Court Opinion

ID: 4602069
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:28:56.132967+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:52:36.323829
License: Public Domain

HENRY C. TAYLOR, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Taylor v. CommissionerDocket No. 50264.United States Board of Tax Appeals34 B.T.A. 241; 1936 BTA LEXIS 724; April 3, 1936, Promulgated *724  A mere shortage in the accounts of an employee is not sufficient to establish a deductible loss.  Thomas O. Marlar, Esq., for the petitioner.  Thomas F. Callahan, Esq., for the respondent.  STERNHAGEN *241  The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $1,357.08 in petitioner's individual income tax for 1927.  Four items of deduction were disallowed, of which only one remains in controversy - "bad debts $10,000 - disallowed for the reason they have not been substantiated as required by law." The petition alleges: The item of $10,000 claimed as a deduction represents the amount embezzled by an employee of the petitioner during the year 1927 * * *.  The answer denies this, and at the opening of the trial respondent's counsel said that he denied both "that there was embezzlement, and as to the year when the embezzlement took place." The evidence was entirely by oral testimony.  FINDINGS OF FACT.  Petitioner was engaged, principally at Toledo, Ohio, in the business of purchasing tax certificates.  He had a branch office at Detroit, which, during 1927 and earlier, was in charge of Robinson, an employee.  Robinson bought tax certificates covering*725  property in and about Detroit, kept track of the delinquent tax payments, and at the proper time presented the certificates for redemption and received the money.  Early in 1927 petitioner discovered a "shortage" of $12,319.12 *242  in Robinson's accounts, which Robinson admitted.  This amount was charged off on March 10, 1927, in a ledger account called "the expense account at Detroit." Ten thousand dollars was deducted on the 1927 return.  OPINION.  STERNHAGEN: The facts are entirely inadequate to establish a deductible loss in 1927.  They show merely a shortage in Robinson's accounts discovered in 1927 and charged off on the "expense account" of that year.  The petitioner limited his deduction to $10,000 of the total shortage because he regarded this as the amount which Robinson "had gotten away with" in 1927.  If this were part of petitioner's proper receipts for 1927 which Robinson had omitted to record upon the petitioner's accounts, it would have represented a failure of 1927 profit rather than a loss, and we may assume that such an accounting shortage was reflected on the return by way of reducing gross income, thus justifying no deduction to arrive at net.  A failure*726  of profit does not support a statutory deduction.  ; ; ; see Paul and Mertens, vol. 3, §§ 26.28, 26.30.  A shortage in the accounts of an employee is not per se a loss or a bad debt, because there is no knowing how it arises or what facts it represents.  There must be evidence that the amount is actually out of pocket or otherwise how it affects the taxpayer.  The pleadings, opening statement, and briefs discuss embezzlement.  The evidence, however, speaks only of a shortage in Robinson's accounts and a charge-off in the ledger account of "the expense account at Detroit." This does not establish an embezzlement, even if it starts a suspicion of one.  In short, the evidence leaves it doubtful as to what happened, and more particularly whether in 1927 petitioner sustained a loss as the statute requires.  On his return he treated the amount as a bad debt, and the Commissioner disallowed it because it had not been substantiated.  The evidence in this record likewise fails to support the deduction of a loss, and the Commissioner's determination is sustained. *727 Judgment will be entered under Rule 50.