JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.
Presented by this appeal from a decision of the Tax Court adverse to all members (and their wives) of a professional consulting engineering partnership is the question whether the Commissioner could require computation of distributable partnership income for the years 1948-1951 on the accrual rather than cash basis as used in all returns since 1946. Additionally, in the case of one such partner, there is the further question whether penalties for failure to file a declaration of estimated tax, Section 294(d) (1) (A), 26 U.S.C.A., and for substantial underestimate of the tax, Section 294(d) (2), can both be imposed in the same taxable year.
I.
Taxpayers in 1946 organized a partnership for performance of professional engineering services. The partnership maintains no inventories and its activities are confined to the practice of professional engineering. This covers a wide field including the design and engineering-construction supervision for large projects, governmental and industrial, such as airports, sewerage systems, chemical plants and the like. As business developed, the fee arrangements fell into four main classifications; (1) lump sum fee, (2) hourly rate for work performed, (3) cost-plus lump sum, and (4) percentage of cost of construction.
At the outset, the books and records for 1946 and 1947 were essentially the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting. The Cash method was definitely used in the first and all subsequent income tax returns. Presumably because of complications in the diverse types of billings
to clients under the four classifications for fees, these “bookkeeping records * * * were limited and incomplete” in the sense that the partnership accountants, in compiling the necessary information for Income Tax Returns for 1946 and 1947 “ * * * had to make a complete analysis of every transaction * * *.” There is no showing or finding, however, that the partnership’s Cash method books did not clearly reflect its income or that extraneous materials were essential or that extraneous adjustments were made.
In 1948 the partnership directed its Certified Public Accountants to install a method of bookkeeping showing the cost of each job done by the partnership for use in billing under the various fee arrangements. This new system was essentially an Accrual method of accounting. However, the new system included
partners’ salaries and other charges to various reserves which were not deductible for Federal income tax purposes under any method of accounting. Through the use of the so-called Jobs in Progress Account and transfers from it into the Job Cost Account, the system also provided for deferring to a later year certain expenses on uncompleted jobs which, on either a Cash or Accrual method were properly deductible only in the current year.
That the new system was intended to serve a limited function and was definitely not intended to supplant the Cash records or method of reporting its income tax returns, is shown by the Tax Court’s findings:
“At the end of each of the years here involved, the accounting firm employed by it audited its books and determined its income according to an accrual method. On its returns for these years, the partnership continued to use the cash receipts and disbursements method. It did not, at any time, request permission from the Internal Revenue Service to change its method of accounting from the cash to an accrual method, and it did not desire to change the method used in preparing its returns. In preparing the partnership income tax returns for the years in issue, the partnership’s accountants prepared memorandum journal entries converting all elements of income and expense to the cash receipts and disbursements method. Such adjusting entries are shown in the accountants’ working papers, but are not entered on the partnership’s books. These working papers and memorandum journal entries were kept by the accountants as a permanent part of their records and were available and furnished to the respondent’s examining officers in the course of their examination. Without such working papers, the partnership’s net income on the cash method was not readily ascertainable from its records.”
Recasting the last sentence of this excerpt into an affirmative form, the Tax Court holds that “with * * * such working papers, the partnership’s net income on the cash method was * * * readily ascertainable from its records.”
The Tax Court then proceeded to hold that since the current books regularly kept by the partnership were on an Accrual basis, it was, under Section 41 of the Code
“ * * * entirely proper for [the Commissioner] to determine that the partnership income should have been reported on the Accrual method for the years here in issue.
But no sooner had this been said, than the Tax Court saw that it was faced with the dilemma: what was to be done with the Regulations,
stated in mandatory terms, prohibiting a change in the method of keeping books unless done with the Commissioner’s consent and on the terms imposed by him? The Court did not try to meet this by minimizing the effective force of this Regulation or denying that, under it, the Commissioner could have rejected returns
on an Accrual basis had they been filed.
On the contrary, the Tax Court forthrightly recognized that here was a clash between the literal requirement of
conformity
to the method of accounting regularly employed and the further requirement of
consistency
as between current return and prior returns. The solution eschewed a relative weighing of the two, or the formulation of any guide which might with some reliability be followed either by taxpayers, the Commissioner, Revenue Agents, Tax or reviewing Courts. The solution was to introduce for the first time in this field the existence of an
option
in the Commissioner :
“But the taxpayers’ difficulty is of their own making and they are in no position to complain, as they do, that this result gives the [Commissioner] the
option
of accepting cash basis returns which are
consistent
with those previously filed, or of requiring that the returns be prepared on the accrual method in
conformity
with the partnership’s books. If the accrual method proved to be a more accurate method for the taxpayers, then the [Commissioner] should also be entitled to the benefits of this increased accuracy. * * *
It is not enough to say that either the cash method used by the partnership in its returns or the accrual method proposed by the [Commissioner] will clearly reflect income, and that
consistency
requires the continued acceptance of the partnership returns on the cash method. The requirements of section 41 are clear and must be followed. (Emphasis supplied.)
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.
Presented by this appeal from a decision of the Tax Court adverse to all members (and their wives) of a professional consulting engineering partnership is the question whether the Commissioner could require computation of distributable partnership income for the years 1948-1951 on the accrual rather than cash basis as used in all returns since 1946. Additionally, in the case of one such partner, there is the further question whether penalties for failure to file a declaration of estimated tax, Section 294(d) (1) (A), 26 U.S.C.A., and for substantial underestimate of the tax, Section 294(d) (2), can both be imposed in the same taxable year.
I.
Taxpayers in 1946 organized a partnership for performance of professional engineering services. The partnership maintains no inventories and its activities are confined to the practice of professional engineering. This covers a wide field including the design and engineering-construction supervision for large projects, governmental and industrial, such as airports, sewerage systems, chemical plants and the like. As business developed, the fee arrangements fell into four main classifications; (1) lump sum fee, (2) hourly rate for work performed, (3) cost-plus lump sum, and (4) percentage of cost of construction.
At the outset, the books and records for 1946 and 1947 were essentially the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting. The Cash method was definitely used in the first and all subsequent income tax returns. Presumably because of complications in the diverse types of billings
to clients under the four classifications for fees, these “bookkeeping records * * * were limited and incomplete” in the sense that the partnership accountants, in compiling the necessary information for Income Tax Returns for 1946 and 1947 “ * * * had to make a complete analysis of every transaction * * *.” There is no showing or finding, however, that the partnership’s Cash method books did not clearly reflect its income or that extraneous materials were essential or that extraneous adjustments were made.
In 1948 the partnership directed its Certified Public Accountants to install a method of bookkeeping showing the cost of each job done by the partnership for use in billing under the various fee arrangements. This new system was essentially an Accrual method of accounting. However, the new system included
partners’ salaries and other charges to various reserves which were not deductible for Federal income tax purposes under any method of accounting. Through the use of the so-called Jobs in Progress Account and transfers from it into the Job Cost Account, the system also provided for deferring to a later year certain expenses on uncompleted jobs which, on either a Cash or Accrual method were properly deductible only in the current year.
That the new system was intended to serve a limited function and was definitely not intended to supplant the Cash records or method of reporting its income tax returns, is shown by the Tax Court’s findings:
“At the end of each of the years here involved, the accounting firm employed by it audited its books and determined its income according to an accrual method. On its returns for these years, the partnership continued to use the cash receipts and disbursements method. It did not, at any time, request permission from the Internal Revenue Service to change its method of accounting from the cash to an accrual method, and it did not desire to change the method used in preparing its returns. In preparing the partnership income tax returns for the years in issue, the partnership’s accountants prepared memorandum journal entries converting all elements of income and expense to the cash receipts and disbursements method. Such adjusting entries are shown in the accountants’ working papers, but are not entered on the partnership’s books. These working papers and memorandum journal entries were kept by the accountants as a permanent part of their records and were available and furnished to the respondent’s examining officers in the course of their examination. Without such working papers, the partnership’s net income on the cash method was not readily ascertainable from its records.”
Recasting the last sentence of this excerpt into an affirmative form, the Tax Court holds that “with * * * such working papers, the partnership’s net income on the cash method was * * * readily ascertainable from its records.”
The Tax Court then proceeded to hold that since the current books regularly kept by the partnership were on an Accrual basis, it was, under Section 41 of the Code
“ * * * entirely proper for [the Commissioner] to determine that the partnership income should have been reported on the Accrual method for the years here in issue.
But no sooner had this been said, than the Tax Court saw that it was faced with the dilemma: what was to be done with the Regulations,
stated in mandatory terms, prohibiting a change in the method of keeping books unless done with the Commissioner’s consent and on the terms imposed by him? The Court did not try to meet this by minimizing the effective force of this Regulation or denying that, under it, the Commissioner could have rejected returns
on an Accrual basis had they been filed.
On the contrary, the Tax Court forthrightly recognized that here was a clash between the literal requirement of
conformity
to the method of accounting regularly employed and the further requirement of
consistency
as between current return and prior returns. The solution eschewed a relative weighing of the two, or the formulation of any guide which might with some reliability be followed either by taxpayers, the Commissioner, Revenue Agents, Tax or reviewing Courts. The solution was to introduce for the first time in this field the existence of an
option
in the Commissioner :
“But the taxpayers’ difficulty is of their own making and they are in no position to complain, as they do, that this result gives the [Commissioner] the
option
of accepting cash basis returns which are
consistent
with those previously filed, or of requiring that the returns be prepared on the accrual method in
conformity
with the partnership’s books. If the accrual method proved to be a more accurate method for the taxpayers, then the [Commissioner] should also be entitled to the benefits of this increased accuracy. * * *
It is not enough to say that either the cash method used by the partnership in its returns or the accrual method proposed by the [Commissioner] will clearly reflect income, and that
consistency
requires the continued acceptance of the partnership returns on the cash method. The requirements of section 41 are clear and must be followed. (Emphasis supplied.)
As we view the case, we need not determine whether such an option can be claimed, or its reaches if it exists. We must say, however, that in many respects the assertion of such an indefinable
privilege is comparable to similar efforts by the Commissioner to read into the operation of Section 41 and Reg. 29.41-1-4 the right to impose on a taxpayer whose tax is coercively recomputed by the Commissioner on an Accrual rather than the reported Cash basis because the method of keeping books has changed or the return was not consistent with the books as kept, the same terms and conditions which would have been imposed had the taxpayer sought and obtained the Commissioner’s consent. Except for vacillations in the Tax Court and reviewing Courts attempting to find and then apply as a basis for distinguishing the holding pronounced by Judge Learned Hand in William Hardy, Inc., v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 1936, 82 F.2d 249, a distinction which that eminent jurist first expatriated as 121 volumes and 17 years later he overruled the case itself, Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Dwyer, 2 Cir., 203 F.2d 522, nearly all such efforts
have met with a singular lack of success. Goodrich v. Commissioner, 8 Cir., 243 F.2d 868.
The existence of any such option has far-reaching and, in some ways, disturbing implications. As an option, it recognizes that where the taxpayer has changed his method of keeping books without consent but, in compliance with the Regulations which prohibit computation of income tax returns on the new method prior to consent, has continued to use the old basis for the return, the Commissioner may nevertheless recompute the taxes as though consent had been asked and obtained and as though the tax return had been made on the new basis conforming to the new bookkeeping method. But, as an option, it also recognizes that he might not, so that the Commissioner would continue to hold the taxpayer to the prior basis for making the tax return until consent is given.
The consequences of a choice either way cannot be forecast. They can be determined only after the event. What will the guide be for its exercise? The temptations, of course, would be present to adopt whichever course produces the greater revenue. That purpose is certainly not the philosophy which Congress reflects generally in the income tax law. For those taxpayers who read, and understand, and then religiously attempt to follow the Regulations forbidding a change in computation of the income tax return until consent is given, it also subjects them to the prospect of substantial penalties for underestimating the tax as well as to interest for a number of years on any such option-determined
deficiencies. This latter would
leave the taxpayer in the weird predicament of having the Commissioner determine that his tax was deficient because it ought to have been reported on a different basis even though, under the Regulations, the taxpayer had no legal right to prepare and file his return on the basis which would have avoided such liability.
If any such option exists, we think it never could be exercised until all reasonable basis has been exhausted for accommodating the principal aims of
conformity
and
consistency.
After all, they have a common objective, to assure that income and deductions are not artificially and fortuitously bunched to produce a distorted picture with unrealistic and unfair advantage or disadvantage to taxpayer or the Government alike. Goodrich v. Commissioner, 8 Cir., 243 F.2d 686, 688. We nowhere near approach that situation here.
First, we are dealing with a professional personal service enterprise in which the Cash method would be entirely adequate as a basis for computing income. As the Tax Court found “The partnership did not, at any time, hold merchandise inventories which would require the use of an accrual method in keeping its books or reporting its income.” And, more important, the Tax Court expressly held that “The partnership’s income could, on the facts of this case, be clearly reflected by use of either the cash or accrual methods.”
The partnership started out with the Cash method of bookkeeping. Its returns were in conformity with that. Returns for subsequent years were consistent with the prior returns. For its own internal purposes it installed an Accrual system. But this was to supplement, not supplant, the Cash method. An integral part of the 1948 system was the recognized necessity for accounting adjustments which were to be made by the partnership’s accountants in accordance with accepted professional concepts in order that the books would show income on the Cash method so that, in turn, tax returns could be computed both in
conformity
with such books and
consistent
with prior returns.
That this system called for adjustments or that mechanical evidences of the results of them were kept in the physical possession of the partnership’s regular accountants is of no significance. The first is but one of the strange consequences of a tax-weary world in which, taxwise, it is sometimes wise to spend to save, and orthodox principles have to be trimmed and hauled to meet the unique necessities of the insatiable tax-gather
ing process. “Tax accounting is not, and is not intended to be, the same as other accounting. * * * [and] * * * a determination of ‘earnings and profits’ in the tax sense does not necessarily follow economic or ‘corporate accounting concepts’.” Hills, The Law of Accounting and Financial Statements (1957), Sec. 1.12. Guardian Investment Corp. v. Phinney, 5 Cir., 253 F.2d 326. Indeed, if making adjustments is an offense, then the Commissioner is among the first to cast stones. For in his worship of
coru-formity
to the ostensible Accrual bookkeeping system, he disallows, as he properly should, many of the items, see notes 2, 3, supra, which, in an economic sense, were relevant to cost of operations, the loss or profit in given jobs, but which cannot be deducted in a partnership return.
The second factor, physical possession of the adjustments by the accountants is a shallow objection. They were treated by Taxpayer, the accountants, and Revenue Agents as a part of the books
or records
of the partnership to be permanently retained for inspection by Internal Revenue officers. Regulations 111, 29.54-1. While the Tax Court did say that “Without such working papers, the partnership’s net income on the cash method was not readily ascertainable from its records,” this is not to be read literally either from an accounting or tax point of view. These memorandum journal entries converting all elements of income and expense to the Cash method follow accepted accounting principles. They are so simple in number, in terminology, in the number of items covered, that the stipulated adjustment entries for all four years (1948-1951) are printed in full in traditional tabular form on two pages of the appendix to Taxpayer’s brief. Starting with the figure showing “Ordinary net income (loss) disclosed by books,” there are ten items under “Add” and nine under “Less” resulting in the final figure “Ordinary net income as disclosed by returns.” Each of these items to be added or deducted is one which any accountant in the routine conversion of Accrual system to a Cash system would instinctively know would have to be taken into account, and each of these items is reflected by the Accrual books. Moreover, two of the adjustments entries increasing income for tax purposes, aggregating substantial sums for partners’ salaries and capital reserves, see notes 2, 3, supra, are the very ones which the Revenue Agents disallowed in applying the Accrual method. There is no suggestion that to find, understand, and then intelligently deal with these items no more obvious than the others, the Agents found the Accrual system of books inadequate or that they had to search elsewhere for the numerical truth.
These books were therefore entirely adequate. They did, as the Tax Court found, clearly reflect income. Once that condition exists, Section 41 gives the Commissioner no power to reconstruct income on some other system or basis to secure more favorable tax revenue. Indeed, it is difficult to see how a conscientious taxpayer in this sort of professional activity, anxious to learn through the revealing processes of modern accountancy, more about the economic capabilities of his organization and its everyday business performance, could have done otherwise. He would know that until the Commissioner’s consent was given to such a change, he could not compute and file income tax returns on the new basis. Recognizing that, conscious that if he made such an attempt, it would be a violation of the lawful regulation, hence a violation of law, the most simple and forthright solution would be to maintain the books in such a way as to serve his internal needs and, at the same time, reflect accurately the income on the former method and upon which the subsequent income tax returns would be made.
II.
One Taxpayer (and his wife) failed to file any declaration of estimated tax for 1951. The Tax Court held that both an addition to tax under Sec. 294(d) (1) (A) of the 1939 Code for failure to file a declaration of estimated tax, and
an addition under See. 294(d) (2) of the 1989 Code for substantial underestimate of the estimated tax, may be imposed in the same taxable year.
A taxpayer is, of course, required under Section 58 of the 1939 Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 58, to file a declaration of his estimated tax in which he states the amount estimated to be his tax for the taxable year. Under Section 59, 26 U.S.C.A. § 59, he must thereafter make quarterly payments of the estimated tax. To enforce these provisions, Sec. 294 (d) (1) (A) provides for an addition to tax for failure to file a declaration and to make quarterly payments, of five (5%) percent of each installment due but unpaid, plus one (1%) percent for each month during which an installment is unpaid, up to ten percent of the unpaid portion of the installment. Section 294(d) (2) provides for an addition to tax for substantial underestimation of the estimated tax, i. e., where the estimated tax turns out to be less than eighty (80%) percent of the correct tax liability. This latter addition consists of the lesser of six (6 %) percent of the amount by which the final tax exceeds the estimated tax, or the amount by which eighty (80%) percent of the final tax exceeds the estimated tax.
Taxpayers here assert that nothing in the language of Section 294 provides for cumulative imposition of these penalties for the single omission of failing to file a timely estimate of tax, nor do the Regulations contain such a provision. The latter contention encompasses the claim that Courts upholding cumulative imposition have mistakenly relied on the Regulation
which, if valid, is here applied in such a way as to extend its effect far beyond the intended scope. Proceeding further with the argument Taxpayers assert that if Congress had entertained the unlikely intention of imposing a double penalty, it would have clearly said so and would have provided an entirely different statutory scheme. The only reasonable construction must therefore be that Congress intended these penalties were to be imposed in the alternative. The greater 10% penalty was designed to punish the complete failure to file a timely estimate of tax, while the lesser 6% penalty was designed to punish the filing of a substantial underestimate of tax.
So far the box score in the District Courts is in favor of Taxpayers for cases applying the double penalty concept followed in the Tax Court
are few
in number in contrast to the many which have held the penalties to be alternative
only. All acknowledge that up to this time while the imprimatur
of reviewing Courts weights the scale in the Govern
ment’s favor, there has yet been no exposition
of the problem.
As we view it, the absence of affirmative language expressly stating that these additions to tax are to be cumulative is of slight importance. Equally lacking is language stating that they are to be alternative only. While the penalty nature of these additions leads us to apply the statute strictly, Stephan v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 197 F.2d 712, 714, the words used plainly state the consequence for each of the three separate kinds of default. There were three categories of defaulting taxpayers whom Congress plainly meant to reach: (1) those who, without reasonable excuse, failed to file any declaration of estimated tax, (2) those who, without reasonable excuse, failed to pay installments on the basis of the estimate and (3) those who failed to make an accurate estimate which would affect both (1) and (2).
Moreover there is intrinsic evidence that Congress articulately distinguished among the three. Number (3), for example, is self-executing and is applicable regardless of excusable neglect. In contrast, (1) and (2), by express provision, do not apply to taxpayers whose default is excusable. This imports that this is expected to be an additional sanction for those who, without justification, fail to file a declaration or pay. Likewise, (1) and (2) by their terms, as well as Sec. 29.294-1 (b) (2) of Regulations 111 are alternative and only one, but not both, may be applied.
There is ample basis for concluding that Congress might well have had several considerations in mind in establishing this legislative pattern. Congress might have first recognized that each type of default was of a kind to be expected and hence had to be dealt with. And, more important, it might have recognized that those whose willful non-excusable acts prevented the effective operation of the scheme of self-assessment and current payment ought to bear some additional disadvantage over the person whose arithmetic or prognostication was merely faulty.
If, as Taxpayer here urges, one who willfully failed to file any declaration whatsoever is no worse off than one who merely underestimates, all are lumped into one class without regard to the obvious differences in the quality of the acts done. To suggest as an offsetting compensation, as this argument requires, that in such a case the penalty is alternative, i. e., whichever produces the greater payment, is certainly judicial legislating: we have not only read in words that are absent, found a purpose not to make the penalties cumulative, but we will have put in a minima-maxima qualification of a kind so carefully spelled out in 294(d) (1) (A) and (B) but completely lacking in 294(d) (2).
If, as the legislative history
of the 1954 Code seems to indicate, cumulative
penalties were considered in the light of experience to be onerous, it was for Congress, not the Judiciary, to make the change.
The result is that the decision of the Tax Court is reversed as to Part I but affirmed as to Part II.
Reversed in part and affirmed in part.