*22 Decision will be entered under
1. The fair market values of a terminal facility and of tires and tubes distributed to petitioner on the liquidation of a wholly owned subsidiary are determined.
2. S, a corporation, was engaged in the motor freight transportation business. It purchased tires and tubes for its own equipment and for equipment which it leased for use in its operations. The cost of procuring tires and tubes to be mounted on equipment already in use was expensed when the tires and tubes were placed in service. The cost of tires and tubes purchased with new equipment was expensed at the time of the purchase. S was permitted to expense the cost of its tires and tubes on the assumption that their average useful life was 1 year or less. S was liquidated before the useful life of certain of its tires and tubes had been exhausted. These tires and tubes were distributed in liquidation to S's sole shareholder. Held, on its liquidation S had to include in gross income the lesser of the fair market value of the tires and tubes distributed or the portion of their cost attributable to their remaining useful life.
*440 Respondent determined the following deficiencies in the Federal income*25 tax of petitioner:
1964 | $ 5,520.23 |
1965 | 82,904.53 |
1966 | 11,913.00 |
Concessions have been made by both parties. It remains for us to decide: (1) Petitioner's basis in a terminal facility and in tires and tubes distributed to petitioner on the liquidation of a subsidiary; (2) whether a corporation recognizes income when it distributes in liquidation tires and tubes whose cost it has expensed but whose useful life it has not fully exhausted in its operations.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Tennessee. Its principal place of business was at Nashville, Tenn., when the petition herein was filed.
*441 Petitioner reports income and expenditures according to the accrual method of accounting.
For each of the years in issue petitioner filed a corporation income tax return with the District Director of Internal Revenue, Nashville, Tenn. For the year 1967 petitioner and its several subsidiaries filed a consolidated income tax return with the Southeast Service Center, Chamblee, Ga. A consolidated net operating loss wholly attributable to petitioner was reported on that return. Petitioner applied for and on March 15, 1968, *26 was allowed a tentative net operating loss carryback adjustment reducing petitioner's income tax liability for 1964 and 1965.
On February 28, 1973, respondent mailed to petitioner a statutory notice of deficiencies in Federal income tax for the years in issue. Insofar as these deficiencies are still in controversy they are attributable to respondent's determination that the consolidated net operating loss reported for 1967 and, consequently, the tentative carryback adjustments allowed for 1964 and 1965 were excessive.
During 1967 and for many prior years petitioner was engaged in the motor freight transportation business. On January 3, 1967, petitioner purchased all of the stock of four corporations pursuant to a contract entered into on April 26, 1966. The purchase price was $ 1,908,190.05.
Among the corporations whose stock was purchased was Service Lines, Inc. (Service), a Tennessee corporation also engaged in the motor freight transportation business. Service remained in operation through February 28, 1967. On the following day it was liquidated and merged into petitioner.
Service was one of several subsidiaries of petitioner which joined the latter in filing the consolidated*27 return for 1967.
Among the assets which were distributed to petitioner by Service on its liquidation was a terminal facility located at 600 9th Avenue South, Nashville, which Service had purchased in 1955 for $ 255,959.
The terminal consisted of an office building, a truck dock, and a garage, situated on 52,200 square feet of land zoned for industrial use.
The office building measured 30 x 50 feet, was of brick construction with a stone foundation and plastered walls, and had a full basement.
*442 The truck dock was of steel construction and measured 50 x 120 feet.
The garage was built of brick and measured 35 x 140 feet.
The terminal was centrally located and adequately serviced with water, gas, electricity, telephones, sewerage, and other utilities.
The terminal was in use until January 22, 1967, when Service's terminal operations were transferred to a facility owned by petitioner. Petitioner's management comtemplated no further use for the terminal and therefore listed it for sale with the Tennessee Real Estate Co. shortly after it was vacated.
Eight months before the terminal was listed for sale, it was appraised on behalf of petitioner by J. Campbell Jenkins, the owner *28 of the real estate company. He estimated that as of June 1966, the land was worth $ 65,250 and the improvements $ 116,800. Nevertheless, he recommended that the property be listed for sale at $ 150,000 because he was aware that petitioner wanted to sell it quickly.
Within a week of its being listed for sale, the terminal was damaged by trespassers. Windows were broken, plumbing and electric wiring disarranged, and fire extinguishers sprayed throughout the premises. Similar acts of vandalism occurred throughout the 7 months in which the terminal was on the market. In that period it was inspected by five or six prospective purchasers, but because of the condition of the property, none of these expressed an interest in purchasing it. As time passed, retention of the terminal became increasingly burdensome to petitioner, not only because of the expenses incurred in connection with its maintenance but also because of a need for cash which petitioner hoped might be alleviated with the proceeds of the sale of the property. Therefore petitioner advised Jenkins that it would accept less than $ 150,000 for the terminal. Shortly after he had been so advised, Jenkins obtained an offer *29 of $ 100,000 for the terminal from the Stansell Electric Co. In view of the condition of the property, Jenkins considered the offer a satisfactory one. Pursuant to the offer, the terminal was sold to the electric company on August 31, 1967.
While actively engaged in the motor freight transportation business, Service purchased tires and tubes for its own equipment and for equipment which it leased for use in its operations. The cost of procuring tires and tubes to be mounted on equipment *443 already in use was expensed when the tires and tubes were placed in service. The cost of tires and tubes purchased with new equipment was expensed at the time of the purchase.
During the last full year of operations, 1966, Service charged $ 53,918.03 (net) to expense for tires and tubes.
The average useful life of the tires and tubes purchased by Service was about 1 year.
When Service was liquidated, it distributed to petitioner 1,638 tires and tubes the cost of which it had previously expensed. 1 At the time of the distribution, 67.5 percent of the useful life of these tires and tubes remained.
*30 OPINION
Issue 1The liquidation of Service was a complete liquidation of a subsidiary within the meaning of
For the purpose of applying
After the terminal was vacated by Service on January 22, 1967, it was of no *31 further usefulness to petitioner. Petitioner's objective was therefore to sell the terminal as quickly as possible. With this objective in mind, petitioner's real estate agent recommended that the property be listed for sale at $ 150,000. Shortly after the terminal was listed, it was seriously damaged by trespassers. Windows were broken; plumbing and electric wiring were disarranged; and fire extinguishers were sprayed throughout *444 the premises. These wanton acts discouraged prospective purchasers from becoming interested in the property, and during the 7 months in which the terminal remained listed for sale at $ 150,000, not a single offer of purchase was forthcoming.
As time passed, the need to sell the property became more urgent. Petitioner was in need of the cash that a sale would provide and could ill afford to bear the expense of maintaining so useless an asset as the terminal. Therefore when petitioner was offered $ 100,000 for the terminal by an unrelated party, an agreement was concluded on the basis of that offer.
Ordinarily, the price at which property is sold in an arm's-length transaction is the best evidence of its fair market value at the time of the *32 sale.
In the 7 months during which the property was available for sale at $ 150,000, it was inspected by five or six prospective purchasers. In its damaged condition the property was of interest to none of them at that price. Certainly this indicates that the asking price was well in excess of the fair market value of the property in its damaged condition. Furthermore, when the offer of $ 100,000 was made, petitioner's real estate agent deemed it well worth accepting. Given these facts, we are satisfied that the value of the selling price as evidence of the fair market value of the terminal has not been impugned because petitioner may have felt compelled by a need *33 for cash to accept the offer of $ 100,000.
Some incidents of vandalism occurred before the terminal was distributed to petitioner in liquidation; others occurred thereafter. The initial acts of vandalism which occurred before the distribution must have had an adverse effect upon the fair market value of the terminal because of the alterations which they effected in the appearance of the property. Not to be gainsaid, however, is the effect of the damage which was wrought upon the terminal after it was distributed to petitioner. Therefore in determining the fair market value of the property as of the date of distribution, respondent ought not to have *445 presupposed that when the terminal was sold on August 31, 1967, it was worth no less than it had been on the date of distribution 6 months before.
The extent to which the terminal was damaged after it was distributed was not precisely established at trial. We have therefore to approximate as best we can the extent to which the fair market value of the terminal declined between the date of distribution and the date of sale. Upon due consideration of all the pertinent facts we estimate the amount of the decline to have been *34 $ 25,000.
When Service purchased tires and tubes to be mounted on equipment used in its operations, it expensed the cost of procuring them when they were placed in service. The cost of tires and tubes purchased on new equipment was expensed at the time of the purchase. These costs were charged to expense rather than capitalized on the assumption that the average useful life of the tires and tubes was 1 year or less.
When Service was liquidated, it distributed to petitioner 1,638 tires and tubes, the cost of which it had previously expensed. For the purpose of applying
During 1966, the last full year of its operations, Service charged $ 53,918.03 (net) to expense in respect of tires and tubes. In view of this, respondent determined that the value assigned by petitioner to the 1,638 tires and tubes was excessive.
There is nothing in the record to indicate that the cost of tires and tubes increased significantly*35 between the time when Service purchased the tires and tubes whose cost it charged to expense in 1966, and the date on which it was liquidated. On the date of Service's liquidation, 67.5 percent of the useful life of the 1,638 tires and tubes remained. We would therefore be inclined to hold that on the liquidation of Service the fair market value of these tires and tubes was $ 36,394.67,
We therefore hold that on March 1, 1967, the fair market value of the tires and tubes in question was $ 36,394.67. 3
*36 Issue 2If the useful life of items purchased for use in the production of income is sufficiently brief that the cost of procuring them may be expensed, 4 then ordinarily their cost is expensible in a taxable year to the extent the items are actually consumed in operations during that year.
Certain of the tires and tubes whose cost Service expensed were not fully consumed in its operations. Rather they were distributed by Service in liquidation when a substantial*37 portion of their useful life had not been exhausted. We must decide if Service recognized income on the distribution of these tires and tubes under the tax benefit rule. We have not addressed ourselves to this issue previously. See
The tax benefit rule provides that an item properly offset against gross income in determining 1 year's tax liability is includable in gross income when it is recovered in a subsequent year.
*38 *447 Relying on
In our opinion the understanding of "recovery" upon which the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in South Lake Farms, Inc., *39 rests is unduly restrictive. It is well established, for example, that an item of expenditure that has been properly accrued but not paid is deemed to be recovered when liability for the item terminates.
Service was permitted to expense the cost of the tires and tubes which it purchased, on the assumption that their useful life would be fully exhausted in its operations. Once Service had expensed their cost, the tires and tubes were therefore deemed to have been*40 fully consumed in its operations for purposes of Federal income taxation whatever their fair market value may have been. If, having expensed the cost of the tires and tubes Service subsequently treated them as property having a fair market value in a transaction of consequence in the scheme of Federal income taxation, it would therefore necessarily be deemed to have received tires and tubes identical to them immediately prior to that transaction.
*448 When Service was liquidated, among the property which it distributed to petitioner, its sole shareholder, were tires and tubes having a fair market value of $ 36,394.67. Service had previously expensed the cost of these items. It must therefore be deemed to have received immediately prior to its liquidation, tires and tubes equal in value to those which it distributed.
Service's receipt of tires and tubes which is deemed to have occurred for purposes of Federal income taxation, *41 was occasioned by its distribution of property in liquidation. Section 336 provides that a corporation shall not recognize gain or loss on the distribution of property in liquidation. The receipt of the tires and tubes, however, is an event of independent significance for purposes of Federal income taxation and is therefore not subject to section 336.
We therefore hold that under the tax benefit rule Service had to include in gross income on its liquidation the lesser of the fair market value of the tires and tubes which it distributed or the portion of their cost attributable to their useful life remaining at the time of the distribution.
There is no indication in the record of significant fluctuation in the cost of tires and tubes. In this instance, therefore, the portion of the cost of the tires and tubes attributable to their remaining useful life is equal to their fair market value at the time of the distribution, $ 36,394.67, *42 and it is that amount which Service had to include in gross income on its liquidation. 7
At this juncture we would take note of the decision of the Supreme Court in
Petitioner contends that under Nash an accrual basis corporate taxpayer which provides for bad debt losses with respect to its accounts receivable by maintaining a reserve account would not be required*43 under the tax benefit rule to include the reserve in gross income if it distributed the receivables in liquidation; and that by analogy we are precluded by Nash from applying the tax benefit rule in the case now before us.
*449 In so contending petitioner fails to perceive that Nash presupposes that the fair market value of the receivables distributed equals their net worth, i.e., their face value less the amount in the reserve for bad debt; and that the case now before us is better analogized to the situation in which the fair market value of the receivables exceeds their net worth. Nash implies that in the latter case the reserve would be includable in the gross income of the liquidating corporation to the extent the fair market value of the receivables exceeded their net worth. See
Decision will be entered under
Simpson, J., concurring: Although I agree with the Court's conclusions in this*44 case, I wish to emphasize that there was a "recovery" in this case because the liquidation was of the type described in
By our holding in this case, we are expressing no position concerning the tax consequences when property is distributed in other types of liquidations.
Tannenwald, J., dissenting: I disagree with the majority's application of the tax benefit rule to the facts presented herein on the*45 simple ground that there was no recovery within the meaning of the third prong of that rule which I set forth in my concurring *450 opinion in
In every case cited by the majority, in which the tax benefit rule has been applied, there was*46 a present economic benefit, either by way of an actual receipt of funds or a release of a liability resulting in an increase in the taxpayer's net worth. In both
*47 The only apparent source of authority for a broader reading of the word "recovery" is
Income tax liability must be determined for annual periods on the basis of facts as they existed in each period. When recovery or some other event which is inconsistent with what has been done in the past occurs, adjustment must be made in reporting income for the year in which the change occurs. [Emphasis added.]
*451 Since that case involved an actual recovery in the form of a receipt by the taxpayer of a "refund of the taxes which formed a basis for deductions from its income in prior years,"
To the extent that the majority reads the language of Block to sanction the application of the tax benefit rule where the only event is the cessation of need for the prior deduction, its approach is directly contrary to that taken in
Two aspects of the instant situation obviously influenced the majority in reaching their conclusion: (1) The feeling that, unless the tax benefit *50 rule is applied, petitioner will have the equivalent of a double deduction and (2) the need to have parity between the applications of sections 336 and 337, 2 a problem which I dealt with extensively in my concurring opinions in
As to the first aspect, since the petitioner realized nothing upon its own liquidation, it cannot be said to have enjoyed any "double deduction." Compare
To the extent that there is a double deduction herein, it arises from the fact that the distributee corporation appears entitled to expense its stepped-up basis in the tires and tubes. But any advantage to the distributee corporation by reason of a
As far as parity between sections 336 and 337 is concerned, the courts have thus far refrained from embracing any absolute rule. See
In analyzing the issue before us, I think it is of some significance that the recapture of depreciation deductions which *454 Congress has seen fit to impose in corporate liquidations (see
If we are to be guided by legislative expression, let it be by section 111, the statutory tax benefit rule. This provision excludes from gross income the amount of a prior deduction later recovered to the extent the earlier deduction did not result in a tax benefit. This provision requires an actual economic recovery and its thrust in terms of the tax benefit rule is one of limitation; it was enacted to "harness the 'benefit theory' to a standard formula which could be applied with reasonable uniformity." See 1 Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation, sec. 7.34, n. 38 (Malone rev. 1974). 4 To permit the word "recovery" to take on Procrustean attributes would clearly not serve this purpose.
*56 In sum, I simply cannot find that element of "recovery" herein which the application of the tax benefit rule demands. Similarly, I cannot bring myself to dispense with the "recovery" requirement (or alternatively to find a fictional "recovery") in order to apply that rule and impute a taxable event to a corporate liquidation in kind under circumstances where such taxability has heretofore not been considered to exist. In this connection, it is interesting to note that this Court, in the past, has refused to activate "the abstract notion of tax benefit" to require a taxpayer to include in income gratuitously canceled interest on his indebtedness, notwithstanding the fact that such taxpayer had accrued and deducted such interest in prior years.
To the extent that petitioner expensed tires and tubes purchased in the year of liquidation, an adjustment should be made in petitioner's deductions for that year under section 446(b). *455
Footnotes
1. Service may also have distributed to petitioner tires and tubes which may have been in inventory at the time of its liquidation. None of the issues which we are to decide relate to any such tires and tubes. All further references to tires and tubes in this opinion are to those whose cost Service had expensed prior to its liquidation.↩
2. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated.↩
3. All outstanding issues of fair market value having been resolved, petitioner's basis in the various assets which it received on the liquidation of Service may be computed under
Rule 155, Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Respondent concedes that petitioner is entitled to deduct on the consolidated return filed for 1967 the basis allocated to the tires and tubes.↩
4. See
sec. 1.446-1(a)(4)(ii), Income Tax Regs.↩ 5. Certainly the burden of proving the contrary would be upon petitioner.
Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111↩ (1933) .6. In deciding
South Lake Farms, Inc., 36 T.C. 1027↩ (1961) , this Court did not address itself to the issue of whether there had been a recovery for purposes of the tax benefit rule. That issue was dealt with only by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit; and it is on the decision of that court that petitioner relies.7. Our holding pertains solely to the distribution in liquidation of property whose cost has previously been expensed. We point this out to preclude inapposite analogies to the distribution in liquidation of fully depreciated property.
Commissioner v. Anders, 414 F.2d 1283, 1288 (10th Cir. 1969) , revg.48 T.C. 815 (1967) , cert. denied396 U.S. 958 (1969) . See also the concurring opinion of Judge Tannenwald inEstate of David B. Munter, 63 T.C. 663, 679-680↩ (1975) .1. It should be noted that the expensing of the tires and tubes in previous years in and of itself created no asset or liability which was capable of transfer or whose disposition would have affected the petitioners' net worth. Cf.
Nash v. United States, 398 U.S. 1, n. 4 (1970) ;Argus, Inc., 45 T.C. 63, 69-70↩ (1965) .2. It should be noted that the taxability of the corporation is determined under secs. 336 and 337, whether the liquidation is taxable or tax free to the recipients under secs. 331 through 333.↩
3. Compare
sec. 1.162-3, Income Tax Regs. , withsecs. 1.263(a)-1 and1.263(a)-2, Income Tax Regs. See generallyWelch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111, 113↩ (1933) .4. See also H. Rept. No. 2333, to accompany H.R. 7378 (Pub. L. No. 753), 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 45, 69-71 (1942).↩