DocketNumber: Docket No. 24006-88
Judges: WELLS
Filed Date: 7/30/1991
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*64
P purchased the assets of M and T in separate transactions, assigning a portion of the purchase price to inventory acquired from M and T. The value assigned to the purchased inventory was less than the value assigned to it by the targets under the first-in, first-out (FIFO) convention. Such assigned value was used as the base year cost for P's inventory under P's dollar value last-in, first-out (LIFO) method of inventory accounting.
P used the accrual acceptance1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*65 method of accounting for long-term contracts. P determined inventory costs attributable to such contracts using LIFO inventory costs for the year income attributable to such contracts was taken into account.
P claimed depreciation deductions on its consolidated return with respect to property acquired by a subsidiary not in existence for the full tax year of the consolidated group.
97 T.C. 120">*121 Respondent determined the following deficiencies in petitioner's Federal income tax:
Taxable Year Ending June 30 | Deficiency |
1977 | $ 31,210 |
1980 | $ 755,228 |
1981 | $ 1,952,926 |
1982 | $ 1,464,788 |
1983 | $ 197,751 |
1984 | $ 129,846 |
After concessions, the1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*66 issues remaining for decision are: (1) Whether respondent's determination that inventory acquired as part of petitioner's purchases of other businesses should be treated as pools or items separate from raw materials purchased or inventory manufactured subsequent to such acquisitions constituted a change in petitioner's method of accounting for inventories; (2) whether respondent abused his discretion in making the foregoing determination; (3) whether petitioner used the completed contract method of accounting for long-term contracts; (4) whether petitioner's income was clearly reflected where it offset income from a long-term contract with LIFO inventory costs calculated in the year that it recognized income from such long-term contract; (5) whether respondent properly disallowed certain depreciation deductions claimed by petitioner.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated for trial pursuant to Rule 91. 1 The stipulations and accompanying exhibits are incorporated in this Opinion by reference irrespective of any restatement below.
1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*67 Petitioner is a corporation with its principal place of business in Des Plaines, Illinois. Prior to December 26, 1986, petitioner was a subsidiary of Mayline Company, Inc. (Mayline), and became the successor in interest of Mayline as of December 26, 1986. Mayline used an accrual method of accounting for tax purposes. For taxable years ending in 1975 and 1976, Mayline used a fiscal year ending April 30. 97 T.C. 120">*122 During the taxable years in issue, Mayline's annual accounting period for tax purposes ended on June 30.
Mayline was incorporated on March 12, 1975, but did not engage in business prior to May 1, 1975. On March 25, 1975, Mayline entered into an agreement to purchase substantially all of the assets, including all of the inventory, of Mayline Company, Inc. (old Mayline). The price paid for old Mayline's assets was $ 3,000,000, plus assumption of old Mayline's liabilities. The agreement specifically allocated the purchase price among the assets acquired, excepting inventory. The residue of the purchase price was allocated to inventory. On the date that the sale was closed, April 29, 1975, old Mayline valued its inventory at $ 2,034,680.48 under the first-in, first-out (FIFO) 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*68 convention.
Mayline allocated $ 79,028.32 of the purchase price to the inventory purchased from old Mayline, which was further allocated among each item of inventory in proportion to its relative FIFO value in old Mayline's inventory at April 29, 1975. After the purchase, Mayline continued old Mayline's business of manufacturing drafting equipment and related furniture and accessories. Acquisition of old Mayline's inventory was necessary to continue such business. The products produced after the acquisition were identical to those produced by old Mayline prior to the sale. In maintaining its inventory records, Mayline made no distinction between inventory purchased in the acquisition of the assets of old Mayline and inventory subsequently purchased or produced. After the acquisition, Mayline also purchased drafting equipment and furniture as inventory for resale.
On its return for its taxable year ended April 30, 1975, Mayline elected to use the dollar value last-in, first-out (LIFO) inventory accounting method for its entire inventory. Mayline also elected to include its entire inventory in a single natural business unit (NBU) pool and to use the double extension method in1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*69 computing the LIFO value of its NBU pool. On April 30, 1975, Mayline's inventory consisted only of the inventory it had purchased from old Mayline. Mayline possessed an itemized listing of the inventory acquired from old Mayline. In subsequent years, Mayline treated the amount of the purchase price it had allocated to 97 T.C. 120">*123 old Mayline's inventory as the base-year cost for inventoriable items it purchased and manufactured.
Hamilton Industries, Inc. (Hamilton), was incorporated May 12, 1982, as a wholly owned subsidiary of Mayline, but did not engage in business prior to June 28, 1982. Hamilton used the accrual method of accounting to compute taxable income. On May 19, 1982, Hamilton entered into an agreement to purchase substantially all of the assets, including all of the inventory, of the Two Rivers Division of the Hamilton Division of American Hospital Supply Corporation (Two Rivers). The purchase price equalled $ 31,300,000, plus assumption of certain liabilities. After the acquisition, Hamilton continued Two Rivers' business of manufacturing laboratory and hospital case goods and furniture. Purchase of Two Rivers' inventory was necessary to continue such business.
Two Rivers1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*70 used the LIFO convention to value its inventory, and, as of June 28, 1982, the closing date of the sale, it valued such inventory at $ 6,550.262. The inventory also was valued under the FIFO convention at $ 16,566,320. The amount of the purchase price allocated to the inventory equalled its LIFO value in Two Rivers' hands, $ 6,550,262, which was further allocated among the items in inventory on the basis of their relative value as compared to the total inventory, determined using the FIFO convention. In keeping its inventory records, petitioner did not distinguish between inventory purchased from Two Rivers as part of the acquisition and inventory purchased or produced subsequently.
On its initial tax return, filed for the taxable year ended June 30, 1982, Hamilton elected to use the dollar value LIFO method of valuing its inventory. Hamilton also elected to include its entire inventory in a single NBU pool, and to use the double extension method in computing the LIFO value of its NBU pool. On June 30, 1982, Hamilton's inventory primarily consisted of inventory purchased from Two Rivers. For taxable year ended June 30, 1982, Hamilton considered the cost of its earliest inventory1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*71 acquisitions during the year to be the FIFO inventory values shown on the books of Two Rivers on June 28, 1982. In subsequent tax years, Hamilton treated the amount of the purchase 97 T.C. 120">*124 price it had allocated to the inventory purchased from Two Rivers as the base year cost for such inventoriable items.
Generally, petitioner's business was limited to the manufacture of goods for its customers; occasionally, however, it also contracted to install on customers' premises office furnishings petitioner manufactured. On average, such installation contracts required up to 24 months to complete, although a small number required more time. Petitioner included payments with respect to such contracts in gross income 90 days after installation was completed, when the customer was deemed to have accepted the work. Petitioner accumulated the cost of producing furniture and cabinetry pursuant to such contracts in its LIFO inventories. Petitioner allocated costs to inventory under the "full absorption" costing rules of
Included in the assets purchased by Hamilton from Two Rivers were 3-year Accelerated Cost Recovery System (ACRS) property with a cost of $ 2,048,993 and 5-year ACRS property with a cost of $ 10,659,386. In the consolidated return for the tax year ended June 30, 1982, filed by the affiliated group of which Hamilton was a part, petitioner claimed an ACRS depreciation deduction for such property under
OPINION
The issues in the instant case fall into three principal groups which we will discuss under separate headings: Accounting for Inventories Purchased in Acquisitions; Petitioner's Method of Accounting for Long-Term Contracts; 97 T.C. 120">*125 and Depreciation1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*73 of ACRS Property Acquired from Two Rivers.
Respondent determined that petitioner incorrectly combined inventory received in the old Mayline and Two Rivers acquisitions with raw materials purchased and inventory manufactured subsequent to such transactions for purposes of valuing its closing inventory. We first will discuss whether
1.
Respondent treated his determination with respect to the old Mayline transaction as a change in petitioner's method of accounting for inventory and made a
In an effort to avoid application of
Consequently, where the Commissioner's determination alters a taxpayer's practice which has resulted in the postponement of income recognition, such determination causes a change in method of accounting.
We previously have considered whether adjustments by the Commissioner to correct undervaluations1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*76 of inventory constitute accounting method changes.
In the instant case, respondent determined that it was improper1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*77 to include inventory purchased in the old Mayline and Two Rivers acquisitions in the same inventory pool or items as raw materials acquired and inventory manufactured subsequent to such acquisitions. Respondent determined that the combination resulted in an understatement of the value of closing inventory, in that use of the bargain acquisition cost of the purchased inventory as the base year inventory cost permitted an excessive amount of cost attributable to newly manufactured inventory to flow into cost of goods sold, thus reducing taxable income. The recognition of such income, however, merely has been postponed until such time as a sufficient liquidation of inventory occurs to permit the acquisition cost to be included in cost of goods sold. Consequently, because respondent's adjustments affect the timing of the inclusion of income deferred by petitioner, we hold that they constitute a change in method of accounting.
Petitioner also argues that the combination of inventory acquired from Mayline and Two Rivers with goods purchased or produced later did not establish a method of accounting because such acquisitions were isolated transactions effected by separate taxable entities. 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*78 Petitioner also contends that the determination of when a new item comes into existence is so factual as not to rise to the level of an accounting method. We disagree. Petitioner and its predecessors consistently did not differentiate between inventory acquired from Mayline and later acquired or produced items for purposes of figuring taxable income, thus causing the combination of the two types of inventory to become a method of accounting. Furthermore, the regulations provide that a taxpayer's accounting treatment of any item constitutes an accounting method.
2.
Having decided that respondent's determination constitutes a change in petitioner's method of accounting for its inventory, we now will1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*79 consider whether that determination is to be sustained. Because a taxpayer's inventory valuation constitutes a method of accounting, the treatment of inventories for tax purposes is governed by
The Commissioner's determination with respect to clear reflection of income is entitled to more than the usual presumption of correctness, and the taxpayer bears a heavy burden of overcoming a determination that a method of accounting does not clearly reflect income.
Once the Commissioner determines that a taxpayer's method does not clearly reflect income, he may select for the taxpayer a method which, in his opinion, does clearly reflect income.
a.
To set the stage for our review of respondent's determinations, a discussion of the dollar value LIFO method of inventory accounting, used by petitioner to determine its closing inventory, is helpful.
In a manufacturing1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*82 business, gross income from sales means total sales less cost of goods sold.
97 T.C. 120">*130
Two principal methods of computing the closing inventory figure under the LIFO convention are permitted by the regulation: the specific goods method, a measure of inventory in terms of physical units of individual items, see
Under the double extension method, the value of all items in closing inventory is calculated at both base and current year cost.
If an increase1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*86 has occurred based on a comparison of beginning and closing inventory, expressed in terms of base year dollars, such increment is added to closing inventory as a new LIFO layer. If a decrease from beginning inventory occurs in closing inventory, such decrease, expressed in base year dollars, is subtracted from opening inventory, as expressed in base year dollars, reducing in reverse order the most recently added increments to beginning inventory.
Once the total closing inventory is calculated in base year dollars, the LIFO value of each layer must be calculated. To arrive at such value, each layer of inventory, expressed in base year dollars, is multiplied by a price index representing the ratio of base year cost to the inventory cost for the year such layer was added to closing inventory.
Accordingly, the proper grouping of goods into pools and items is central to the operation of the dollar value method.
In the instant case, respondent determined that petitioner's method of accounting for its inventory under the dollar value LIFO method did not result in a clear reflection of income because, respondent asserts, inventory purchased in the acquisitions of Mayline and Two Rivers should not have been included in the same pool or item categories as inventory manufactured after the acquisition. Accordingly, we will consider the proper scope and definition of such terms in deciding whether petitioner has carried the heavy 97 T.C. 120">*133 burden of showing respondent's determination to be arbitrary.
b.
We must decide whether petitioner properly included the finished inventory manufactured by old Mayline and Two Rivers prior to their acquisition by petitioner in the LIFO inventory pool maintained for raw materials acquired and goods manufactured subsequent to such acquisitions. 3Under the dollar-value LIFO method of valuing inventories, the entire inventory investment of a business, including raw materials, work-in-process, and finished products, is to be placed in inventory pools.
1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*90
The regulations governing the dollar value method of valuing LIFO inventories generally provide that the items properly includable in an inventory pool are to be determined with reference to the "natural business unit" of the taxpayer, and that each such unit will use a separate pool.
Previously, we have had occasion to consider the circumstances under which a taxpayer 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*91 is subject to the separate 97 T.C. 120">*134 pooling requirements by virtue of being both a manufacturer and wholesaler or retailer of merchandise. In
Recently, however, we have rejected an attempt by the Commissioner to apply the separate pooling requirement of
As in
c.
The next issue for our consideration is whether the purchased and manufactured inventory within petitioner's natural business unit pool should be treated as the same "items" or as different items for purposes of calculating inventory value under the "double-extension method." See
While neither the Code nor the regulations define the term "item," some relevant case law exists. In
Goods may be in separate item categories because they have substantially dissimilar characteristics, whether in terms of their physical nature, The nature of "items" in a pool must be similar enough to allow a comparison between ending inventory and base-year inventory. Because the change in the price of an item determines the price index and the index affects the computation of increments or decrements in the LIFO inventory, the definition and scope of an item are extremely important to the clear reflection of income. If factors other than inflation enter into the cost of inventory items, a reliable index cannot be computed. For example, if a taxpayer's inventory1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*96 experiences mix changes that result in the substitution of less expensive goods for more expensive goods, the treatment of those goods as a single item increases taxable income. This occurs because any inflation in the cost of an item is offset by the reduction in cost resulting from the shift to less expensive goods. A narrower definition of an item within a pool will generally lead to a more accurate measure of inflation (i.e., price index) and thereby lead to a clearer reflection of income. * * * [
In
In the old Mayline acquisition, inventory valued at $ 2,034,680.48 under the FIFO convention was given a value of $ 79,028.32, a discount of 96 percent from its preacquisition value. Such value was fixed simply by assigning to inventory the amount of the purchase price not otherwise allocated to other assets purchased. Similarly, the inventory acquired from Two Rivers was entered on petitioner's books at its LIFO value of $ 6,550,262, while1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*98 its FIFO value was $ 16,566,320, a discount of over 60 per cent. 4 Petitioner's use of the FIFO values of the acquired inventory to allocate the assigned cost among the inventory items acquired from its targets and its use of the FIFO values of the inventory acquired from Two Rivers to value its first purchases of inventory after the acquisition suggest that such values were more representative of the actual cost or value of the inventory purchased in the acquisitions than the amount of the purchase price allocated to it under the purchase and sale agreements.
The disparity between the value assigned and the FIFO value of the inventory acquired from old Mayline and Two Rivers indicates that1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*99 petitioner purchased such inventory at a substantial discount from its replacement cost or market value, and that such inventory therefore possessed materially different cost characteristics from inventory purchased or produced after the acquisitions. We hold that the significantly large bargain element represented by such discount caused inventory acquired to assume a different character from inventory purchased or produced at market 97 T.C. 120">*138 prices, as represented by the FIFO value of the inventory, after the acquisition.
Petitioner argues that if it obtained a bargain on the purchase of old Mayline's and Two Rivers' assets, it is appropriate that a portion of the bargain be allocated to the inventory purchased. We agree that such an allocation is permissible under
In order to clearly1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*101 reflect income, petitioner should be required to recognize the gain inherent in the bargain cost inventory at the time such gain is realized, rather than at a later time of petitioner's choosing. Such a requirement is in harmony with the matching principle which is at the heart of the inventory accounting rules. To hold otherwise would permit petitioner to include the cost increases attributable to the replacement of bargain cost inventory with inventory produced at prevailing market prices in the cost of goods sold as though such cost increases were attributable to inflation. The LIFO method was not intended to permit taxpayers to include in cost of goods sold cost increases attributable to the replacement of goods with low cost characteristics with goods possessing higher cost characteristics. See
97 T.C. 120">*139 Thus, even though the two classes of inventory were physically the same, the great disparity in their cost warrants separating them. Accordingly, we hold that the inventory acquired in the old Mayline acquisition and the inventory acquired in the Two Rivers acquisition should be treated as items separate1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*102 from the inventory acquired or produced subsequent to such acquisitions. Such treatment avoids a distortion of petitioner's income, produces a better measure of inflation, and results in a clear reflection of petitioner's income. 6
1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*103 Petitioner argues that distinguishing between the two types of inventory will be burdensome. We note, however, that the difficulty petitioner faces is largely of its own making. The basis for our holding that the inventory purchased from old Mayline and Two Rivers should be treated separately is that its cost characteristics were so greatly disparate from later acquired inventory that separate treatment was required in order to avoid a distortion of income. Had the cost characteristics assigned the inventory acquired in the purchases of old Mayline and Two Rivers not been so disparate from the cost of later acquired inventory, we would not have required their separation.
Furthermore, we are not persuaded by petitioner's claims that separate accounting for the two items will impose an undue burden on petitioner. The inventory acquired in the purchase of old Mayline and Two Rivers was identifiable at the time of the purchases and could have been tracked as it was liquidated by sales in the course of petitioner's business. Moreover, we find that eliminating the significant distortion in petitioner's income which resulted from combining 97 T.C. 120">*140 the two types of inventory warrants the burden1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*104 that might be imposed on petitioner.
Petitioner also argues that respondent's method of correcting its inventories might not be completely accurate. Respondent treated all of the inventory acquired from old Mayline and Two Rivers as having been sold in the first full taxable year following each acquisition, thus causing petitioner to recognize the full amount of gain from its bargain inventory purchase in such year. Petitioner points out that not all of the inventory may have been sold during such year.
Petitioner, however, must do more than suggest that respondent's method is less than perfect in order to carry its burden; rather, petitioner must show respondent's action to be arbitrary.
Respondent determined that, for certain taxable years in issue, Hamilton used the completed contract method 7 of 97 T.C. 120">*141 accounting for income received from long-term contracts covering the installation of Hamilton's products on customers' premises, and determined that Hamilton improperly allocated costs to such contracts under its LIFO inventory accounting system. Petitioner disputes respondent's determinations.
1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*106 We first will address petitioner's contention that it did not use the completed contract method of accounting. A "long-term contract" is defined as "a building, installation, construction or manufacturing contract which is not completed within the taxable year it is entered into."
Petitioner contends that it used an "accrual acceptance" method to account for its long-term contracts, and that its accounting practices with respect to such contracts conformed to the principles of such method. Respondent's determination that petitioner used the completed contract method of accounting, however, is presumed correct, and petitioner has the burden of proving the contrary.
Prior to the passage of
97 T.C. 120">*142 The question of which accounting method is used by the taxpayer is one of fact.
Accrual method taxpayers who did not use either of the long-term contract methods prescribed in
1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*110 The cost of goods sold from inventory was taken into account when title passed to the buyer,
1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*111 The completed contract method, on the other hand, took a significantly different approach to accounting for long-term contracts. We previously have described the completed contract method in the following terms: The accounting system employed by the petitioner is the completed-contract system. It is a modification of a strict accrual method and differs in the one respect that items of income and expense, though recorded in primary accounts when accrued or incurred, are not carried into profit and loss as earnings of the business until the contract to which they relate is completed. A separate account is kept for each contract. Any debit balance in the account represents the investment in the contract and any credit balance represents unearned income until the completion of the contract. A characteristic of this system is that income earned in one accounting period may not be accounted for until a later period. It is peculiarly adapted to a business fulfilling contracts which lap over accounting periods where the ultimate gain or loss can not be accurately determined until the completion of the contract. It may be used even though the contracts call for payment on the basis1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*112 of a certain 97 T.C. 120">*144 price per pound. The contracts need not run for more than a year. The Commissioner's regulations permit its use. It has been approved, for tax purposes, by the courts and by this Board. [
With the foregoing as a backdrop, we now will identify instances in which the accrual acceptance method and the completed contract method require different treatment of the same items. The first area we will examine concerns the manner of accounting for items of income under the accrual acceptance and completed contract methods. In the instant case, however, it is not possible to distinguish between the completed contract method and the accrual acceptance methods by comparing the point in time when payments made with respect to long-term contracts are taken into account for tax purposes. Under the completed contract method, income allocable to a long-term contract is taken into account for tax purposes 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*113 in the year that the contract is completed and accepted by the customer, even if payments are received prior to such time.
Under the accrual acceptance method, as noted above, income is taken into account when the subject matter of the contract is accepted by the purchaser. Taxpayers using the accrual method of accounting, however, customarily must include advance payments in income in the year received, even though such payments may not be earned until later years.
The regulations, 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*114 however, permit taxpayers using the accrual shipment method of accounting for long-term contracts to defer recognition of advance payments received on account of such contracts until the time such income would 97 T.C. 120">*145 otherwise be accrued under the taxpayer's accounting method.
Instances exist, however, where the accrual acceptance and completed contract methods will produce different results with respect to the same items. One area in which potential differences between the accrual acceptance method and the completed contract method exist is the point in time at which1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*115 expenses allocable to long-term contracts are taken into account. Under the accrual acceptance method, expenses accumulated in inventories are taken into account when the goods are accepted by the customer. See H. Rept. No. 97-760,
Additionally, the rules governing types of indirect production costs allocable to long-term contracts under the completed contract and the accrual methods differed during the years in issue. A taxpayer using the completed contract method was required to allocate a broader range of indirect costs to a contract under
Based upon the record in the instant case, petitioner has established the nature of the accounting method it used for long-term contracts. At trial, petitioner's1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*117 financial officers testified that petitioner used the accrual acceptance method of accounting for its long-term contracts. Their description of the method used by petitioner is buttressed by additional evidence. For instance, Hamilton's audited financial statements for 1983 and 1984 stated that it used an accrual acceptance method of accounting for long-term contracts. Furthermore, petitioner calculated the product costs associated with the contracts in accordance with the full absorption costing rules of
Petitioner's returns for the years in issue are consistent with a finding that petitioner did not use the completed contract method. Petitioner's returns do not contain any election to employ the completed contract method of accounting, which was required of taxpayers using such method under
We find that the absence of a statement that petitioner used the completed contract method and the presence of an election to use the accrual acceptance method furnish some evidence of petitioner's intent to use the accrual acceptance method.
Inasmuch as we have decided that petitioner used the accrual acceptance method of accounting for long-term contracts, under which use of LIFO inventories is concededly proper, see, e.g.,
The1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*120 facts of the instant case demonstrate that respondent's determination is arbitrary. If the inventoriable costs allocable to each long-term contract were treated as separate items, such cost would not be taken into account until acceptance of the work occurred and a liquidation of the item took place. Such a practice, in effect, disallows use of LIFO inventories to accumulate costs and essentially forces the taxpayer to treat the inventory costs attributable to long-term contracts as deferred expenses. The accrual method, however, does not require such precise matching of income and expense.
97 T.C. 120">*148 Moreover, we previously have rejected the Commissioner's attempts to impose such a regime upon taxpayers using the completed contract method.
Furthermore, treating inventory allocable to long-term contracts as separate items is not required under the principles of dollar value LIFO. The items produced for long-term contracts are the same as those otherwise produced for petitioner's customers. The only distinguishing feature is that the goods produced for long-term contracts are to be installed by petitioner, while the other goods are simply1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*122 shipped to the customer. We do not find such a circumstance to be sufficient basis for separating such goods from the other items in petitioner's inventory. See
We find that petitioner's income is clearly reflected under its method of accounting using LIFO inventories to accumulate costs allocable to long-term contracts. Respondent's determination disallows petitioner's use of an otherwise permissible method of accounting, substituting for it one preferred by respondent. Such a determination constitutes an abuse of discretion.
97 T.C. 120">*149
The final issue we will consider1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 64">*123 in the instant case concerns respondent's disallowance of a portion of the depreciation expense deducted by Hamilton in its taxable year ending June 30, 1982. Hamilton commenced business on June 28, 1982, when it acquired the assets of Two Rivers. Included in such assets were 3-year ACRS property with a cost of $ 2,048,993 and 5-year ACRS property with a cost of $ 10,659,386. As Hamilton was a member of the Mayline consolidated group and joined in such group's consolidated return, Hamilton was required to adopt Mayline's taxable year for its first year.
Petitioner, however, claimed the full amount of depreciation with respect to such property that would have been allowable had Hamilton been in existence for all of Mayline's taxable year. Under the authority of
Under
To reflect concessions and the foregoing,
1. Except as otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code as in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The intention of the LIFO method is to allow inflation to pass into the cost of goods sold.
3. Petitioner concedes that finished inventory purchased for resale after the acquisition of old Mayline should have been placed in a separate LIFO pool, but disputes respondent's computations with respect to such separate pool as shown on the notice of deficiency. No evidence has been offered concerning the nature of such dispute. At trial, we granted petitioner's motion to allow introduction of its inventory accounting records solely for purposes of making any Rule 155 computation required pursuant to our decision.↩
4. By assigning an amount of the purchase price equal to the LIFO value of Two Rivers' inventory, it appears as though petitioner attempts to carry over the tax attributes of its target's inventory, which generally is possible only in the course of a liquidation of a subsidiary under section 332 or in a reorganization. Sec. 381.↩
5. Petitioner's method is somewhat akin to the "base stock" method of accounting, under which an amount of inventory equal to the minimum quantity required to operate the business was carried on the taxpayer's books at an artificially low price, and all inventory costs above the base stock figure were carried into cost of goods sold. See S. Gertzman, Federal Tax Accounting, par. 7.02[2] (1988); R. Hoffman & H. Gunders, Inventories: Control, Costing, and Effect upon Income and Taxes, 169-173 (2d ed. 1970). The base stock method is not a permissible method of tax accounting because it "obscures the true gain or loss of the year and, thus, misrepresents the facts."
6. We do not mean to suggest that every bargain purchase of inventoriable property will require the creation of new items within the dollar value LIFO pool, as occasional purchases concluded on advantageous terms are to be expected in the course of normal business activities. Moreover, where a taxpayer uses LIFO, the gain realized upon sale of such goods probably will be recognized within a short time, unless an increase in closing inventory prevents such bargain cost from flowing into cost of goods sold. Consequently, an isolated bargain purchase in the course of an ongoing business differs materially from the case where a taxpayer attempts to value its entire base year inventory at bargain cost.
Creation of a new item for tax accounting purposes on the basis of differences in cost characteristics is required only where necessary to clearly reflect income, and the issue is to be resolved on a case-by-case basis.
7. We note that taxpayers generally may no longer use the completed contract method in determining when to take into account income and expense allocable to a long-term contract.
8.
9. The term "accrual acceptance," therefore, denotes the version of the accrual shipment method under which income is accrued at the time the customer accepts the subject matter of the contract.↩
10. For tax years beginning after December 31, 1986, the full absorption rules were replaced by the uniform capitalization rules of Sec. 263A, added to the Code by the Tax Reform Act of 1986,
11.
12. Such cost allocation rules originally were applicable to all long-term contracts accounted for under the long-term contract methods prescribed under
13.
14. The foregoing rules have been changed by the Tax Reform Act of 1986. See Sec. 201(a), Pub. L. 99-514, 100 Stat. 2121.↩
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