Elgin Nat. Watch Co. v. United States

13 F. Supp. 428, 82 Ct. Cl. 592, 17 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 244, 1936 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 293
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 3, 1936
DocketNo. 42597
StatusPublished

This text of 13 F. Supp. 428 (Elgin Nat. Watch Co. 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
Elgin Nat. Watch Co. v. United States, 13 F. Supp. 428, 82 Ct. Cl. 592, 17 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 244, 1936 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 293 (cc 1936).

Opinion

GREEN, Judge.

Plaintiff has filed a motion to amend the filings and for a new trial. The opinion heretofore filed contained a typographical error, misstating a date which might lead the reader to mistake the document referred to in connection therewith. We have also concluded to make some additional findings. None of these matters alter the opinion of the court as to the final result in the case, but under the circumstances it is thought best to withdraw the original findings, judgment, and opinion, and file amended findings, together with a new opinion, which is as follows:

This is a suit to recover a portion of income and profits taxes paid by the plaintiff for the year 1920. The action is based upon a claim for refund filed June 6, 1925, and a determination of the amount of overpayment for that year made by the commissioner on February 13, 1932.

The record made by the Bureau of Internal Revenue with reference to plaintiff’s taxes for 1920 is very confusing and in some respects contradictory. The taxes for 1920 depend to some extent upon the amount of the taxes for 1919, and the question of the amount of taxes due for the latter year was for a long time in the courts and was not settled until after the commissioner had made his final determination of the taxes for 1920. Counsel for the respective parties have not, to say the least, assisted in clearing up the confusion-by filing a stipulation which contains much matter entirely irrelevant and includes documents some of which contain reams of calculations based upon plaintiff’s claims unsupported by any satisfactory evidence. When this mass is sifted the material facts are as follows:

[431]*431On October 16, 1924, in a document which also referred to the years 1918 and 1919, the plaintiff made a claim for the refund of $149,517.80 for the year 1920 alleged to have been determined as an overassessment by the commissioner in a letter dated August 30, 1924. On May 19, 1925, the commissioner issued his schedule of refunds and credits for the year 1920 allowing an overassessment in the sum of $149,517.80 and crediting this amount to taxes outstanding and uncollected for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1919. On May 20, 1925, plaintiff filed a brief entitled “Brief of Facts Relating to Claim for Abatement of $191,127.-64 for the Taxable Year 1919 and Proposed Additional Assessments of $3,360.76 and $4,871.75 for the Taxable Years 1921 and 1922.” It will be noticed that this brief was not submitted for the purpose of determining the taxes for 1920, although it refers to the fact that the commissioner had previously allowed an over-assessment on the taxes for 1920 of $149,-517.80 as stated above. The brief also contained a statement that the plaintiff “bases its appeal for a redetermination of the income and profits taxes due from it for the taxable years 1919 to 1922” upon a contention that the commissioner had “erred in including as a part of the income and expense of the Elgin National Watch Company, the income and expense of the board of trustees of the Elgin National Watch Company’s pension fund and the Elgin National Watch Company’s special pension fund.” And that “the Commissioner has also erroneously disallowed contributions made to the board of trustees of these funds.”

On June 6, 1925, the plaintiff filed a second claim for refund reciting: “This claim is filed as a demand for the refund of the overassessment stated by the Commissioner in his letter of August 30, 1924, or such other amount as may be determined to be refundable upon the final audit of the return for the taxable year ended April 30, 1920.”

On June 22, 1925, plaintiff filed a brief entitled “Supplementary Brief Relating to Income and Profits Taxes for the Taxable Years 1919 to 1922, Inclusive.” This brief contained an extremely elaborate and extensive calculation of the taxes of plaintiff for those years in accordance with the method and basis which plaintiff considered should be adopted. It stated that it should be considered as part of the brief previously filed, and attached to it was a prayer for relief in which the commissioner was requested to refund $250,-702.55, of which an overpayment for 1920 was specified in the sum of $97,044.98, an overpayment for 1919 in the sum of $258,569.98, and there was subtracted the total of certain additional taxes for 1921 and 1922.

On June 25, 1926, the commissioner addressed a letter to plaintiff stating among other things in substance that its claim for abatement of the deficiency for the years 1919 and 1920 had been allowed in part and rejected in part. The calculation upon which the commissioner based his conclusions accompanied the letter. As shown above, the claim for abatement was set out in the brief filed May 20, 1925.

Plaintiff took an appeal from the commissioner’s decision of its tax liability for the year 1919 to the United Stales Board of Tax Appeals, which on, June 24, 1931, decided that there had been an overpayment for that year in the amount of $481,-963.79. The findings of fact and opinion on this appeal appear in Elgin Watch Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 37 B.T.A. 339-364. The commissioner refunded the $149,517.80 which had been credited from the 1920 overassessment upon the taxes for 1919 and, having refused to make any further refund, plaintiff brought suit to recover the amount with interest which was due under the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals. This suit after having gone through the District Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals was finally settled sometime after October 20, 1933, by the government paying $500,000 in accordance with a certificate of overassessment for 1919 issued by the commissioner. If plaintiff wished to amend its refund claim for 1920, it should have done so when the Board of Tax Appeals rendered its opinion on September 19, 1929, in favor of the plaintiff on the main issues, or at least on June 24, 1931, when the board entered its final decision, in order to bring before the commissioner the question now raised. Especially should it have done this when it saw that the commissioner was contesting the board’s decision for 1919 in plaintiff’s favor and had taken the case to the Circuit Court of Appeals. Instead of so doing plaintiff waited three years before attempting to [432]*432call the matter to the attention of the commissioner, and four months after the claim for 1920 had been finally decided.

On February 13, 1932, while- the taxes for the year 1919 were pending in the Circuit Court of Appeals on an appeal by, the government, the commissioner issued a certificate of overassessment for the year 1920 in which the net' amount of overassessment'for that year, after deducting the $149,517.80 previously allowed, was : fixed at $56,994.91, but $11,333.67 thereof was stated to be barréd- by the statute ' of - limitations. The remainder, $45,661.24, was • credited - in the sum of $30,726.08 to the taxes of 1921, and $14,-935.16, together with interest in. the sum of $29,-709.27, was refunded. ■ On June 17, 1932, the - plaintiff’s attorney addressed a letter to the commissioner in which he stated that the plaintiff had filed a claim for'the refund'of $149,517.80 for the year 1920 and that .’no- action had been taken thereon. , ’To this letter was attached a postscript as follows: ■ “Under the decision of the Court of Claims in the case of Factors ,& Finance - Co., we hereby amend the' said claim by claiming that there, should be added to the invested capital of the taxpayer as set forth in the 60-day letter issued by you, 42% of the overpayment determined by the United States Board of Tax Appeals in the case of this company for the .year Í919.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Supp. 428, 82 Ct. Cl. 592, 17 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 244, 1936 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elgin-nat-watch-co-v-united-states-cc-1936.