DocketNumber: Docket No. 16175-80.
Filed Date: 7/6/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
DAWSON, Sometime in 1976, Carroll's Trucking agreed with Evergreen Trucking to deliver a single load of potatoes to Safeway*394 Stores, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as Safeway) in Seattle. Upon delivery of the load, petitioner expected Safeway to pay Carroll's Trucking by validating one of its checks in the amount of $ 850 given to him by Evergreen Trucking. Carroll's Trucking hauled the load to Safeway in Seattle. Employees of Safeway unloaded the potatoes, but Safeway then claimed that the potatoes were spoiled when they were delivered and, therefore, refused to validate the check. Petitioner has never been able to collect the $ 850 from Safeway. Since the truck driver spent extra time attempting to persuade Safeway to validate its check, he failed to get another load that he was supposed to haul back to San Francisco for another customer. Consequently, Carroll's Trucking also failed to realize anticipated income from the return trip to San Francisco. On his tax return for the year 1976, petitioner deducted all of the expenses that Carroll's Trucking incurred to pick up the load of potatoes and to deliver it to Safeway. Petitioner, on his tax return for the year 1976, also deducted $ 850 for "Safeway Store Claim for damage," representing the amount that he expected to receive from Safeway for*395 hauling the load of potatoes. Respondent disallowed the deduction claimed for "Safeway Store Claim for damage" on the ground that, since Carroll's Trucking used the cash method of accounting and, therefore, had not treated the amount of $ 850 owing to it from Safeway as taxable income, it was not entitled to deduct such amount as a bad debt loss. OPINION Petitioner contends that he is entitled to deduct the $ 850 that Safeway refused to pay upon delivery of the load of potatoes, because Carroll's Trucking, by hauling that load, incurred expenses for wages and fuel, incurred wear and tear on its truck, and suffered a loss of income. Since the amount of $ 850 for which a deduction is claimed by petitioner was owed by Safeway to Carroll's Trucking, the deductibility of such amount is determined under the provisions of section 166, specifically allowing a deduction for bad debts, rather than under section 165, generally allowing deductions for losses. In any event, whether the deductibility of the "loss" in question is determined by referring to section 165 or section 166, there is a more fundamental reason why it is not deductible under either section. The maximum amount deductible, under each section, is the adjusted basis, provided by section 1011, for determining loss upon the sale or other disposition of the property. *397 no amount owing to it from Safeway in its taxable income, the debt due Carroll's Trucking from Safeway had a basis of zero. Cf. The failure to realize anticipated income is not considered a deductible loss under section 165. Although we sympathize with petitioner in his frustration over his inability to collect the amount in issue and his failure to collect other anticipated income, we have been unable to find any provision of the Internal Revenue Code which would entitle him to the deduction claimed. Since our jurisdiction is limited to applying the law as written, we, accordingly, must sustain the respondent's position.
1. All section references are to the Internal revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated. ↩
2. Pursuant to the order of assignment, on the authority of the "otherwise provided" language of
3. The amount allowable as a deduction for medical expenses depends upon the amount of petitioners' adjusted gross income, and hence, upon the resolution of the issue in this case.↩
4. See
5. Secs. 165(b) and 166(b). ↩
6. See