DocketNumber: Docket No. 439-70
Citation Numbers: 58 T.C. 397, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 112
Judges: Forrester
Filed Date: 5/31/1972
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*112
Petitioner was a nonexempt cooperative in its taxable year 1963 and an exempt cooperative in its taxable year 1964. In each year petitioner distributed a patronage dividend to its patrons and a dividend on capital stock to its stockholders.
*398 OPINION
Respondent has determined deficiencies in petitioner's income tax of $ 81,267.77 and $ 138,164.30 for the taxable years 1961 and 1963, respectively. Petitioner does not contest certain of the adjustments which respondent has made in petitioner's taxable income for the taxable year 1963. The questions we must resolve are: (1) Whether for the taxable*119 year 1963 petitioner may charge dividends on its capital stock solely to net earnings arising from its nonmember business; (2) whether because of his inaction with respect to prior taxable years, respondent is now equitably estopped from attacking petitioner's method of accounting for such dividends; and (3) whether for the taxable year 1964 petitioner is entitled to a net operating loss which would have the effect of reducing its income tax liability for the taxable year 1961.
All of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation and attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioner is an Oklahoma cooperative marketing association incorporated and doing business pursuant to the Oklahoma Cooperative Marketing Association Act,
For all taxable*120 years relevant to this case petitioner's taxable year ended on March 31.
Petitioner was authorized to issue $ 20 million of capital stock consisting of 40,000 shares having a par value of $ 500 each and such stock could not be sold for less than its par value. According to its bylaws, any local farmers' cooperative elevator association which was eligible for membership in petitioner and which owned one or more shares of petitioner's capital stock was deemed to be a member of petitioner. Eligibility for membership and for ownership of stock in petitioner were restricted as follows:
Any local farmers' cooperative elevator association organized and operating in conformity with the provisions of the Capper-Volstead Act and located in any territory served by this Association, may become a member of this Association upon written application accepted by the Board of Directors, by agreeing to comply with, and become subject to, all the requirements and provisions of these By-Laws and by purchasing at least one share of its capital stock. Only such local farmers' cooperative elevator associations shall be or remain eligible to hold stock or participate in the affairs and management of this*121 Association.
Petitioner declared and paid dividends on its capital stock as follows: *399
Amount | Declared | Paid |
$ 439,674.44 | March 1962 | May 1962 |
476,410.65 | March 1963 | May 1963 |
245,112.50 | February 1964 | May 1964 |
249,275.00 | March 1965 | May 1965 |
From 1950 through its taxable year 1963, petitioner was a non-exempt farmers' cooperative. On May 8, 1962, petitioner adopted bylaws which were in effect for the taxable year 1963 and which provided in pertinent part as follows:
ARTICLE VIII
Apportionment of Earnings
Section 1. The Directors, subject to revision by the members at the regular or special meeting lawfully called, shall apportion the net earnings at least once in each year.
Section 2. The net earnings accrued on business transacted with or for nonmembers shall be apportioned as follows:
(A) For payment of income taxes on the amount of such net earnings.
(B) The remaining net earnings or any portion thereof may be used to pay dividends on the membership capital or stock at a rate not to exceed five percent (5%) per annum.
(C) The remainder of the net earnings may be transferred to the Surplus Reserve Fund for the purpose of building the Surplus Reserve Fund to *122 meet the requirements of state law and/or liquidate incurred indebtedness or provide needed working capital, or to provide such additional reserves as may be reasonable and necessary; or
(D) The remainder of the net earnings may be apportioned and distributed ratably on the basis of patronage, and in the same media, as provided for in Section 3 of this Article.
Section 3. The net earnings accrued on business transacted with or for members of cooperative organizations who are eligible and approved for membership, shall be apportioned as follows:
(A) If the portion of the net earnings on non-member business which was transferred to the Surplus Reserve Fund, as provided for in Section 2 of this Article, does not equal ten percent (10%) of the total net earnings for the fiscal year, then an amount equal to the difference between the amount so transferred from earnings on non-member business, and ten percent (10%) of the total net earnings for the fiscal year, shall be set aside in the Surplus Reserve Fund until such reserve fund shall equal the amount of the paid-up Capital Stock.
(B) If the net earnings on non-member business is not sufficient to pay dividends on the membership Capital, *123 or Stock, as provided for in Section 2 of this Article, then dividends at a rate not to exceed five percent (5%) per annum may be paid from the net earnings accrued on business done with or for members or cooperative organizations who are eligible and approved for membership.
(C) If the net earnings on non-member business is not sufficient to pay the income tax for the fiscal year by reason of apportionment of member earnings as provided under (A) and/or (B) above, the balance of the income tax shall be paid from the net earnings accrued on business done with or for members or cooperative organizations who are eligible and approved for membership.
(D) The remainder of the total net earnings shall be apportioned and distributed *400 ratably upon amounts charged for services and upon the value or volume of the products sold to, or handled through, the Association and/or the value or volume of the purchases from, or through, the Association, to all members and cooperative organizations, who are eligible and approved for membership, on the same basis and same percentage. Such earnings shall be distributed either in cash, capital stock, allocated or Special Reserves, provided that*124 amounts prorated to cooperative organizations who are not members but are eligible and have been approved for membership shall be distributed to them in credits on Capital Stock until such accumulated credits are sufficient to cause a share of stock to be issued as provided for in Article I, Section 2, of these By-Laws.
(E) An amount not less than thirty-five percent (35%) of each members [sic] patronage apportioned under this Section shall be credited to the purchase of additional Capital Stock until such member owns fifty (50) fully paid shares.
During a meeting of petitioner's directors on March 18-19, 1963, a motion was made and carried approving the distribution of petitioner's net earnings for the taxable year 1963 as follows:
1. Net Earnings derived from member business be distributed on the basis of patronage -- 65% shall be payable in Cash and 35% shall be in Capital Stock.
2. Net Earnings from non-member business be transferred to surplus, and
3. 5% Dividend on outstanding stock be paid out of surplus.
For the taxable year 1963 petitioner's total net earnings before adjustments for patronage dividends and dividends on capital stock were $ 1,519,884.69. In that taxable*125 year petitioner's member business constituted 57.18 percent of the total business it conducted. In calculating the distribution of its net earnings for the taxable year 1963 petitioner first determined that its members had generated $ 869,070.07 (57.18 percent of $ 1,519,884.69) of its net earnings. From this sum it made certain reductions and distributed as patronage dividends to its members $ 559,254.53 in cash and $ 302,541.30 in capital stock. It paid income tax from the balance of its net earnings and transferred the remaining net earnings to its general or surplus reserve.
From 1950 through the taxable year 1962 petitioner followed its by-laws and charged the dividends it paid on capital stock first to non-member earnings before computing its patronage dividend deduction. During these years the Internal Revenue Service made periodic audits of petitioner's tax returns, but the examining agents never questioned this accounting practice.
For its taxable year 1964 petitioner was an organization exempt from tax under
Apportionment of Earnings
Section 1. APPORTIONMENT. The directors, subject to revision by the members at the regular or special meeting lawfully called, shall apportion the net earnings at least once in each year.
Section 2. LEGAL RESERVE. Ten percent (10%) of the total net earnings for the fiscal year shall be apportioned and set aside to the general reserve fund unless and until such reserve fund shall equal the amount of the paid-in capital stock.
Section 3. STOCK DIVIDENDS. A dividend not to exceed five percent (5%) may be paid to the stockholders computed on the par value of the capital stock held by each stockholder.
Section 4. PATRONAGE DISTRIBUTION. The remainder of the net earnings shall be apportioned, allocated, and distributed ratably on the basis of patronage to both members and non-members alike (except to the United States Government or any of its agencies), and shall be based upon the value or quantity of the products sold to or handled through this Association. Such earnings shall be distributed either in cash, capital stock, allocated or special reserves; provided, that not less than twenty percent (20%) of the amount of such patronage dividend *127 shall be paid in money, or qualified check; and, provided further, that amounts pro rated to cooperative organizations who are not members but are eligible and have been approved for membership shall be distributed to them in credits on capital stock until such accumulating credits are sufficient to cause a share of stock to be issued as provided for in Article I, Section 2, of these By-Laws.
Section 5. STOCK BUILD-UP REQUIREMENTS. An amount not less than thirty-five percent (35%) of each members patronage apportioned under this Section shall be credited to the purchase of additional capital stock until such member owns fifty (50) fully paid shares.
During the meeting of petitioner's directors on February 23-24, 1964, a motion was made and carried approving the distribution of petitioner's net earnings for the taxable year 1964 as follows:
That 10% of the Net Earnings be transferred to General Reserve;
A stock dividend *128 of 2 1/2% be paid on all outstanding paid up stock; and the remainder of Net Earnings shall be distributed ratably on the basis of patronage to members and non-members -- 50% in Cash and 50% in Capital Stock.
For the taxable year 1964 petitioner filed an Exempt Cooperative Association Income Tax Return (Form 990-C). On that return petitioner reported total income of $ 3,132,989.25 and total deductions and adjustments of $ 3,289,273.46 to arrive at a net operating loss of $ 156,284.21. Of the deductions and adjustments a total of $ 906,423.65 constituted deductions or adjustments which petitioner calculated under
Dividend paid on capital stock | $ 476,410.65 |
Patronage dividends: Money | 216,978.86 |
Patronage dividends: Qualified written notices of allocation | 213,034.14 |
Total | 906,423.65 |
*402 Petitioner sought to carry back its claimed net operating loss for the taxable year 1964 to the taxable year 1961. As a result it filed an Application for Tentative Carryback Adjustment (Form 1139, rev. June 1961) dated June 12, 1964, in which it applied for a tentative carryback adjustment under
There are three principal issues presented for our consideration.
During the taxable year 1963 petitioner was a nonexempt cooperative marketing association incorporated under the laws of Oklahoma. Petitioner's stockholders were its members and only its members were eligible to hold its stock.
As in effect for that year, the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 had no specific provisions dealing with the taxation of nonexempt cooperative organizations. However, since at least 1918, respondent had consistently ruled that, *130 under proper circumstances, a nonexempt cooperative could deduct or exclude from gross income certain amounts qualifying as refunds or dividends paid on the basis of patronage.
*134 In the taxable year 1963 petitioner had net earnings of $ 1,519,884.69 of which 57.18 percent (or $ 869,070.07) had been generated by petitioner's members. After slightly reducing this sum of $ 869,070.07 for reasons which are not apparent from the record, petitioner distributed to its members as a patronage dividend $ 861,795.83 in cash and in its *404 stock. From the remainder of its net earnings petitioner paid income tax and subtracted $ 476,410.65 which it had declared in the taxable year 1963 as a 5-percent dividend on its capital stock, but which it did not pay until the taxable year 1964. Petitioner transferred what then remained of its net earnings to its general or surplus reserve.
Respondent points out that petitioner's method of computing its patronage dividend has the effect of charging the dividend on capital stock solely to earnings generated by nonmember business. He states that, "By charging capital stock dividends only to income generated by business done with nonmember patrons, rather than ratably against total income, petitioner's net earnings from business done with member patrons is overstated." Respondent would reject petitioner's method of accounting*135 and instead would rely on the accounting method described in
*136 Under that ruling respondent would first subtract from petitioner's net earnings of $ 1,519,884.69 the dividend on capital stock actually paid in the taxable year 1963, $ 439,674.44. *405 would consist of (1) the amount available for a patronage dividend to petitioner's members and (2) the profits made from nonmembers. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, respondent would assume that petitioner's dealings with members and nonmembers were equally profitable, and, accordingly, that the amount available for a patronage dividend to members consisted of that proportion (57.18 percent) of the net earnings (after deducting the dividend on capital stock) which the amount of business transacted with members bore to the entire amount of business transacted. Following through with these computations, respondent has disallowed over $ 200,000 which petitioner had claimed as a patronage dividend.
*137 The accounting method set forth in
It is true that
As a matter of fact and law, administrative*138 practice has no effect upon the determination of what constitutes gross income, except insofar as the practice is in accord with the rules of law governing that determination.
Therefore, in order to justify the applicability of
An amount distributed by petitioner would qualify as a true patronage dividend only to the extent that it satisfied each of the three requirements set out in
Petitioner derived net earnings of $ 1,519,884.69 from transactions between itself and both member patrons and nonmember patrons. In the absence of any proof that nonmember business was more or less profitable than member business respondent's determination that the profits derived from either business was in direct proportion to the amount of such business is indeed reasonable. *140 Such attribution ignores the dual nature of the stockholder-patron's interest in its nonexempt cooperative.
On the one hand the stockholder-patron receives a distribution from its cooperative solely in respect of its status as stockholder. This is a normal dividend from net earnings which is not deductible at the cooperative level in the same manner that a distribution of earnings and profits by an ordinary corporation is not deductible at the corporate level. *141 On the other hand, the stockholder-patron also receives a distribution solely in respect of its status as patron. This latter distribution *407 is based on its patronage with the cooperative during the year -- the greater the patronage, the greater the patronage dividend.
In attributing the entire dividend paid on capital stock to nonmember business, petitioner is saying, in effect, that its stockholders have invested only in those of petitioner's operations and assets which were used to transact nonmember business. See
Consequently, in the absence of any evidence*142 to the contrary, we uphold respondent's determination that the dividend paid on petitioner's capital stock was properly attributable to net earnings realized from member business and to net earnings realized from nonmember business in proportion to the business transacted with members and nonmembers respectively. Conversely, the amount of member earnings available for distribution as a true patronage dividend would have to be reduced by that part of the dividend on capital stock which was attributable to member earnings.
Petitioner places almost complete reliance on
In reaching its decision in that case the District Court found as a fact incorporated into its conclusions of law that no part of the sum paid as patronage dividends was paid from the profits on nonstockholder business. The parties have stipulated that from 1950 through the taxable year 1962 petitioner charged its dividends on capital stock to nonmember earnings and that for those years respondent's agents never questioned this accounting practice. On the basis of this stipulation petitioner argues that it has relied on its accounting method for so many years that it would be inequitable to force petitioner to adopt the accounting method which respondent urges in this case. The short and complete answer to petitioner's plea is that it is well established that the Commissioner is not estopped from challenging*145 erroneously reported items where its agents have failed, in prior taxable years, to challenge similar erroneously reported items. E.g., Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's income tax for the taxable year 1961 on the ground that it did not sustain a net operating loss in the taxable year 1964, and therefore was not entitled to a net operating*146 loss carryback from the taxable year 1964 to the taxable year 1961. For the taxable year 1964 petitioner was an "organization exempt from tax under *147 The crucial difference between the taxation of a corporation operated on a cooperative basis and the taxation of the usual corporation is that a cooperative must employ the special rules of As was the case for taxable years prior to the effective date of subchapter T, a patronage dividend must satisfy a basic threefold test before it may qualify for deduction. *411 organization from business done with or for its patrons." *151 What is meant by the phrase "by reference to the net earnings"? "Net earnings" itself is a nebulous term. It is not defined in the statute. *152 In any event, The term "net earnings", for purposes of * * * [the definitional test of Thus, without comprehensively defining "net earnings" or "by reference to net earnings," the regulations direct that certain items must be treated in certain ways if a calculation of the allowable patronage dividend is to be made "by reference to net earnings." In this sense, the regulations fill in certain definitional gaps in the same way that section 312 fills in many, but not all, of the definitional gaps created by the use of the term "earnings and profits." See Katcher, "What is Meant by Earnings and Profits," 18th Ann. N.Y.U. Tax Inst. 249 (1960); Andrews, "'Out of Its Earnings and Profits:' Some Reflections on *153 the Taxation of Dividends," In its computation petitioner recognizes that net earnings should be reduced by dividends on capital stock before computing the allowable *412 patronage dividend deduction. However, petitioner reduces its net earnings by the dividend declared on capital stock in the taxable year 1964, but which was not actually paid until the taxable year 1965. Respondent argues that instead petitioner should reduce net earnings by the dividend actually paid on capital stock in the taxable year 1964. paid in the year in issue. We agree with respondent. *154 The language of the regulations seems to require that in calculating the allowable patronage dividend deduction, net earnings should be reduced by the dividends *413 In a different factual situation this regulation has specifically been upheld by the Eighth Circuit. Deductions from gross income are allowed for patronage dividends If we analogize net earnings to earnings and profits, we would find that the payment by a cooperative of a dividend on its capital stock would tend to decrease the cooperative's net earnings by the amount of such dividend. See sec. 312(a). More importantly, since normal corporate dividends would be considered to be made out of the most recently accumulated earnings and profits, sec. 316(a), the dividend which petitioner paid on its capital stock in the taxable year 1964 would be deemed to have been made out of the net earnings of that same year. Consequently, we would have to reduce the net earnings for the taxable year 1964 by the dividend actually We might reach the same result by using the same analogy but a different route. Thus, as a general rule where an item is common to both taxable income and earnings and profits available for distribution as normal dividends, consistency requires the use of the same accounting method in computing that item's effect upon both taxable income and such earnings and profits. Respondent's method and the method of But even if we were to accept petitioner's view that in calculating the allowable patronage dividend net earnings should be reduced by the dividend declared on*158 capital stock of the taxable year, we would be unable to allow a greater patronage dividend deduction than respondent has allowed. The reason is that even under petitioner's computation, a large part of the amount claimed by petitioner as a patronage dividend was not an amount paid "under an obligation of such organization to pay such amount, which obligation existed before the organization received the amount so paid." Petitioner's bylaws, which for the taxable year 1964 were different from its bylaws for the taxable year 1963, are the only evidence presented of an obligation to pay a patronage dividend. Respondent's regulations recognize that amounts paid pursuant to the provisions of a cooperative's bylaws whereby the cooperative is obligated to make such payment constitute amounts paid under a written legal obligation. Under the relevant bylaws, 10 percent of petitioner's net earnings for its fiscal year " However, since petitioner's directors had the discretion to declare that so much of petitioner's net earnings as equaled 5 percent of the *415 par value of its capital stock should be distributed to its stockholders as a dividend on capital stock, the obligation imposed by the bylaws extended only to that part of the net earnings which might have remained if the directors had declared a full 5-percent dividend on capital stock. For the taxable year 1964 petitioner's directors declared a dividend on its capital stock of only 2 1/2 percent. Petitioner's computation uses this 2 1/2-percent*160 figure in reducing net earnings for the purpose of ascertaining the fund from which a patronage dividend could be distributed. But, an obligation to pay a patronage dividend is destroyed to the extent that discretion to divert exists. On the basis of petitioner's original return for the taxable year 1964 and on the basis of the loss reported by petitioner on that return, respondent allowed petitioner a tentative carryback adjustment of its tax for the taxable year 1961. In its opening brief petitioner's argument seemed to be that respondent is bound by his allowance of that tentative carryback adjustment. A taxpayer may file an application for a tentative carryback adjustment of the tax for the prior taxable year affected by a net operating loss carryback provided in An application under this subsection shall not constitute a claim for credit or refund. the Secretary or his delegate shall make, to the extent he deems practicable in such period, a limited examination of the application, to discover omissions and errors of computation therein, and shall determine the amount of the decrease in the tax attributable to such carryback upon the basis of the *163 application and the examination * * * Once the decrease in tax attributable to the carryback is determined, it may be applied or credited in various ways or, as was apparently done in this case, it may be refunded to the taxpayer. Petitioner has overlooked the tentative character of adjustments made pursuant to In conclusion, petitioner's claim for a net operating*164 loss in the taxable year 1964 must be denied in its entirety.
1. Unless otherwise specified, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.↩
2. Subch. T, secs. 1381-1388, which now controls the taxation of both exempt and nonexempt cooperative organizations is effective only for taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 1962. Sec. 17(c)(1), Revenue Act of 1962, 76 Stat. 960, 1051;
3. See
4. The term patronage dividend is now statutorily defined. See
5. In pertinent part
"First compute the apparent net income of the cooperative association. From this amount deduct the fixed dividend paid or payable on any outstanding capital stock. The amount of such fixed dividend is the portion of net income properly attributable to the investment made in the association by the holders of any outstanding capital stock.
"The balance consists of (1) the amount available for refund to the members of the association and (2) the profits made from nonmembers. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, it will be assumed that the dealings with members and nonmembers are equally profitable, and, accordingly, that the amount available for refund consists of that proportion of the apparent net profits, after deducting the fixed dividend on outstanding capital stock, which the amount of business transacted with members bears to the entire amount of business transacted. Up to the amount available for refund thus computed, a distribution by a cooperative association to its members, upon the basis of the business transacted with them, will be deemed to be a true patronage dividend, deductible by the association in computing its taxable net income for Federal income and profits tax purposes."↩
6. In its calculations petitioner has used the figure $ 476,410.65 which represents the dividend on capital stock declared in the taxable year 1963 but not paid until the taxable year 1964. We note that respondent's use of the figure $ 439,674.44 (which was the dividend on capital stock actually paid in the taxable year 1963) is more favorable to petitioner in that it results in a larger allowable patronage dividend under the rule of
7. Without the practical rule of apportionment of member and nonmember profits in accordance with member and nonmember business as set forth in
8. It was early recognized that a dividend paid on the capital stock of a nonexempt cooperative was not deductible or excludable and had, in fact, the same character as a dividend paid upon the stock of the usual noncooperative corporation. E.g.,
9. The District Court also found that -- plaintiff's charter contains a contractual provision whereby the common stock dividends are to be paid first from profits on non-stockholder business and only the deficiency, if any, may be deducted from the margins on stockholder patronage. [
10. An indication that
11. In the Revenue Act of 1951 Congress changed sec. 101(12) of the 1939 Code so that cooperatives which had been totally exempt from income taxes became subject to the regular corporate income tax at least to the extent of certain earnings placed in reserve and not allocated to patrons. S. Rept. No. 781, 82d Cong., 1st Sess. (1951), As a result of this action, all earnings or net margins of cooperatives will be taxable either to the cooperative, its patrons or its stockholders with the exception of amounts which are paid or allocated to patrons on the basis of purchases of personal, rather than business, expense items.
12. Through the years patronage dividends have been variously denominated as deductions or exclusions from gross receipts, gross income, or taxable income. See, e.g., fn. 3
13. (1) as patronage dividends (as defined in (2) in money or other property (except written notices of allocation) in redemption of a nonqualified written notice of allocation which was paid as a patronage dividend during the payment period for the taxable year during which the patronage occurred.↩
14. (1) amounts paid during the taxable year as dividends on its capital stock; and (2) amounts paid during the payment period for the taxable year -- (A) in money, qualified written notices of allocation, or other property (except nonqualified written notices of allocation) on a patronage basis to patrons with respect to its earnings during such taxable year which are derived from business done for the United States or any of its agencies or from sources other than patronage, or (B) in money or other property (except written notices of allocation) in redemption of a nonqualified written notice of allocation which was paid, during the payment period for the taxable year during which the earnings were derived, on a patronage basis to a patron with respect to earnings derived from business or sources described in subparagraph (A).↩
15.
(a) Patronage Dividend. -- For purposes of this subchapter, the term "patronage dividend" means an amount paid to a patron by an organization to which part I of this subchapter applies -- (1) on the basis of quantity or value of business done with or for such patron, (2) under an obligation of such organization to pay such amount, which obligation existed before the organization received the amount so paid, and (3) which is determined by reference to the net earnings of the organization from business done with or for its patrons.↩
16. Among other things net earnings have, often interchangeably, also been called profits,
17. In his explanation of adjustments accompanying the notice of deficiency herein, respondent determined that petitioner was entitled to a patronage dividend deduction only to the extent of $ 206,352.64, as follows:
Net earnings before dividends, per return | $ 750,139.44 |
Plus: Charitable deductions disallowed | 8,486.44 |
Corrected net earnings before dividends | 758,625.88 |
Less: 10% to general reserve | 75,862.59 |
Less: Dividend paid on capital stock during year | 476,410.65 |
Amount available for patronage dividend | 206,352.64 |
Petitioner claimed a patronage dividend deduction of $ 430,013. Respondent disallowed $ 223,660.36, the difference between the claimed patronage dividend deduction ($ 430,013) and the allowable patronage dividend deduction ($ 206,352.64). By adding this disallowed patronage dividend deduction to petitioner's loss as shown on its return, respondent eliminated the entire loss and determined that petitioner had a positive taxable income for the taxable year 1964. We note, however, that
In another part of the explanation respondent had determined that petitioner's taxable income for 1964 (without deduction for charitable contributions) was $ 79,855.36, and that the charitable deduction would be limited to 5 percent of that figure, or $ 3,992.77. See sec. 170(b)(2). As petitioner had claimed $ 12,479.21 as charitable deductions, respondent disallowed $ 8,486.44, the difference between the amount claimed ($ 12,479.21) and the amount allowable ($ 3,992.77). Petitioner does not question respondent's computation of the allowable charitable deduction, nor does it suggest that respondent's disallowance of $ 8,486.44 in charitable deductions should not effect an increase in its net earnings for the taxable year 1964. But see
18. Note, however, that amounts paid with respect to certain nonmember earnings described in
19. While these last-cited cases discuss the excludability or deductibility of patronage dividends of nonexempt cooperatives for years not controlled by subch. T, the term "patronage dividend" as defined in
20. The dividend declared on capital stock in the taxable year 1964 was $ 245,112.50. Since this sum represents a 2 1/2-percent dividend on capital stock, a 5-percent dividend on capital stock would be twice as large, or $ 490,225. Petitioner had net earnings of $ 758,625.88 in the taxable year 1964. By reducing these net earnings by $ 75,862.59, which represents the 10 percent of net earnings set aside for the general reserve, and $ 490,225, which represents an amount equal to a 5-percent dividend on capital stock, the net earnings available for a patronage dividend would be $ 192,538.29, or somewhat less than respondent's allowance of $ 206,352.64.
On a more fundamental level, we wonder if a patronage dividend "deduction" may even be used in calculating net operating losses. Petitioner had no real operating loss in the taxable year 1964. The excess of its gross receipts over its normal operating expenses was over three-quarters of a million dollars.
Linnton Plywood Association v. United States , 236 F. Supp. 227 ( 1964 )
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. B. A. Carpenter , 219 F.2d 635 ( 1955 )
Long Poultry Farms, Incorporated v. Commissioner of ... , 249 F.2d 726 ( 1957 )
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Fertile Co-Operative Dairy Ass'n v. Huston , 119 F.2d 274 ( 1941 )
Laura Farmers Cooperative Elevator Co. v. United States , 273 F. Supp. 1019 ( 1967 )
Mississippi Valley Portland Cement Company v. United States , 408 F.2d 827 ( 1969 )
George R. Tollefsen and Margaret A. Tollefsen v. ... , 431 F.2d 511 ( 1970 )
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Farmers Cooperative Co. v. Birmingham , 86 F. Supp. 201 ( 1949 )
Lozoff v. United States , 266 F. Supp. 966 ( 1967 )
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Irvin S. Lozoff and Cecile Lozoff v. United States , 392 F.2d 875 ( 1968 )
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South Carolina Produce Ass'n v. COM'R OF INT. REVENUE , 50 F.2d 742 ( 1931 )
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