Title 7AgricultureRelease 119-73

§616 Stock on hand when tax takes effect or terminates

Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 26— - AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - COMMODITY BENEFITS › § 616

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

When a processing tax starts, ends, or changes, people holding goods that were made mostly from a taxed commodity must have their tax charges adjusted. If the tax starts, anyone holding those processed articles for sale on the start date (including items in transit) must pay the tax that would be due if the processing had happened that day. Imported items in customs must pay before release. For sugar, non-retail floor stocks are taxed in the month they are sold or used under IRS rules approved by the Treasury. If the tax ends, holders get a refund, credit, or abatement equal to the tax that would have been due if processing had happened on the end date. How the relief is given depends on whether the holder already paid the tax or is the processor. If there was a rate increase before June 1, 1934, refunds cannot exceed the original rate in effect then. Retail stocks held by stores on the start date are generally exempt, but not stocks in warehouses or stocks not sold within 30 days. Special rules limit exemptions for flour, certain wheat products, sugar and cotton products. Sugar bought or held under certain conditions before April 25, 1934, and sugar imported that paid the duty rate in effect on January 1, 1934, can be exempt. The Secretary of Agriculture may buy up to 300,000 tons (raw value) of surplus beet-area sugar at no more than market price and may sell or distribute it; proceeds are available for specified USDA purposes. If the processing tax rate changes on or after June 1, 1934, holders get a refund or extra charge equal to the rate difference (with a special restriction for hogs and limited application to certain wheat and sugar products). If the Secretary of Agriculture certifies a suspension or revocation under section 615(a), the refund or charge rules described above apply. These rules do not apply to rice.

Full Legal Text

Title 7, §616

Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)Upon the sale or other disposition of any article processed wholly or in chief value from any commodity with respect to which a processing tax is to be levied, that on the date the tax first takes effect or wholly terminates with respect to the commodity, is held for sale or other disposition (including articles in transit) by any person, there shall be made a tax adjustment as follows:
(1)Whenever the processing tax first takes effect, there shall be levied, assessed, and collected a tax to be paid by such person equivalent to the amount of the processing tax which would be payable with respect to the commodity from which processed if the processing had occurred on such date. Such tax upon articles imported prior to, but in customs custody or control on, the effective date, shall be paid prior to release therefrom. In the case of sugar, the tax on floor stocks, except the retail stocks of persons engaged in retail trade, shall be paid for the month in which the stocks are sold, or used in the manufacture of other articles, under rules and regulations prescribed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury.
(2)Whenever the processing tax is wholly terminated, (A) there shall be refunded or credited in the case of a person holding such stocks with respect to which a tax under this chapter has been paid, or (B) there shall be credited or abated in the case of a person holding such stocks with respect to which a tax under this chapter is payable, where such person is the processor liable for the payment of such tax, or (C) there shall be refunded or credited (but not before the tax has been paid) in the case of a person holding such stocks with respect to which a tax under this chapter is payable, where such person is not the processor liable for the payment of such tax, a sum in an amount equivalent to the processing tax which would have been payable with respect to the commodity from which processed if the processing had occurred on such date: Provided, That in the case of any commodity with respect to which there was any increase, effective prior to June 1, 1934, in the rate of the processing tax, no such refund, credit, or abatement, shall be in an amount which exceeds the equivalent of the initial rate of the processing tax in effect with respect to such commodity.
(b)The tax imposed by subsection (a) of this section shall not apply to the retail stocks of persons engaged in retail trade, held at the date the processing tax first takes effect; but such retail stocks shall not be deemed to include stocks held in a warehouse on such date, or such portion of other stocks held on such date as are not sold or otherwise disposed of within thirty days thereafter. Except as to flour and prepared flour, and cereal preparations made chiefly from wheat, as classified in Wheat Regulations, Series 1, Supplement 1, and as to any article processed wholly or in chief value from cotton, the tax refund, credit, or abatement provided in subsection (a) of this section shall not apply to the retail stocks of persons engaged in retail trade, nor to any article (except sugar) processed wholly or in chief value from sugar beets, sugarcane, or any product thereof, nor to any article (except flour, prepared flour and cereal preparations made chiefly from wheat, as classified in Wheat Regulations, Series 1, Supplement 1) processed wholly or in chief value from wheat, held on the date the processing tax is wholly terminated.
(c)(1)Any sugar, imported prior to the effective date of a processing tax on sugar beets and sugarcane, with respect to which it is established (under regulations prescribed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury) that there was paid at the time of importation a duty at the rate in effect on January 1, 1934, and (2) any sugar held on April 25, 1934, by, or to be delivered under a bona fide contract of sale entered into prior to April 25, 1934, to, any manufacturer or converter, for use in the production of any article (except sugar) and not for ultimate consumption as sugar, and (3) any article (except sugar) processed wholly or in chief value from sugar beets, sugarcane, or any product thereof, shall be exempt from taxation under subsection (a) of this section, but sugar held in customs custody or control on April 25, 1934, shall not be exempt from taxation under subsection (a) of this section, unless the rate of duty paid upon the withdrawal thereof was the rate of duty in effect on January 1, 1934.
(d)The Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to purchase, out of such proceeds of taxes as are available therefor, during the period this chapter is in effect with respect to sugar beets and sugarcane, not in excess of three hundred thousand tons of sugar raw value from the surplus stocks of direct-consumption sugar produced in the United States beet-sugar area, at a price not in excess of the market price for direct consumption sugar on the date of purchase, and to dispose of such sugar by sale or otherwise, including distribution to any organization for the relief of the unemployed, under such conditions and at such times as will tend to effectuate the declared policy of section 608a of this title. The sugar so purchased shall not be included in the quota for the United States beet-sugar area. All proceeds received by the Secretary of Agriculture, in the exercise of the powers granted, are appropriated to be available to the Secretary of Agriculture for the purposes described in subsections (a) and (b) of section 612 of this title.
(e)Upon the sale or other disposition of any article processed wholly or in chief value from any commodity with respect to which the existing rate of the processing tax is to be increased, or decreased, that on the date such increase, or decrease, first takes effect with respect to the commodity, is held for sale or other disposition (including articles in transit) by any person, and upon the production of any article from a commodity in process on the date on which the rate of the processing tax is to be increased or decreased, there shall be made a tax adjustment as follows:
(1)Whenever, on or after June 1, 1934, the rate of the processing tax on the processing of the commodity generally or for any designated use or uses, or as to any designated product or products thereof for any designated use or uses, or as to any class of products, is decreased, there shall be credited or refunded to such person an amount equivalent to the difference between the rate of the processing tax payable or paid at the time immediately preceding the decrease in rate and the rate of the processing tax which would have been payable with respect to the commodity from which processed, if the processing had occurred on such date: Provided, however, That no such credit or refund shall be made in the case of hogs unless the rate of the processing tax immediately preceding said decrease is equal to, or less than, the rate of the processing tax in effect on the date on which any floor stocks tax was paid prior to the adoption of this subsection. In the case of wheat the provisions of this paragraph and of paragraph (2) of this subsection shall apply to flour, prepared flour and cereal preparations made chiefly from wheat, as classified in Wheat Regulations, Series 1, Supplement 1 only; in the case of sugarcane and sugar beets the provisions of this paragraph and of paragraph (2) of this subsection shall apply to sugar only.
(2)Whenever the rate of the processing tax on the processing of the commodity generally, or for any designated use or uses, or as to any designated product or products thereof for any designated use or uses, or as to any class of products, is increased, there shall be levied, assessed and collected a tax to be paid by such person equivalent to the difference between the rate of the processing tax payable or paid at the time immediately preceding the increase in rate and the rate of the processing tax which would be payable with respect to the commodity from which processed, if the processing had occurred on such date.
(3)Whenever the processing tax is suspended or is to be refunded pursuant to a certification of the Secretary of Agriculture to the Secretary of the Treasury, under section 615(a) of this title, the provisions of paragraph (1) of this subsection shall become applicable.
(4)Whenever the Secretary of Agriculture revokes any certification to the Secretary of the Treasury under section 615(a) of this title, the provisions of paragraph (2) of this subsection shall become applicable.
(5)The provisions of this subsection shall be effective on and after June 1, 1934.
(f)The provisions of this section shall not be applicable with respect to rice.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Constitutionality Section may be obsolete in view of the Supreme Court’s holding that the processing and floor stock taxes provided for by the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 are unconstitutional. See U.S. v. Butler, Mass. 1936, 56 S.Ct. 312, 297 U.S. 1, 80 L.Ed. 477, 102 A.L.R. 914.

Amendments

1936—Subsec. (e)(1). Act
June 22, 1936, § 601(a), (g), reenacted par. (1) for certain refund purposes only and substituted “on or after
June 1, 1934” for “subsequent to
June 26, 1934”, respectively. Act
June 4, 1936, substituted “on or after
June 1, 1934” for “subsequent to
June 26, 1934”. Subsec. (e)(3). Act
June 22, 1936, § 601(a), reenacted par. (3) for certain refund purposes only. Subsec. (g). Act
June 22, 1936, § 601(c), repealed subsec. (g) which related to the time for filing refunds. 1935—Subsec. (a)(2). Act Aug. 24, 1935, § 25, substituted a new par. (2) for former par. (2). Subsec. (b). Act Aug. 24, 1935, § 26, amended second sentence generally. Subsec. (c). Act Aug. 24, 1935, § 20(b), struck out last sentence. Subsec. (e). Act Mar. 18, 1935, redesignated former subsec. (c) as (e). Subsec. (e)(1). Act Aug. 24, 1935, § 27(a), inserted “subsequent to
June 26, 1934” at beginning of paragraph, and “in the case of hogs” after “made” in proviso and inserted “In the case of wheat the provisions of this paragraph and of paragraph (2) of this subsection shall apply to flour, prepared flour and cereal preparations made chiefly from wheat, as classified in Wheat

Regulations

, Series 1, Supplement 1 only; in the case of sugarcane and sugar beets the provisions of this paragraph and of paragraph (2) of this subsection shall apply to sugar only.” Subsec. (f). Act Mar. 18, 1935, added subsec. (f). Subsec. (g). Act Aug. 24, 1935, § 27(b), added subsec. (g). 1934—Subsec. (a)(1). Act
May 9, 1934, § 10, inserted second sentence. Subsec. (c). Act
June 26, 1934, added subsec. (c). Subsec. (c)(1). Act
May 9, 1934, § 17, added par. (1). Subsec. (d). Act
May 9, 1934, § 17, added subsec. (d).

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

SeparabilityValidity of remainder of this chapter as not affected should any of the provisions of this chapter be declared unconstitutional. See section 614 of this title. AppropriationsAppropriations for refunds, etc., see note set out under section 610 of this title.

Executive Documents

Transfer of Functions

Functions of all officers of Department of the Treasury, and functions of all agencies and employees of such Department, transferred, with certain exceptions, to Secretary of the Treasury, with power vested in him to authorize their performance or performance of any of his functions, by any of such officers, agencies, and employees, by 1950 Reorg. Plan No. 26, §§ 1, 2, eff. July 31, 1950, 15 F.R. 4935, 64 Stat. 1280, set out in the Appendix to Title 5, Government Organization and Employees. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, referred to in this section, is an officer of Department of the Treasury.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

7 U.S.C. § 616

Title 7Agriculture

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73