Court Opinion

ID: 4616279
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-21 02:34:09.471229+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:55:05.204878
License: Public Domain

PERKINS SASH & DOOR CO., PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Perkins Sash & Door Co. v. CommissionerDocket No. 9910.United States Board of Tax Appeals5 B.T.A. 847; 1926 BTA LEXIS 2757; December 17, 1926, Promulgated *2757  Petitioner has not shown that it was entitled to a greater invested capital than that determined by the Commissioner, or that the Commissioner's determination in respect of the allowance for exhaustion, wear and tear of the property was erroneous: not has it shown that the Commissioner's adjustment of the closing inventories for the fiscal years ending July 31, 1920 and 1921, was erroneous.  G. S. Alexander, Esq., for the petitioner.  Henry Rowenel, Esq., for the respondent.  LITTLETON*847  The Commissioner determined deficiencies in income and profits taxes in the amounts of $1,026.44 and $734.09, respectively, for the fiscal years ending July 31, 1920 and 1921.  The petitioner claims that the Commissioner erred in his determination (1) in respect of the value of the property, alleged to have been paid in to the corporation, for invested capital and depreciation purposes, (2) in reducing the inventories of July 31, 1920 and 1921, and (3) in reducing surplus in each of the years on account of prior year's tax.  FINDINGS OF FACT.  The petitioner is a Georgia corporation with principal office at Augusta.  At some date prior to July, 1913, the*2758  National Bank of Augusta had loaned approximately $41,272.05 to the Woodward Manufacturing Co., for which that company gave the bank mortgages on certain of its properties and equipment.  The Woodward Company failed and certain of its properties were taken over by the bank.  Thereafter, the National Bank of Augusta was liquidated by the officers of the Citizens & Southern Bank of Augusta.  During this liquidation the National Bank of Augusta, through its liquidating agents, sold certain miscellaneous property of the Woodward Manufacturing Co. for $8,408.15 and, in July, 1913, they sold the plant of the Woodward Manufacturing Co. to H. R. Perkins and H. C. Maxwell for $15,000; $2,500 being paid in cash, and interest-bearing promissory notes of Perkins and Maxwell were given for the balance, payable $2,500 annually.  The National Bank of Augusta gave Perkins and Maxwell a bond for title, in which it agreed to transfer title when the deferred payments had been made.  At the end of each of the fiscal years involved a physical inventory was taken by petitioner of all of its materials and supplies on hand, including the finished products.  *848  It was petitioner's established*2759  custom to price the inventory at selling prices and to reduce the total thereof by 33 1/3 per cent to bring it to cost.  For the fiscal year ending July 31, 1920, the inventory of moldings and sundry manufactured articles priced at selling prices amounted to $3,929.90, and before this amount was added to the total of the inventory of all other materials, supplies, and the manufactured product, it was reduced by 33 1/3 per cent, or $1,309.97, making the total of this portion of the inventory $2,619.93.  The detailed and itemized inventory of all departments was then totaled and summarized, and adjusted to arrive at the total inventory for the year as follows: Sheets 1 to 3.  Frame Room$1,242.15Sheets 4 to 7. Glass & Glazing Dept2,546.20Sheets 8 to 14. Sash Door & Blind Dept4,158.85Sheets 15 to 17 Sundries & Moldings (reduced from $3,927.90 as above stated)2,619.93Sheets 18 to 23.  Lumber and Supplies17,486.08Selling Values28,053.21Less: Blythe School Building charged on books - not made$1,000.0033 1/3 per cent9,693.3410,693.34Total closing inventory17,359.87The Commissioner adjusted this inventory by eliminating*2760  the reduction of $1,309.97 in the inventory price of moldings and sundries, allowing a reduction of 33 1/3 per cent on the total inventory thus determined, after deducting therefrom the Blythe School Building item of $1,000 resulting in a closing inventory for the year of $18,908.79, an increase of the closing inventory as shown by the petitioner of $1,548.92, which it claims was erroneous.  The petitioner followed the same method in pricing its inventory at July 31, 1921.  In this year, before totaling the inventory of all departments and reducing it by 33 1/3 per cent to arrive at the cost, the inventory price of lumber, sash weights, feed and supplies, amounting to $12,176.91, was reduced 25 per cent, or $3,044.23, resulting in an inventory value for these departments of $9,132.68.  The total selling price of the inventory thus priced amounted to $21,492.16, and this amount was then further reduced by 33 1/3 per cent, or $7,164.05 - the "difference between cost and selling values" resulting in a closing inventory for the fiscal year ending July 31, 1920, of $14,328.11.  The Commissioner adjusted the inventory by eliminating the arbitrary reduction of $3,044.23, being 25 per cent*2761  of the item of $12,176.91 above mentioned, and arrived at a total inventory at a selling value of $24,536.39, which was reduced by 33 1/3 per cent, *849  or $8,178.79, resulting in a closing inventory for the year of $16,357.60, an increase in the inventory as shown by the petitioner of $2,029.49, which it claims was erroneous.  There was a marked decline in the lumber market shortly prior to July, 1920.  OPINION.  LITTLETON: The Board is unable from the evidence submitted to make any modification in the Commissioner's determination in respect of the invested capital and his allowance for exhaustion, wear and tear of the property owned by the petitioner.  The record does not disclose what action the Commissioner took in this regard, nor does it show what property was paid in to the corporation for stock or otherwise, and it contains no information from which the Board can make a finding of the value of any property for invested capital or depreciation purposes.  Considerable testimony was taken by depositions, apparently in an effort to show that certain property purchased by Perkins and Maxwell from the National Bank of Augusta at $15,000 had a value in excess of that*2762  amount, but there is no evidence to show that this property was acquired by the petitioner for stock or otherwise, or that it was owned by it during the taxable year.  We have carefully considered the evidence submitted in support of the claim that the property purchased by Perkins and Maxwell had a cash value of $30,000, and even if we could find that this property was paid in to the petitioner by them we are not convinced from the evidence that its actual cash value was in excess of $15,000.  The Board is unable from the evidence submitted to find that the Commissioner erred in his determination of petitioner's inventories for the taxable years.  The Commissioner has approved petitioner's method of pricing its inventories, but has declined to allow the arbitrary reductions of the amounts at which certain portions of the inventories were priced by 33 1/3 per cent in the year ending July 31, 1920, and 25 per cent in the year ending July 31, 1921.  These inventories were priced by H. C. Maxwell, now deceased.  Another official of the company, who listed practically the entire inventory in each of the years and who conferred with Maxwell during the time that he was pricing the same, *2763  testified that the reductions made by Maxwell and disallowed by the Commissioner were due to the decline in market.  This evidence, however, does not enable the Board to determine that the Commissioner erred in his adjustment of the inventories.  We fail to see why the prices placed upon each individual article when pricing the inventories did not represent the correct price according to the method followed, and if they did *850  there was no justification in the arbitrary reductions of 33 1/3 per cent in 1920 and 25 per cent in 1921 of a portion of the inventories.  It would appear from the record that, when the entire inventories had been priced, item by item, and totaled, Maxwell concluded that the total figure was too high and arbitrarily made the reductions mentioned before the 33 1/3 per cent from the total inventory was taken.  Upon the evidence we approve the Commissioner's adjustment.  The action of the Commissioner in reducing the surplus for each of the years on account of the tax for the preceding years is approved.  *2764 . Judgment will be entered on 15 days' notice, under Rule 50.