Grogan v. United States

346 F. Supp. 564, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5089, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13540
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMay 26, 1972
DocketCiv. A. 1367
StatusPublished

This text of 346 F. Supp. 564 (Grogan v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grogan v. United States, 346 F. Supp. 564, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5089, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13540 (N.D. Ga. 1972).

Opinion

SIDNEY O. SMITH, Jr., District Judge.

This action for the recovery of income taxes paid to defendant for the taxable year 1963 has been submitted to this Court for judgment on the basis of briefs and stipulated facts.

Plaintiffs are husband and wife who filed a joint tax return for the year 1963. From sometime prior to 1950 until 1962, plaintiff, Eldo Grogan, was a poultry grower. He mixed the feed for his poultry, operated as an individual, and kept his records and computed his income tax according to the cash receipts and disbursement method of accounting. On December 31, 1953, Eldo Grogan’s proprietorship had accounts receivable totaling $86,857.56 for poultry sold and accounts receivable totaling $172,545.69 representing feed and chickens furnished contract growers, and a feed inventory of $2,000. On January 2, 1962, Eldo Grogan, in his individual capacity, and his brother, A. J. Grogan, as trustee for the plaintiffs’ three minor children, formed a partnership known as Grogan Feed Co. Eldo Grogan contributed the feed mixing operations of his proprietorship to the partnership and his brother, as trustee, contributed $18,000 to the partnership. Consequently, Eldo Grogan owned an interest of 91.6% in the capital and profits of the partnership, which buys feed ingredients from dealers and mills feed for sale and raises some chickens which produce eggs for sale. In 1966, agents of the defendant examined the income tax returns of plaintiffs and the Grogan Feed Co. partnership for the years 1963 and 1964 and changed the partnership’s accounting method from the cash to the accrual basis of accounting beginning with the 1963 tax year. Because of this change of method of accounting and determining taxable income all of the outstanding receivables on the books of the partnership for 1963 were taken into the partnership’s income. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ own taxable income was increased and defendant assessed against plaintiffs additional income taxes for 1963 plus interest and penalty fees. After plaintiffs paid the assessment, they filed claim for refund which was denied. 1

1) The controversy in this action concerns the operation of section 481(a) of *566 the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 481). Section 481(a), which is one of the sections governing accounting and computing taxable income, provides that where a taxpayer computes his taxable income by a method of accounting different from the method under which the taxpayer’s taxable income for the preceding year was computed, there shall be taken into account those adjustments which are determined to be necessary solely by reason of the change in order to prevent amounts from being duplicated or omitted. The section further provides, however, that where a change in accounting method is involuntary, i. e., initiated by the government, no portion of the adjustments which is attributable to pre-1954 Code years shall be taken into account in computing taxable income of the taxpayer in the year of the change in accounting method. 2

Plaintiffs argue that under section 481, defendant had no right to include in Grogan Feed Co.’s partnership income for 1963 its inventory and deferred receivables as of December 31, 1963, without giving credit for the inventory and deferred receivables of Eldo Grogan’s proprietorship as of December, 1953. Defendant contends that the Grogan Feed Co. partnership is, for the purposes of section 481(a), a distinct entity, i. e., a “taxpayer”, separate from its individual partners and different from its predecessor sole proprietorship; that, since the partnership did not exist prior to 1962, no portion of the adjustment in dispute can actually be attributed to pre-1954 receivables of the partnership, and, thus, the partnership was due no credit for such items.

In light of the facts and arguments, the Court is presented with this novel question, which both parties agree is not governed by any existing precedent: Where a person who has operated a business as a sole proprietorship joins with other persons to operate the same business as a partnership and where the former sole proprietor owns an interest of more than 90% in the capital and profits of the partnership, is the partnership a continuation of the sole proprietorship for the purposes of I.R.C. § 481(a) so that pre-1954 inventories and accounts receivable of the proprietorship may be credited against the partnership’s inventories and accounts receivable in 1963, the year in which the government changed the partnership’s accounting method from cash to accrual?

While apparently no cases have been decided involving the precise issue before this Court, the Tax Court has decided three somewhat analogous cases.

In Ezo Prods. Co., 37 T.C. 385 (1961), a partnership was succeeded by a corporation; both the partnership and the corporation used the cash receipts and disbursements accounting method. Subsequently, but during the corporation’s first taxable year, the government required the corporation to use the accrual method of accounting. The corporation then sought to limit the resulting increase in its taxable income by invoking section 481 to claim credit for the partnership’s pre-1954 receivables. The Tax Court held that the corporation was not a continuation of the partnership, but a separate entity, and that as a separate entity it had no preceding taxable years within the meaning of 481(a). The corporation was, therefore, not allowed credit for the partnership’s pre1954 receivables. 3 In Pittsfield Coal & Oil Co., 25 Tax Ct.Mem. 11 (1966), a sole proprietorship was incorporated. In circumstances very similar to those in Ezo, the Tax Court held that the corporation should not be considered a continuation of the proprietorship for the purpose of calculating a section 481 adjust *567 ment following a change in accounting method. The Court again would not disregard the corporation’s separate existence and noted the corporation could have had no preceding tax years before its incorporation. Similarly, in Estate of Biewer, 41 T.C. 191 (1963), where the plaintiff was a decedent’s estate which continued a business previously conducted by decedent, the court held that for the purposes of section 481 an estate was not a continuation of the decedent taxpayer, but a new and different taxable entity.

Defendant cites these three cases to support its contention that the successor in interest of a business is not the same entity for the purposes of section 481 as its predecessor and cannot receive the benefits of any credits that might arise from the preceding taxable years of its predecessor. Plaintiffs do not directly attack the soundness of these decisions, but point out that corporations and estates are different from partnerships, since partnerships are not treated by the Internal Revenue Code as taxable entities, but rather as mere conduits of income and loss to the partners.

Plaintiffs’ distinctions have some merit. In light of the estate income tax provisions (26 U.S.C. § 641

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Related

Ezo Products Co. v. Commissioner
37 T.C. 385 (U.S. Tax Court, 1961)
Estate of Biewer v. Commissioner
41 T.C. 191 (U.S. Tax Court, 1963)
Travis v. Commissioner
47 T.C. 502 (U.S. Tax Court, 1967)
Dearborn Gage Co. v. Commissioner
48 T.C. 190 (U.S. Tax Court, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
346 F. Supp. 564, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5089, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grogan-v-united-states-gand-1972.