Bentley's Estate v. Director of Revenue

6 So. 2d 70, 199 La. 609, 1942 La. LEXIS 1135
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 2, 1942
DocketNo. 36320.
StatusPublished

This text of 6 So. 2d 70 (Bentley's Estate v. Director of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bentley's Estate v. Director of Revenue, 6 So. 2d 70, 199 La. 609, 1942 La. LEXIS 1135 (La. 1942).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

Estate of J. A. Bentley has prosecuted this appeal from a judgment of the Ninth *306 Judicial District Court which affirmed a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals determining a deficiency in income taxes of J. A. Bentley for the fiscal year 1935.

The facts which gave rise to the controversy are as follows :

During the year 1935 and prior thereto, J. A. Bentley Lumber Company was a commercial copartnership consisting of J. A. Bentley and the heirs of E. W. Zimmerman. This copartnership was engaged in the lumber business in this State and was the owner in fee of numerous and large tracts' of pine timber and cut-over lands situated in the Parishes of Rapides, Vernon and Natchitoches. During the years in which the copartnership was engaged in business, it regularly kept its books and records on the accrual method of accounting.

In 1935, the Louisiana Tax Commission, acting through its agents and attorneys, Huey P. Long and Peyton R. Sandoz, directed the assessors of the three parishes in which the lumber company’s timberlands were situated to reassess the value of these lands for ad valorem taxes due during 1932, 1933 and 1934, so as to reflect the value •of certain timber standing on said lands which had not been included in the original assessments. At the same time, these agents for the Louisiana Tax Commission wrote to the lumber company making demand upon it for additional taxes for the years 1932, 1933 and 1934 aggregating the sum of $223,619.83 resulting from the inclusion of the unreported timber in the reassessment of its properties. The lumber company vigorously protested against liability for the additional taxes maintaining that a true and correct return of the value of its properties situated in the three parishes had been made for the years 1932, 1933 and 1934; that all taxes due and assessable had been paid and that no retroactive assessment could legally be made. These protests were denied and, thereupon, the lumber company prepared a suit against the Tax Commission, the assessors and the tax collectors to enjoin the collection of the taxes. However, before this contemplated suit -was filed, negotiations were commenced between representatives of the lumber company and the agents for the Tax Commission, which resulted in a compromise of the differences existing between them. According to this compromise, the lumber company agreed to pay, and the Tax Commission to receive, the sum of $75,000 in full settlement of the claim of $223,619.-83 for the back taxes due by the lumber company for the years 1932, 1933 and 1934, and, as a further consideration, the Tax Commission agreed that, for the purpose of obviating any future dispute over the amount and valuation of pine timber lands and physical properties owned by the company, the basic assessment of the lumber company’s property beginning with the year 1935 would be static and in accordance with the valuation fixed in the settlement.

■ In filing its income tax return for the year 1935, the lumber company deducted from its gross income the amount of $75,-000, which it had paid to the State as back taxes in conformity with its compromise with the taxing authorities. With this deduction, the partnership return showed á *307 net income of $130,232.06. Mr. J. A. Bentley had a two-thirds interest in the copartnership and, in making his individual state income tax return for 1935, he reported having received from the copartnership the sum of $86,821.37 or two-thirds of the co-partnership’s net income. Thereafter, the State Collector (now Director) of Revenue, being of the opinion that the payment by the lumber company in settlement of the additional taxes claimed by the Tax Commission for ad valorem taxes on the company’s property for the years 1932, 1933 and 1934, was improperly deducted as an expense accruing in 1935 from the partnership’s computation of its net income for that year, refused to recognize the $75,000 deduction from the partnership’s gross income for 1935. He ruled that, since Mr. Bentley had a two-thirds interest • in the lumber company, his income from it was, accordingly, increased by the sum of $50,-000 (or two-thirds of $75,000) and that he, therefore, owed the State for income taxes for 1935 an additional $3,000, plus interest, since the $50,000 when added to his net income and taxed at 6% was equal to that sum.

When this deficiency assessment of income taxes was asserted by the Collector of Revenue, the Estate of Mr. Bentley (he having died in the meantime) appealed to the Board of Tax Appeals, where, after hearing the parties, the determination of the Collector of Revenue was upheld on the ground that, since the lumber company kept its books on an accrual basis, the additional tax payments which it made by way of compromise for the years 1932, 1933 and 1934 should have been accrued by it on its statement for those respective years in order that its true net income be accurately shown.

The Board based its decision on the authority of the case of A. Wilbert’s Sons L. & S. Co. v. Collector of Revenue, 196 La. 591, 199 So. 652, which it found to be indistinguishable from the case at hand. From the adverse ruling of the Board of Tax Appeals, the taxpayer appealed to the Ninth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Rapides where the ruling of the Board was affirmed.

In its appeal to this Court from the unfavorable decision below, the Estate of Bentley makes four contentions which are relied upon for reversal. These contentions, which are listed in its counsel’s brief, are as follows:

1. That the Board erred in failing to find as a fact that the taxpayer alleged and proved that the lumber company could not accrue the additional taxes in the years 1932, 1933 and 1934, since the company had no means of ascertaining and could not anticipate that these taxes would be subsequently assessed because all its lands and timber thereon had already been reported for taxes and assessed for those years.

2. In the alternative, that the Board erred in failing to find as a fact that the taxes paid as a result of the compromise were deductible only in the year the compromise was consummated which was the year in which the tax rolls assessing the additional taxes were filed.

*308 3. That the Board erred as a matter of law in applying the findings in A. Wilbert’s Sons L. & S. Co. v. Collector of Revenue, supra, because the contentions in that suit were entirely different and distinct from the contentions made in the instant matter, and further erred as a matter of law in applying the legal principles enunciated in United States v. Anderson, 269 U.S. 422, 46 S.Ct. 131, 70 L.Ed. 347, to the facts of the case.

4. That the Board erred in holding that the taxes paid in the year 1935 as a result of the compromise were not deductible as a tax for the year 1935 under the provisions of the State Income Tax Law.

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6 So. 2d 70, 199 La. 609, 1942 La. LEXIS 1135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bentleys-estate-v-director-of-revenue-la-1942.