Court Opinion

ID: 4623289
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-21 02:52:38.503437+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:56:20.055213
License: Public Domain

TERMINAL RAILROAD ASSOCIATION OF ST. LOUIS, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Terminal R.R. Ass'n. v. CommissionerDocket Nos. 49832, 53429, 63699.United States Board of Tax Appeals33 B.T.A. 906; 1936 BTA LEXIS 807; January 14, 1936, Promulgated *807  The Commissioner raises an affirmative issue and claims an increased deficiency on the ground that the petitioner was not entitled to deductions for depreciation which were allowed in determining the deficiency.  The petitioner was a lessee and was not entitled to the deductions.  However, the deductions were claimed on a consolidated return.  There was affiliation between the petitioner, the lessee, and the lessors through complete stock ownership.  Since it does not appear that the lessors were not entitled to the deductions, the Commissioner has failed to show that the deficiencies should be increased.  J. T. Haslam, Esq., for the respondent.  MURDOCK *906  OPINION.  MURDOCK: The Commissioner determined the following deficiencies in the petitioner's income tax: Docket no.YearDeficiency498321926$31,803.8549832192736,430.80534291928$33,467.3763699192948,880.13All of the issues raised in the pleadings relating to the above deficiencies have been settled by a stipulation of the parties.  The only matter now in controversy is an issue in each proceeding, raised by the respondent, whereby he claims that*808  the amounts which he allowed as deductions for depreciation for each year were erroneously allowed.  The facts of record bearing upon this issue have been presented by a stipulation.  The stipulation may be summarized for present purposes as follows: The petitioner is a corporation organized under the laws of Missouri.  Its principal office is at St. Louis, Missouri.  It kept its books on an accrual basis and in accordance with the classification of accounts prescribed by the Interstate state Commerce Commission.  The petitioner owned all of the outstanding capital stock of St. Louis Merchants Bridge Terminal Railway Company and of Wiggins Ferry Company.  Wiggins Ferry Company owned all of the outstanding capital stock of St. Louis Transfer Railway Company and of the East St. Louis Connecting railway Company.  The petitioner, for itself and affiliated companies, filed consolidated income tax returns for all of the years here involved.  Those returns included the income and deductions of the companies above mentioned.  The returns were filed on an accrual basis.  The petitioner, as lessee, leased the properties of St. Louis Merchants Bridge Terminal Railway Company, of East St. *809  Louis Connecting Railway Company and of the St.  *907  Louis Transfer Railway Company for a period of 99 years beginning January 1, 1926.  These leases were approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1925.  The properties leased consisted of railways, bridges, structures, depots, shops, locomotives, cars and all other properties owned comprising the entire railroad systems of the lessors.  The rental which the petitioner was required to pay under the leases consisted of taxes, assessments and other like charges imposed upon the lessor companies and interest on bonds of one of the companies.  Each lease contains the following provision: The Lessee Company shall and will maintain and keep the premises hereby delivered, and every part thereof, in good condition, and make all necessary repairs and renewals of the same, and operate and use the same for the purposes for which the Lessor Company holds the same, and shall and will indemnify and save harmless the Lessor Company from any and all claims for damages arising out of such operation and use.  The petitioner operated the properties during the taxable years in accordance with the terms of the leases.  The properties*810  leased were constructed with funds of the lessor companies or their predecessor companies.  The various expenditures to be made by the petitioner in the payment of interest, taxes, assessments, repairs, renewals, maintenance, etc., were made as required by the terms of the leases and the amounts thereof were deducted from the gross income of the petitioner as expenses.  Those deductions have been allowed by the Commissioner in determining the deficiencies.  The petitioner, in the consolidated returns, claimed the following amounts for depreciation of the properties, and the deductions were allowed by the Commissioner in determining the deficiencies: For 1926$30,871.48For 192730,404.80For 192830,488.65For 192929,054.06The notice of deficiency for the years 1926 and 1927 contains the following statement: In accordance with the agreement for the allocation of tax executed under date of April 16, 1929, the deficiencies for the years 1926 and 1927 are assessable against your company.  The following statement appears in the notice of deficiency for the year 1928: The entire tax is allocated to your company, in accordance with agreement signed under*811  date of September 3, 1930, by you and the subsidiary companies listed above.  The following statement is from the deficiency notice for 1929: In accordance with article 16(a) of Regulations 75, the deficiency will be assessed severally against each corporation named above.  The Commissioner is the moving party on the single issue left for decision by the Board.  He is asking that his action in determining the deficiencies be changed so as to disallow deductions which he says he erroneously allowed.  If, under such circumstances, he fails to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that his determination of the deficiencies was erroneous, he must lose the point.  He *908  contends that the petitioner has no capital investment in the properties, and, therefore, has nothing to recover by way of depreciation.  He further states that the petitioner has been allowed all deductions to which it is entitled, including all expenses of repairing and maintaining the property in good condition and all costs of renewals.  He further states that the lessors will not suffer loss from depreciation on their properties and are not entitled to deductions for depreciation.  His argument*812  in support of this statement is that the loss from depreciation can not fall upon the lessors since the petitioner, as lessee, is required to maintain every part of the properties in good condition and make all necessary repairs and renewals of the same.  Therefore he concludes that, since neither the petitioner nor the lessors are entitled to depreciation, he erred in allowing any depreciation in determining the deficiency.  Section 214(a)(8) of the Revenue Act of 1926 and section 23(k) of the Revenue Act of 1928 authorize the deduction of "a reasonable allowance for the exhaustion, wear and tear of property used in the trade or business, including a reasonable allowance for obsolescence." This provision in the latter act is captioned "Depreciation." The basis for computing the deduction, as provided in these statutes, is the same as the basis for gain or loss upon the sale or other disposition of the property.  Sec. 204, Revenue Act of 1926; secs. 23(m) and 114(a), Revenue Act of 1928.  That basis is cost, if the property was acquired by the taxpayer after March 1, 1913, or cost or value on March 1, 1913, whichever is greater, in case the property was acquired by the taxpayer before*813  March 1, 1913.  Sec. 204, Revenue Act of 1926; sec. 113, Revenue Act of 1928.  The petitioner is not entitled to any deduction for depreciation on the properties under these statutes.  . It does not own the properties and they have no basis for gain or loss and, consequently, no basis for depreciation in its hands.  The lessors are the owners and, if any one is entitled to depreciation on the properties, it is the lessors and not the petitioner.  ; affd., ; ; affd., ; certiorari denied, ; ; certiorari denied, . However, it appears that the lessors joined with the petitioner in a consolidated return for each of the years and the petitioner is liable for the total tax including the deficiencies.  The Commissioner may not succeed in having the deficiencies increased unless the evidence shows that the lessors are not entitled to deductions for*814  depreciation of the properties, that is, if the Commissioner's only mistake was to allow the deductions for depreciation to the petitioner instead of to its subsidiaries, then that mistake is not a sound reason *909  for increasing the deficiencies computed on a consolidated return basis.  If the situation were reversed, that is, if the Commissioner, in the determination of the deficiency, had added an item to income as shown on the consolidated return, the petitioner could not have the deficiency reduced by merely showing that it had had no such item of income, particularly if the evidence left a possible inference that the item might have been income to the subsidiary companies included in the same consolidated return.  The Commissioner, the moving party here, in under no less a burden to show that the deficiency should be increased.  The evidence does not go so far as to show that the lessors were not entitled to some deduction for depreciation.  The petitioner, as lessee, was required to maintain and keep the premises and every part thereof in good condition and to make all necessary repairs.  But such a requirement, even if fulfilled, would not completely offset the gradual*815  wearing out of the properties.  . The petitioner was also required to make all necessary renewals of the leased premises.  The meaning of this term "renewals", as used in the lease, is not entirely clear.  It may have been intended by the parties to refer to ordinary renewals of a more or less minor character which clearly would not completely offset depreciation.  The Commissioner allowed deductions as ordinary and necessary expenses for the actual expenditures made by the lessee, which would indicate that the renewals were of a minor character.  One of the properties involved was a bridge over the Mississippi River.  It seems at least doubtful whether the use of the word "renewals" in the lease would require the petitioner to replace the present bridge.  The Commissioner has not shown that the lessors were not entitled to deductions for wear and tear.  But, however that may be, there is no provision in the lease which would obviously completely compensate the lessors for the loss growing out of the obsolescence of their properties.  There is nothing in the evidence to show that the deductions in question were not in proper*816  amounts.  Neither the cost nor the probable useful life of any property has been shown.  The evidence does not show that in the consolidated returns the deductions for depreciation were improper.  Consequently, the evidence does not show that the deficiencies were too small on this account.  Reviewed by the Board.  Decision will be entered under Rule 50.ARUNDELLARUNDELL, dissenting: The petitioner herein is the lessee of property of another railroad, all of whose stock it owns and with whom it has joined in the filing of a consolidated return.  The petitioner *910  deducted in its returns depreciation on the leased property and originally the Commissioner allowed the deduction.  In these proceedings the Commissioner has raised as an affirmative issue the validity of this deduction.  The majority opinion, while conceding the correctness of the Commissioner's position that the petitioner as the lessee of property is not entitled to a deduction for depreciation thereon (Weiss v. Wiener,279 U.S. 333">279 U.S. 333), nevertheless refuses to allow the resulting deficiency because, as it is stated, the Commissioner does not carry his burden further and*817  establish that the lessor likewise is not entitled to depreciation.  The petitioner did not contend originally and does not contend in these proceedings that the lessor is entitled to depreciation and in view of the decisions in Georgia Railway & Electric Co. v. Commissioner, 77 Fed.(2d) 897, and Commissioner v. Terre Haute Electric Co., 67 Fed.(2d) 697, it would seem at least doubtful whether the lessor would be entitled to deductions for depreciation.  At any rate, there is no showing that the deductions, if allowable, would be in the same amounts as claimed by the lessee.  The respondent has met his burden of proof when he shows that the petitioner is not entitled to the deductions claimed and allowed, and the majority opinion carries the burden too far.  The Commissioner should prevail.  LEECH, TURNER, and TYSON agree with this dissent.