Kollsman Instrument Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

870 F.2d 89, 63 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 947, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3360
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 1989
Docket407, Docket 86-4187
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 870 F.2d 89 (Kollsman Instrument Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kollsman Instrument Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 870 F.2d 89, 63 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 947, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3360 (2d Cir. 1989).

Opinion

GEORGE C. PRATT, Circuit Judge:

In 1962 * Kollsman Instrument Corporation negotiated a contract with the United States Air Force under which Kollsman agreed to make prototypes for a photo mapping system and for a ground data subsystem at a fixed contract price of $6,718,480. Because the Air Force made many changes in engineering, specifications, design, and production, that caused increased costs, Kollsman in 1965, submitted a request for equitable adjustment in the contract price pursuant to the “changes” clause in the contract. Kollsman sought a price increase in the amount of $5,528,205.

On January 10, 1966, the Air Force’s contracting officer allowed a price increase, but only in the amount of $123,780. Kolls-man appealed to the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals in September 1966 and a year later, in September 1967, Kollsman and the Air Force settled on an increase of $2,000,000, instead of the $123,780. Thus, in 1967 the actual contract price that Kolls-man would receive upon completion of the contract was finally determined to be $8,718,480.

In calculating its income from this contract for tax purposes for each year 1963 through 1967 Kollsman used the “cost percentage of completion” method of accounting under which it computed the percentage of the project that was completed in a given year by comparing the costs actually incurred in that year with the total projected cost of the project. Since Kollsman did not know the exact contract price that it would ultimately be entitled to receive, it estimated the gross contract price and applied each year’s cost percentage of completion to that estimated gross contract price to arrive at the income from the contract that was allocated to that year. This approach was followed regardless of whether any part of the contract price was actually received in a particular year. In short, in order to arrive at the taxable income from the contract for a particular year, the costs actually expended were deducted from the allocated income reported in that year as determined by applying the cost percentage of completion to the estimated gross contract price for the entire project.

The dispute in this case arises because until 1966 Kollsman’s estimate of the gross contract price it hoped to obtain was substantially higher than the fixed contract price of $6,718,480. Thus, for the years 1963 through 1965 Kollsman had reported income from the contract totaling approximately $10,142,787, and this represented only a percentage of a still higher anticipated gross contract price. In 1966, when the Air Force’s contracting officer allowed a price increase of only $128,780 Kollsman realized that on its prior tax returns it had vastly overestimated the anticipated total contract price, and therefore had reported substantial excess income for 1963 through 1965. Kollsman therefore claimed a deduction of $4,359,000 on its 1966 tax return, describing it as a “Reduction of 1963-1965 claim against U.S. Air Force per 1/10/66 determination of Contracting Officer.”

In 1967 after Kollsman and the Air Force settled on a $2,000,000 increase in the contract price, Kollsman again reevaluated the income it had reported in 1963 through 1965 and deducted $2,359,000 from its 1967 income, an amount the parties agree is attributable to the claimed overreporting in 1963 through 1965 when calculated on the agreed $2,000,000 increase in contract price. Kollsman’s 1967 tax return described this deduction as “Claim settlement *91 —U.S. Air Force” and stated in a footnote: “To a certain extent this deduction represents amounts previously deducted in 1966; upon I.R.S. audit (Years 1965-1966); however, the examining Agent disallowed the deduction, the taxpayer acceded to the deduction for the year 1966.”

In 1972 the commissioner issued to Kolls-man a Notice of Deficiency for the 1966 tax year, the year here in dispute, amounting to over $2,000,000 in taxes. The commissioner disallowed the claimed 1966 deduction of $4,359,000, finding that the deduction claimed and allowed for 1967 was entirely duplicative of the deduction claimed in 1966, except that the 1967 figure takes into account the $2,000,000 price increase agreed to by the Air Force in 1967. The commissioner determined that the correct year for Kollsman to deduct its loss on the contract was 1967, since that was the year in which the exact amount of the contract price was finally determined. He relied on Treasury Regulations section 1.451-l(a) which provides: “Where an amount of income is properly accrued on the basis of a reasonable estimate and the exact amount is subsequently determined, the difference, if any, shall be taken into account for the taxable year in which such determination is made.”

The Notice of Deficiency also reflected the' commissioner’s determination that Kollsman had improperly claimed a deduction in 1966 of $868,000 for research and development expenses that should have been amortized over three years. The commissioner did, however, allow the figure to be prorated over three years, producing a deduction of $289,000 in 1966, $289,000 in 1967 and $290,000 in 1968. The result of spreading the deduction over three years was to create a net operating loss in 1968 which, when carried back to 1965, resulted in an overassessment of $137,840 in taxes for 1965. This 1965 overassessment derived ultimately from the redistribution of a disallowed 1966 deduction and was noted in the same Notice of Deficiency that informed Kollsman of its 1966 tax deficiency. Kollsman seeks to offset the 1965 overas-sessment against its 1966 deficiency.

DISCUSSION

In the tax court, Kollsman claimed that it was entitled to its contract deduction in 1966, rather than in 1967, but it has abandoned that argument on appeal. We agree with the commissioner and the tax court that, under section 1.451-l(a) of the regulations, 1967 was the appropriate year for a deduction based on Kollsman’s previous overestimates of income, since 1967 was the year in which the exact amount that would be paid on the contract was determined. In any event, Kollsman now claims that it should be permitted to re-characterize its claimed 1966 deduction of $4,359,000 as a “write-down” of its inventory from cost to market value.

The commissioner responds, first, that Kollsman should be precluded from arguing that the 1966 deduction may be rechar-acterized as an inventory write-down, because Kollsman did not raise that issue until its motion for reconsideration after the tax court’s decision. Kollsman maintains that it had argued that the $4,359,000 should be allowed as a write-down of inventory, instead of as a deduction, in its opening brief to the tax court and again in its motion for reconsideration. While Kolls-man’s arguments may have metamorphosed in several phases during the long history of litigation surrounding this contract, Kollsman certainly did present its position to the tax court, and we see no reason to preclude Kollsman from presenting the merits of its inventory write-down argument to this court.

In essence, Kollsman now claims that in each year from 1963 through 1966 as it incurred costs on the fixed price contract, it recorded those costs into its “work-in-progress” inventory. Because Kollsman was contractually bound to sell the products to the Air Force, and because the goods were unique, the “market price” for the goods was equivalent to the contract price.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mark Betz & Christine Betz
U.S. Tax Court, 2023
Union Carbide Corp. v. Comm'r
2009 T.C. Memo. 50 (U.S. Tax Court, 2009)
William D. Zack v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
291 F.3d 407 (Sixth Circuit, 2002)
Ekman v. Commissioner
1997 T.C. Memo. 318 (U.S. Tax Court, 1997)
Cameron v. Commissioner
105 T.C. No. 25 (U.S. Tax Court, 1995)
Capitol Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n v. Commissioner
96 T.C. No. 11 (U.S. Tax Court, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
870 F.2d 89, 63 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 947, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kollsman-instrument-corporation-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1989.