Buck v. War Contracts Price Adjustment Board

10 T.C. 623, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 15, 1948
DocketDocket No. 449-R.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 T.C. 623 (Buck v. War Contracts Price Adjustment Board) 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
Buck v. War Contracts Price Adjustment Board, 10 T.C. 623, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221 (tax 1948).

Opinions

OPINION.

TuRnee, Judge:

This proceeding is now before the Court on the petitioner’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.

Under date of December 1,1943, a letter was mailed to the petitioner, signed by Morton J. Stone, Lieutenant Commander, XT SNR, Acting Chief, Services and Sales Renegotiation Section, Navy Department. Portions of the letter here pertinent read as follows:

Information received in this office indicates that the profits realized or likely to be realized by your organization for your fiscal years 1942 and 1943 may be excessive.
This -notice constitutes commencement of renegotiation with your organization pursuant to said Act. You are required (1) to acknowledge such commencement by executing and returning to this office not later than December 10, 1943 the enclosed “Acknowledgment of Commencement of Renegotiation” and (2) to complete and file with this office not later than December 20,1943 the information called for by the enclosed “Standard Form of Contractor’s Report.”

The pleadings show no facts as to any further notices, the dates of any conferences held, or whether or when the petitioner completed and filed the information called for.

What occurred thereafter with respect to 1942 is not shown and 1942 is not here involved. With respect to 1943, however, an order was entered on September 28, 1945, by Lewis S. Munson, Jr., Lieutenant Commander, USETE, Vice Chief, Services and Sales Eenegotiation Section, Navy Department, as delegatee of the War Contracts Price Adjustment Board, fixing'the excessive profits of the petitioner at $18,950.61. No review by the Board of this determination having been requested and the Board not having initiated review on its own motion, the Board on January 15, 1946, by registered mail, mailed to petitioner notice of its determination that petitioner had realized excessive profits on war contracts for the said year in the amount found by its delegatee.

It is the claim of the petitioner that the letter of December 1, 1943, constituted the commencement of renegotiation within the meaning of section 403 (c) of the Eenegotiation Act,1 as amended by the Eevenue Act of 1943, and that the order of unilateral determination made under delegated authority on September 28, 1945, having been made more than one year from December 1, 1943, he is discharged of all liabilities for excessive profits under his contracts for the year ended December 31, 1943. The Eevenue Act of 1943 did not become law until February 25,1944, almost three months after the mailing of the letter of December 1,1943. The petitioner must of necessity, however, rest his contention upon the Renegotiation Act as so amended, since, from and after enactment, it is the law of renegotiation of war contracts for all years ending after June 30, 1943,2 and by its terms established, for the first time, a period within which renegotiation proceedings, once commenced, must be concluded and without whieh 'he petitioner has no point at all. There is still no such limitation on the period of completion of renegotiation proceedings, once commenced, for fiscal years ending on or before June 30, 1943. Accordingly, the provisions of the Renegotiation Act as they existed prior to amendment on February 25,1944, and which are still applicable to years ended on or before June 30,1943, are of interest only to the extent that they may supply the backdrop for things done prior to the amendment of February 25,1944, or throw some light on the meaning or intent of Congress as expressed in the amended statute.

By section 403 (c) (1) of the act, prior to amendment, it was provided that the Secretary of a Department, whenever in his opinion the profits realized or likely to be realized from any contract with such Department might be excessive, was authorized and directed to require the contractor to renegotiate the contract price. In section 403 (c) (6) it was provided that no renegotiation should be commenced more than one year after the close of the fiscal year within which completion or termination of the contract occurred. By section 403 (c) (5), however, it was provided that the contractor might start the running of a period of limitation as to commencement of renegotiation by filing statements of actual costs of production and such other financial statements as might be prescribed by regulation, in which case the Secretary, if he was of the view that the profits might be excessive, and within one year of the filing of the costs and financial statements was to give notice of a date and place for an initial conference to be held within sixty days thereafter, and if such notice was not given and renegotiation was not commenced by the Secretary within such sixty days, the contractor was not thereafter to be required to renegotiate his contract or contracts for such fiscal year or years. It is to be noted that, while the statute did contain a limitation on the period within which renegotiation proceedings were required to be commenced, it contained no provision as to what act or acts should constitute the commencement of renegotiation, nor did it contain any limitation on the period within which renegotiation once commenced might be concluded. In this situation, the War, Navy, and Treasury Departments and the Maritime Commission on March 31,1943, issued a joint statement with respect to the commencement of renegotiation, referring particularly to the one-year limitation on commencement of a renegotiation proceeding as prescribed by section 403 (c) (6). The statement was:

* * * The Departments interpret this provision to mean that renegotiation commences on the specific date set by the Department conducting renegotiation for the initial renegotiation conference unless otherwise agreed to by the contractor.

Approximately two months later, on May 27,1943, the Departments amended that part of the joint statement previously issued relating to their interpretation of the meaning of commencement of renegotiation, the new provision reading as follows:

* * * The Departments interpret this provision to mean that renegotiation commences at the time of the institution of proceedings to obtain the information which is to be used as a basis for the determination of excessive profits.

But for the fact that this interpretation of the term “commenced” apparently was related to the limitation prescribed by section 403 (c) (6), it might well have been regarded as being in conflict with the provisions of section 403 (c) (5) ,3 wherein it is apparent that in situations where a contractor voluntarily filed costs and financial statements, as prescribed by regulation, Congress rather obviously had in mind that the commencement of renegotiation in such cases not only followed the filing of the information and data which was to be used as the basis for renegotiation, but was to be either the issuance of the notice for initial hearing or conference, or the holding of the initial hearing or conference pursuant to such notice.

By the Revenue Act of 1943, Congress completely rewrote the limitations provisions of the Renegotiation Act for all years ending after June 30,1943, which includes the year herein, that year being the year ended December 31, 1943.

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Brady v. War Contracts Price Adjustment Board
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Buck v. War Contracts Price Adjustment Board
10 T.C. 623 (U.S. Tax Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
10 T.C. 623, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buck-v-war-contracts-price-adjustment-board-tax-1948.