DocketNumber: Docket No. 237-79
Citation Numbers: 78 T.C. 894, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90, 78 T.C. No. 63
Judges: Whitaker
Filed Date: 6/8/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*90
1. Petitioner, an exempt farmers' cooperative, sold in taxable year 1974 equipment on which it had deducted depreciation in prior years. All the gain from the sale of the equipment was reported on petitioner's taxable year 1974 return as ordinary income under
2. Petitioner primarily performed marketing services for its patrons but also purchased small quantities of farm supplies that it resold to patrons approximately at cost. Because the scale of the purchasing operation was quite small relative to its overall operations, petitioner did not keep any separate accounts with respect to the purchasing operation. Petitioner based its allocation of patronage dividends for taxable year 1974*91 solely on the patronage to its marketing operation.
*895 The Commissioner determined a deficiency in the Federal income tax of petitioner for the taxable year ending July 31, 1974, in the amount of $ 21,232.11. The issues to be decided are: (1) Whether part of the patronage dividend deduction *94 in Lamesa, Tex., when it filed its petition in this case. For all the relevant periods, petitioner has been an exempt farmers' cooperative under
Throughout the period petitioner owned the trailers, tractors, and stick machine, this equipment was subject to depreciation, which was shown by petitioner on its books and records and claimed on its tax returns. The bases of the equipment for purposes of depreciation included the initial purchase prices as well as amounts expended for capital improvements made to some of the trailers.
In the taxable year 1974, petitioner, with the support of a majority of its patrons, decided to dispose of the cotton trailers, tractors, and stick machine. Pursuant to this decision, during the taxable year 1974, petitioner auctioned off all of this equipment then on hand. There were only 285 trailers sold by auction. The discrepancy between the number of trailers initially acquired (389) and the number sold at auction is explained by the fact that during the period 1964 through 1974, *96 many of the trailers were lost, destroyed by fire, or stripped to obtain spare parts. The trailers were sold in 111 lots containing 1 to 10 trailers per lot, at prices ranging from $ 175 to $ 1,425. The tractors were sold in two lots for $ 2,585 and $ 1,236.50, and the stick machine was sold for $ 1,000.
Petitioner could not determine the identity of any single cotton trailer. Hence it could not determine the date of purchase, the original cost, the amount of capitalized repairs, or the amount or timing of depreciation deductions taken with respect to each trailer. Thus, it was not possible to determine gain or loss on any one trailer. Petitioner reported the entire $ 57,622.78 gain from the sale of the 285 cotton trailers as depreciation recapture under
Petitioner's bylaws require the annual net savings or margins resulting from the transaction of the business of the association in excess of reserve fund requirements and after the payment of dividends on outstanding capital stock to be allocated among its patrons on a patronage basis. The bylaws also require that accurate patronage records be maintained on a departmental basis to comply with this allocation requirement.
Other than minor purchases of chemicals and supplies for some patrons, which petitioner handled at cost as an accommodation, petitioner's revenues were generated by the charge for ginning of cotton and resales of cottonseed purchased from patrons. Records were kept of the numbers of bales of cotton ginned and the pounds of seed purchased from each patron, and patronage dividends were allocated to each customer based separately on the cotton ginning and seed purchase volume of that patron.
The $ 61,081.50 gain from the sale of the trailers, tractors, and the stick machine in taxable year 1974 was allocated by petitioner to its current year's patrons in proportion to their patronage that year, *98 and a deduction was claimed by petitioner for the amount so allocated to the patrons.
Petitioner's membership tends to remain stable with little variation from year to year, although the amount of patronage for each member may vary significantly each year. Petitioner has an annual meeting of its membership, usually in August, which is normally attended by 300 to 500 persons. It expends great effort to secure large attendance at this meeting. Past as well as current patrons are encouraged to attend. Most of the 300 persons who attended the annual meeting in 1974 had been members of petitioner in prior years.
At the 1974 annual meeting, as in past years, petitioner's certified public accountant explained the financial report. He discussed the fact that the current year's gain included a substantial sum from the sale of the cotton trailers, but he did not specifically explain that the gain would be allocated only on the basis of patronage in taxable year 1974. This was, however, the customary method for allocating gains received *898 by petitioner. No patron raised any question as to allocation of the gain from the sale of equipment.
On audit, respondent determined that the*99 allocation of gain from the sale of equipment on the basis of only patronage during taxable year 1974 was improper. Respondent's position is that
Petitioner maintains an equity ledger showing the status of each patron's equity or ownership account in each year, but these ledgers were not usually retained by petitioner in complete form. Petitioner also compiled, in at least some of the years during which the equipment was being depreciated, an alphabetized ledger showing patrons' equity account balances, and a separate dividend allocation list was maintained on an annual basis showing each patron's then-current balance of all prior unpaid equities. In 1974, petitioner could have retrieved dividend allocation lists for the taxable years 1967 through 1974.
There is no way to determine simply from the current balances in the equity ledgers or dividend allocation lists*100 precisely how much of a patron's equity is due to patronage in a particular year, although the balances do give a general indication of patrons' cumulative proportions of patronage. The balances do not correlate exactly to past patronage for two primary reasons. First, the amount of gain per unit of patronage varies greatly from year to year. Second, the addition to the equity balance in each year is not the same amount as the total amount of the patronage dividend but is only the retained portion of the patron's patronage dividend for that year. Thus, the equity ledger records only that portion of a patronage dividend not paid to the patron in cash. The percentage of the patronage dividends paid in cash varied between taxable years 1964 through 1974 from 25 percent to 100 percent. Although the gain from the sale of equipment could be allocated back to prior years on the basis of equity ledger balances, the amount so allocated to each year would not precisely correlate to actual patronage in each year because of the wide variations in the amount paid in each year *899 in cash, and the variations from year to year in the amount of profit and thus in the patronage dividend*101 and resulting equity per unit of patronage.
To arrive at a more accurate computation of how patrons benefited from past depreciation, the annual additions to each patron's equity, which were also shown on the equity ledgers, could be examined. By comparing each patron's increase in equity in a given year to the total increases in equity in that year, each patron's proportionate share of patronage in each year could be computed. The amount of depreciation deductions taken in each year could also be computed, and by correlating these two computations, the extent to which each patron benefited from past years' depreciation on all equipment on petitioner's books for that year could be determined. This would not be an easy computation, however, and if made would not produce an accurate result since it was not possible to relate the gain on any trailer to the depreciation deduction actually claimed in any prior year with respect to that trailer.
During the taxable year 1974, petitioner sold to its patrons, on a voluntary basis, seed, chemicals, and other farm products used in cotton farming. The patrons who purchased supplies from petitioner were generally also patrons of the ginning*102 and cottonseed sales function. Petitioner's purpose in furnishing these agricultural supplies was to accommodate patrons by selling these goods approximately at cost. Petitioner did not account for these sales as a separate purchasing department. Rather, it reported as income all the amounts received from the sale of chemicals, seed, and other farm products, together with the amounts it received from the ginning function of the cooperative and the patronage dividends received from the regional cotton oil mill. From this total amount, petitioner subtracted the various deductions, including its cost of purchasing items sold to members through the purchasing function, to arrive at a net profit or net margin. This net profit was then allocated to the patrons of petitioner's gin on the basis of current patronage, that is, the number of bales of cotton ginned and the pounds of seed purchased.
During the audit, at the request of the revenue agent, petitioner projected a profit on these sales of supplies of $ 1,868.73. However, this amount was arrived at by simply applying the same rate of profit to expenses associated with *900 the supplies function as petitioner made on its overall*103 operation. No attempt was made to determine whether this particular purchasing function was actually more or less profitable than the overall operation.
OPINION
Under subchapter T, both exempt and nonexempt cooperatives are subject to tax as corporations.
Petitioner and respondent have stipulated that the depreciation recapture caused by the sale of the trailers, tractors, and the stick machine in taxable year 1974 was income derived from patronage
*105 Clearly, the gain from the sale of the equipment was realized in 1974. It is fundamental to the principle of annual tax accounting that gain is generally reported in the year received or accrued. Furthermore,
On the basis of two principles, viz, operation at cost and equitable allocation, respondent maintains that the gain should have been allocated in proportion to patronage that occurred during the years in which the equipment was being depreciated. On a theoretical basis, respondent's position has some appeal in the sense that if depreciation had not been claimed, dividend distributions in prior years would have been increased. However, minor inequities are often permitted in our tax system. In this case, it cannot be demonstrated that the allocation suggested by respondent would result in a significantly*106 more accurate allocation of patronage dividends than the method used by petitioner. In maintaining that petitioner could have allocated on the basis of equity ledger balances or annual additions to such balances correlated to annual depreciation deductions, respondent ignores the fact *902 that it was impossible to determine how much of the
Petitioner argues that even if the gain were attributable to prior years' patronage, it was not inequitable for it to allocate the gain on the basis of the taxable year 1974 patronage, given the substantial similarity of petitioner's membership over the years, the size of the gain relative to earnings over the period in which the equipment had been depreciated, and the practical difficulties involved in allocating the gain in proportion to the benefits patrons derived from the depreciation of the equipment in prior years. We agree with petitioner. Exact equity cannot be accomplished here even if we were endowed with sufficient*107 Solomon-like attributes to be able to divine its parameter. Allocation to current patrons does reasonable equity.
Respondent cites little case law in support of his position but relies largely upon the theoretical basis for the special tax treatment of cooperatives, focusing particularly upon the concept of "operation at cost," which treats the excess of a cooperative's operating revenues over its cost of operations (net margins) as the property of the patrons of the cooperative. Respondent reasons that this concept implies that the net margins are the property only of the particular persons whose patronage caused the excess income and only in direct proportion to their patronage. It appears inferentially that this concept may be the rationale underlying
Respondent also argues the "equitable allocation" principle, citing a number of cases, including four decisions of this Court, *903
The cases that have found violations of the "equitable allocation" requirement have generally dealt with cooperatives that have allocated to members some or all of the net margins attributable to nonmembers' patronage. E.g.,
*112 In
In
In this case, the key factor is that the identity of the patrons has remained stable enough so that there is no reason to assume that petitioner's management would be prone to take actions discriminatory against past patrons. The basic controversy here concerns petitioner's allocation of the earnings among its members; nonmember patrons have not been subjected to discriminatory treatment.
A primary factor influencing petitioner's decision to allocate the gain only to the taxable year 1974 patrons was that it had no records from which it could have determined what the patronage in the past years had been and how such patronage related to depreciation claimed in such years. Much of the testimony in this trial concerned respondent's contention that *906 an allocation to past years based on balances on the equity ledgers could have been made. However, the equity*115 ledger balances do not in themselves identify a particular patron's patronage in any prior year and they do not relate the amount of past patronage to depreciation deductions taken by the cooperative. Furthermore, respondent admits that use of the equity ledger balances would not have led to a mathematically precise allocation; he only contends that it would have more closely allocated the gain to the particular patrons who got the benefit of the depreciation than petitioner's method, which did not even look at past patronage. As we have pointed out, a mathematically precise allocation could not have been made. We are not convinced that respondent's suggested method of allocation is more equitable than petitioner's or even that petitioner's method is materially inequitable. One of the factors that must be taken into consideration is the practicality of making a particular type of allocation.
Moreover, the trailers were acquired and utilized over a period of 10 years. Petitioner's abbreviated recordkeeping in this regard is not unreasonable, as respondent recognizes. Even if each dollar of this gain could have been related to a particular dollar of depreciation, it is likely *116 that petitioner could not have located all of the patrons over the 10-year span and the cost of the exercise seems disproportionate to the benefit. *117 of cooperatives do not have carte blanche to make whatever allocations they choose, but we believe respondent should recognize that directors have some discretion, some flexibility, in the exercise of business judgment. Only when unreasonable exercise of that discretion appears should the board's weighing of the equities be overturned by this Court.
*907 The second issue in this case concerns respondent's disallowance of an additional $ 1,868.73 of the patronage dividend deduction claimed by petitioner in taxable year 1974. Respondent maintains that this $ 1,868.73 was the net margin of a separate supplies-purchasing function of the petitioner and that it was inequitable for petitioner to have allocated this net margin to all the patrons of its marketing function. Petitioner contends, first, that it has no such separate purchasing function, and that even if it were seen as having a separate purchasing function, the distribution should not be considered inequitable. We agree,, largely for the reasons discussed in the prior portion of this opinion.
On its books and records and on its return for taxable year 1974, petitioner did not segregate its activities into two separate*118 departments. It made no separate profit or loss allocations to its activities in purchasing supplies but simply included the income and expenses in computing its gross profit and determining the amount to allocate as patronage dividends among all its taxable year 1974 patrons.
Respondent contends that
Although it is obviously*119 easier to determine if the "equitable allocation" requirement is satisfied with respect to both the marketing and purchasing functions when separate accounts are maintained, we do not believe the failure to account separately should automatically cause a patronage dividend deduction to be disallowed. In the cases discussed below, courts have not required separate accounting by each of the different functions of a cooperative. Although none of these cases *908 involved the regulation cited by respondent here (
In
In
Furthermore, in
In determining whether respondent erred by disallowing the patronage dividend deduction that it attributed to gains from the purchasing function, our inquiry should simply be whether the allocation was inequitable in view of the board*123 of directors considerable discretion. Several factors lead us to conclude that the allocation here was not inequitable. First of all, we have no evidence that the patrons of the purchasing function were significantly different from the patrons of the marketing function or that any patron ever objected to the method of allocation. The small size of this supplies-purchasing function relative to the marketing function and the minimal amount of gain attributed to the purchasing and resale of supplies by respondent ($ 1,868.73) *124 also support the board of directors *910 decision not to require separate records for the purchasing function. Indeed, to have maintained accounting records with respect to the separate functions may well have cost petitioner almost as much as it is charged with having derived gain from the purchasing function. *125 respect to the profit from the purchase and resale of supplies, the de minimis nature of the item.
*. This case was tried before Judge Cynthia H. Hall, who subsequently resigned from the Court. By order of the Chief Judge, this case was reassigned to Judge Meade Whitaker for disposition.↩
1. For convenience, we will refer to patronage dividends as deductions. We offer no comment, however, on whether patronage dividends are deductions or exclusions. See
2. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended.↩
3. In the only case to date to consider this issue,
4.
"if a cooperative organization does not pay any patronage dividends to nonmembers, any portion of the amounts paid to members which is out of net earnings from patronage with nonmembers, and which would have been paid to the nonmembers if all patrons were treated alike, is not a patronage dividend."↩
5. See generally I. Packel, The Organization and Operation of Cooperatives, sec. 24, at 106-109 (4th ed. 1970), for a discussion of the basic principle that a cooperative must be democratically controlled by its members. Under Texas law, each member of a cooperative has one vote regardless of the amount of patronage or stock held.
6. Although members have indirect, as well as direct, means of control over the cooperative's management, e.g., the rights to inspect books and records and to bring representative suits, these indirect means of control are not available to nonmember patrons. See I. Packel,
7. We are not unmindful of
8. The $ 1,868.73 gain allocated to the purchasing function was computed by petitioner's accountant upon being requested during the audit to come up with some profit figure separately allocable to the purchasing function. Respondent argued that since petitioner's own agent came up with this $ 1,868.73 figure, then it must be assumed that petitioner admits that this amount of gain is clearly allocable to only the purchasing function. We do not agree with this contention. The amount allocated to the purchasing function was an arbitrary amount based not upon the gain derived from the purchasing function itself but computed simply on the basis of the overall gain from all petitioner's operations.↩
9. Cf.
Farmers Union Co-Op. Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 90 F.2d 488 ( 1937 )
Farmers Cooperative Company v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 288 F.2d 315 ( 1961 )
Burnet v. Houston , 51 S. Ct. 413 ( 1931 )
Pomeroy Cooperative Grain Company v. Commissioner of ... , 288 F.2d 326 ( 1961 )
Farm Service Cooperative v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 619 F.2d 718 ( 1980 )
Union Equity Cooperative Exchange v. Commissioner of ... , 481 F.2d 812 ( 1973 )