Farber v. Commissioner

43 T.C. 407, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 144
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1965
DocketDocket Nos. 91341, 91342
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 43 T.C. 407 (Farber 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
Farber v. Commissioner, 43 T.C. 407, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 144 (tax 1965).

Opinion

Hoyt, Judge:

Respondent determined deficiencies in and additions to the income tax of petitioner Jacob D. Farber for the calendar year 1948 and of petitioners Jacob D. Farber and Boze Farber for the calendar years 1949 through 1954 in the following amounts:

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One of the cases here decided involves the separate return of Jacob D. Farber for the year 1948. The other case is concerned with the joint returns of Jacob D. Farber and his wife, Boze Farber, for the years 1949 through 1954. The cases have been consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion. The principal issues for decision are:

(1) Were the understatements of income in petitioners’ returns for the years in question due to fraud with intent to evade tax ?

(2) If not, are the assessment and collection of the asserted deficiencies barred by limitations ?

(3) Is the bank-deposits method used by respondent in determining the amount of each annual deficiency invalid and did it produce excessive deficiencies, or should respondent’s determination be sustained?

FINDINGS OP PACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.

Petitioners Jacob D. Farber and Boze Farber are husband and wife residing in Philadelphia, Pa. Petitioner Jacob D. Farber filed an individual income tax return for the calendar year 1948 with the collector of internal revenue, Philadelphia, Pa. The petitioners filed joint income tax returns with the collector of internal revenue, Philadelphia, Pa., for the calendar years 1949,1950, and 1951, and with the district director of internal revenue, Philadelphia, Pa., for the calendar years 1952, 1953, and 1954. Notices of deficiency pertaining to all of these years were issued on December 29, 1960. The notices of deficiency for the years 1948 through 1953 were all issued more than 6 years after the returns for those respective years had been filed. The notice of deficiency for the year 1954 was issued less than 6 years but more than 3 years after the date of filing1 of petitioners’ 1954 return.

For convenience hereinafter Jacob D. Farber will be referred to as petitioner and Eoze Farber will sometimes be referred to as petitioner’s wife.

Petitioner was born in approximately 1900. He completed the sixth grade of elementary school and then began working. In 1917 he joined the U.S. Navy, served for almost 2 years, and was then honorably discharged. While in the Navy he worked applying tar to the inside of the bottom of ships. After leaving the Navy, petitioner started a business for the manufacture and sale of bituminous coatings. This business was run as a sole proprietorship and became known as Briggs Bituminous Composition Co. In 1937 petitioner developed a new coating which he called Farbertite and which soon made him successful. Petitioner supervised overall operations of the business during the years 1948 through 1954, including plant operations, sales, delivery, and recordkeeping. He traveled extensively in pursuit of this business during these years.

The sole officeworker employed by the company during the period here in question was Owen Trainer, who served as bookkeeper, secretary, and assistant to petitioner in supervising production employees. Trainer began keeping books and records for the business on a cash basis in approximately 1949. Petitioner maintained a bank account for the business at Liberty Eeal Estate Bank & Trust Co. (hereinafter referred to as Liberty Bank), and maintained personal accounts at other banks. Petitioner would regularly receive checks representing business receipts as well as income from personal investments (rents, dividends, etc.) at his office, and these checks would be deposited by Trainer in the various accounts maintained by petitioner. Except when absent from the office, petitioner would instruct Trainer as to the specific bank account into which each check should be deposited. Sometimes petitioner instructed Trainer to deposit checks representing proceeds of the business in one of petitioner’s personal accounts. Petitioner had also instructed Trainer to record in the records of the business only the receipts deposited in the business bank account at Liberty Bank, to turn over to petitioner’s accountants only the records that pertained to deposits in the Liberty Bank, and to not mention to the accountants anything about the personal bank accounts. With reasonable regularity during the period in question, amounts previously deposited in petitioner’s personal accounts were withdrawn and deposited in the company’s account at Liberty Bank. Upon petitioner’s instruction, these deposits were treated on the books of the company as loans.

An accountant was hired by petitioner to prepare the profit-and-loss statements of the business and the individual income tax returns of petitioner and his wife for each of the years in question. An associate of the accountant audited the cash disbursements and receipts of the business, using only the bank statements of Liberty Bank for verification of cash receipts. Upon inquiry every year, petitioner told him that all of his business receipts were deposited in the Liberty Bank account. During each of the years in question the company’s account at the Liberty Bank reflected deposits in excess of the business receipts shown on the business records. In each year petitioner explained to his accountants that some of the excess was attributable to business borrowings. The remaining unexplained excesses were, with petitioner’s concurrence, added by the accountants to business receipts.

Facts, needed in preparation of petitioner’s tax returns, concerning income other than from the Briggs Bituminous Composition Co. (i.e., rents, dividends, etc.), were supplied to the accountants personally by petitioner and his wife. The information supplied them by both petitioner and his wife omitted disclosure of certain amounts of taxable income, which amounts were not reported in petitioners’ tax returns.

The net income or loss which petitioner reported in his income tax returns for each of the years in question, and specific items of taxable gross income which were never reported, were as follows:

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In addition to the amounts of identified income reflected above, petitioner deposited funds in accounts in his name at the Peoples National Bank & Trust Co., Langhorne, Pa.; the Central Trust Co.,2 Rochester, N.Y.; and the Central Penn Bank, Philadelphia, Pa., from unidentified sources as follows:

1948_$27, 843
1949_ 17,889
1950 _ 35,854
1951_ 12, 724
1952_ $4, 040
1953 _ 6,765
1954 _ 1,583

Petitioner married his present wife, Roze, in the year 1920 when he was about 20 years old and she was about 17. At the time of his marriage, petitioner was affectionate, ambitious, and firm in bis ideas and conduct. He was normal mentally.

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Bluebook (online)
43 T.C. 407, 1965 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farber-v-commissioner-tax-1965.