Parkchester Beach Club Corp., on Review v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, on Review

335 F.2d 478, 14 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5406, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4564
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1964
Docket441, Docket 28760
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 335 F.2d 478 (Parkchester Beach Club Corp., on Review v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, on Review) 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
Parkchester Beach Club Corp., on Review v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, on Review, 335 F.2d 478, 14 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5406, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4564 (2d Cir. 1964).

Opinion

ANDERSON, District Judge,

Thg taxpayer, Parkchester Beach Club owned approximately thirty acres of real in the Borough of the Bronx New York City, which it used in ^ tion of its business of furnish. . . , mg park and recreational facilities, m- . ,. , . . . ... eluding a beach, swimming pool, picnic area, tennis courts, handball courts, basketball courts, and eating places, These services and facilities were available only to members of Shorehaven Beach Club, Inc., a non-profit membership corporation. The taxpayer was the solicitation and collection agent for memberships in Shorehaven. The season during which the services and facilities were *479 available to the members was from May 30th through the week after the following Labor Day.

There was considerable demand for Parkchester facilities and, in order to be certain of a reservation for the use of them, many of the members made an advance payment of the annual membership dues and the fees for the other services and facilities, including roomettes or lockers, in the fall of the year preceding the calendar year in which the season actually commenced. The so-called roomettes or lockers were actually a space about the size of a telephone booth, in which a member, in common with others who were assigned space in the same roomette or locker, could hang his or her clothes.

Parkchester kept its books and filed its income tax returns on an accrual method of accounting and on the basis of a fiscal year ending March 31st. After the final audit of its books, after March 31st of each year, it treated the bookkeeping profit as shown on the books of Shore-haven as rental income to Parkchester. The income tax returns here in question concern the fiscal years ending March 31, 1954, 1955, 1956 and 1957, during which Parkchester and Shorehaven were to all intents and purposes the same operating entity.

The taxpayer did not report on its income tax returns for the years in question the receipt of membership dues and roomette or locker fees paid in advance for the use of the Parkchester services and facilities for the following season, which came within the next fiscal year; but it did report these payments as income for the fiscal year within which the services and facilities were actually furnished. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, however, determined that the amounts received by the petitioner as advance membership dues and the fees for other services and facilities, including roomettes or lockers, constituted taxable income to the taxpayer for the fiscal year in which it actually received the money.

The Tax Court affirmed and it is from this judgment, which also included the approval of the imposition of a penalty for the tardy filing of the 1957 return, that the taxpayer appeals. The appeal does not appear to question the Tax Court’s determination as to the taxability of the advance payment of “membership dues” in the year of receipt, but does question the inclusion as taxable income in such year of the fees paid in advance for other services and facilities.

The taxpayer asserts that the moneys paid in advance did not become taxable income until the next fiscal year when claims for refund could no longer be made and when it actually supplied the services or facilities. Its accounting was kept on this basis. Parkchester asserts that as an accrual basis taxpayer, cash receipts, paid to it in advance, cannot be held to constitute taxable income unless they are correlated in time with the rendering of the services or furnishing of the facilities-for which the payments are made. While-this method of accounting may be reasonable and sound for the taxpayer’s own purposes in the conduct of its business and is generally in accord with accepted accrual accounting principles, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue has ruled that such a system “does not clearly reflect the income,” and has required,, under the authority of 26 U.S.C. § 446-(1958 ed.), 1 that, for tax purposes, such receipts be included as part of the taxable income of the fiscal year in which they were actually received.

*480 The Supreme Court, closely divided, has twice passed upon this question. In American Automobile Ass’n v. United States, 367 U.S. 687, 81 S.Ct. 1727, 6 L. Ed.2d 1109 (1960), it held that membership dues paid in one calendar accounting year to the association, a national automobile club, for services to be provided to the members in the following calendar year must be included as income in the calendar year of their actual receipt. In Schlude, et ux. v. Commissioner, 372 U.S. 128, 83 S.Ct. 601, 9 L.Ed.2d 633 (1962), it held that fees paid by students, pursuant to contracts for dancing lessons to be given over a period of years, must be included in the taxpayer’s return, where its accounting was kept on a fiscal-year accrual basis, in the year in which the payments were actually made, even though the dancing lessons for which the payments were made were actually given in subsequent fiscal years.

In these cases the Supreme Court upholds the statutory authority of the Commissioner to require an accounting for tax purposes which reflects as taxable income payments made in advance in one fiscal year for services or facilities to be furnished in the following year, and concludes that such an exercise of authority by the Commissioner is consistent with Congressional intent. American Automobile Ass’n v. United States, supra, 367 U.S. at p. 694, 81 S.Ct. 1727, et seq. and Schlude, et ux. v. Commissioner, supra, 372 U.S. at p. 134 and p. 135, 83 S.Ct. 601.

Parkchester seeks to distinguish the present case from those decisions. It lays considerable emphasis on the Supreme Court’s use of the word “dues” and takes the position that, while the membership dues paid to it in advance may come within the holding of American Automobile Ass’n and Schlude, the fees paid in advance for other services and facilities, including roomette or locker space, do not. It claims that these fees were actually either refundable deposits on rentals or real property or trust funds in the hands of the taxpayer or were nothing more than payments which accompanied applications and did not become converted into income in the taxpayer’s hands until it had accepted the applications.

The Tax Court concluded, however, that the evidence presented disclosed that the monies paid were simply advance payments made by the members in one fiscal year for membership, services and facilities to be furnished them by the taxpayer in the next fiscal year. There was obviously no way to ascertain or estimate with reasonable accuracy in the fiscal year in which the advance payments were made how much the taxpayer would be required to expend in the next fiscal year to furnish the services and facilities previously paid for. Automobile Club of New York, Inc. v. C.I.R., 304 F.2d 781 (2 Cir. 1962).

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335 F.2d 478, 14 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5406, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkchester-beach-club-corp-on-review-v-commissioner-of-internal-ca2-1964.