Barrier v. United States

1 Cl. Ct. 674, 51 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 852, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1853
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 23, 1983
DocketNo. 336-76
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Cl. Ct. 674 (Barrier v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrier v. United States, 1 Cl. Ct. 674, 51 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 852, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1853 (cc 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

WOOD, Judge:

This action, to recover federal income tax, penalties, and interest of approximately $92,000, alleged to have been erroneously assessed against and collected from plaintiffs for the calendar year 1972, is presently before the court following trial limited to a single issue raised by way of offset in defendant’s answer to the first amended petition filed herein June 10, 1981. The issue tried is the “inventory issue,” defined in an order filed February 26,1982, and discussed and decided below.1

For the reasons hereinafter appearing, it is concluded that plaintiffs’ complaint should be dismissed.

[676]*676I

At all times here relevant, plaintiffs, cash-basis taxpayers residing in Spokane, Washington, owned all of the shares of stock of Corrugated Metals Inc. (CMI). CMI was an “electing small business corporation” within the meaning of section 1371(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, and was an accrual basis taxpayer reporting its income on the basis of a fiscal year ending February 28 (or 29).2

In 1971 and 1972, CMI processed metal coils or strips of very thin material, perhaps as much as a mile in length and weighing two to two and a half tons, into corrugated sheets. CMI purchased substantially all of its inventory of metal coils for use in its business from Nissho-Iwai (Nissho), a Japanese company. CMI operated in both Spokane and Seattle, Washington, and stored inventory in warehouses located in both cities. CMI’s main storage facility was located in Seattle; its main fabricating facility was located in Spokane.

Throughout the period here relevant, CMI took inventory periodically. In the process, a CMI employee (normally a branch manager) physically counted the materials on hand in each of the CMI warehouses in Spokane and Seattle. The count at each warehouse was then recorded on a standard form. In some instances, at least, the value of the inventory reflected on a particular standard form was calculated by plaintiff John C. Barrier (Mr. Barrier) and noted on that form. During the period 1971-72, CMI’s inventory valuation method was to value metal coils at 50 percent of cost, and for present purposes the propriety of that method of inventory valuation is not questioned.

For its fiscal year ending February 29, 1972, CMI filed a Form 1120, U.S. Small Business Corporate Income Tax Return, dated August 10, 1973, and reflecting a taxable income of $102,733. In plaintiffs’ joint federal income tax return for the calendar year 1972, also dated August 10,1973, plaintiffs, as owners of all of CMI’s stock, included CMI’s reported taxable income of $102,733 for the fiscal year ending February 29, 1972, as dividend income.3

In September 1974, CMI filed an amended federal income tax return reflecting a taxable income of $55,755 for its fiscal year ending February 29, 1972. Both CMI’s original return for 1972 and its amended return for that year reported a beginning inventory of $25,703, and an ending inventory of $37,384.4 Plaintiffs now concede that the latter figure was and is understated (but urge that the former one should also be found to be). In an amended joint federal income tax return for the calendar year 1972, also filed in September 1974, plaintiffs reported (among other things) income from CMI of only $55,755, and claimed a refund of taxes allegedly overpaid for the calendar year 1972 of $20,678.

In August 1976, plaintiffs filed this action to recover that amount, plus interest. In November 1976, shortly after filing its answer herein, defendant successfully sought a suspension of proceedings pending completion of an extensive investigation by the Internal Revenue Service into plaintiffs’ tax affairs, including the federal tax returns of plaintiffs and CMI for the year 1972.

In April 1979, that suspension of proceedings was vacated. On August 14, 1979, following examination by the Service of [677]*677plaintiffs’ 1972 amended return and claim for refund,5 a notice of deficiency, assessing additional federal income taxes for 1972 of $27,841.93, plus a penalty of $32,002.47 pursuant to section 6653(b), was issued to plaintiffs. In accordance with section 7422(e), proceedings were thereupon “stayed for the period of time in which the taxpayer may file a petition with the Tax Court * * * and for sixty days thereafter.”

On January 11,1980, defendant duly filed an amended answer and counterclaim seeking to recover the amount of income tax and penalty assessed against plaintiffs August 14,1979, plus interest thereon. Thereafter, plaintiffs paid the amounts asserted by defendant to be due and owing for the calendar year 19726; timely filed a claim for refund; and, upon disallowance of that claim by the Service, sought and received leave to amend their complaint herein so as to encompass the amounts paid by plaintiffs pursuant to the August 14, 1979, notice of deficiency. Plaintiffs’ amended petition, filed June 10, 1981, claimed some $92,000, plus statutory interest.

Defendant’s amended answer, filed August 27, 1981, asserted by way of affirmative defense that CMI’s ending inventory for the fiscal year ending February 29, 1972, had been substantially understated; that by virtue of the understatement CMI’s taxable income had been understated by $236,575 on its 1972 tax return; and that this, in turn, had resulted in an understatement of plaintiffs’ income on their 1972 federal income tax returns and in an underpayment by plaintiffs of $133,184 in federal income tax for that year. Defendant’s amended answer further asserted that in the event any of plaintiffs’ claims should be sustained, the amount of any recovery due them in this suit should be reduced and offset by the said underpayment in tax.

Even prior to the 1981 amendment of plaintiffs’ complaint, the parties had been directed to make pretrial submissions, and plaintiffs had in fact done so. In requesting leave to amend their complaint, however, plaintiffs represented that they would make an amended pretrial submission, and allowance of the motion for leave to amend was accompanied by a direction that, following the filing of an answer, plaintiffs make an amended pretrial submission.

Plaintiffs did so January 11, 1982. That submission affirmatively asserted that CMI’s amended tax return for the fiscal year ending February 29, 1972, as filed in 1974, “is correct and complete.” There was no direct response to the government’s claim of right to an offset based on an understatement of CMI’s ending inventory for 1972, and there was certainly no mention of possible error in CMI’s beginning inventory for its fiscal year ending February 29, 1972.7

By motions, filed January 28, 1982, defendant sought (1) a separate trial of the issue raised by its offset defense (i.e., the asserted understatement of CMI’s ending inventory for its fiscal year ending February 29,1972, and its impact upon plaintiffs’ federal income tax liability for 1972); and (2) an order placing the burden of proof with respect to that issue (termed “the inventory issue”) on plaintiffs. See n. 1, supra.

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80 Fed. Cl. 178 (Federal Claims, 2008)

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1 Cl. Ct. 674, 51 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 852, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrier-v-united-states-cc-1983.