Fischer Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner

87 T.C. No. 7, 87 T.C. 116, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 80
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1986
DocketDocket No. 40305-84
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 87 T.C. No. 7 (Fischer Industries, Inc. 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
Fischer Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. No. 7, 87 T.C. 116, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 80 (tax 1986).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioners’ Federal income tax for each of the taxable years 1975 through 1978 and for 1980 and additions to tax for fraud pursuant to section 6653(b)1 in the following amounts:

TYE Apr. 30-Deficiency Sec. 6653(b) additions to tax1
1975 $349,436 $174,718
1976 174,699 87,335
1977 246.311 123,156
1978 22,698 (not applicable)
19802 177.311 (not applicable)
1 Respondent, by amendment to answer, proposed increases in the additions to tax pursuant to sec. 6653(b); the proposed revised additions are as follows: for the taxable year 1975 — 1442,357; for the taxable year 1976 — $385,687; and, for the taxable year 1977 — $334,355. Petitioners concede the correctness of the revised additions to tax.
2 Adjustments were made but no deficiency was determined for the taxable year 1979 as petitioners incurred a consolidated net operating loss for that year; therefore petitioners’ taxable year 1979 is not before us. Although we do not have jurisdiction over taxable year 1979, we may consider facts relating to any taxable year that are relevant to the issues to be decided in those taxable years before this Court. Martz v. Commissioner, 77 T.C. 749 (1981).

Following concessions by the parties, the sole issue that the Court must decide now is whether Mayfran, Inc., a member of petitioners’ consolidated group, elected for 1975 to value its inventory under the last-in, first-out (LIFO) method of inventory accounting.2

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. Petitioners’ principal place of business at the time the petition was filed was Mayfield Heights, Ohio.

Petitioners are corporations organized under the laws of the State of Ohio. Petitioner Fischer Industries, Inc. (Fischer), owned four subsidiaries during the period 1975 through 1980 — petitioners American Monorail, Inc., American Tool, Inc., M.G. Building Co., and Mayfran, Inc. (Mayfran). Mayfran, a manufacturer during the years at issue in this case, owned a foreign subsidiary, Mayfran GmbH. Mayfran was merged with Fischer, the surviving corporation, on January 3, 1979. Fischer filed consolidated Federal income tax returns (Forms 1120) for each of the taxable years ended April 30, 1975 through 1980, on which the income of each of its domestic subsidiaries was included. As a foreign corporation, Mayfran GmbH could not be included in petitioners’ consolidated returns. An information return for Mayfran GmbH was filed with petitioners’ consolidated returns, however, for each of the years at issue in this case.

Prior to the taxable year 1975, the value of Mayfran’s inventory was calculated on the first-in, first-out (FIFO) method of inventory accounting while Fischer and its other domestic subsidiaries calculated the value of their inventories under the LIFO method. For the taxable year 1975, however, the value of Mayfran’s closing inventory was calculated on the LIFO method. Thereafter, Mayfran calculated the value of its inventories under the LIFO method. Mayfran GmbH continued to calculate the value of its inventory on the FIFO method during the years before this Court.

On their consolidated Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1975 (the 1975 return), petitioners reported that both the LIFO and the FIFO methods were used in their inventory accounting. Petitioners did not answer a question on the 1975 return which asked whether there was any substantial change in determining quantities, costs, or valuations of inventories. No Form 970, Application to Use LIFO Inventory Method, was filed with the 1975 return or with the returns filed by petitioners for any of the remaining taxable years at issue in this case until April 16, 1986, shortly after trial, when petitioners filed an amended return for 1975 attaching a properly completed Form 970. Prior to April 16, 1986, the information requested by Form 970 was not provided on or with petitioners’ income tax returns for any of the taxable years 1975 through 1980. Petitioners filed returns for each of the taxable years 1976 through 1980 on the indicated dates: 1976 — on January 28, 1977; 1977 — on January 18, 1978; 1978 — on October 16, 1978; 1979 — on October 18, 1979; and 1980 — on January 19, 1981. On each of these returns, petitioners reported that LIFO was the method of inventory valuation used and that there was no substantial change in determining the quantities, costs, or valuations of inventories from the prior year.

Petitioners’ accounting firm conducted an audit of petitioners’ records for the taxable year 1975, and pursuant to its normal audit procedures prepared a certified financial statement for that year. The 1975 financial statement noted that Mayfran had changed from the FIFO to the LIFO method of inventory accounting that year. Petitioner provided a copy of the 1975 financial statement to respondent in 1979, in response to respondent’s request during its own audit of petitioners for documentation to support an election by Mayfran to use the LIFO method for the taxable year 1975.3 The information requested by Form 970 and respondent’s regulations was fully set forth in the work papers of petitioners’ accountants that were provided to respondent during the course of its audit of Fischer.

OPINION

Section 472 permits a taxpayer to elect, in accordance with applicable regulations, the LIFO method of inventory accounting. The regulations provide in part that:

(a) The LIFO inventory method may be adopted and used only if the taxpayer files with his income tax return for the taxable year as of the close of which the method is first to be used a statement of his election to use such inventory method. The statement shall be made on Form 970 pursuant to the instructions printed with respect thereto and to the requirements of this section, or in such other manner as may be acceptable to the Commissioner. * * * [Sec. 1.472-3(a), Income Tax Regs.]

The regulation has been changed significantly since we decided Textile Apron Co. v. Commissioner, 21 T.C. 147 (1953), when we last considered the effect of a failure to file a Form 970 on making the LIFO election.4 In Textile Apron we held, based on respondent’s regulations that, despite the taxpayer’s statement on the original return for its first taxable year that it had calculated its inventory by using LIFO valuation, failure to file a Form 970 was fatal to the LIFO election. After Textile Apron was decided, the regulation was amended to permit a taxpayer to elect the LIFO method (1) by filing a Form 970 or (2) in such other manner as may be acceptable to the Commissioner. Filing with the return the information that is required to be reported on Form 970 satisfies these regulations.5 We believe that this change in the regulations reflects, in part, the opinions of this Court and others decided since Textile Apron that if a taxpayer substantially complies with the procedures for making an election, the election will be effective.

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Bluebook (online)
87 T.C. No. 7, 87 T.C. 116, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-industries-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1986.