DocketNumber: Docket No. 2579-79.
Filed Date: 1/27/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
TIETJENS, The issues for our determination are (1) whether petitioner's sale of a 55-mile interconnection transmission line in 1975 constituted an extraordinary retirement under Petitioner, a Wisconsin corporation, had its principal place of business in Ashland, Wisconsin and the time of its filing its petition. Petitioner timely filed corporate Federal income tax returns for 1975 and 1976 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Kansas City, Missouri. Petitioner, a regulated public utility within the meaning of sections 118(b)(3)(C) and 7701(a)(33), is an electric, gas, and water utility company providing electric service in all or parts of 13 counties in*715 northern Wisconsin and 2 counties in the western tip of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. It provides gas service in 16 communities in Wisconsin and in 6 communities in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Also, it provides water service in the City of Bayfield, Wisconsin. In 1973, petitioner completed construction of a 55-mile transmission line with a capacity of 161,000 volts between Stone Lake, Wisconsin and Menong, Wisconsin, where it interconnects with petitioner's existing transmission network and then continues to the Washburn-Barron county line near Beaver Lake, Wisconsin. This transmission line was to interconnect physically with Superior Water, Light and Power Company and Northern States Power Company. The interconnection was designed to assure a reliable importation of 50,000 kilowatts of electric power. Because of a financial problem in 1975, petitioner gave up 2 of its wholesale electrical power customers, Bayfield Electric Cooperative, Inc. (hereinafter Bayfield), and Price Electric Cooperative, Inc. (hereinafter Price), to Dairyland Power Cooperative, Inc. (hereinafter Dairyland). However, since these cooperatives were connected to petitioner's transmission lines, *716 Dairyland was charged a "wheeling" charge to transmit electrical power over petitioner's lines. A wheeling charge reflects the charge by one electrical company to use its transmission line to transmit electrical power and energy over its line to another electrical company's customers. On April 22, 1975, petitioner and Dairyland entered into an interim agreement whereby Dairyland agreed to pay petitioner a fee of approximately 2.4 mills per kilowatt hour for electric power and energy delivered through petitioner's transmission facilities to Dairyland's Class A members. During the interim period in 1975, Dairyland paid the following wheeling charges to petitioner: Year Deficiency 1975 $ 187,380.83 1976 1,780.19 Date Amount June 30, 1975 $ 15,758.40 July 31, 1975 15,148.66 August 31, 1975 17,842.70 September 30, 1975 17,733.74 October 31, 1975 14,781.29 Total $ 81,264.79
On September 10, 1975, petitioner entered into a final agreement with Dairyland, Bayfield, and Price, which stated that petitioner would provide power and energy to Dairyland's member electrical cooperatives through substations connected to petitioner's transmission lines.
Presently, petitioner provides a transmission service*717 or "wheels" electric power and energy from Dairyland to 4 of its Class A members: Bayfield, Price, Barron Electric Cooperative, Inc., and Jump River Electric Cooperative, Inc.
The Federal Power Commission, Docket Nos. E-9539 and ER-76-173, issued an order authorizing the sale of electrical facilities and approving the wheeling agreement in this case.
The sale of the 55-mile transmission line constituted a sale of approximately 48.55 percent of the 1973 vintage account for electric utility transmission and distribution plant. The sale for $ 2,407,000 was based upon the net book value of the transmission line and transformer and did not include in that amount any State of Wisconsin sales tax.
On September 10, 1975, Dairyland, Bayfield, and Price acquired all of the benefits and burdens of ownership for tax purposes of the 55-mile interconnection line.
On its 1971 Federal corporation income tax return, petitioner elected to depreciate its electric utility transmission and distribution plant by using the class life asset depreciation range (ADR) system contained in
In 1973, as well as in 1971 and 1972, petitioner elected to compute depreciation on a composite vintage account guideline class basis, under
In 1976 petitioner did not charge any customer a fee for extending overhead electrical power lines, gas or water mains provided the extension required to service the customer did not exceed a prescribed distance. If, however, the required extension exceeded the free limit, the customers were required to advance a payment described by petitioner as an "aid-to-construction amount equal to the estimated cost of the extension which is in excess of the free limit."
The total credits and debits reflected in 1976 in petitioner's Account 252, Customer Advances for Construction, as well as the breakdown of the total amount transferred from Account 252 to Account 271, Contributions in Aid*719 of Construction, are as follows:
(1) Total Customer Contributions Received | |
(2-1-76 to 12-31-76) | $ 95,763.93 |
Credits from Account 271 | 505.00 |
Total Cash Received (January, 1976) | 5,146.11 |
$ 101,415.04 | |
(2) Refunds paid to Customers | $ 11,912.26 |
(2-1-76 to 12-31-76) | |
Refunds paid to customers | |
(January, 1976) | 227.33 |
Cash Received which should be in | |
Account 107.2 | 79.35 |
Transfer to Account 271 | |
(December 31, 1976) | 85,660.20 |
$ 97,879.14 | |
(3) Transfer to Account 271 | $ 85,660.20 |
Transfer Account from Prior Years | (2,731.53) |
Transfer Account from January, 1976 | (3,484.00) |
$ 79,444.67 | |
(4) Electric- | |
a. Underground Service Extension Charges | $ 43,856.50 |
b. Transformer Charges | 5,747.13 |
c. Primary and Overhead Line Extension Charges | 23,209.33 |
d. Gas - Excess Footage Charge | 4,428.11 |
e. Water - Hydrant Extension Charges | 2,203.60 |
$ 79,444.67 |
Those charges to customers by petitioner which were not refundable were transferred at December 31, 1976, from Account 252 to Account 271, Contributions in Aid of Construction.
The transfer between Account 252 and Account 271 of December 31, 1976, included $ 5,747.13 which represented customer charges*720 by petitioner for transformers and transformer pads which were installed between petitioner's primary transmission lines and the underground transmission lines to individual customers' homes and businesses.
Petitioner argues that its sale of the 55-mile portion of its transmission line did not result in an extraordinary retirement within the meaning of section 1.167(a)-11(d)(3)(ii)(
By contrast, respondent contends that petitioner's sale of a 55-mile interconnection transmission line, on September 10, 1975, constituted an extraordinary retirement upon which gain must be recognized under the class life and asset depreciation range (ADR) system embodied in
We agree with respondent.
Petitioner established a 1973 vintage account for electric utility transmission and distribution plant property additions and elected the composite ADR depreciation*723 system described in
In general, a retirement of an asset in a vintage account occurs:
when such asset is permanently withdrawn from use in a trade or business or in the production of income by the taxpayer. A retirement may occur as a result of a sale or exchange, by other act of the taxpayer amounting to a permanent disposition of an asset, or by physical abandonment of an asset. A retirement may also occur by transfer of an asset to supplies or scrap.
(
(
(
Example (
From the above examples and a comparison between the definitions for a retirement and an extraordinary retirement, we conclude that an ordinary retirement of section 1245 property occurs either (1) where property is retired by a transfer of an asset to supplies or scrap or (2) the property, not retired as a result of a casualty, is retired but has an unadjusted basis which does not exceed 20 percent of the unadjusted basis*726 of the vintage account immediately before its retirement.
Petitioner, on the one hand, maintains that the sale of its 55-mile line constitutes an ordinary retirement; on the other hand, it emphasizes that it could not constitute an extraordinary retirement since the facts here show no future future nonuse of the line.
We do not understand how petitioner's assertions are compatible with each other.
An asset is retired "when such asset is permanently withdrawn from use in a trade or business * * * [and] * * * may occur as the result of a sale." An "extraordinary" retirement occurs when section 1245 property is retired "as the direct result of a cessation, termination, curtailment, or disposition" and its unadjusted basis exceeds 20 percent of the unadjusted basis of such vintage account immediately prior to that event. Where the definition of a retirement speaks of total future nonuse, the definition of an extraordinary retirement includes a "curtailment" or reduction in use and a "disposition" which includes "a sale." *727 Because the sale of petitioner's 55-mile interconnection line constitutes an extraordinary retirement, petitioner must recognize gain from that sale.
Section 118(a) provides that contributions to the capital of a corporation are not includable in its gross income. Section 118(b)(1) provides that contributions in aid of construction are contributions to the capital of the taxpayer. Customer connection fees, including, inter alia, amounts paid to connect the customer's line to a main electric line, are not, under the definitions in section 118(b)(3)(A), contributions in aid of construction.
Both parties agree that the legislative history of section 118 indicates that customer connections embrace underground, as well as overground, customer connections.*728 line to the customer's line since, under local law, such overhead service had to be provided on a "no charge" basis.
Despite the optional nature of the type of connection, however, the fees were indeed charged for installing a connection from the main line to the customer's line. That no-cost alternatives existed does not change what are clearly customer connection fees into contributions in aid of construction. The fees received from customers for connecting their lines with the main lines are includable in petitioner's gross income for 1976. Additionally, those amounts of the "primary and overhead line extension charges" which represent fees imposed on customers whose connections to the main line exceeded the free limit are similarly customer connection fees and includable in petitioner's 1976 gross income.
1. A proposed deficiency in Federal income tax for 1974 was settled by execution of Form 870 on July 25, 1975; therefore, this year is no longer in issue.
In addition, respondent has conceded that petitioner is entitled to a deduction in 1976 of $ 70,135.42 for Wisconsin sales taxes paid by it on the sale of an interconnection transmission line in 1975 to Dairyland Power Co., Inc. Petitioner has conceded that it is not entitled to a deduction in 1975 for this same item. Therefore, a decision under
2. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect for the years in issue, unless otherwise stated. ↩
3. On brief, petitioner has conceded that the gas and water excess footage charges are customer connection fees and thereby includable in its taxable income.↩
4. The second example in the regulation clearly contemplates an extraordinary retirement as including a sale. A disposition, furthermore, among other definitions, is "the transfer of property from one to another (as by gift, barter, or sale or by will) or the scheme or arrangement by which such transfer is effected." Webster's Third New International Distionary (1976), p. 654. ↩
5. While petitioner, in its brief, appeared to argue that the facts her do not constitute a retirement, petitioner asserts, in its reply brief, "Petitioner does not contend the sale did not result in a retirement, because the sale did result in a retirement. Petitioner contends that the sale resulted in an ordinary retirement pursuant to reg. sec. 1.167(a)-11(d)(3)(ii)" (p. 2, petitioner's reply brief).↩
6. See S. Rept. 95-1263, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 182 n. 4 (1978),