Koby v. Commissioner , 14 T.C. 1103 ( 1950 )


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  • Z. W. Koby, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Respondent
    Koby v. Commissioner
    Docket No. 21637
    United States Tax Court
    June 7, 1950, Promulgated

    *180 Decision will be entered for the respondent.

    1. Petitioner kept his books and filed his income tax returns on the cash basis for 1942, and for many years prior thereto. However, since the purchase and sale of merchandise was an income-producing factor, petitioner should have been on an accrual basis during those years. For 1942 respondent recomputed petitioner's gross income on an accrual basis and made certain adjustments to reflect the transition in reporting income from the cash to an accrual basis. Held, that petitioner should properly have reported his income on an accrual basis for 1942, and the adjustments in gross income made by respondent to reflect the change from the cash to an accrual basis were proper. C. L. Carver, 10 T. C. 171; affd., 173 Fed. (2d) 29, and William Hardy, Inc. v. Commissioner, 82 Fed. (2d) 249, followed.

    2. Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's income tax for 1943, computed pursuant to section 6 (b) of the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943 and based on adjustments to 1942 income which were in excess of 25 per cent of petitioner's total *181 gross income for 1942 and 1943. The deficiency notice was mailed more than five years after petitioner filed his return for 1942, but less than five years after he filed his return for 1943. Held, the five-year period of limitation embodied in section 275 (c) runs from the date on which petitioner filed his return for 1943, and the assessment of the deficiency by respondent was timely.

    Morton S. Zaller, Esq., and Bennet Kleinman, Esq., for the petitioner.
    William R. Bagby, Esq., for the respondent.
    Harron, Judge.

    HARRON

    *1104 The Commissioner has determined a deficiency of $ 18,562.90 in petitioner's income and victory tax for the year 1943. The year 1942 is involved because of the foregiveness feature of the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943.

    The issues for decision are (1) whether certain adjustments made by respondent to petitioner's income for the year 1942 to recognize the change from the cash basis to an accrual basis of accounting in that year were proper, and (2) whether the adjustments to 1942 income so made were barred by the statute of limitations.

    The petitioner filed his original and amended income tax returns for the years 1942 and 1943 with the collector for the eighteenth district of Ohio.

    This proceeding was submitted under a stipulation of facts and joint exhibits from which the following findings of fact are made.

    FINDINGS OF FACT.

    The facts which have been stipulated are found as stipulated, and the stipulation is incorporated*183 herein by this reference.

    Petitioner is an individual who for many years, including 1942 and 1943, has been engaged in the business of selling photographic equipment and drug supplies at retail in Cleveland, Ohio. From the beginning of petitioner's business he kept his books and filed his income tax returns on the cash basis. It was his practice to write the words "Not taken" on the return where the return called for "Inventories" and to treat his purchases as the cost of goods sold. Among the returns which petitioner so filed was his return for the year 1926. Subsequently, he received a letter from the Commissioner dated March 6, 1928, which read as follows:

    Your income tax return for the calendar year 1926 has been examined and is considered to be correct as submitted.

    The case will be regarded as closed unless information other than that shown on your return should subsequently be discovered, in which event the Commissioner reserves the right to reopen the case in accordance with the provisions of existing laws.

    The purchase and the sale of merchandise was an income-producing factor in petitioner's business during 1942 and 1943, and for many years prior thereto. In order clearly*184 to determine petitioner's income for those years, it was necessary that inventories be used. During 1942 and 1943, and for many years prior thereto, petitioner's business was such as to require that his books be kept and his Federal income tax returns be made on an accrual basis in order clearly to reflect his income.

    On March 15, 1943, petitioner filed his income tax return on the cash basis for the year 1942, reporting gross income of $ 10,253.11. On March *1105 15, 1944, he filed his income tax return on the cash basis for the year 1943, reporting gross income of $ 9,587.40 for that year. On March 14, 1947, he filed amended returns on an accrual basis for both the taxable years 1942 and 1943, together with a claim for refund, in which he alleged an overpayment of income tax for the year 1943 in the amount of $ 1,948.76. In the amended returns, he reported gross income of $ 4,040.95 for 1942 and $ 2,810.91 for 1943. At the same time, petitioner also filed amended returns on an accrual basis for the years 1944 and 1945, and filed his original 1946 return on an accrual basis.

    At no time prior to the filing of the amended returns did petitioner request or receive specific*185 permission from the Commissioner to change his method of accounting from the cash to an accrual basis.

    Petitioner's amended returns for the years 1942 and 1943, involving a change from the cash basis to an accrual basis, were approved on behalf of the Commissioner on the ground that an accrual method was the only one which would correctly reflect petitioner's income in view of the fact that petitioner's retail business utilized inventories. However, petitioner was notified through his counsel that his claim for refund was denied and that additional taxes were due because of certain adjustments alleged to be necessitated by petitioner's change in his basis of reporting. These adjustments added $ 38,901.11 to petitioner's gross income for 1942. This amount is in excess of 25 per cent of the total gross income which petitioner had reported for 1942 and 1943. Upon the receipt of this notice, petitioner informed the Commissioner that he wished to withdraw his claim for refund, but permission to do so was not granted.

    The notice of deficiency was mailed to petitioner on November 10, 1948. Assessment of the deficiency in petitioner's income and victory tax liability for 1943 was made*186 by respondent less than five years after the date on which petitioner filed his return for 1943 and was timely. In the notice of deficiency, respondent gave the following explanation for the adjustments which he made:

    On March 14, 1947 you filed an amended return for the year ended December 31, 1942 on the accrual method of accounting that reflected the business income as if you had been previously reporting your income on the accrual basis. It is held that you failed to make the necessary adjustments to recognize the change from the cash basis to the accrual basis of accounting and in so doing understated your business income in the amount of $ 38,901.11, computed as follows:

    Opening inventory - January 1, 1942$ 39,441.91
    Plus: Accounts Receivable - January 1, 19421,125.30
    Total$ 40,567.21
    Less: Accounts Payable - January 1, 19421,666.10
    Increase to income$ 38,901.11

    *1106 The opening inventory of $ 39,441.91 represents a double deduction as it had been included in the cost of merchandise purchased in prior years. Accounts receivable of $ 1,125.30 and accounts payable of $ 1,666.10 have never been used in determining the net income of prior*187 years under the cash basis and never would be under the accrual basis; therefore, they should be recognized in the adjustments changing to the accrual basis of accounting.

    OPINION.

    The principal issue in this proceeding is whether respondent erred in requiring that petitioner's gross income for the year 1942 be adjusted to reflect a necessary change from the cash to an accrual basis of accounting in the method under which petitioner reported his income. The adjustments made by respondent were: (1) Opening inventory on January 1, 1942, was disallowed as part of the cost of goods sold because it represented purchases which had been deducted as expenses in prior years on the cash basis, and, if in the year of change from the cash to an accrual basis the opening inventory was included in cost of goods sold, the petitioner would receive the advantage of a double deduction of this expense; (2) accounts receivable on hand January 1, 1942, were added to income for the year 1942 because, since they were not properly includible in income of prior years under the cash basis, if they were not included in income in the year of change from the cash to an accrual basis, they would escape taxation*188 entirely; (3) the parties agree that if the adjustments in inventory and accounts receivable are proper, a similar adjustment in accounts payable must also be made.

    Under section 41 of the Internal Revenue Code, respondent had the authority to require petitioner to report his income for 1942 in accordance with a method of accounting which clearly reflected his income. See Brown v. Helvering, 291 U.S. 193">291 U.S. 193; Lucas v. American Code Co., 280 U.S. 445">280 U.S. 445. Petitioner agrees that for the year 1942, and for many years prior thereto, he should have reported his income on an accrual basis, since that is the only method of accounting which correctly reflects the income of a business in which the purchase and sale of merchandise is an income-producing factor. See Regulations 111, secs. 29.22(c)-1, 29.41-2. Petitioner objects, however, to the adjustments in gross income made by respondent in changing petitioner's returns from the cash to an accrual basis, and contends that these adjustments represent an attempt by respondent to correct in 1942 errors in returns of previous years. The correctness of the amounts of the adjustments*189 is not disputed.

    A similar question as to the propriety of making such adjustments in the year in which the Commissioner required that the method of reporting income be changed from the cash to an accrual basis was *1107 before us in C. L. Carver, 10 T. C. 171, 174; affd., 173 Fed. (2d) 29. In holding that the adjustments were proper, we said:

    We do not know, nor are we concerned with, why the respondent did not make a change in petitioner's method of reporting income in some previous year. It may have been due to error or oversight or lack of information. One assumption is as good as another. See Niles Bement Pond Co.v.United States, supra [281 U.S. 357]. We deem this immaterial. Section 41 of the Internal Revenue Code provides that the net income for income tax purposes shall be computed in accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed by the taxpayer in keeping his books, unless such method does not clearly reflect income, in which case such method as, in the opinion of the Commissioner, does clearly reflect income, shall be used. It was within the power of the petitioner to have effected*190 the change in the method of reporting his income by requesting permission of the Commissioner so to do. This, petitioner knew. Why he did not do so is not shown by the record, nor is it material to the issue. The fact is respondent, in 1941, determined that the change from the cash to the accrual method of computing income should be employed. This was within his jurisdiction and authority. Petitioner does not contest the accuracy of the amounts of adjustments made. As above observed, the record does not establish that in so doing respondent acted without authority or erroneously. As stated in Schuman Carriage Co., Ltd., 43 B. T. A. 880: "The failure of the petitioner to make its returns consistently upon the accrual basis may place it in an unfortunate position. But for this situation the petitioner is alone to blame."

    As in C. L. Carver, respondent in this proceeding properly has determined that petitioner should report his income for 1942 on an accrual basis. This necessitates a change in 1942 from the cash to an accrual method, and certain adjustments in gross income for that year are necessary to effect this required change. In making*191 the adjustments, respondent did not act without authority or erroneously. In William Hardy, Inc. v. Commissioner, 82 Fed. (2d) 249, the Commissioner determined that an accrual basis was necessary for the year in question in order clearly to reflect the income of a taxpayer who had previously been on the cash basis. The Commissioner made adjustments in that taxpayer's gross income for the year in question similar to those in dispute in the instant proceeding. The Court of Appeals held that the adjustments were proper and said:

    In putting the petitioner on the accrual basis in 1925, the commissioner, bound to do it in a way that would clearly reflect its income, was not required to adhere strictly to a stereotyped accrual form of accounting. It is obvious that there must be some leeway in making the change from the cash basis in order that the income for the first taxable period under the changed method of reporting will be reflected accurately. To permit the deduction of opening inventory which has already been deducted from income in previous years would allow that to be used twice as a deduction and would result in computing the petitioner's*192 taxable income in an amount that much less than its actual income subject to taxation. To prevent this it was proper to include the opening inventory as the board did. See Appeal of Barbas, 1 B. T. A. 589.

    *1108 Petitioner cites Greene Motor Co., 5 T.C. 314">5 T. C. 314, and Estate of Samuel Mnookin, 12 T. C. 744 (on appeal to the Eighth Circuit). But those cases involved the propriety of increasing the income of one year by an amount erroneously excluded from income in a prior year and are readily distinguishable from the issue in the present proceeding. The opinions in those cases distinguish the C. L. Carver and William Hardy, Inc., cases, supra, on the ground that the latter cases involved adjustments made necessary by a change in the method of reporting income from the cash to an accrual basis, while the taxpayers in the Greene and Mnookin cases had consistently followed an accrual method of accounting and no change in the method of reporting income was necessary. But the adjustments in dispute in this proceeding are made necessary by a change in 1942 from the cash to*193 an accrual basis in petitioner's method of reporting income, and the C. L. Carver and William Hardy, Inc., cases are directly in point.

    It is held that the adjustments made by respondent in petitioner's gross income for 1942 were proper.

    A further issue is raised by petitioner's plea of the statute of limitations. The deficiency notice was concededly mailed subsequent to the expiration of the three-year period of limitation prescribed as the general rule in section 275 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code. Respondent, however, asserts that it was nevertheless timely as being within the five-year period specified in section 275 (c) for cases in which "the taxpayer omits from gross income an amount properly includible therein which is in excess of 25 per centum of the amount of gross income stated in the return." Under the first issue, we have held that the adjustments made by respondent in petitioner's gross income for 1942 were proper. These adjustments result in the addition to petitioner's taxable income of an amount which is concededly in excess of 25 per cent of the total gross income shown on either petitioner's original or his amended returns for the years 1942 and 1943. *194 But petitioner contends that, as the adjustments which result in the deficiency herein were made in his 1942 tax return, the respondent's assessment of the deficiency is barred by the fact that the deficiency notice was mailed on November 10, 1948, more than five years after March 15, 1943, the date on which petitioner filed his return for 1942. Respondent argues, however, that the deficiency notice was timely, since the petitioner omitted from gross income more than 25 per cent of the amount properly includible therein and the deficiency was assessed within five years of March 15, 1944, the date on which petitioner filed his return for 1943. The question under this issue, therefore, is whether the five-year period of limitation against adjustments in petitioner's income for the year 1942 properly runs from March 15, 1943, or from March 15, 1944.

    *1109 A question similar to the one which petitioner here raises as to the period of limitation was before us in Lawrence W. Carpenter, 10 T. C. 64, and was decided adversely to the contention of the taxpayer. In that case, the Commissioner determined a deficiency against the taxpayer for the year 1943*195 based upon adjustments to his taxable income for the year 1942. The notice of deficiency was mailed more than three years after the taxpayer filed his 1942 return, but less than three years after he filed his 1943 tax return. The issue in that case was whether the three-year limitation period embodied in section 275 (a) ran from the date on which the taxpayer filed his 1942 return, or from the date on which he filed his 1943 return. In holding that the forgiveness provisions of the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943 in effect combined the taxes for the years 1942 and 1943 into an indivisible whole, so that under section 275 (a) the period allowed the Commissioner in which to make adjustments in the taxpayer's 1942 income tax return for the purpose of determining a deficiency for the year 1943 was three years from the date on which the 1943 return was filed, we said:

    Considerable clarity can be achieved in the disposition of the question before us by keeping in mind the income tax return under consideration. It is the 1943 return.

    From the effective date of the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943 the petitioner no longer possessed the right to file a petition with the Tax Court for a *196 redetermination of the 1942 income tax liability as such. That tax liability, with the operation of the Current Tax Payment Act, became discharged as of September 1, 1943. After that date there was no longer any purpose to be served by the statute of limitations controlling the assessment of the 1942 tax because the tax liability itself for that year was wiped out. Any taxpayer aggrieved by the Commissioner's computation of the amount equal to 25 per cent of the 1942 tax liability which the law directed should be added to the 1943 tax liability, retained his remedy for any error in the 1942 computation in the filing of a petition for a redetermination of the 1943 tax. In fact, that is just what the taxpayer herein has done. The amount which the Commissioner computed to be 25 per cent of the 1942 tax became an integral part of the 1943 tax liability and when the taxpayer would procure a redetermination of the 1943 tax he had an adequate and ample remedy.

    Therefore, since the taxpayer had no right to a redetermination of the 1942 tax liability and since the Commissioner, after he had determined 25 per cent of the 1942 tax liability, could do nothing more towards the collection thereof*197 than include such an amount in his determination and assessment of the 1943 tax, then there was obviously no purpose for the Commissioner or advantage for the taxpayer in the Commissioner making any assessment of the 1942 tax, even if he were empowered so to do. * * *

    See, also, Fred B. Snite, 10 T. C. 523; affd., on another issue, 177 Fed. (2d) 819; Estate of Carr V. Van Anda, 12 T.C. 1158">12 T. C. 1158.

    The petitioner seeks to distinguish the Carpenter case on the ground that there the only question was whether the Commissioner could make *1110 adjustments to the taxpayer's 1942 income for the purpose of determining the 1943 tax, on which the statute of limitations had not yet run, whereas the question in the instant proceeding is whether the Commissioner, in order to invoke the five-year limitation period against assessment contained in section 275 (c), may rely on the petitioner's omission from gross income for 1942 of an amount which is in excess of 25 per cent of the amount of gross income reported for the years 1942 and 1943. *199 We do not believe, however, that this is a valid ground upon*198 which to distinguish the Carpenter case. Although subsection (c) of section 275 is an exception to the general limitation period contained in subsection (a), both subsection (a) and subsection (c) deal with the period of limitation against assessment after a return is filed. The question under both subsections is whether assessment was made within the requisite period after the return for the year in question was filed. It must be borne in mind that respondent has not determined any deficiency for the year 1942. The only year in question in this proceeding is 1943, although the forgiveness provisions of the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943 require that the petitioner's income for 1942 be considered in arriving at his tax liability for 1943. *200 *1111 We believe that the reasoning quoted supra from the Carpenter case is no less applicable to the five-year limitation period contained in subsection (c) of section 275 than it is to the three-year limitation period embodied in subsection (a) of that section. It is held that respondent's adjustments in petitioner's income for 1942 were made within the period of limitation contained in section 275 (c).

    Decision will be entered for the respondent.


    Footnotes

Document Info

Docket Number: Docket No. 21637

Citation Numbers: 14 T.C. 1103, 1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 180

Judges: Harron

Filed Date: 6/7/1950

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024