Artnell Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

400 F.2d 981, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5590, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5501
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1968
Docket16586_1
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 400 F.2d 981 (Artnell Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Artnell Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 400 F.2d 981, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5590, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5501 (7th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

FAIRCHILD, Circuit Judge.

The tax court upheld the commissioner’s determination of deficiencies, 1 and Artnell Company, transferee taxpayer, seeks review. The main question is whether prepayments for services (proceeds of advance sales of tickets for baseball games and revenues for related future services) must be treated as income when received or whether such treatment could be deferred by the accrual basis taxpayer until the games were played and other services rendered.

Early in the 1962 baseball season, as in previous seasons, the White Sox team was operated by Chicago White Sox, Inc. It sold season tickets and single admissions for later games. It received revenues for broadcasting and televising future games, and it sold season parking books. Its taxable year would normally have run to October 31, 1962. It employed the accrual method of accounting for its own and for income tax purposes.

Before May 31, 1962, Artnell Company had acquired all the stock in White Sox. On that date White Sox was liquidated. Artnell became the owner of all the assets and subject to all the liabilities. It continued to operate the team.

As of May 31, the balance sheet of White Sox showed as deferred unearned income that part of the amount received for season tickets, advance single admissions, radio, television, and season parking books, allocable to games to be played after May 31. As the games were played Artnell took into income *983 the amounts of deferred unearned income allocated to each.

The White Sox income tax return for the taxable year ending May 31, 1962 (because of the liquidation) was filed by Artnell as transferee. The return did not include the deferred unearned income as gross income. The commissioner decided it must be included and determined deficiencies accordingly.

When a business receives money in exchange for its obligation to render service or deliver goods and the costs of performance are incurred in a later accounting period, treatment of the receipt as income tends to reflect an illusory or partially illusory gain for the period of receipt. Accountancy has techniques (e. g. deferral of income, reserves for expenses) for achieving a more realistic reflection. The degree to which such techniques are available under income tax statutes is a vexing question. 2

The commissioner urges the simple answer “that deferral of income is a matter for Congress to permit and, until Congress acts, deferral must be disallowed.” He stands on “the established rule that an accrual basis taxpayer must include in gross income in the year of receipt prepaid items for which services will be performed in a later year. The rule implements the annual accounting principle which is at the heart of the federal taxing statute and which forbids transactional accounting for income tax purposes, however sound such methods might be for financial and other purposes under commercial accounting practice.” 3

Artnell relies upon statutory language which requires computation of taxable income under the accrual method of accounting regularly used by the taxpayer unless such method “does not clearly reflect income.” 4 This language could call for a factual determination in the individual case whether an accrual system which employs the deferral of income technique clearly reflects income. Artnell contends that the White Sox system does so.

The commissioner’s principal contention, which was sustained by the tax court, is that there is a rule of law which rejects deferral of income. Presumably he believes that any system in which prepaid income is deferred “does not clearly reflect income” and would consider the present statutory provisions for deferral in the case of prepaid subscription income 5 and prepaid dues of certain membership organizations 6 extensions of legislative grace.

One could reason from the statutory language that any deferral of prepaid income which fulfills standards of sound accounting practice could be employed by an accrual basis taxpayer, and the commissioner would not have power to reject it. Three Supreme Court decisions, Automobile Club of Michigan, 7 American Automobile Association, 8 and Schlude 9 have made it clear that this is not the law.

. There are two other lines of reasoning reflected in the three decisions cited. All three held, upon consideration of the particular facts, that the commissioner did not abuse his discretion in rejecting a deferral of income where the time *984 and extent of performance of future services were uncertain. Thus in Automobile Club of Michigan: “The pro rata allocation of the membership dues in monthly amounts is purely artificial and bears no relation to the services which petitioner may in fact be called upon to render for the member.” In American Automobile Association: “That ‘irregularity,’ however, is highly relevant to the clarity of an accounting system which defers receipt, as earned income, of dues to a taxable period in which no, some or all the services paid for by those dues may or may not be rendered.” In Schlude: “The American Automobile Association Case rested upon an additional ground which is also controlr ling here. Relying upon Automobile Club of Michigan * * *, the Court rejected the taxpayer’s system as artificial since the advance payments related to services which were to be performed only upon customers’ demands without relation to fixed dates in the future. The system employed here suffers from that very same vice * * In Schlude the Court also found that certain expenses were deducted in the year the payments were received even though related income had been deferred to later periods.

The uncertainty stressed in those decisions is not present here. The deferred income was allocable to games which were to be played on a fixed schedule. Except for rain dates, there was certainty. We would have no difficulty distinguishing the instant case in this respect.

A second consideration is reflected in American Automobile Association and Schlude. It is that Congress is aware of the problem and that it is the policy of the Supreme Court to defer, where possible, to congressional procedures in the tax field. Thus in American Automobile Association: “At the very least, this background indicates congressional recognition of the complications inherent in the problem and its seriousness to the general revenues. We must leave to the Congress the fashioning of a rule which, in any event, must have wide ramifications.

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Bluebook (online)
400 F.2d 981, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5590, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/artnell-company-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca7-1968.