Hague v. Commissioner

45 B.T.A. 104, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1181
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedSeptember 12, 1941
DocketDocket Nos. 103352, 103355.
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 45 B.T.A. 104 (Hague 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
Hague v. Commissioner, 45 B.T.A. 104, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1181 (bta 1941).

Opinion

[109]*109OPINION.

Turner:

Respondent’s determination that Hague received taxable income in the amount of $343,192.61 not reported by him in his return was based on the discovery of large deposits in his bank accounts from unexplained sources. One argument by counsel for the estate seems to be that under the circumstances here, Hague now being dead, the respondent was not justified and had no authority to determine income on the basis of bank deposits and that his determination of the deficiency herein is entitled therefore to no presumption of correctness. There is ample authority for the respondent’s action in using Hague’s deposits as a starting point in determining his income. Axel Holmstrom, 35 B. T. A. 1092; Leonard B. Willits, 36 B. T. A. 294; Joseph Calafato, 42 B. T. A. 881; Russell C. Mauch, 35 B. T. A. 617; aff'd., 113 Fed. (2d) 555; and Hoefle v. Commissioner, 114 Fed. (2d) 713. Those cases hold that deficiencies determined by the respondent on the basis of such information are prima facie correct and that the burden is on the taxpayers to show that they are wrong. By design the statute contemplates the keeping by a taxpayer of accounts and records from which his correct income can be determined, [110]*110and in the absence of such books of account the respondent must determine or verify his income from the records or sources that are available. In the instant case Hague kept no books of account and the respondent has used as the starting point for his determination the only records kept by Hague from which information could be had, namely, his check stubs, canceled checks, and bank statements. The record also indicates that the respondent has made reasonable efforts to verify his conclusions from outside sources. The fact that Hague is now dead does not change the situation; it does not detract from or add to the respondent’s powers and duties; neither does it change the force and effect of his determination.

Counsel for the estate also argue that, except for some minor items not here in issue, Hague had no income over and above that reported by him on the joint return and that the deposits on which the respondent based his determination resulted from redeposits, loans, and the “kiting of checks.” It is argued that such a conclusion is borne out by the fact that Hague was shown to be eccentric with respect to money items, that he withdrew and carried substantial sums of money on his person, and that these amounts were frequently redeposited in his bank accounts; that the respondent has failed to show or indicate the source or sources of such additional income; and, further, that there is no showing of any accumulation of wealth.

The accumulation of wealth during the taxable year, like the possession and use of unexplained cash, is merely evidential, and, where a taxpayer fails to keep proper books of account and is unable to explain the source of accumulated property, such accumulations may be the basis for the determination of income, but the failure to accumulate wealth during the taxable year does not negative the realization or receipt of income, particularly where it is shown as in this case that a taxpayer has expended large sums of money during the taxable year for personal uses and there is a failure on his part to show that the amounts so expended were of a character other than income earned or realized during the year.

In the instant case the facts show that Hague received during 1936 sums of money far in excess of his salary. They further show that some of the amounts so received were not income to him, but, after the sums so identified plus Hague’s salary and other small items reported in the joint return have been eliminated, only approximately one-half of the amounts deposited by Hague during the year have been accounted for or explained. During 1936 Hague deposited or caused to be deposited in his accounts at the National City Bank and the Chase National Bank a total of $529,880.45. Of the amounts so deposited, the record shows that $39,391.92 represented salary, all of which was reported in the joint return; $1,035.94 represented a loan from the New [111]*111England Mutual Life Insurance Co.; $9,510.70 represented proceeds from the sale of stock; $32,750 represented checks drawn in favor of Hague by Mary Lewis Hague on her account at the Guaranty Trust Co.; $39,000 represented checks similarly drawn in favor of Hague by his brother, Cuthbert Hague, on his account at the Corn Exchange Bank; $60,000 represented amounts received from the Standard Oil Co. and was described on its books as “Strike Expense”; $66,877.41 represented the proceeds of loans to Hague by the National City Bank less discounts; and $7,500 represented an advance on traveling expenses by the Standard Oil Co. to Hague on May 1,1936. On brief respondent concedes that of the total deposits, $49,023.37 classified as income reported on the joint return, $67,913.35 as amounts received from loans, and $60,000 as “strike expenses” received from the Standard Oil Co. should be eliminated from income in computing the deficiency herein. The $67,913.35 described as loans and the $60,000 described as “Strike Expense” received from the Standard Oil Co. are verified as to character and amount by the facts of record, while of the $49,023.37 classified as income reported on the joint return we have been able to identify among the deposits only $39,391.92 representing salary and possibly $2,700.25 representing gain from the sale of stock. The respondent, however, has apparently satisfied himself as to the correctness of the amounts so conceded and the three items in question will be excluded from income in the amounts stated. In addition to these items there should also be excluded $32,750 covered by the checks from Mary Lewis Hague, $39,000 covered by the checks from Cuthbert Hague, $7,500 representing traveling expenses advanced by the Standard Oil Co., and $6,810.45 of the proceeds from the sale of Standard Oil Co. stock. With respect to the item last mentioned, it is to be noted that the total proceeds from the sale of such stock deposited by Hague in his account at the National City Bank was $9,510.70. In his return, however, he reported $2,700.25 as gain from the sale of stock, and, inasmuch as we find no other indication of a sale of stock by Hague during the taxable year, we assume that the gain so reported represented a portion of the total proceeds of $9,510.70, leaving only $6,810.45 not excluded elsewhere. After the exclusion of the items set forth in the preceding paragraph, there remains as unidentified and unexplained bank deposits a total amount of $266,883.28.

The possession of unexplained or unidentified sums of money by an individual does not, of course, establish affirmatively or conclusively that those sums represent income. It could be possible that such sums represented loans, gifts, property or money held in a fiduciary capacity, or money or the proceeds of property acquired in prior years. In the instant case, however, there is no claim, and if there had been there is nothing in the record to substantiate a claim, that the unexplained [112]*112deposits represented gifts, property or money held in trust, or money or the proceeds of property acquired in prior years, and, with respect to borrowings as a possible source of money on hand, it is to be noted that we have previously excluded all amounts shown to have been deposited in Hague’s accounts as the result of loans and the same is true of amounts received for the use of the Standard Oil Co.

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Bluebook (online)
45 B.T.A. 104, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hague-v-commissioner-bta-1941.