Schiffman v. Commissioner

47 T.C. 537, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 141
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1967
DocketDocket No. 5992-65
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 47 T.C. 537 (Schiffman 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
Schiffman v. Commissioner, 47 T.C. 537, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 141 (tax 1967).

Opinion

Tannenwauq, Judge:

Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner’s income taxes for the years and in the amounts as follows:

Addition to tax (sec. 6653(a),
Year Income tax I.R.C.1954)1
1961_ $10,071.12 $503.56
1962_ 8,004.91 400.25
1963_ 9,179.78 458.99
All references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1951.
Although the respondent’s deficiency notice was not issued until Aug. 27, 1965, there is no issue as to the period of limitations with respect to the taxable year 1961. Petitioner reported gross income of $39,539 and the claimed omissions from gross income aggregate $16,392, or more than 25 percent. See see. 6501(e).

The parties having settled all other issues raised by the deficiency notice, including respondent’s assertion of additions to tax, the sole question remaining for decision is whether certain discounts and rebates, which purchasers of insurance received, reduced petitioner’s commissions and therefore are properly excludable from petitioner’s gross income.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts are stipulated and are found accordingly.

Petitioner is a resident of Short Hills, N.J., and timely filed his individual income tax returns on a cash basis for the calendar years 1961, 1962, and 1963 with the district director of internal revenue, Newark, N.J.

For approximately 38 years, including the taxable years involved herein, petitioner has been and continues to be engaged, as a sole proprietor, in the insurance business, providing on behalf of various insurance companies different types of general insurance for his customers, including fire, burglary, workmen’s compensation, public liability, etc., as well as various types of indemnity and surety bonds. He has been at all times, and continues to be, a licensed insurance broker in the State of New Jersey.

In the course of his business petitioner entered into agency contracts with various insurance companies licensed to issue insurance policies in New Jersey. Though these contracts vary slightly in form or language, they all contain provisions substantially similar to the following:

2. The Agent shall have full power to solicit and accept applications and issue and deliver policies, bonds, certificates, endorsements and binders covering classes of risks which the Company may, from time to time, authorize to be insured or bonded; to collect and receipt for premiums therefor; to cancel such policies and bonds; and to retain out of premiums so collected, as full compensation on business placed with the Company by or through the Agent, commissions in accordance with schedules attached to this Agreement or as may otherwise be mutually agreed upon.
3. Accounts of money due the Company on business placed by or through the Agent with the Company are to be rendered monthly so as to reach the Company’s office not later than the 10th day of the following month; the balance shown to be due the Company shall be paid not later than 60 days after the end of the month for which the account is rendered.

Each agency agreement entered into by petitioner contained a schedule showing the rate of commission (in terms of percentage of premium) to which petitioner was entitled with respect to each type of policy of insurance sold by him. They also provided that the commissions were subject to specific exceptions in cases where rates of commissions other than those listed in the schedule were agreed upon by the parties.

In order to induce some of his customers to obtain their insurance coverage through him, petitioner entered into two types of agreements with customers whose patronage he feared he would otherwise lose. Both types of agreements called for petitioner to bill the customers for the full amount of the premium payable for the kind of insurance involved, in accordance with the schedules filed with the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance and as stated in the insurance policies.

Under one type of agreement (hereafter referred to as the “discount” type of agreement) petitioner was to accept, and did accept, from customers a lesser sum than the billed amount, as payment in full thereof. The difference represented an allowance to the customer.

Under the other type of agreement (hereafter referred to as the “rebate” type of agreement) the customer paid petitioner the full amount billed, but thereafter petitioner was required to remit, and did remit, to the customer a portion of the customer’s payment, also as an allowance.

It was at the customers’ suggestion and insistence that these agreements were consummated. Petitioner’s practice of giving discounts and rebates was required by the competitive conditions of petitioner’s business.

The insurance companies neither participated in, nor had knowledge of, the giving of the discounts or rebates.

During the years in question, petitioner followed a uniform procedure for reporting and remitting premium payments to the various insurance companies with which he had agreements. Each month petitioner received from each insurance company a statement showing, with respect to each policy for which petitioner was to collect and remit a premium payment, the policy number, the name of the assured, the type of coverage, effective (or renewal) date of the policy, the gross premium, the amount of petitioner’s commission, and the net premium, that is, the gross premium less petitioner’s commission thereon. As required and authorized under his agency contracts, petitioner rendered a monthly accounting to each insurance company of the premiums due it on the policies issued to his customers and the amounts of his commissions thereon which he was entitled to retain for himself. This monthly accounting showed, with respect to each policy on which he received a premium payment, the name of the assured, the policy number, the amount of the gross premium on said policy, and the amount of the commission ostensibly due him thereon. Along with these monthly statements, petitioner transmitted to the insurance company his check for the net premiums due the company, that is, the total gross premiums less the total amount of the ostensible commissions.

The discount or rebate given to a customer by petitioner at no time reduced the net premium received by the insurance company; the commission to which the petitioner was otherwise entitled was reduced by the amount thereof.

In computing gross income, petitioner reduced the reportable commissions by the aggregate amount of discounts and rebates received by his customers and included on his returns only the amounts actually retained.

The amounts of such reductions were as follows:

Taxable year Discount type Rebate type
1961_ $13,352 $3,040
1962_ 7,063 4,590
1963_ 9,565 4,024

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Schiffman v. Commissioner
47 T.C. 537 (U.S. Tax Court, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 T.C. 537, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schiffman-v-commissioner-tax-1967.