Great Bear Spring Co. v. Commissioner

12 B.T.A. 383, 1928 BTA LEXIS 3550
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1928
DocketDocket No. 10489.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 B.T.A. 383 (Great Bear Spring Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Bear Spring Co. v. Commissioner, 12 B.T.A. 383, 1928 BTA LEXIS 3550 (bta 1928).

Opinion

[389]*389OPINION.

Love :

Before discussing the issues, we will dispose of two claims made by petitioners in their brief.

The first is, that another company, viz, the Great Bear Water Works Co., ivas affiliated with them. Testimony intended to prove the fact Avas offered by petitioners during the taking of a deposition and was duly objected to on behalf of the respondent. There are no allegations in the pleadings relating to it and we are, therefore, precluded from considering this claim.

Second, the petitioners invoke the jurisdiction of the Board to redetermine the tax of the Spring Company for 1920. It is asserted in the brief that the amount of overassessment of this company, mentioned in the deficiency letter, is the disallowed portion of a larger amount as to which a claim in abatement had been filed. However, the facts are not pleaded and are not in evidence and there is, therefore, nothing before us upon which we may act. The only reference to an abatement claim is a sentence in the deficiency letter, reading, “ Consideration has been given the statements contained in your claim for the abatement of $3,648.60, 1920 income and profits tax.” On its face, the deficiency letter states merely an overassessment of the Spring Company for 1920. This is the only fact before us, and we haA'e no jurisdiction to redetermine an overassessment.

The consolidated tax assessed against the two petitioners Avas apportioned by the Commissioner between them on the basis of the income assignable to each. Section 240, Revenue Act of 1918. In redetermining the deficiency of the Realty Company for 1920 and of the Spring Company for 1921, it is necessary to consider any evidence [390]*390affecting the consolidated tax, but wé have no jurisdiction to redetermine the tax liability of the member of the affiliation against which no deficiency has been determined.

It is alleged that the petitioners were on the accrual basis of accounting and that their income and invested capital should be computed accordingly, the Commissioner apparently having used the cash receipts and disbursements method. The testimony consists largely of accounting figures read into the record, and exhibits consisting of sheets from accounting books. These do not, however, tell the story completely. Such argument as was made throws no light on how the petitioner's themselves interpreted this testimony in reaching their conclusion that the accrual method prevailed. They maintain that the Spring Company had accounts receivable in 1920, which were summarized on its general books, although the details were kept in the auxiliary ledgers at the branches; also that it kept inventories, and that the existence of accounts receivable and inventories are consistent only with the accrual method. They stop short, however', of showing just how the accounts receivable were treated in computing income. The balance sheets indicate that they were not included in income in 1919 and 1920; otherwise, they would appear therein as assets and be reflected in surplus. The surplus appearing in these balance sheets, respectively, checks with the profit and loss accounts in the books. This shows that the accounts receivable undoubtedly were not considered in computing income. Its so-called inventory was not a record of goods or materials in stock used in manufacture. It had no “ stock in trade ” in the ordinary accounting sense. The article which it dealt in was water, and the water was not inventoried. What it terms an inventory was a statement of the personal propérty which it owned at each branch office such as machinery, furniture, bottles, crates, horses, automobiles, coolers, and of the accounts receivable. The testimony introduced by petitioner not only fails to prove that the Spring Company was on the accrual basis in 1920, but, on the contrary, shows, we think, that its books were then kept on the cash receipts and disbursements method.

This conclusion is supported by the fact that it made entries in 1921 putting the accounts receivable on the general ledger and including them in surplus for the first time. Under date of January 1, 1921, it made an entry in the profit and loss account, reading, “Additional assets not earnings, $86,686.10.” Reference to another page shows this item to be-made up as follows: “Supplies, $2,817.07; Coolers, $38,444; Accounts Receivable, $45,365.63.” The evidence shows that the-accounts were kept on the accrual basis in 1921, and we think this method would correctly reflect its income for 1921.

[391]*391The only evidence as to how the Realty Company kept its books is a copy of its profit and loss account. This account does not contain enough information to enable us to determine the question and we make no finding in this regard.

Petitioners contend, however, that accounts receivable should properly be included in invested capital irrespective of the accounting method employed, since they are assets and tangible, and, as they state, represent an investment of cash. They cite section 325 of the Revenue Act of 1918. This is a section of definitions. Section 326 is the one that prescribes what may be included in invested capital. Assets, merely as such, are not included. Invested capital embraces cash and property paid in for stock, or as paid-in surplus, and also earned surplus and undivided profits. Under the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting, accounts receivable do not enter into earned surplus or undivided profits until after they have been collected. We, therefore, hold that the accounts receivable of the Spring Company are not a part of invested capital for 1920, but that the accounts receivable at the beginning of 1921 may be included in invested capital for 1921.

The Spring Company charged coolers to expense. They had a life in service of 10 years, and are properly capital assets. At the beginning of 1920 it had thus expended for coolers, $98,643.31. The accrued depreciation thereon was $47,191.95, leaving an unexpired value of $50,851.36. At the beginning of 1921 the total expenditure was $105,995.89; accrued depreciation $58,023.88; unexpired value $47,972.91. However, inventories at the beginning of 1920 and 1921 show that this company had on hand coolers of the value of $38,100 and $38,444, respectively. The discrepancy between the inventories and the unexpired part of the cost at the beginning of each year is not explained. If the difference represented coolers lost or destroyed, deductions should have been made in the year in which the loss or destruction occurred. The total cost of coolers should be reduced by the amount of the discrepancy, both for invested capital and for depreciation purposes.

It is proper to include in invested capital the supplies on hand at the beginning of each of the taxable years, which had been charged to expenses.

The parties have agreed upon the amount of depreciation to be allowed on part of the property of the Spring Company. In addition to the amounts agreed upon, petitioners claim obsolescence on a building and machinery located on leased ground at Jersey City which had been used as a bottling plant. The purchase of springs at a different location, from which delivery of water would be made directly, rendered this plant no longer of use. In 1920 it was planned to put [392]*392the springs into use in about three years, and the change was actually carried out in 1923. One-fourth of the depreciated value is a proper deduction for obsolescence in each of the years 1920 and 1921.

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Related

Great Bear Spring Co. v. Commissioner
12 B.T.A. 383 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
12 B.T.A. 383, 1928 BTA LEXIS 3550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-bear-spring-co-v-commissioner-bta-1928.