Court Opinion

ID: 4598049
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:20:27.965986+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:59:01.818397
License: Public Domain

American Box Shook Export Association, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentAmerican Box Shook Export Asso. v. CommissionerDocket No. 777United States Tax Court4 T.C. 758; 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230; February 12, 1945, Promulgated *230 Decision will be entered under Rule 50.  The petitioner was organized under the general corporation laws of California.  Neither its articles of incorporation nor its bylaws nor any contract required that amounts received in excess of cost be distributed to its members on a patronage basis.  No amounts were distributable except upon action by the board of directors. Held, (1) petitioner is not a true cooperative and is subject to tax upon its income; (2) petitioner is not entitled to a deduction for amounts actually distributed during the year.  W. R. Wallace, Jr., Esq., and Frank L. Muncy, C. P. A., for the petitioner.Arthur L. Murray, Esq., for the respondent.  Van Fossan, Judge.  VAN FOSSAN *758  The respondent determined deficiencies in income and excess profits taxes against American Box Shook Export Association for its fiscal year ended May 31, 1941, as follows: Income tax, $ 1,952.15; excess profits tax, $ 1,270.32.*759  The principal issue now in controversy is whether any of the amounts received by the petitioner during the year in question are taxable to it as its income.  In the event this issue is decided in the respondent's favor, a second*231  issue is presented, whether the sum of $ 7,559.11 paid by the petitioner to its members during the taxable year may properly be deducted from gross income.FINDINGS OF FACT.The petitioner is a corporation organized on March 26, 1940, under the general corporation laws of the State of California.  Its income, declared value excess profits and defense tax return and its excess profits tax return for the year involved were prepared on the accrual basis and were filed with the collector of internal revenue for the first district of California on August 15, 1941.The petitioner was organized to succeed an unincorporated association of the same name which was organized in 1935.The petitioner is a sales organization engaged in the purchase of box shook, i. e., unassembled parts of wooden boxes, exclusively for export purposes.  During the year in controversy, it purchased shook from its member-stockholders only.  It has twelve such members, all of whom are associations engaged either in the manufacture or distribution of lumber products, or both.  The shook so purchased by the petitioner was sold by it to its customers in foreign countries.The petitioner does not make purchases from its*232  members upon any standard rate or price basis.  When an order for shook is placed by a foreign customer, the petitioner first obtains the necessary data from the customer, including information as to specifications, shipping schedule, and quantity.  It then contacts its members to ascertain the "minimum satisfactory price" at which the members would agree to handle the particular order.These negotiations with the members usually are not reduced to writing.  The petitioner conducts its business with its members in an informal manner, much of it being handled by telephone.After it obtains the minimum price at which the members will produce the shook, the petitioner endeavors to secure a higher price from the customer. This usually amounts to an additional margin of from 8 percent to 10 percent of the original "minimum" price.  It is added to provide against unforeseen items of expense.The members bill the petitioner for shook sold on the basis of the "minimum" price and the petitioner settles with them currently on that basis at a discount.  This is done since the final profit from the transaction can not be determined for some time, owing to the distances which the products must*233  travel and the unforeseen expenses which may arise.*760  Neither the articles of incorporation nor the bylaws of the petitioner require that amounts received by it in excess of the cost of the goods sold should be distributed to its members upon any patronage basis.  There is an understanding, however, between the petitioner and its members that any amounts received in excess of actual cost, with the exception of amounts placed in a reserve for anticipated claims, is to be returned to them.At the close of the fiscal year the directors determined the amount of profits which could be distributed without endangering the reserve fund.  These amounts were distributed to the members upon the basis of the amount of board feet of shook which each shipped during the year.On or about May 28, 1941, the petitioner made distributions to its members totaling $ 7,559.11 out of earnings of that year.In its income tax return the petitioner reported total income of $ 50,865.03 and net taxable income of $ 13,317.66.  It did not include in its gross income either the amounts distributed to the members during that year or the sum of $ 4,000 entered in its books as a reserve for anticipated claims. *234  It now concedes the nondeductibility of the latter item in the event it is determined that the corporation is taxable.OPINION.The fundamental issue before us is whether the petitioner had any taxable income of its own or whether its income was actually, at all times, the income of its members.  In the event our determination of this issue is adverse to the petitioner, a further issue arises, namely, whether the petitioner is entitled to a deduction in the amount of the distributions made to its members on May 28, 1941.There may be some question whether the first stated issue was properly raised in the pleadings.  Although the respondent directed attention to the alleged defect at the hearing, no motion to amend the petition was made and the respondent consequently contends that the issue is not properly before the Court.  However, we do not choose to rest our decision on the possible defect in the pleadings for, assuming that the issue was properly raised, the petitioner can not be sustained.The petitioner relies on no specific statutory provision for exemption, but asks us to find that it was merely an agent for its members -- a mere conduit through which the income flowed -- *235  and that all its earnings were in reality the property of its members and not its own taxable income. This we can not do.The petitioner was organized under the general corporation laws of *761 California, not under the statutes providing for cooperative associations.  No explanation was given for this action.  The statutes under which an association is organized are not controlling, however, if it is actually organized and operates as a true cooperative. Eugene Fruit Growers Association, 37 B. T. A. 993; United Cooperatives, Inc., 4 T.C. 93">4 T. C. 93. In order to be a true cooperative, there must be a legal obligation on the part of the association to return to the producers, on a patronage basis, all funds received in excess of the cost of the goods sold. Such an obligation may arise from the association's articles of incorporation, its bylaws, or some other contract.  Midland Cooperative Wholesale, 44 B. T. A. 824.Here we find no evidence of such a legal obligation. There was no provision in either its articles or bylaws requiring the petitioner to distribute all its profits to its members*236  on a patronage basis.  Neither were there any express written contracts with the members to that effect.  The most we find was an "understanding" between the petitioner and its members that all sums received in excess of the cost of selling the shook and in excess of the amounts placed in the reserve for anticipated claims should be returned to the members.It does not appear, however, that this understanding was carried out in practice.  During the year in controversy the petitioner made distributions to its members of $ 7,559.11 and had in its reserve the sum of $ 4,000.  Yet it reported a taxable income, after deducting both of these items, of $ 13,317.66.  What disposition was to be made of this amount, we do not know.  There is nothing in the record to show that it could not be used for the payment of dividends on the stock, or for any other purpose.  Other than the amounts actually distributed to the members, of which we shall speak later, there is nothing to show that the petitioner's earnings were not its own, which it could use for any ordinary corporate purpose.In support of its contention, the petitioner relies principally upon San Joaquin Valley Poultry Producers' Association v. Commissioner, 136 Fed. (2d) 382.*237  However, the facts in that case were materially different from those before us.  There the petitioner was organized under the Agricultural Code of California, which provided that "Associations organized [under chapter 4 thereof] shall be deemed 'nonprofit', inasmuch as they are not organized to make profit for themselves, as such, or for their members, as such, but only for their members as producers." The petitioner's articles of incorporation provided that it "shall conduct and carry on its business without profit to itself." Its bylaws provided that it "is organized as a nonprofit cooperative association" and that "The 'net proceeds' resulting from the operation of the business, if any, shall belong to the members."*762  The petitioner in that case engaged in the business of marketing eggs for its members and selling supplies to its members and others.  It did not pay its members the entire net proceeds of the eggs that it marketed for them, but retained certain amounts which it placed in three reserves, crediting to the members the proportionate share of each in the sums so retained.  It was the amounts so retained which the respondent sought to tax.  The court held that *238  the sums in question were not the property of the petitioner, but were that of its members; that to hold otherwise would be to hold that the petitioner could and did make a profit for itself in contravention of its bylaws, its articles of incorporation, and the statute to which it owes its existence.  It was pointed out that the petitioner never pretended to be the owner of the sums, but, as required by its bylaws, it prorated and credited them to its members.  The court concluded that, since none of the sums ever belonged to the petitioner, they could not be, and were not, its income.Here, however, as we have noted, neither the statute under which it was incorporated, its articles of incorporation, its bylaws nor any other contract forbade the petitioner from having income of its own.  Under such circumstances, it can not be said that the petitioner's income was actually that of its members.We turn, therefore, to a consideration of whether or not the petitioner is entitled to deduct from its gross income those amounts which it actually distributed to its members during the year in question.  Deductions are available to taxpayers only by virtue of statutory provisions.  Not every*239  payment out of income creates a legal deduction.  Here again the answer turns upon whether or not the right of the members to these amounts arises by reason of the corporate charter or bylaws or some other contract, and is not dependent upon some subsequent corporate action taken by the officers or directors.  United Cooperatives, Inc., supra; Midland Cooperative Wholesale, supra. The petitioner contends that such a right inhered in its members and that it is entitled to the deduction.  The respondent asserts that the petitioner was under no legal obligation to make the payments and that the distributions were in the nature of dividends, hence not available as statutory deductions.As we have indicated above, there was nothing in the petitioner's articles of incorporation or bylaws imposing upon it the obligation to distribute its excess revenue among its members.  The question is, therefore, narrowed to whether or not such an obligation existed because of some other contract or contracts between the petitioner and its members.The petitioner contends that such a contract existed by virtue of the "understanding" between the*240  petitioner and its members that they *763  were to receive all the profits in excess of cost and the additions to the reserve.  This contention is not borne out by the evidence.  The testimony shows that it had originally been contemplated that excess revenue should be distributed by way of dividends on the stock. At a meeting of the stockholders, held May 6, 1940, a motion was made that the bylaws be amended to effect the distribution of excess revenue among the members upon the basis of the dollar value of shipments made by each member.  This amendment was never put into effect.  It was finally decided that the basis for distribution proposed in the motion was not practicable and that "the only fair method of distribution" was upon the basis of board feet of shook shipped by each member.  However, no formal action in this regard was ever taken.It is apparent from the record also that no amounts were distributable to the members without prior action on the part of the petitioner's board of directors. This is shown by the following excerpt from the minutes of the meeting of the association held July 29, 1940:Attention was further called to the fact that the Association had*241  been set up as a non-profit organization with the understanding that any excess received from the sale of shook over expenses would, upon action of the organization, be subject to distribution as additional realization on shipments made during the period when such surplus was accumulated.  [Italics added.]This was likewise the understanding of the petitioner's members.  One of the witnesses, who was general manager of a member association and a director of the petitioner, testified as follows:* * * We invoiced the American Box Shook Export Association at the minimum price, and that is all we did until later, if I would attend a meeting of the Export Association and as a director of the Association learn that it was contemplated paying another dollar per thousand to certain shipments, then I would go back to our office and set up a debit against the Association.The taxpayer points to no statute authorizing the claimed deductions.  Clearly they are not deductible expenses.  The petitioner was under no obligation to make distributions to its members until the board of directors had so acted.  Whether the payments were in the nature of dividends, we need not decide.  But see Fontana Power Co., 43 B. T. A. 1090;*242  affd., 127 Fed. (2d) 193; Juneau Dairies, Inc., 44 B. T. A. 759. We are of the opinion that the petitioner is not entitled to the deduction in any event and that the respondent's determination must be sustained.Decision will be entered under Rule 50.