Brodsky v. Commissioner

27 T.C. 216, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 53
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1956
DocketDocket No. 56692
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 27 T.C. 216 (Brodsky v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brodsky v. Commissioner, 27 T.C. 216, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 53 (tax 1956).

Opinion

OPINION.

LeMiee, Judge:

This proceeding involves deficiencies in income tax for the taxable years 1949 and 1950 in the amounts of $530.36 and $1,940.56, respectively.

The sole contested issue is whether the respondent erred in including in petitioners’ income for the years 1949 and 1950 certain amounts withheld by a bank out of sums due on the purchase of notes from petitioners, automobile dealers on an accrual basis, which were held as a dealer’s reserve and credited on the bank’s books to petitioners, pursuant to a written agreement.

All the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly. They may be summarized as follows:

Petitioners are husband and wife residing in Eugene, Oregon. They filed joint income tax returns for the years 1949 and 1950 with the then collector of internal revenue for the district of Oregon.

During and prior to the taxable years involved petitioners were equal partners in the partnership doing business under the name of Brodsky’s Willys Company, which engaged in buying, selling, and servicing new and used automobiles.

The partnership kept its books and filed its partnership returns on an accrual method of accounting. It used the specific charge-off method in deducting its bad debts.

A large number of automobiles sold by petitioners were sold pursuant to conditional sales contracts under which the purchaser agreed to pay the unpaid purchase price, including insurance, interest, finance, and other charges, over a specified period of time. Usually the purchaser executed a note for the unpaid balance. Under the conditional sales contract, which was assignable, title remained in petitioners until the amount due was paid in full.

During the taxable years involved there was in force an agreement between petitioners and the First National Bank of Eugene, Oregon, pursuant to which petitioners sold and assigned the notes and conditional sales contracts to the bank. Under the agreement the bank remitted to the partnership the amount due on the selling price of the automobile less the amount which was Credited to a dealer’s reserve account referred to as a “loss reserve” in the agreement and called the “Bancontrol Account” on the books of the bank. The bank annually remitted to petitioners a certain portion of the reserve, retaining 10 per cent of the unpaid balance on the notes, or $1,000, whichever was greater.

The provisions of the agreement between petitioners and the bank, pertinent to the issue involved, read as follows:

(1) The Bank will purchase from Dealer, at such rate of discount as Bank shall from time to time establish, such contracts of conditional sale of and chattel mortgages on new and used automobiles (which contracts of conditional sale and chattel mortgages are herein called “contracts”) as Bank shall deem acceptable. All contracts, assignments and guaranties shall be executed upon forms provided or approved by Bank.
* * * * * * *
(3) With respect to each contract assigned by Dealer to Bank, Dealer warrants that title to the properly therein described is vested in the Seller or Mortgagor, free from encumbrances other than the contract, that the contract arose from a bona fide sale of the property therein described, that the Dealer is the owner of the contract and has good right to assign the same, that the Purchaser or Mortgagor has capacity to execute the same and is bound thereby, that no payment has been made to apply upon the indebtedness thereby evidenced, that there is no defense, offset or counterclaim thereto, that the property has been delivered to and accepted by the Purchaser or Mortgagor and approved by him. Subject to the provisions of paragraph 6 hereof. Dealer guarantees full and prompt performance of each and every of the terms, covenants and conditions to be performed by the Purchaser or Mortgagor contained in each contract assigned by Dealer to Bank. Consent is hereby granted to extensions, indulgences, waivers, settlements, compromises, adjustments and all such other acts as Bank shall deem advisable with respect to any contract assigned to it by Dealer, without notice and without affecting recourse hereunder. Dealer also waives presentment, protest, notices of nonpayment and notice of any other kind. If Bank shall exercise or attempt to exercise any remedy and a balance shall remain owing hereafter, Dealer agrees to pay the same upon demand. If any suit or action be brought upon this agreement or for the branch [sic] hereof, Dealer agrees to pay such attorney’s fees as shall be adjudged reasonable therein.
(4) The Bank shall create a loss reserve to the credit of which it shall deposit the difference between its discount rate and the contract carrying charge and from which it shall remit to the Dealer on Annually for that portion of the reserve in excess of 10% of the Dealer’s contingent liability to Bank, its successors or assigns, except that such remittances shall not reduce the reserve below the sum of $1000.00, nor shall any remittance be made while Dealer shall be in default in the performance of any obligation to Bank, its successors or assigns, nor after the termination of this agreement by either party or if the Bank deems the Dealer to be insolvent or if Dealer is no longer engaged in the automobile business, until all of Dealer’s obligations to Bank, its successors or assigns, whenever arising and however evidenced, whether absolute or contingent, primary or secondary, due or deferred, shall have been discharged in full. All such obligations are secured by said reserve.
(5) When any obligation of the Dealer upon a guaranty of a contract shall become absolute, such liability shall be limited to the unpaid balance less unearned discount and less insurance premium refund, if any, received by Bank and such amount shall be paid by the Dealer upon demand, without recourse to the Dealer’s reserve.
(6) The Bank shall protect the Dealer from loss by waiving recourse upon Dealer’s guaranty when Bank is unable to deliver the automobile described in the contract to the Dealer within 90 days after the maturing of the oldest unpaid full installment; except that in the event of the Bank sustaining a loss, if it shall appear
(a) That, upon a new car contract, the original cash balance (difference between cash selling price and down payment) was in excess of 70% of the cash selling price or
(b) That, upon a used car contract, the original cash balance (as above defined) was in excess of 66%% of the lesser of the cash selling price of the average retail price as quoted in the issue of the valuation book current as oí the date of the sale, then in general use by the Bank, then, in either such case,
Dealer shall pay to Bank upon demand, without recourse to Dealer’s reserve, that proportion of the excess which the unpaid balance on the contract at the time of loss bears to the original amount of the contract.
When the Bank shall sustain a loss on a contract the loss reserve on that contract shall not be earned, but, instead, the amount thereof shall be repaid by Dealer to Bank upon demand.

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Brodsky v. Commissioner
27 T.C. 216 (U.S. Tax Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 T.C. 216, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brodsky-v-commissioner-tax-1956.