Court Opinion

ID: 4609448
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:44:46.184804+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:53:53.419741
License: Public Domain

Eugene Vassallo and Georgie Vassallo, Petitioners, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Respondent.  Vassallo, Incorporated, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentVassallo v. CommissionerDocket Nos. 27406, 27407United States Tax Court23 T.C. 656; 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 267; January 19, 1955, Filed *267 Decisions will be entered for the respondent.  1. Held, where individual kept no books or records and where those kept for his wholly owned corporation were inadequate, respondent was justified in using the net worth and sources and expenditures methods for determining petitioners' income and his determination thereof is upheld.2. Held, further, where sole stockholder withdrew all of corporation's profits without reserve for any tax liability, he is liable for personal income taxes thereon even though corporation must first pay corporate income tax on the same funds as its income.3. Held, further, the deficiencies in all taxes herein were due, in part, to fraud with intent to evade tax.4. Held, further, respondent was justified in asserting the negligence penalty against petitioner corporation for failure to file excess profits tax returns.5. Held, further, petitioner corporation, a cash basis taxpayer, is not entitled to a deduction for declared value excess-profits tax determined in the deficiency notice to be due but unpaid in computing its income and excess profits tax liability.  Stewart Lynch, Esq., and Harry Friedman, Esq., for the petitioners.Stephen P. Cadden, Esq., for the respondent.  Rice, Judge.  RICE*657  These consolidated proceedings involve the following deficiencies in taxes and penalties:Eugene Vassallo and Georgie VassalloDocket No. 27406YearKind of taxDeficiencySec. 293 (b)Totalpenalties1941Income$ 430.38$ 215.19$ 645.571942Income197.4998.74296.231943Income27,395.2613,697.6341,092.891944Income41,640.3920,820.1962,460.581945Income23,630.7211,815.3635,446.08Total$ 93,294.24$ 46,647.11$ 139,941.35*269 Vassallo, IncorporatedDocket No. 27407Fiscal yearKind of taxDeficiencySec. 293 (b)Sec. 291TotalendedpenaltiespenaltiesMarch 311942Income$ 946.68$ 473.34Declared valueexcess-profits427.21213.61$ 2,060.841943Income1,709.80854.90Declared valueexcess-profits4,065.582,032.79Excess profits20,934.7110,467.36$ 5,233.6845,298.821944Income2,700.151,350.08Declared valueexcess-profits7,484.953,742.48Excess profits43,483.0321,741.5210,870.7691,372.971945Income3,209.531,604.77Declared valueexcess-profits7,854.243,927.12Excess profits40,586.9020,293.4510,146.7387,622.741946Income3,563.751,781.88Declared valueexcess-profits1,902.12951.06Excess profits1,400.32700.16350.0810,649.37Total$ 140,268.97$ 70,134.52$ 26,601.25$ 237,004.74The issues to be determined are: (1) Whether the respondent erred in computing the petitioners' tax liability for the years in issue; (2) whether any part of the deficiencies is due to fraud with intent to evade tax; (3) if not, whether the statute of limitation bars assessment and collection of*270  the deficiencies and penalties asserted against petitioners Eugene Vassallo and Georgie Vassallo for the years 1941 and 1942 and against petitioner Vassallo, Inc., for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1942; and (4) whether the respondent correctly asserted the 25 per cent penalty for negligence against Vassallo, Inc., for failure to file an excess profits tax return for the fiscal years ended March 31, 1943 to 1946, inclusive.Some of the facts were stipulated, are so found, and are incorporated herein by this reference.*658  FINDINGS OF FACT.Eugene Vassallo (hereinafter referred to as the petitioner) and Georgie Vassallo were residents of Wilmington, Delaware.  Petitioner filed an individual income tax return for 1941.  For 1942, he and Georgie Vassallo filed a joint return which both signed.  Petitioner filed what purported to be joint returns for 1943 and 1945, but he alone signed them.  His 1944 return was on Form W-2, and was signed only by him.  The deficiency notice was addressed to "Mr. Eugene Vassallo and Mrs. Georgie Vassallo, Husband and Wife." Both signed the petition in Docket No. 27406.  Their marriage was not formalized.  Throughout the course of these proceedings, *271  however, all parties have regarded them as man and wife, and have considered the returns for all of the years in issue as joint returns of a husband and wife, and have further treated the tax liabilities asserted by the respondent as the joint and several liability of a husband and wife filing joint returns.  Vassallo, Inc. (sometimes hereinafter referred to as Vassallo's), was incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware on April 16, 1940.  It filed a Federal income and declared value excess-profits tax return for each of the fiscal years here in issue on the cash basis with the collector of internal revenue at Wilmington.  It filed no excess profits tax return for any such year.On March 31, 1940, three of petitioner's creditors filed an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against him in the United States District Court at Wilmington, Delaware.  On April 22, 1940, petitioner filed a sworn statement of assets and liabilities with the referee showing assets of $ 20, consisting of "One Hamilton Watch." Later in that year, petitioner paid $ 6,770.42 in discharge of his liability for all claims filed in the bankruptcy proceedings.On April 18, 1940, Vassallo's, which at all times*272  here in issue was solely owned by petitioner, purchased a taproom located at 105 West Seventh Street in Wilmington for the sum of $ 20,564.62.  Of the purchase price, $ 11,564.62 was paid in cash and a mortgage of $ 9,000 was placed on the property to secure the balance.  Petitioner, through Vassallo's, operated the taproom at which whisky, beer, and wine were sold during all of the years here in issue.  The corporation held a license for both "on" and "off" sales.  "On" sales constituted the most substantial part of its business.Vassallo's employed no regular bookkeeper.  A friend of petitioner's every week or so entered on a single entry set of books the corporation's receipts and disbursements from information given to him by petitioner.  Petitioner kept no personal books or records of any kind.Respondent commenced an investigation of all of the petitioners' tax returns in September 1946.  The investigation disclosed petitioner's receipts of interest and rents in each of the years in issue, which *659  were not reported on the returns.  From a comparative net worth statement, the respondent also determined that petitioner received substantial amounts of income, which were*273  presumably withdrawn as dividends from Vassallo, Inc., but not reported.  The investigation disclosed that petitioner had bank accounts, substantial real estate holdings, and mortgage notes, and that Georgie Vassallo had bank accounts containing funds given to her by petitioner.  The respondent determined that petitioner's net worth as of December 31, 1940, was $ 16,725.  That sum did not include petitioner's investment in Vassallo, Inc., of approximately $ 12,000, since the amount of that investment was considered to be constant throughout the years here in issue.By use of the comparative net worth method for the fiscal years ended March 31, 1942 and 1943, and by the sources and expenditures method for the fiscal years ended March 31, 1944, 1945, and 1946, the respondent determined that Vassallo, Inc., had received substantial amounts of income which were not reported on its returns.Set forth below are the amounts of income reported by petitioner; and, as determined by respondent, the amounts of rent and interest received but not reported; and the amounts of additional unreported income received from Vassallo, Inc., during each of the years in issue:OtherYearReported onUnreportedUnreportedunreportedreturnrentsinterestincome1941$ 1,733.00$ 904.65$ 2,852.7319422,260.00908.45$ 10.4619432,650.00925.17438.9147,422.1019442,600.002,449.332,957.2161,050.7319452,971.942,475.554,349.7235,901.82*274  Set forth below are the amounts of income (or loss) reported by Vassallo, Inc., during each of the fiscal years here in issue; and, as determined by respondent, the amount of income received but not reported during such years:Income (or loss)Additionalreported onunreportedFiscal year ended March 31returnincome1942$ 986.50 $ 3,624.921943(4,464.02)36,638.891944(571.98)58,651.1119452,006.62 59,501.781946(1,494.46)17,279.61On November 9, 1948, a criminal information was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware, charging petitioner with willful attempts to defeat and evade his income taxes for the years 1943 to 1945, inclusive, and charging him also as the sole stockholder and controlling officer of Vassallo, Inc., with willful attempts to defeat and evade its corporate taxes for the fiscal years ended March 31, 1943 to 1946, inclusive. Petitioner pleaded not guilty and waived *660  indictment by the grand jury.  Upon trial without a jury, he was found guilty as charged (except as to the fiscal year 1943, which was dismissed by the Government during the course of the trial), was sentenced to imprisonment*275  for a year and a day, and fined $ 3,000.  An appeal of his conviction was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit, on May 11, 1950.  1 The parties stipulated the entire record of the trial in the District Court into evidence here.The petitioners received additional unreported income as determined by respondent.  A part of the deficiencies for each of the years here in issue determined against petitioner was due to fraud with intent to evade tax. A part of the deficiencies in income tax, declared value excess-profits tax, and excess profits tax determined against Vassallo, Inc., was due to fraud with intent to evade tax.OPINION.On the opening day of the hearing in this case the respondent submitted a motion for judgment by estoppel, as to the fraud issue relative to petitioner Eugene Vassallo for the years 1943 to 1945, inclusive, and relative to the corporation for the fiscal *276  years ended March 31, 1944 to 1946, inclusive, based on the conviction of petitioner in the United States District Court.  The motion likewise sought judgment by estoppel as to the amount of tax for such years since the amounts thereof in the deficiency notice here were identical with the amounts set forth in the information on which petitioner was tried and convicted in the District Court.  The petitioner objected to respondent's motion and we agreed to take it under advisement.  On brief, respondent discussed only that part of his motion concerning the issue of fraud.It is clear that petitioner's conviction under section 145 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 in the District Court is not res judicata in these proceedings as to the fraud issue or as to the amount of tax allegedly due.  See Helvering v. Mitchell, 303 U.S. 391 (1938); Michael Potson, 22 T. C. 912 (1954); David J. Pleason, 22 T. C. 361 (1954), on appeal (C. A. 7, Dec. 13, 1954); Henry H. Epstein, 34 B. T. A. 925 (1936); and Thomas J. McLaughlin, 29 B. T. A. 247 (1933).*277 The District Court made no specific findings as to the amounts of income which the petitioner had received.  It found only that petitioner Eugene Vassallo had knowingly filed or caused to be filed false and fraudulent returns with intent to evade taxes.The petitioners attack the respondent's determination of the deficiencies here in issue principally on two grounds.  First, they attempted to show that petitioner Eugene Vassallo had approximately *661  $ 100,000 in cash concealed in a small metal box at the beginning of 1941; and, second, insofar as the corporation is concerned, they attempted to reconstruct its income on the basis of actual sales from information supplied by the Delaware Liquor Control Commission as to the total volume of purchases and sales in bulk of wine, whisky, and beer during the years in issue.We have carefully reviewed the testimony of petitioner and others with reference to the $ 100,000 of cash which he claimed to have had at the beginning of 1941.  On the entire record before us, we do not believe such testimony.  Petitioner was adjudged a bankrupt in 1940.  The statement of assets and liabilities which he filed on April 22 of that year listed as *278  his only asset a watch valued at $ 20.  The record, of course, discloses that he, at that time, actually possessed substantial assets which were held for him in the names of others, in the approximate amount of $ 28,000.  We do not believe that at that time he, in addition, possessed large sums of cash.We are also unable to accept petitioner's computation of income for Vassallo, Inc., based on the bulk purchase and sale records.  To be sure, petitioner introduced testimony as to the size of glass used for each kind of beverage served; the price charged at various times; the date during the 5-year period at which prices were increased because of the wartime cabaret tax; and the time during the day and evening when the largest number of customers was served.  The mere recitation of these factors included in the computation makes obvious that a variation in even one or possibly all of them could materially affect the end result of a computation of income based thereon.  The respondent also submitted a computation based on bulk purchase and sale figures substantially identical to those used by the petitioner, but with variations as to the price per drink and size thereof.  His computation*279  by this method showed income for each year substantially in excess of that so computed by the petitioner and, for all but 1 of the years, substantially in excess of the amount of income actually determined in the deficiency notices.  On the whole record, we are satisfied that Vassallo's received the additional amounts of income as determined by respondent by use of the net worth and sources and expenditures methods.Petitioners advanced two further objections to the respondent's determination of income for Eugene Vassallo and for the corporation.  They admit, of course, that the returns filed by the corporation were on the cash basis, but argue that the respondent in reconstructing that income should have included inventories.The comparative net worth method of determining income and the sources and expenditures method, used by respondent in determining Vassallo's income, are not systems of accounting.  Holland v. United States, 348 U.S. 121 (1954); Thomas A. Talley, 20 T. C. 715 (1953). *662  Those methods are resorted to, as they were here, only because a taxpayer's books and records do not disclose his true *280  income, nor is it possible to determine from such books and records what that income was.  While we agree with petitioners that the respondent's reconstruction of Vassallo's income by such methods would have been more exact had its actual inventories been included, the respondent, under the authority granted him in section 41 of the Code, determined such income on the cash basis -- the method which, in his opinion, most clearly reflected it.  It was incumbent on the petitioners to show the amount of the inventories which they argue, if used, would more correctly reflect income.  They made no such showing and we, therefore, approve the respondent's determination.Insofar as petitioner is concerned, he argues that the large amounts of additional income which the respondent determined he received, supposedly as dividends from the corporation, should be reduced by the amount of tax liability and penalties which the corporation should have paid on its unreported income. He says this is so because dividends cannot be paid by a corporation until its tax liabilities have been satisfied.  This argument is advanced despite the fact that petitioner each year actually withdrew the money from *281  the corporation and spent it as he chose.While no question of transferee liability has been raised in these proceedings, the argument advanced by petitioner is essentially no different in principle from that before us in Bennett E. Meyers, 21 T. C. 331 (1953), or before the Supreme Court in Healy v. Commissioner, 345 U.S. 278 (1953). In the Meyers case, the taxpayer's withdrawals from corporate earnings through the guise of officers' salaries, together with the amount of income tax liability accrued for the year, rendered the corporation insolvent.  The Government proceeded against him as a transferee of the corporation and also against him individually on the theory that the withdrawals were income to him personally.  The taxpayer there argued that the Government was estopped from asserting that the same money was taxable to him as personal income and taxable again to him as a transferee.  That, in essence, is what the petitioner is arguing here; namely, that money withdrawn from the corporation, which should have been used to pay its tax liabilities, should not now be taxed both to the corporation and to him. *282  Relying on the Healy case, we said in Bennett E. Meyers, supra, p. 347:It is apparent that the distributions made here were received by petitioner under a claim of right and without any restrictions on the use of the money, and no contention is specifically made to the contrary.  The decision of the Supreme Court, just discussed, fully supports the action of the respondent in including the amounts in taxable income of petitioner in the year of receipt * * **663  Petitioner here is, therefore, liable for personal income taxes on the full amount withdrawn from the corporation, as respondent determined.  Petitioner's argument with respect to taxing him on sums withdrawn from the corporation, but which should have been used to pay its tax liabilities, seems to stem from his feeling that great injustice results because that same money is taxed twice.  Regrettable as this may be, a taxpayer, having adopted the corporate form to conduct his business activities, must accept the tax consequences which result therefrom.  There is no question here but that Vassallo, Inc., was a bona fide corporation and carried on business as such.  No argument, in fact, *283  is advanced to the contrary; and, while it must pay tax on the full amount of its income, petitioner, also, must pay tax on the full withdrawals or "dividends" which he took from it.  The disadvantage of his choice of doing business as a corporation is perhaps emphasized by the fact that he withdrew all of its earnings and must pay personal income taxes on the full amount thereof; but he received the money withdrawn under a claim of right and used it as he chose.  It, therefore, was fully taxable income to him.  Healy v. Commissioner, supra.We have carefully reviewed the voluminous record of the trial in the District Court which was stipulated into evidence here.  We are satisfied from the evidence presented there and from that adduced before us that petitioner filed fraudulent returns for each of the years in issue with intent to evade tax and that the corporation, through him, filed fraudulent returns for each of the fiscal years here in issue with intent to evade tax. The amounts of income unreported for petitioner and the corporation exceeded many times over that which was reported.  That fact alone is, to us, highly persuasive evidence that*284  the returns were fraudulent, Lillian Kilpatrick, 22 T. C. 446 (1954), on appeal (C. A. 5, Jan. 7, 1955).  In addition, there is the fact of petitioner's criminal conviction for fraudulent evasion of taxes for 3 of the 5 years here in issue.Insofar as the fraud penalty has been asserted on the basis of deficiencies in excess profits tax, petitioner argues that he did not know about such tax.  A fair inference to be drawn from this record is that his knowledge of all tax matters was sketchy, but it is abundantly clear that the inadequate records of corporate income were deliberately maintained to evade the payment of the corporation's true tax liability for any and all taxes imposed on its income by the Federal Government.  We are satisfied that a part of the deficiency, due to the corporation's failure to file any excess profits tax return, was due to fraud with intent to evade payment of that tax.  The corporation's income and declared value excess-profits tax return in 3 of the 5 *664  years here in issue showed a net operating loss, and income of only nominal amounts in the other 2 years when, in fact, it was many times greater.  An attempt*285  was made to demonstrate petitioner's abysmal ignorance of accounting and bookkeeping methods.  It was alleged that he could not read or do other than write his own name and Arabic numerals.  Be that as it may, he has been a resident of the United States since 1910 and from the record here it would seem that he has been a successful businessman during the years here in issue.  Any man intelligent enough to earn that amount of income must be presumed to be intelligent enough to make an honest effort to report it correctly and pay the tax thereon.  Sometimes there are unusual circumstances which excuse a taxpayer's failure to meet the common standards required of all.  In this record we find no such circumstances.  Rather, we find a blatant disregard for the minimum responsibility required of every taxpayer and a willfully fraudulent and continuing effort to defeat and evade the payment of taxes due by him and by his corporation.In view of our conclusion that the deficiencies of petitioner and his corporation were due in part each year to fraud with intent to evade tax, the issue with respect to the statute of limitation becomes moot.We find nothing in this record constituting reasonable*286  cause for Vassallo, Inc.'s, failure to file excess profits tax returns.  We therefore, uphold respondent's assertion of a 25 per cent delinquency penalty for those years in which a return was not filed.Petitioners argue that the respondent's computation of income and excess profits tax due from Vassallo's is incorrect, since in such computation no deduction was allowed for the amount of declared value excess-profits tax.  They admit that no such tax was paid.The deduction for declared value excess-profits tax allowed by section 23 (c) of the Code is for such tax as was "paid or accrued within the taxable year." Vassallo's filed its returns on the cash basis; and the respondent kept it on a cash basis in determining the deficiencies herein -- that being the method which, in his opinion, most clearly reflected its income. Sec. 41, I. R. C., 1939.  Clearly, a cash basis taxpayer is not entitled to a deduction for taxes not actually paid within the year, which was admittedly the case here.  In any event, had Vassallo's been on the accrual basis, it still would not be entitled to accrue the amounts of declared value excess-profits taxes and so claim them as a deduction, since its liability*287  for such taxes was in dispute.  Dixie Pine Co. v. Commissioner, 320 U.S. 516 (1944); Gunderson Bros. Engineering Corp., 16 T. C. 118 (1951).Decisions will be entered for the respondent.  Footnotes1. United States of America v. Eugene Vassallo, 181 F. 2d 1006↩ (C. A. 3, 1950).