1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*181
Shares of stock of a wholly owned subsidiary corporation which the petitioner purchased for the purpose of increasing its wartime production capacity,
10 T.C. 948">*948 The respondent determined deficiencies against the petitioner in income and excess profits taxes for the calendar year 1941 in the respective amounts of $ 1,672.46 and $ 9,486.47. These deficiencies arise from the disallowance of a deduction of $ 13,500 claimed as amortization, under
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The stipulated facts are incorporated herein by reference. They, and the other facts of record, may be summarized as follows:
The petitioner is an Ohio corporation, with its principal office at Cleveland, Ohio. Its income and excess profits tax returns for the calendar year 1941 were filed with the collector for the eighteenth district of Ohio.
For several years prior to, and including, the taxable year 1941, the petitioner operated a manufacturing plant at 13000 St. Clair Avenue, N. E., Cleveland, Ohio, where it engaged in the manufacture of machine tools such as drilling, reaming, and tapping machines, surface broaching machines, rifling machines, and single spindle automatic screw machines, and equipment for all such machines. During the latter half of 1940, and throughout 1941, and for several years thereafter during World War II, petitioner manufactured said products for customers1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*183 having prime contracts and subcontracts with the United States Government or for the Purchasing Commissions of Great Britain, Canada, and Australia, and from time to time it also manufactured smaller amounts of such products directly for the United States Government.
On November 20, 1940, petitioner acquired for cash in the amount of $ 67,500 all of the outstanding capital stock of the Hammond Manufacturing Co., an Ohio corporation occupying a plant on East 80th Street, Cleveland, Ohio, where it manufactured precision surface grinders and sensitive radial drills. Shortly after such acquisition the name of the corporation was changed to the Foote-Burt Machine Co. To save confusion the company will be referred to hereinafter as Hammond. The balance sheet of Hammond, as of October 31, 1940, showed the following assets and liabilities:
Assets: | ||||
Cash | $ 16,518.27 | |||
Accounts receivable | 10,416.90 | |||
Inventory | 21,418.40 | |||
Property, plant, and equipment: | ||||
Land | $ 9,400.00 | |||
Building | $ 39,077.85 | |||
Less reserve for depreciation | 10,165.35 | 28,912.50 | ||
Machinery and equipment, etc | 72,311.99 | |||
Less reserves for depreciation | 67,114.02 | 5,197.97 | 43,510.47 | |
Total | 91,864.04 | |||
Liabilities and capital: | ||||
Notes payable | $ 42,500.00 | |||
Accounts payable | 8,681.99 | |||
Accrued local taxes | 602.90 | |||
Accrued Federal taxes on income | 6,699.51 | |||
Capital stock and deficit: | ||||
Capital stock | $ 41,300.00 | |||
Deficit | 7,920.36 | 33,379.64 | ||
Total | 91,864.04 |
1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*184 10 T.C. 948">*950 Immediately following acquisition of the Hammond stock, T. H. Doan, president, and S. E. Gross, secretary-treasurer of the petitioner, were elected to the same respective offices in that company. The general manager of Hammond remained with that company as its general manager. During the ensuing period, through December 1941, the subsidiary's production and sales of machinery and parts therefor were increased to the limit of the practical capacity of its plant.
The stock of Hammond was carried on the books of the petitioner as a capital investment, in the amount of $ 67,500, until 1943, when the company was liquidated.
Upon application of the petitioner, filed on November 29, 1941, the Secretary of War issued his necessity certificate (No. WD-N-5657), dated March 10, 1942. The certificate of necessity reads as follows:
Mar 10 1942
No. WD-N-5657
War Department
Necessity Certificate
To the Commissioner of Internal Revenue:
Pursuant to
It Is Hereby Certified that the facilities described1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*185 in the attached Appendix A (consisting of twelve pages * * *) are necessary in the interest of national defense during the emergency period, up to 100% of the cost attributable to the construction, reconstruction, erection, installation or acquisition thereof, and that the application for this Certificate was filed on November 29, 1941.
By direction of the Under Secretary of War:
[Signed] George H. Foster,
Certified true copy.
[Signed] J. T. Ashworth,
In its application for such certificate of necessity the petitioner stated, after describing in detail the facilities of Hammond:
Applicant believes the acquisition of the capital stock of Hammond Manufacturing Company for the sum of $ 67,500.00 necessary in the interests of national 10 T.C. 948">*951 defense and requests a certificate of necessity for this investment if the regulations so permit.
The petitioner's purpose in acquiring Hammond was to utilize the facilities of that company to their fullest extent in order to meet the demand of the United States Government1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*186 for increased production of equipment essential to the war effort. The petitioner did not acquire Hammond as a permanent addition to its own plant. That company was operated as a completely separate unit at all times after its acquisition by the petitioner.
The petitioner's production in terms of dollars increased from approximately $ 3,276,000 in 1940 to approximately $ 6,093,000 in 1942, while that of Hammond increased from $ 150,254 in 1940 to $ 793,351 in 1942. Most of the production of Hammond was of grinders and radial drills, completely manufactured at its plant. The company also did contract work for the petitioner, on materials which the petitioner furnished, of approximately $ 78,600 in 1941 and $ 52,200 in 1942.
Upon its liquidation in 1943 all of Hammond's assets were sold for cash, which was distributed to the petitioner in exchange for its capital stock. The petitioner realized a capital gain on this transaction.
In its income and declared value excess profits tax return for 1941 the petitioner elected to amortize its cost of Hammond stock over a sixty-month period, commencing with the month of January 1941, and claimed a deduction on account thereof in the amount1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*187 of $ 13,500. The respondent disallowed the deduction in determining the deficiency herein.
OPINION.
The petitioner's sole contention here is that the capital stock of Hammond, which it purchased in 1940, was an "emergency facility" within the meaning of
The material provisions of
(a) General Rule. -- Every person, at his election, shall be entitled to a deduction with respect to the amortization of the adjusted basis (for determining gain) of any emergency facility (as defined in subsection (e)), based on a period of sixty months. Such amortization deduction shall be an amount, with respect to each month of such period within the taxable year, equal to the adjusted basis of the facility at the end of such month divided by the number of months (including the month for which the deduction is computed) remaining in the period. Such adjusted basis at the end of the month shall be computed without regard to the amortization deduction1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*188 for such month. The amortization deduction above provided with respect to any month shall, except to the extent provided in subsection (g) of this section, be in lieu of the deduction with respect to such facility for such month provided by
* * * *
(e) Definitions. --
(1) Emergency facility. -- As used in this section, the term "emergency facility" means any facility, land, building, machinery, or equipment, or part thereof, the construction, reconstruction, erection, installation, or acquisition of which was completed after December 31, 1939, and with respect to which a certificate under subsection (f) has been made. * * *
The Commissioner's regulations (sec. 29.124-0 of Regulations 111, as amended by
(b) "Emergency facility" means any facility, land, building, machinery, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*189 or equipment, or any part thereof --
(1) the acquisition of which occurred after December 31, 1939, or the construction, reconstruction, erection, or installation of which was completed after such date, and
(2) any part of the construction, reconstruction, erection, installation, or acquisition of which has, under such regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, or the Chairman of the War Production Board, or his duly authorized representative, with the approval of the President, been certified by the certifying officer as necessary in the interest of national defense during the emergency period.
The word "facility" is defined in Webster's New International Dictionary, 2d ed., as "A thing that promotes the ease of any action, operation, transaction, or course of conduct."
In
10 T.C. 948">*953 The manifest purpose of the act was to afford relief to taxpayers who increased production of articles contributing to the prosecution of war. The means adopted by the act were to permit a deduction measured by proper amortization of the 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*191 cost to the taxpayer of appropriate facilities. There is no limitation of "articles" to a kind or class. Neither is there a limitation of "facilities." The facilities, then, may differ as widely as the articles. * * *
The court further pointed out that the statutory provision under consideration was a relief measure and therefore must be liberally construed in favor of the taxpayer.
In
Assuming that the statutory term "facility" can be given a sufficiently broad construction to include shares of stock, there still remains unanswered our question, whether such a construction would conform to the congressional intent.
Turning to the legislative history of the enactment, we find that in the draft of the House bill (H. R. 10413), as presented to the Senate, and also in the bill as reported by the Senate Finance Committee, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*192 the word "facility" did not appear in the definition of "emergency facility," contained in
The report of the Committee on Ways and Means on this provision of the bill reads, in part, as follows:
Title II of the bill adds to the Internal Revenue Code a new section to be designated as
The Senate Finance Committee report states that: "Your committee extended the amortization deduction benefits to certified
The word "facility" was inserted before the word "land" on the proposal of Senator Harrison, Chairman of the Finance Committee, as a "clarifying amendment." This amendment was referred to in the conference report as follows:
This is a clarifying amendment expanding the definition of the term "emergency facility" to include any facility which meets the required conditions, as well as land, buildings, machinery, or equipment, in terms of which the definition in the House bill was phrased. This is to make certain that the cost of dry docks, channels, airports, and similar facilities may be amortized. The House recedes.
We think that the history of the enactment of the statute1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*195 shows clearly that shares of corporate stock are not the type of property to which Congress intended the wartime amortization deduction provisions to apply. A share of stock in a corporation is not in itself a thing, or a "facility," which can be used for producing anything. It merely symbolizes ownership of such facilities. It is not something to be constructed or created or utilized in the process of manufacturing or producing any war commodity. It does not suffer deterioration through usage and is not subject to depreciation or exhaustion. In this connection it is especially significant that the amortization deductions are to be taken "in lieu of the deduction with respect to such facility for such month provided by
It is not shown or even claimed here that the full statutory depreciation or exhaustion deductions allowable on the assets of the subsidiary corporation were not allowed, or were not allowable, in the subsidiary's returns for the taxable year involved in this proceeding. To permit the petitioner additional amortization deduction on the shares of stock evidencing1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 181">*196 the ownership of these assets would be to allow a double deduction, which Congress expressly forbade. The petitioner did not suffer any loss on its investment in the subsidiary stock, but actually realized a capital gain.
We think that the petitioner's claim for an amortization deduction, based on the cost of the stock, is without merit.