Federal Oil Co. v. Commissioner
This text of 1 T.C.M. 930 (Federal Oil Co. 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Opinion
HILL, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's income tax liability of $5,509.38 for the calendar year 1940, and a deficiency in excess-profits tax liability for the same year of $4,508.35. Respondent also determined a 25 percent penalty in the amount of $1,127.09 for failure of petitioner to file an excess-profits tax return within the time prescribed by law. On brief respondent admits that petitioner is entitled to an excess-profits credit sufficient to eliminate the asserted excess-profits tax liability, and now concedes that there is no deficiency in excess-profits tax or penalty, due from petitioners for 1940. This leaves in controversy only the income tax deficiency, which results entirely from the disallowance by respondent of a bad debt deduction claimed by petitioner in the amount of $172,655.47.
The Commissioner's determination of a deficiency is presumed to be correct, and the burden is upon the taxpayer to show that it is erroneous.
It is alleged and admitted in the pleadings that petitioner is a Texas corporation, with its principal office at Dallas. Only one witness testified at the hearing, and a single document, listing the assets and liabilities of Bennett Oil Corporation at December 31, 1940, as shown by its books of account, was offered in evidence.
Petitioner's witness stated on direct examination that the Bennett*356 Oil Corporation owned the Bennett Oil & Gas Company, which in turn owned the Federal Oil Company, petitioner herein. However, on cross examination, the witness testified that one Frank W. Bennett was the principal stockholder of petitioner, owning 87 percent of its stock, and that he also owned all of the stock of Bennett Oil Corporation. In 1940 and for several years prior thereto, this witness was chief accountant for the Bennett Oil Corporation, and at the time of the hearing, and during part of the year 1940, was employed by petitioner as chief accountant; he was also chief accountant for two or three other corporations. The further testimony of the witness, pertinent here, may be summarized as follows: Bennett Oil & Gas Company was a Louisiana corporation, and was indebted to the Federal Oil Company in an undisclosed amount. Bennett Oil Corporation forwarded to the Louisiana corporation, "a certificate of their checks on account." Certain of these checks held by the Bennett Oil & Gas Company were transmitted to the Federal Oil Company in the summer or early fall of 1940 for application on that company's account with Federal. The checks were seven in number, dated in February *357 and March 1940, and were for the total amount of $162,789.94. At that time petitioner had an unsecured account on its books against the Bennett Oil Corporation for an additional amount of at least $9,865.53. The checks in question were not issued by the Bennett Oil Corporation in payment of its obligation to petitioner; they were issued to the Bennett Oil & Gas Company. The Bennett Oil Corporation "went into the Federal Court under the Bankruptcy Act on November 1, 1940," and "went into the hands of the Receiver." The amount of the checks and open account, totaling $172,655.47 was charged off the books of Federal Oil Company as worthless at December 31, 1940.
The statement of assets and liabilities of Bennett Oil Corporation, per books at December 31, 1940, petitioner's exhibit 1 disclosed assets of $5,433,669.16 and total liabilities of $6,375,575.18. Liabilities exceeded assets in the amount of $941,906.02, but such liabilities included reserves for depreciation, depletion and intangible drilling costs, and capital stock and capital surplus, all in the aggregate amount of $653,196.24. Thus, it appears that the liabilities to creditors exceeded book value of assets available to pay*358 creditors only to the extent of $288,709.78.
While statements contained in a taxpayer's brief do not constitute evidence which may be considered in deciding an issue, certain alleged facts stated in the brief of petitioner herein throw some light on the confusing and incomplete picture presented by the evidence. Attached to petitioner's reply brief are purported copies of the seven checks in controversy, made payable to Bennett Oil & Gas Company, Inc., and endorsed by the payee to petitioner "without recourse to us." In its brief, petitioner says that it accepted these checks in 1940 in full payment of the indebtedness due to it from the Bennett Oil & Gas Company, Inc.; that the latter corporation was a solvent, responsible company, managed and operated entirely by its president, one W. P. Weber; that Frank W. Bennett, who owned 100 percent of the stock of the Bennett Oil Corporation and 87 percent of petitioner's stock, owned only 43 percent of the stock of Bennett Oil & Gas Company.
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1 T.C.M. 930, 1943 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-oil-co-v-commissioner-tax-1943.