Schuyler v. Commissioner
This text of 10 T.C.M. 439 (Schuyler 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.
Opinion
*235 Petitioners owned and operated a hotel, a part of their business involving purchase and sale of merchandise. Held, respondent was correct in requiring petitioners to use inventories in reporting income for tax purposes, but petitioners can take into account opening as well as ending inventories for the taxable year.
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of $2,118.96 for the taxable year 1947. The sole issue is whether respondent, in determining*236 that use of inventories was necessary in order to properly reflect petitioner's income, was correct in including in petitioner's gross income for 1947 the ending inventory of $5,010.85 without taking into account the opening inventory for that year.
Findings of Fact
Petitioners, husband and wife, owned and operated the Naples Hotel, Naples, New York. They have conducted the business since 1926. Their joint income tax return for 1947 was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the twenty-eighth district of New York at Buffalo, New York. Petitioners have always filed their tax returns, including that for the calendar year 1947, on the cash basis.
In connection with their hotel business petitioners purchased and sold certain merchandise, such as cigars, cigarettes, tobacco, food, wine, liquor, and beer. In about 1943 they began to take inventories and continued to do so through the taxable year. The amount of the inventories was recorded on petitioners' books. Petitioners' opening inventory for the calendar year 1947 was $5,048.86; its ending inventory for 1947 was $5,010.85.
In determining the deficiency, respondent adjusted petitioners' income, in part, as follows:
*237 "Unallowable deductions and additional income:
* * *
(d) Ending inventory… $5,010.85"
The explanation given for the adjustment was:
"(d) It is held that the use of an ending inventory is necessary in order to correctly reflect income of the taxable year."
Opening inventory was not taken into account, nor were other adjustments made by respondent in order to place petitioners on an accrual method of reporting income for the taxable year in question.
Opinion
RICE, Judge:
Whether the books of the taxpayer properly reflect income is the distinguishing factor in cases such as this. Cf.
The cases cited by respondent have previously been distinguished in Robert G. Frame, supra;
Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
10 T.C.M. 439, 1951 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuyler-v-commissioner-tax-1951.