9, 1960, and December 30, 1960, Pearl made payments of $ 5,000 and $ 14,700 respectively to McCabe and these payments were recorded as sales of feed on McCabe's books. Pearl's cattle consumed $ 495.25 worth of feed during 1960 and $ 4,822.01 in 1961. Pearl joined *33 Tim when he transferred his entire cattle business to Heber in 1961 and, as a result of this change, a check for $ 14,382.74 (the difference between Pearl's December 1960 payments and the total feed consumed by her cattle) was drawn by McCabe to Pearl on July 14, 1961. No provision for refund had been made with McCabe in December 1960. Pearl continued to raise cattle at the facilities of Heber Cattle Feeders during the remainder of 1961. Petitioners received monthly statements from Heber and McCabe which showed the cost of the feed consumed by their cattle. The cost was charged against their credit balances, which equaled the end-of-year payments less monthly charges.
Petitioners did not secure any volume discounts or preferential treatment from Heber or McCabe because of the large end-of-year payments. Nor were they required to pay for feed in advance of consumption. Customers of Heber and McCabe could pay monthly for the cost of feed consumed by their cattle and many of them did so. Petitioners were charged for feed consumed at the same price as were all other customers independent of their feeding arrangement. Petitioners received no price advantage by making end-of-year payments *34 during the years in issue.
The price charged for feed by both Heber and McCabe included the cost of extensive and valuable services rendered by the cattle-feeding companies.
*58 The end-of-year payments made by petitioners to Heber and McCabe did not secure for them specific quantities or types of feed. Nor did they secure for petitioners any business advantage other than a tax saving.
In his income tax returns Tim claimed the end-of-year payments as ordinary and necessary business expenses in the years of payment, as shown in the following schedule:
1959 | 1960 | 1961 | |
Cattle sales | $ 67,575.24 | $ 118,135.46 | |
Less: Cost of cattle sold | (30,710.41) | (64,705.14) | |
Gross profit | 36,864.83 | 53,430.32 | |
Less: All expenses (except feed) | ($ 4,176.83) | (4,800.90) | (7,114.16) |
Profit (loss) before feed expense | |||
claimed | (4,176.83) | 32,063.93 | 46,316.16 |
Feed expense claimed | (25,000.00) | (50,522.39) | (53,000.00) |
Net loss claimed | (29,176.83) | (18,458.46) | (6,683.84) |
The net profit computed on the basis of actual feed costs is as follows:
1959 | 1960 | 1961 | |
Cattle sales | $ 67,575.24 | $ 118,135.46 | |
Less: Cost of cattle sold | (30,710.41) | (64,705.14) | |
Gross profit | 36,864.83 | 53,430.32 | |
Less: All expenses (except feed) | ($ 4,176.83) | (4,800.90) | (7,114.16) |
Profit (loss) before feed expense | (4,176.83) | 32,063.93 | 46,316.16 |
Feed expense (feed actually consumed) | (657.65) | (35,949.33) | (23,118.85) |
Net profit (loss) | (4,834.48) | (3,885.40) | 23,197.31 |
In *35 his notices of deficiencies the respondent disallowed such payments as deductions in the years paid but allowed them in the years the feed and services were supplied.
The end-of-year payments made by petitioners to Heber and McCabe were deposits for the purchase of feed and related services to be supplied in subsequent years.
OPINION
The parties are in agreement that petitioners are engaged in the business of raising cattle for profit and are therefore entitled to deduct the cost of feed as an ordinary and necessary business expense under the provisions of
Respondent disallowed the end-of-year payments as deductions in the years paid except for small amounts applicable to the feed actually consumed in the years of payment. However, respondent has allowed deductions in the years the feed was consumed and the feeding services rendered. He contends that these payments were, in substance, advance payments or deposits which were not ordinary and necessary business expenses *37 in the years of payment; that they served to distort petitioners' income materially; and that they created assets having a useful life beyond the year of payment which requires them to be allocated over the period to which they relate in order to reflect clearly petitioners' income for Federal tax purposes.
These cases were tried against the backdrop of three decisions involving a business deduction claimed in the year of payment for feed to be consumed in the future. They are
The first case,
At the end of 1953, Cravens had an asset as the result of this contract, not a deductible expense. Any expense that would arise would come about upon delivery by Superior of feed which Cravens might order. Until the legal obligation to pay for the feed arose, which would occur only upon delivery on Cravens's demand, no deductible expense was incurred.
We now turn our attention to the question of whether any amount was "paid" to Superior in 1953 which would entitle Cravens to a deduction under section 23(a)(1)(A). We think it is clear that the "payment" required as a basis for a deduction has not been accomplished where there is merely a deposit as security for payment. See
Upon the facts, it is our view that at the end of the year 1953 petitioner was, at most, a party to a contingent contract of sale in which the price, the time of delivery, and to some extent, at least, the type of merchandise to be purchased, remained to be determined. See 1 Williston, Sales secs. 1, 2 (1948);
The Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit reversed our decision in
There is no intimation that Cravens' decision to buy feed rather than sell his stock was an unusual decision for a cattle raiser to make in like circumstances. While the drought may have been out of the ordinary, the avoidance of a distress sale by prepayment for feed to assure preferential delivery is reasonable and has a direct relation to the taxpayer's business. By paying the $ 50,000 to Superior in advance, Cravens secured an advantage which, so far as the record shows, was not otherwise obtainable. When a commodity, such as cattle feed, is in short supply, an assurance of preferential delivery is important to a man who needs that commodity to stay in business. n13
* * * *
In the case of farmers and cattle raisers the use of a transactional basis for the computation of income would bring confusion into the federal tax system. The treatment of the cost of seed, fertilizer, and feed purchased in one year for use in the next year is simple if the deduction is allowed when paid if the cash *41 basis applies or when incurred if the accrual basis is used. n20 If each transaction must be analyzed to determine whether a distortion of income will result *61 from the allowance of a business expense deduction, § 43 is, in our opinion, given a meaning which Congress did not intend.
[Footnotes omitted.]
In
In distinguishing
the payments for feed disallowed by respondent were not in the nature of deposits to be reimbursed to petitioner if he decided not to order delivery of the feed or if the grain dealer would not or could not make such delivery. The payments were absolute and petitioner, who reported his income on a cash receipts and disbursements basis, was irretrievably out of pocket the amounts paid, which amounts were obviously expenses incident to "carrying on a trade or business." In return for these payments, the grain dealer was unconditionally obligated to deliver to petitioner the quantity of feed which the amounts received would pay for at the prices in effect on the dates of delivery. There was no condition as to the obligation itself; the only condition was as to the
In
*44 The record shows that this $ 23,000.00 deposit was the largest single payment for feed ever made by the Shippy partnership -- almost triple the amount of any previous single payment. It is further noted that on all previous occasions, the partnership had paid for feed on or after delivery -- never in advance. Hence, this large advance deposit for future delivery of feed could hardly be termed "ordinary." Neither was it "necessary." The reasons advanced by the partnership as to the necessity of the advance deposit are not convincing. There was no shortage of feed. Advance payment was not and never had been demanded by the elevator. The elevator's commission paid by the partnership was the same as it had always paid, and the advance deposit assured it of no preferential treatment it could not have had without such deposit.
The arrangement made between the partnership and the elevator was not a contract. It was an advance deposit for future purchases of feed. We do not believe that Congress intended that taxpayers should be allowed to "juggle" their tax liability in this manner.
This decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit which concluded that (
the partnership did not have a binding contract to purchase wet corn or other grain. It did not actually buy grain. It made only an advance deposit which would have been refunded upon request. Therefore, the disbursement was not an ordinary and necessary expense paid in the year 1957 in the carrying on of its trade or business.
While the
*63 The facts which distinguish this case from
We believe these facts present a stronger case than
Since we have found that the amounts placed in the hands of the cattle-feeding companies near the end of each year in question were merely deposits, it follows that they cannot be treated as
1. An additional $ 9.49 was charged against Tim's payments as the fee for a branding
2.
(a) In General. -- There shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business * * *↩
Shippy v. United States , 199 F. Supp. 842 ( 1961 )
R D. And Ida M. Cravens v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 272 F.2d 895 ( 1959 )
George R. Shippy, George Shippy, Jr., Wilda Shippy, Harold ... , 308 F.2d 743 ( 1962 )
gretchen-pack-rose-as-of-the-estate-of-john-w-hubbard-deceased-in-no , 256 F.2d 223 ( 1958 )
Ogle v. Oklahoma City Horse & Mule Com. Co. , 173 Okla. 34 ( 1935 )