Lattimore v. United States

12 F. Supp. 895, 82 Ct. Cl. 97
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 2, 1935
DocketJ-592, K-381, K-382, K-489, K-490
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 F. Supp. 895 (Lattimore v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lattimore v. United States, 12 F. Supp. 895, 82 Ct. Cl. 97 (cc 1935).

Opinion

WHALEY, Judge.

At the suggestion of the plaintiffs, these five cases—Nos. J-592, K-381, K-382, K-489, and K-490—have been ordered consolidated for submission to the court. They will be considered in one opinion, but a separate judgment will be entered in each case.

The record in these cases shows' that there were two partnerships in existence during the period involved, namely, Double Seal Ring sales partnership and the Double Seal Ring factory partnership. The sales partnership was a selling agency for the rings manufactured by the factory partnership.

The questions which arise in these cases involve only the factory partnership.

Each of the plaintiffs had an interest either as a partner, or as the wife or husband of a partner, in the income of a partnership under the community property laws of the state of Texas. In each case the plaintiff seeks to recover an alleged overpayment of income taxes for one or more of the years 1918, 1919, and 1920.

The findings of fact are necessarily voluminous and will only be referred to as the questions which arise from them are discussed and when necessary to clarify the issue involved. A summary repetition would attain no end and only burden the opinion.

*909 (1) The first question is whether the Commissioner of Internal Revenue erred in increasing the income reported by the factory partnership by the amount of excise taxes paid by the partnership during the year 1919. It appears that in the year 1919 an excise tax of $16,474.11 was paid on the manufacture and sale of piston rings. However, in 1921 the Commissioner of Internal Revenue decided these piston rings were not automobile accessories and therefore refunded to the factory partnership the full amount collected for that year. Having refunded this amount, the Commissioner in his final determination of the net income of the factory partnership for 1919 increased the net income by the amount refunded on the ground that the partnership had taken that amount as a deduction in that year and as the amount had been returned to it the deduction was improper .and not allowable. It is admitted that if the partnership took the deduction in its return the increase in net income made by the Commissioner is correct. This resolves itself into a question of fact. The plaintiffs have failed to show affirmatively that the deduction was not taken. Either the partnership or the individual partners had to pay the money to the government and, without evidence to the contrary, it is a fair assumption that the factory partnership made the payments and charged them to some account and the income of the partnership was affected to that extent. When the amount was returned as having been erroneously collected, the income for that year was increased accordingly by this sum. The Commissioner made the decision that a deduction had been taken in 1919. The burden of proving by the greater weight of the evidence that no deduction had been taken was on the plaintiffs. The evidence falls far short of overcoming the presumption of correctness of the findings of the Commissioner. The burden of proof has not been 'sustained by the plaintiffs. No recovery can be had on this item.

(2) The second question involves the value of certain castings and piston rings included in the closing inventory for the year 1920. A claim is made by the plaintiffs that the piston rings were of no value .at the close of the year 1920.

The returns of the partnership show that it figured its inventory on finished articles at cost. Under the statute, section .203 of the Revenue Act of 1918, 40 Stat. 1060, and the regulations promulgated thereunder the partnership could elect to value its inventory at either cost or market whichever was lower. There was no change of basis by the Commissioner. There was no sale or offering for sale of any of the articles at less than cost within 30 days after the inventory was taken as provided by article 1582 of Regulations 45 as amended by Treasury Decision 3296.

The deduction now claimed constitutes the stock in trade at the end of the year 1920. The closing inventory for the year 1920 in the original income tax return for that year shows:

Raw material ................................$ 43,447.32
Finished products (rings)................... 176,236.85
Supplies ...................................... 9,798.82
Total ................1................... 229,480.99

The- Commissioner used these figures in arriving at the final determination. The partnership used these inventory values in 1921. In July, 1922, the partnership combined with a company known as the Double Seal Piston Company and their assets were sold to a corporation known as the Double Seal Ring & Piston Company. Among the assets transferred to this company are the piston rings sought to be charged off. These rings, less whatever had been sold in the meantime, were carried in the inventory of the corporation until it was dissolved in 1925. It was in that year the rings were ascertained to have no value, several years after the partnership had parted with its interest to the corporation. These rings were not only included in the inventory at cost, but, as shown above, were used .on that same basis when the factory partnership combined with the sales partnership in 1921 and the same inventory, less-sales, was valued on the same basis when the consolidated partnership was succeeded by a corporation in 1922. The Commissioner valued them on that basis, and we can find no reason for disturbing his' decision: '

(3) The third issue is a claim on account of defective castings which, were on hand when the closing inventory for 1920 was made. The partnership made a claim against the foundry company which furnished these castings, and it was determined that the partnership had on hand at December 31, 1920, worthless castings which had cost it $13,486.63. The foundry company reimbursed the partnership on account of the loss to the extent of $7,500.

The partnership-had included all'of its castings in its closing inventory for 1920 at *910 their full cost, and, after the payment of $7,500 had been made, a controversy arose between the plaintiffs and the Commissioner as to what adjustment should be made on account of those which were found worthless. In his final determination the Commissioner made a net reduction in income of $7,500 because of the item. The plaintiffs insist that the entire amount of defective material in the sum of $13,486.63 should have been deducted from the inventory and claim that, as only $7,500 has been allowed, a further allowance of $5,968.63 should be made. This is really a question of loss sustained by the partnership for which it has been partially compensated and not an inventory question in the usual sense. The total claim of the partnership against the foundry company was $13,468.-63 for defective castings. The foundry company paid $7,500 of this loss and the Commissioner allowed a deduction in that amount. As a matter of fact, only the difference between the amount of the claim and the amount paid by the foundry company was a loss, and the reduction in income should have been only in that amount, namely, $5,968.63. The plaintiffs have gained an advantage by the decision of the Commissioner. No recovery can be had on this item.

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12 F. Supp. 895, 82 Ct. Cl. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lattimore-v-united-states-cc-1935.