Myers v. Commissioner

12 T.C. 648, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 219
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 28, 1949
DocketDocket Nos. 914, 3216
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 T.C. 648 (Myers v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myers v. Commissioner, 12 T.C. 648, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 219 (tax 1949).

Opinions

SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION.

Harlan, Judge:

The original opinion in these proceedings was promulgated September 28, 1948, at 11 T. C. 447. Subsequently the petitioner and the respondent filed conflicting computations under Rule 50, and, following a hearing on December 21, 1948, each party filed a memorandum in support of his computation. The variance in tax liability shown in the computation for 1940 results from disagreement as to an alleged loss in connection with the Grays Harbor transaction. The difference in the 1941 computations results from an issue in the case which was not theretofore apparent, viz., whether a taxpayer who has received more than one payment in 1941 which comes under section 107 of the Internal Revenue Code may take advantage of that section for the one which works to his tax advantage and ignore it as to the others.

Petitioner’s first contention is that he is entitled to reduce gross income for 1940 by an item representing loss on waterworks purchased in connection with the Grays Harbor transaction in the amount of $4,008.60.

Petitioner testified at the hearing that in order to procure the closing of the Grays Harbor transaction he was compelled to purchase a waterworks plant at $4,003.60 above the fair market value. He gave no testimony as to what disposition, if any, he had ever made of that plant or whether he had ever suffered a capital loss from the sale thereof. Moreover, he raised no issue pertaining to this alleged loss in his petition. This Court, however, in its findings of fact made the following statement:

* * * In completing the Grays Harbor deal it was necessary for Myers to purchase personally from his own funds a waterworks plant at a cost of $16,003.60, the fair market value of which was $12,000, occasioning him a loss of $4,003.60, which he deducted from his compensation of $71,060 paid him by the Grays Harbor PUD.

Inasmuch as this Court held that income from the Grays Harbor transaction was not taxable under the provisions of section 107, and since that question was, under the pleadings, the only question presented for decision, the above statement in the findings of fact was completely obiter as to any issue before the Court and it furnishes no basis for any reduction in gross income in the computation of the deficiency under Eule 50.

We hold that the petitioner is not entitled to a reduction in income in the amount of $4,003.60, and, in accordance with the stipulation of the parties, find the correct deficiency for the year 1940 to be $36,916.68.

Petitioner’s second contention is that, although the original opinion herein sustained petitioner’s contention that he was entitled to the benefit of the provisions of section 107 of the code on five specific items of his 1941 income, he is now permitted to reject the use of section 107 as to four of those five items and apply the total income involved in those four items to his 1941 income and tax only the fifth item as authorized under section 107.

In his petition, petitioner alleged as-error the failure of respondent to permit petitioner to compute his income tax for the years 1940 and 1941 in accordance with the provisions and limitations of section 107 of the code. Involved in the income for 1940 were nine items of income for which the petitioner was claiming section 107 relief, and in his 1941 income there were five items of income for which the petitioner claimed relief under section 107. This Court granted said relief to the petitioner as to five of the items in 1940 and denied relief as to the remaining items. The Court granted section 107 relief to five of the items in the 1941 income. The operation of section 107 on the 1940 issue is not before the Court at this time. This section, as applicable to the taxable year 1941, provides as follows:

(a) Personal Services. — If at least 75 per centum of the total compensation for personal services covering a period of sixty calendar months or more (from the beginning to the completion of such services) is received or accrued in one taxable year by an individual or a partnership, the tax attributable to any part thereof which is included in the gross income of any individual shall not be greater than the aggregate of the taxes attributable to such part had it been included in the gross income of such individual ratably over that part of the period which precedes the date of such receipt or accrual.

In an amended petition filed prior to the hearing the petitioner, in addition to the relief prayed for in his original petition, asked that an operating loss which he had sustained in 1943 be carried back to offset part of his 1941 income for tax purposes. The respondent contested his right to this operating loss carry-back and continued to oppose it until the trial of the case was well advanced, when the Commissioner conceded the right of the petitioner to carry back his 1943 operating loss. The case continued for the decision of the Court on the other tax questions involved, including petitioner’s claimed privilege of the benefit of section 107. After the Court’s determination that the petitioner was entitled to this benefit as to five items of his 1941 income, each party filed a computation' for entry of decision under Rule 50. The computation of the respondent disclosed that, by treating all of the commissions received in 1941 as income taxable in that year, petitioner’s tax liability would be $214,088.27. It also disclosed that, by spreading the commissions ratably over the years in which they were earned, the aggregate of the taxes attributable to the commissions would be $216,391.79. Inasmuch as this latter amount was in excess of $214,088.27, the respondent’s computation showed petitioner’s tax liability to be $214,088.27, which, after deducting the amount of $41,151.26 previously assessed, left a deficiency of $172,937.01.

The petitioner agrees with the respondent that, if all of the commissions received from the five projects were treated as income taxable in 1941, his tax liability would be $214,088.27. He differs from the respondent, however, in his method of applying section 107. Whereas the respondent spread all five commissions ratably over the years in which the services were rendered, the petitioner included four of these commissions in his income for 1941, and spread only one commission of $321,268.29, from what is known as the Iowa-Nebraska project, over the years in which it was earned. The reason he adopted this procedure is that he had deductions, including a 1943 farm loss carry-back of $61,432.58, which were sufficient to absorb practically all of his 1941 income, with the exception of the Iowa-Nebraska commission. By treating four of the commissions as 1941 income and allocating the Iowa-Nebraska commission to the years in which it was earned, his computation shows a tax liability for 1941 of $124,727.84, and a deficiency for that year, after deducting the amount of $41,151.26 previously assessed, of $83,576.58.

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Related

Estate of Street v. Commissioner
1994 T.C. Memo. 568 (U.S. Tax Court, 1994)
Estate of Sweeney v. Commissioner
1980 T.C. Memo. 120 (U.S. Tax Court, 1980)
Myers v. Commissioner
12 T.C. 648 (U.S. Tax Court, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
12 T.C. 648, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-commissioner-tax-1949.