Ferrara v. Commissioner
This text of 10 T.C.M. 141 (Ferrara 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 Findings of Fact and Opinion
OPPER, Judge: This proceeding arises from respondent's determination of deficiencies in income tax for the years 1942 to 1945, inclusive, of $1,286.10, $24,209.14, $25,772.10, and $13,213.67, respectively, and 50 per cent fraud penalties for the same years of $643.05, $12,156.01, $12,886.05, and $6,606.84, respectively. Certain adjustments are not contested. The issues are whether respondent correctly determined petitioner's income by the "net worth" method, and whether any part of any deficiency is due to fraud with intent to evade tax. Some of the facts were stipulated.
Findings of Fact
The stipulated facts are hereby found.
Petitioner, a resident of New York, New York, filed his returns with the collector of internal revenue for the first district of New York.
Petitioner and his wife are both 45 years of age. They married in 1923 and have two children, a son of 26 years and a daughter of 22 years of age.
Petitioner's father came to this country in 1890. Neither of petitioner's parents could read or write. Petitioner's*335 father entered the retail fruit, vegetable, and grocery business. He operated the same retail store located in New York City, from 1907 to 1937. During the era of prohibition, petitioner's father sold homemade wine and bootleg liquor at the store. During the above period petitioner's father never had a bank account and never purchased any stocks, bonds or real property. He never filed any income or gift tax returns and left no estate upon his death.
Petitioner was one of ten children. One brother and one sister have died. Three of petitioner's brothers have been confined in institutions as mental incompetents. Another brother, Frank, 40 years old and married, with no children, has been employed by petitioner since 1930. Petitioner has three sisters. Two sisters are unmarried and live with petitioner's mother who is 71 years of age, one sister being employed by petitioner. Neither petitioner nor his brothers or sisters attended any school beyond elementary school.
Petitioner helped in the store as a boy, with his brothers and sisters. After graduation from elementary school petitioner continued to work for his father for about one year. Thereafter petitioner was employed in other*336 businesses for approximately five years. In 1925 petitioner went into business under the name of Allendale Farms, selling butter and eggs at retail from house to house. In 1927 he merged his business with that of another individual, and they formed Allendale Farms, Inc., to carry on a similar retail butter and egg business. Petitioner was employed by that corporation until March 31, 1937, when a voluntary dissolution occurred, petitioner receiving assets worth about $19,500.
Subsequently petitioner invested those assets plus $500 in cash in a corporation named Pinebrook Farms, Inc., which he organized, to continue in the same retail business. The corporation engaged also in the wholesale butter, egg, and poultry business as a supplier of hotels and restaurants. Petitioner was president and principal stockholder. His annual salary for the years 1938 to 1941, inclusive, was approximately $4,000, $5,000, $7,000, and $7,800, respectively. During the period from 1927 through 1941 petitioner's only sources of income were the enterprises mentioned.
Between May 24, 1939, and November 26, 1945, petitioner received short-term business loans, ranging in amounts from $300 to $6,300, from a*337 bank, on which he paid interest at rates varying from 2 1/2 to 4 per cent, and for which he used life insurance policies and government bonds as collateral. In connection with those loans petitioner submitted personal financial statements to the bank, on various dates during that period, which showed cash assets varying in amount from $4,153 to $7,868.70.
A Selective Service Questionnaire, executed by petitioner under oath on May 27, 1942, stated that he had contributed during the preceding 12 months, $5,200 to the support of his family group, composed of his wife, son and daughter, and that he had contributed $700 and $300 to the support of his mother and mother-in-law, respectively; and that none of the above had received any other income during that period. Petitioner listed two one-family houses in response to a request to describe "all property, real and personal, owned by (or held in trust for) either myself or my dependents * * *." Petitioner stated in the questionnaire that it was his opinion that his classification should be 3A, and that the above dependents were very important to him. Petitioner was classified 3A on June 4, 1942, 3A on June 14, 1943, and classified 4A on*338 January 8, 1945.
During the war petitioner's source of supply from whoesalers for his business became limited. He learned that he could purchase butter, eggs, and poultry in large quantities as a wholesaler from western suppliers. In June or July 1943 petitioner formed the Thomas M. Ferrara Co., which qualfied under O.P.A. regulations, as a primary receiver and distributor, and which sold to chain stores. Petitioner made an initial investment of $5,000 and made larger investments thereafter. He engaged in the wholesale butter, egg, and poultry business under that name until September 1945 when he organized Thomas M. Ferrara Co., Inc., which succeeded to the business.
In 1944 petitioner pleaded guilty in the Federal District Court, to charges in two informations, of unlawfully selling poultry in 1943 and 1944 in excess of O.P.A. ceiling prices. Petitioner paid a fine of $4,303.76, served 15 days in a detention house, and received a suspended sentence of one year, being placed on probation. The violations were discovered by O.P.A. investigators from examinations of the books and records maintained by Pinebrook Farms, Inc., and Thomas M. Ferrara Co. Petitioner's customers were questioned. *339 No other actions have been brought.
On April 1, 1947, Pinebrook Farms, Inc., and Thomas M. Ferrara Co. were consolidated into Thomas M. Ferrara Co., Inc.
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10 T.C.M. 141, 1951 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrara-v-commissioner-tax-1951.