Goldfarb v. Department of Revenue

104 N.E.2d 606, 411 Ill. 573, 1952 Ill. LEXIS 279
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1952
Docket32205
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 104 N.E.2d 606 (Goldfarb v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldfarb v. Department of Revenue, 104 N.E.2d 606, 411 Ill. 573, 1952 Ill. LEXIS 279 (Ill. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Maxwell

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Department of Revenue, hereinafter referred to as the Department, imposed a deficiency assessment of retailers’ occupation tax in the amount of $2136.55 against appellant, Sol Goldfarb, doing business as Goldfarb’s Department Store, hereinafter referred to as the taxpayer. The assessment was confirmed by the circuit court of Madison County and the taxpayer appeals to this court, the revenue being involved.

The taxpayer operated a department store in Wood-river, Illinois, selling men’s, women’s and children’s clothing and household drygoods during the taxable period here involved, January 1, 1943, through December 31, 1945. Regular monthly reports, as required by the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act, were made to the Department by the taxpayer during all this period and taxes were paid on the total monthly receipts shown on these reports.

Section 4 of the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1951, chap. 120, par. 443,) provides: “As soon as practicable after any return is filed, the Department shall examine such return and shall correct such return according to its best judgment and information, which return so corrected by the Department shall be prima facie correct and shall be prima facie evidence of the correctness of the amount of tax due, as shown therein. Instead of requiring the person filing such return to file an amended return, the Department may simply notify him of the correction or corrections it has made.” The section further provides that if the tax computed on the corrected return is greater than the amount on the taxpayer’s returns, the Department shall notify the taxpayer that it proposes to assess the amount due together with penalties. Provision is then made for the taxpayer to file his protest and a hearing is held by a hearing officer appointed by the Department.

Pursuant to this provision of the act, the Department, in the month of June, 1946, caused an audit to be made at the taxpayer’s place of business, and a corrected return covering the three-year period was prepared showing the tax due on the corrected return greater than the amount shown on the taxpayer’s monthly returns. A notice of the proposed assessment was served upon the taxpayer. A protest was duly filed by the taxpayer and hearings were held at which evidence was heard on behalf of the Department and the taxpayer. The hearing officer recommended, and the Department made, a final assessment in accordance with the corrected returns, and that assessment was confirmed by the circuit court.

The sole question presented by this appeal is whether the taxpayer’s evidence presented at these hearings was sufficient to overcome the prima facie case which is made, as provided by the statute, by the Department’s corrected return.

The record discloses that on or about May 1, 1946, two employees of the Department called upon the taxpayer at his place of business, advised him who they were, and called for his books and records. The taxpayer thereupon turned over all his records to them, consisting of his cash receipts and sales books, bank deposit books, disbursement records, retailer occupation tax returns, accounts receivable ledger, cancelled checks, bank’s statements, income tax returns, purchase invoices, and general ledger. According to the testimony of the auditors, they ignored all the taxpayer’s records except his purchase invoices and the inventories as shown on his income tax reports, and proceeded to make their audit from these latter records alone and the oral statements made to them by the taxpayer. In order to compute the taxpayer’s gross receipts they testified they took the purchase invoices, asked the taxpayer the selling prices of the articles listed in these invoices, and from the cost price as shown by such invoices and the selling prices as given to them by the taxpayer, arrived at a markup figure of 52.2 per cent. This markup was added to the costs as shown by the invoices and the sum thereof was entered as the gross receipts. By the use of this method, the auditors found the' taxpayer’s gross receipts for the taxable period of three years to be $538,999.70 as against $439,147.61 as reported by the taxpayer on his tax returns for that period. Upon these figures they computed a tax deficiency of $1852.46, to which was added penalties in the sum of $184.09, making a total due the Department of $2136.55.

The Department contends that where it did not appear to its auditors that the taxpayer’s books and records truly and accurately reflected his gross receipts this ‘markup’ method of auditing was proper and the corrected return made a prima facie case; that the purchases were taken from the taxpayer’s purchase invoices and the selling prices were given to them, and approved in writing by the taxpayer; that he is bound by his signed statement of the purchases and selling prices; and that he fails to overcome the prima facie case by any competent testimony or evidence. They further contend that the taxpayer has failed to comply with the mandatory requirement of the act that he keep annual inventories.

The taxpayer contends that his books and records were in substantial compliance with the statute, that they were true and correct, that the Department accepted them and made no objection to their substantial sufficiency, and that, under such circumstances, the Department could not ignore such records and substitute an arbitrary markup formula. He further contends that where the only competent evidence was his books and records, supported by his testimony which was not so inconsistent or improbable, in itself, to be unworthy of belief, the purported prima facie case is overcome.

A detailed recitation of the evidence is deemed unnecessary. The salient facts are that the taxpayer produced a record of his daily receipts, testified that this record was kept by him or under his supervision, that it contained a ti'ue and correct record of all the receipts of the business taken daily from his cash register, that his monthly reports were made from this record, that such reports were true and correct, and that he did not receive the gross receipts shown by the corrected return prepared by the Department. In explanation of the discrepancy between the gross receipts shown on the corrected return and his monthly reports the taxpayer testified that the sales prices he gave the auditors were his “ticket” prices; that he frequently sold items for less than the “ticket” prices at seasonal sales and in making “concessions” to customers; that during this taxable period he had donated 275 pairs of shoes to the British Relief, gave “hundreds” of ladies coats and dresses to the Greek Relief Drive, “a lot” of sweaters to the Salvation Army, that he had sustained losses by theft of articles from the store; and that he had a “large amount” of outstanding accounts on merchandise included in the purchase invoices which were not reflected in his receipts.

The Department offered no evidence to show the taxpayer’s records were incorrect other than the corrected return based on the sales prices given by the taxpayer. It is admitted that sales for less than the “ticket” price, gifts or losses were not taken into consideration, and the hearing officer disregarded this testimony of the taxpayer because it was not supported by records.

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Bluebook (online)
104 N.E.2d 606, 411 Ill. 573, 1952 Ill. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldfarb-v-department-of-revenue-ill-1952.