Commissioner v. Petroleum Reclamation Co.
Commissioner v. Petroleum Reclamation Co.
Opinion of the Court
These tax cases, tried, argued, and disposed of as one, depend on their own particular pertinent facts, which are as follows: The Petroleum Reclamation Corporation (hereafter called Reclamation Corporation) was organized April 28, 1926. It thereupon acquired all the stock of the Petroleum Reclamation Company (hereafter called Reclamation Company) and all the stock of the Looker Oil Company (hereafter called Looker). For the balance of the year Reclamation Corporation operated the properties of Reclamation Company and Looker, and thereon made a profit of $41,913.60. From January 1, 1926, to April 28, 1926, Reclamation Company operated its property at a loss of $3,970.17; and during the same period Looker operated its property at a loss of $8,-232.30. On its income return for 1926, Reclamation Corporation sought to reduce its gain of $41,913.60 by deduction therefrom of the loss made by Reclamation Company ($3,970.17), from January 1, 1926, to April 28, 1926, and the loss made by Looker ($8,-232.30), from January 1, 1926, to April 28, 1926. The Commissioner refused to so allow; the Board of Tax Appeals overruled him; hence this appeal by the Commissioner.
The basic fact is that as Reclamation Corporation, the taxpayer, only came into being April 28, 1926, its income arose only from its operation for the rest of the year. With the prior operations, losses, or profits
Reference
- Full Case Name
- COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE v. PETROLEUM RECLAMATION CO. SAME v. PETROLEUM RECLAMATION CORPORATION
- Status
- Published