Eljer Co. v. Commissioner

134 F.2d 251, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1110, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3527
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 24, 1943
DocketNo. 8037
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 F.2d 251 (Eljer Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eljer Co. v. Commissioner, 134 F.2d 251, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1110, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3527 (3d Cir. 1943).

Opinion

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

In its income tax return for 1936 the taxpayer claimed a deduction for a bad debt which was disallowed by the Commissioner. The Board of Tax Appeals upheld the Commissioner and the principal question arising upon this review of its decision is whether $75,000 of the debt for which deduction is claimed in 1936 was available to the taxpayer as a deduction in that year under the provisions of Section 23(lc) of the Revenue Act of 1936. 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Acts, pages 827, 828, 829.1 The question arises from the following facts:

[253]*253The taxpayer is a manufacturer of vitreous china plumbing fixtures. It sells most of its perfect or “A" products to Crane Company. The consistent policy of the taxpayer has been to sell its seconds or “B” grade products in territories not served by Crane Company. For some time it sold “B” products to one Philpott in Cleveland, Ohio, but found that he was unable to absorb all the seconds it was producing. In 1910 the taxpayer’s stockholders caused Occidental Company to be incorporated. The officers and directors were the same as the taxpayer’s. Philpott was made manager. Through various mergers, reorganizations and transfers the taxpayer became the owner of all the Occidental stock. The taxpayer sold “B” products to Occidental at prevailing prices. Because of high operating expense and poor management Occidental operated at a loss from its inception in 1910 to its dissolution in 1936. It made payments to the taxpayer from time to time upon a funning account but the indebtedness mounted steadily. In 1927 Occidental owed the taxpayer more than $105,000. The taxpayer’s officers, considering it deceiving to creditors to show on the books the full amount of the Occidental account as current and immediately collectible, transferred $75,000 to an account denominated “Investments.” The taxpayer had a bad debts account but did not follow the practice of setting up reserves for bad, slow, or doubtful accounts. The taxpayer did not seek to deduct the $75,000 as a partially worthless debt in 1927 or in 1928. The unsegregated $30,000 remained in the taxpayer’s receivables. That indebtedness in turn increased steadily. From 1929 to 1934 Occidental changed managers several times. In 1929 it changed its name to Eljer-Ohio Company. In 1934 one Dever was employed as manager and did succeed in increasing the volume of business but did not succeed in operating Occidental at a profit. In 1936 the trustee for the bondholders of the taxpayer and the taxpayer’s accountants suggested and Dever insisted that the Occidental account be liquidated. It was agreed to dissolve Occidental and this was in fact formally accomplished on December 31, 1936.

In its 1936 income tax return the taxpayer deducted the sum of $84,702.62 as a bad debt charge-off computed as follow:

Balance due by Eljer-Ohio Co. [Occidental] to taxpayer at date of its dissolution....... 157,996.07

Received by taxpayer from liquidation of assets.......... 10,756.46

Balance of account charged off 147,239.61

Less tax advantage to taxpayer from 1921 to 1925 and 1928 resulting from filing consolidated income tax returns... 62,536.99

$ 84,702.62

The tax advantage thus conceded was subsequently admitted by the taxpayer to be greater in amount than $62,536.99.2 As a matter of fact, as we shall later show, it totalled $72,667.89. The had debt deduction in dispute is thus reduced to $74,571.-89, a figure slightly less than the portion of the debt transferred to “Investments” account in 1927. Consequently the deductibility in 1936 of the portion of the debt transferred in 1927 to “Investments” account is the question for decision.

The Board of Tax Appeals determined that the Commissioner properly disallowed the deduction. It separated the total debt of $147,239.61 into two items. The item of $75,000, the amount carried in the taxpayer’s books as “Investments”, the Board ruled to be nondeductible for the reason that that item was not ascertained as worthless in 1936 but rather in some year prior thereto. The Board did not state in what year. Having thus first disposed of the $75,000 item the Board then concluded that the remainder of the debt [i. e. $147,-239.61 less $75,000] was not deductible because the tax advantage which accrued to the taxpayer in its consolidated tax returns by reason of the Occidental losses was in excess of that amount.

This division of the debt and consequently of the controversy as to its deductibility is predicated upon the fact that the taxpayer made a separate bookkeeping entry as to $75,000 of the indebtedness. But we think that this special treatment oí a portion of the debt did not create two separate debts out of what was formerly but a single indebtedness.3 The taxpayer [254]*254dealt with its customer continuously from 1910. . It sold merchandise at i prevailing market prices and upon an open and running account. Not a year passed without some payments by Occidental, -j This was just as true after 1927 as before! that year. In several years the payments were in excess of the purchases. At no period during the course of its dealingswith Occidental did the taxpayer give up its plans for the improvement of the latter’s business so as to make it financially ;sound and enable it to pay its debts in full. With this objective the taxpayer caused Occidental to change its managers, its business location and even its name. The taxpayer dealt with Occidental as a customer which was slow but not hopeless. It was not until 1936 when pressure from its own creditors and from the manager of Occidental (who objected to carrying the load of a debt incurred by prjor managers) became too much for the taxpayer, that it caused Occidental’s liquidation.

It will thus be seen that the indebtedness of Occidental did not in fact become wholly worthless until 1936. Nor does the record indicate that the taxpayer ascertained the portion of the indebtedness represented by the $75,000 item to be worthless in 1927 or that it charged that amount off in that year. On the contrary the Board found that the taxpayer recognized that portion of the debt as slow but not worthless. It found that the taxpayer’s officers thought that under proper operating conditions Occidental might be able to pay off the full amount of its debt. That the officers of the taxpayer did have the belief found by the Board is reflected in the fact that no part of the Occidental debt was charged to the bad debts account maintained by the taxpayer. Nor was anything done by the taxpayer between the years 1927 and 1936 to indicate that the taxpayer had changed its original views regarding the $75,000 item. It continued to treat that item as a slow and non-current but ultimately collectible debt.

However, even if the debt was partially worthless in 1927 to the extent of $75,000 it is now well settled that "If no claim for partial worthlessness, is made, the debt may be deducted, in full, when it becomes entirely worthless. The privilege which is given to charge off and deduct that part of a debt which is ascertained to be worthless does not deprive a taxpayer of the right to await the time when the debt becomes wholly worthless”. 5 Mertens—Law of Federal Income Taxation, § 30.23 pp. 384, 385; Commissioner v. MacDonald Eng. Co., 7 Cir., 1939, 102 F.2d 942, 945; Bingham v.

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Bluebook (online)
134 F.2d 251, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1110, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eljer-co-v-commissioner-ca3-1943.