Biggers v. Commissioner

39 B.T.A. 480, 1939 BTA LEXIS 1024
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1939
DocketDocket Nos. 89465, 89466.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 B.T.A. 480 (Biggers v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biggers v. Commissioner, 39 B.T.A. 480, 1939 BTA LEXIS 1024 (bta 1939).

Opinions

[483]*483OPINION.

Leech:

The question is whether respondent properly denied petitioners’ request to file amended returns upon a separate basis.

Under section 51 of the Revenue Act of 1934,1 petitioners had the right to elect whether to file joint or separate income tax returns.2

Article 53-4, Regulations 86, defines the due date as follows:

Due date of return. — The due date is the date on or before which a return is required to be filed in accordance with the provisions of the Act or the last day of the period covered by an extension of time granted by the Commissioner or a collector. When the due date falls on Sunday or a legal holiday, the due date for filing returns will be the day following such Sunday or legal holiday.

Undoubtedly, as petitioners concede, where a right of election of alternative forms of return exists and that right has been exercised, after, if not before,3 the due date of the return, either the respondent has no authority to accept amended returns,4 or such acceptance is discretionary with respondent and its refusal is not subject to review here.5 Thus, our inquiry is whether petitioners, under the law, did elect to file a joint return for 1934.

Ordinarily, certainly, the filing of a joint return by husband and wife constitutes an election of that form of return.6 Petitioners’ position is that they did not elect, under the law, to file a joint return. They argue that the filing of a tentative joint return did not constitute an election and that the filing of a final joint return, in the present circumstances, did not do so either because, when filed, they did not know their legal rights in the premises, in that a change in those legal rights had been effected by Regulations 86, article 117-5 construing [484]*484the Revenue Act of 1934, with the knowledge of the contents of which they could not be charged because such regulations were not promulgated until March 2, 1935; or, in effect, that respondent is estopped from claiming their filing of a final joint return was an election on this record.

The tentative return is a form of report of income not specifically authorized by statute. It came into existence in 1919 by reason of the power delegated to the Commissioner to “grant a reasonable extension of time for filing returns whenever, in his judgment, good cause exists” (section 227 (a), Revenue Act of 1918). Section 250 (a) of that act provided that “where an extension of time for filing a return is granted the time for payment of the first installment shall be postponed until the date of the expiration of the period of the extension.” Consequently, in order to meet the needs of the Government for immediate revenue the “tentative” return was invented. As a condition of being granted the privilege of its use, the taxpayer was required to pay one-fourth of his estimated taxes with the filing of such return.

We agree that petitioners’ filing of the tentative joint return did not constitute the exercise of their right of election.7 But, after being properly granted an extension of time within which to file a final return,8 the taxpayers on May 15,1935, formally filed a final joint return within the period so extended.9 It is true that Regulations 86, article 117-5,10 notice of which first appeared January 21,1935, in T. D. 4511, C. B. XIV-1, pp. 107 — 110, and published in the regulations on March 2 of the same year, is a new regulation in the sense that, and only that, its detail is not contained in any prior regulation. In no event, of course, can a regulation change the law.11 But it does not here even attempt to do that. It is true it bears the caption “Application of Section 117 in the case of Husband and Wife.” But it then proceeds merely to show the specific application of section 117 of the Revenue [485]*485Act of 1934 to the joint or separate returns of a husband and wife where the limitation on the allowance of losses from sales or exchanges of capital assets, contained in subsection (d) of section 117, becomes effective. It does contain the statement that whether a husband and wife make joint or separate returns, they are considered separate taxpayers, but that is merely a statement of what has long been the law.12 Eegulations 86, article 117-5, merely construed, and, we think, properly, the application of section 117 (d) in the light of that law.13 Article 381 of Eegulations 77 provides that where a single joint return is filed by husband and wife “the tax is imposed on the aggregate income and all deductions and credits to which either is entitled shall be taken from such aggregate income. * * *” (Emphasis supplied.) Thus that article would limit these same deductions of a husband and wife under section 117 (d) of the Eevenue Act of 1934, as does article 117-5 of Eegulations 86, supra, which superseded the earlier regulation.

It follows that, since husband and wife had theretofore been determined to be separate taxpayers, the rights of the petitioners, as such, under the Eevenue Act of 1934, section 117 (d), were fixed by the effective date of that act, which was May 10, 1934. That was just a year prior to the date upon which the petitioners filed their final joint return.

It is elementary that every one is presumed to know the law and that ignorance of a taxpayer’s right thereunder does not vitiate such an election of a taxpayer.14 Moreover, since the Board is a creature of statute, its jurisdiction is fixed by statute which does not include equitable jurisdiction. It thus has none.15 This limitation has been recognized in many cases in which the so-called equities were, in our judgment, not weaker than those here.16 But, assuming it had such jurisdiction, we know of no authority under which it would be said that the equities in this situation warranted a holding that the taxpayers should not be charged with knowledge of the law as it existed when they filed their final joint return. Particularly is this so, since the petitioners, before filing their final joint return, actually knew of a change in the law affecting their rights.

[486]*486However, is respondent estopped from taking tbe position that tbe filing of tbe final joint return by tbe petitioners was an election here? Before filing their final joint return, petitioner’s secretary bad telephoned tbe person in the local office of tbe collector of internal revenue at Cleveland, Ohio, who bad checked bis returns for the preceding several years, and had asked him whether the petitioners could file final separate returns. This person, after consulting with his associates in that office, advised that, in his opinion, such returns could not be made. Aside from the general rule that estoppel can not apply against the Government,17 we know of no precedent which would support its application here. Neither the official status of the person advising petitioner, nor that of his consultants, is disclosed. And that person purported to give petitioner’s secretary only his opinion and that of those associates. A mere opinion does not support an estoppel.18

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Biggers v. Commissioner
39 B.T.A. 480 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 B.T.A. 480, 1939 BTA LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biggers-v-commissioner-bta-1939.