GOODRICH, Circuit Judge.
The petitioner, a corporation with principal place of business in ' Pennsylvania, seeks review of the action of the Board of Tax Appeals affecting its liability for income and unjust enrichment taxes for the year 1936. There are three questions involved.
The first has to do with the correctness of the Commissioner’s action regarding the deduction made for salary for Fannie Goldberg, secretary of the corporation. She became the owner in 1936 of % of the common and % of the preferred stock of the company. She was thereafter voted $125 per week salary. This amount, so far as concerns a deduction for tax purposes, was reduced by the Commissioner as excessive. The Board of Tax Appeals upheld the Commissioner. The taxpayer, of course, had the burden of persuasion upon the point that the Commissioner was wrong.1 The Board heard the evidence and reached a conclusion sustaining him. It is well settled that the reasonableness of such allowance is a question of fact2 and equally clear that a conclusion of fact is binding upon us if supported.3 We have read the testimony set out in the petitioner’s appendix. No good purpose would be served by repeating it. It is sufficient to say that the conclusion of the Board is not to be disturbed upon this point.
The second question concerns the construction of § 14(c) (1) of the Revenue Act of 1936. Section 144 imposes a graduated surtax on undistributed corporate profits. The amount of the tax depends upon the excess of the adjusted net income (net income minus a credit for normal tax and other credits, not relevant here) over the undistributed net income (adjusted net income minus a credit for dividends paid and other credits, not material here) and as this increases, the tax due decreases.5
. The problem in this case is concerned only with the effect of a paragraph providing for a “Specific credit”. Section 14(c) (1) provides;
“(1) Specific credit. If the adjusted net income is less than $50,000, there shall be allowed a specific credit equal to the portion of the undistributed net income which is in excess of 10 per centum of the adjusted net income and not in excess of $5,000, such credit to be applied as provided in paragraph (2).”6
[379]*379Despite taxpayer’s argument that the meaning of this paragraph is clear, we think an ambiguity is apparent: namely, whether the clause “not in excess of $5,-000” modifies “the portion of the undistributed net income” or the entire clause which precedes it. This ambiguity we must resolve to reach a decision in this case.
Treasury Regulation 94, Article 14-3 adopts the first view.7 The Commissioner followed this construction and allowed the taxpayer a specific credit of $3,416.84 on its adjusted and undistributed net incomes of $15,831.62. The two were identical in this case for no dividends were declared for the tax year in question. The taxpayer adopts the alternative view and claims a credit of $5,000.8 The only question involved in this part of the case is which of the two views is the one to be followed.
The question is by no means free from difficulty. The Treasury Regulation cannot, of course, change the law, but where two interpretations are possible, as here, the administrative view counts for something. Fawcus Machine Co. v. United States, 1931, 282 U.S. 375, 378, 51 S.Ct. 144, 75 L.Ed. 397. A majority of the Board of Tax Appeals in this case, supported the Commissioner’s interpretation, So does a square decision of the 6th Circuit. Black Motor Co., Inc., v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 6 Cir., 1942, 125 F.2d 977, petition for rehearing denied, April 6, 1942. Apart from authority, we think that the construction offered by the Commissioner leads to more consistent results and presumably, therefore, is within the Congressional intent. A construction is unreasonable when it produces an absurdity,9 and some of the results of applying the taxpayer’s construction are at least incongruous. For example:
A corporation with an adjusted net income of $50,000 is not entitled to a specific credit. If its undistributed net income is also $50,000, its tax under § 14 would be $10,250. If the corporation’s adjusted and undistributed net incomes were one cent less or $49,999.99, it would fall within § 14(c) (1). Under the taxpayer’s construction the tax would be $9,250 or $1000 less; under that of the Commissioner, $10,250.10 The specific credit would be $5000 and 0 respectively.
We believe that the meaning ascribed to § 14(c) (1) by the Treasury Regulations is the more reasonable. By it the specific credit decreases proportionately as the adjusted net income approaches the $50,000 limit and the undistributed profit tax approaches uniformly, not by leaps and bounds, the tax at the $50,000 level.11
The petitioner supports its construction by two major arguments. First, it main-tains that under the interpretation urged by the Commissioner, every corporation, regardless of the size of its undistributed net income is alloted up to $5,000 of that [380]*380income for taxation at 7%.12 If Congress had intended this result, it could, so runs the argument, easily have so provided. But it did not.
But the taxpayer oversimplifies the effect of the supposed intent of Congress. If we look for a iqoment at the Commissioner’s interpretation, it becomes apparent that it produces an additional result which would not have been accomplished had Congress worded § 14(c) (1) in the manner petitioner speaks of. The illustrations in footnote 11 show that as the adjusted net income approaches $50,000, the specific credit decreases. By § 14(c) (2) (A), the specific credit is deducted from the undistributed net income. Thus, the final amount of undistributed net income subject to surtax rates depends, in part, upon the amount of the specific credit. Since the surtax rates are graduated, § 14(b), that is higher as the undistributed net income increases, the lower the specific credit, the greater is the portion of undistributed net income subject to those higher surtax rates. Thus, although $5,000 is always taxed at 7%, the respective amounts of its components (the specific credit and 10% of the adjusted net income), which admittedly are variable, determine the final surtax rates applicable, and hence, the total tax.
Secondly, the taxpayer argues that its construction in allowing a larger specific credit effectuates the intent of Congress to favor small corporations; that under the Regulations the specific credit is determined without regard to the undistributed net income.13 This argument is ingenious but is less forceful when it is borne in mind that Congress did not make the rate of the tax to be paid dependent upon the amount of undistributed net income alone. We believe that the sought for Congressional purpose would be better attained if, as the corporation’s adjusted net income approached $50,000, the specific credit decreased. This result is obtained under the Regulations.
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GOODRICH, Circuit Judge.
The petitioner, a corporation with principal place of business in ' Pennsylvania, seeks review of the action of the Board of Tax Appeals affecting its liability for income and unjust enrichment taxes for the year 1936. There are three questions involved.
The first has to do with the correctness of the Commissioner’s action regarding the deduction made for salary for Fannie Goldberg, secretary of the corporation. She became the owner in 1936 of % of the common and % of the preferred stock of the company. She was thereafter voted $125 per week salary. This amount, so far as concerns a deduction for tax purposes, was reduced by the Commissioner as excessive. The Board of Tax Appeals upheld the Commissioner. The taxpayer, of course, had the burden of persuasion upon the point that the Commissioner was wrong.1 The Board heard the evidence and reached a conclusion sustaining him. It is well settled that the reasonableness of such allowance is a question of fact2 and equally clear that a conclusion of fact is binding upon us if supported.3 We have read the testimony set out in the petitioner’s appendix. No good purpose would be served by repeating it. It is sufficient to say that the conclusion of the Board is not to be disturbed upon this point.
The second question concerns the construction of § 14(c) (1) of the Revenue Act of 1936. Section 144 imposes a graduated surtax on undistributed corporate profits. The amount of the tax depends upon the excess of the adjusted net income (net income minus a credit for normal tax and other credits, not relevant here) over the undistributed net income (adjusted net income minus a credit for dividends paid and other credits, not material here) and as this increases, the tax due decreases.5
. The problem in this case is concerned only with the effect of a paragraph providing for a “Specific credit”. Section 14(c) (1) provides;
“(1) Specific credit. If the adjusted net income is less than $50,000, there shall be allowed a specific credit equal to the portion of the undistributed net income which is in excess of 10 per centum of the adjusted net income and not in excess of $5,000, such credit to be applied as provided in paragraph (2).”6
[379]*379Despite taxpayer’s argument that the meaning of this paragraph is clear, we think an ambiguity is apparent: namely, whether the clause “not in excess of $5,-000” modifies “the portion of the undistributed net income” or the entire clause which precedes it. This ambiguity we must resolve to reach a decision in this case.
Treasury Regulation 94, Article 14-3 adopts the first view.7 The Commissioner followed this construction and allowed the taxpayer a specific credit of $3,416.84 on its adjusted and undistributed net incomes of $15,831.62. The two were identical in this case for no dividends were declared for the tax year in question. The taxpayer adopts the alternative view and claims a credit of $5,000.8 The only question involved in this part of the case is which of the two views is the one to be followed.
The question is by no means free from difficulty. The Treasury Regulation cannot, of course, change the law, but where two interpretations are possible, as here, the administrative view counts for something. Fawcus Machine Co. v. United States, 1931, 282 U.S. 375, 378, 51 S.Ct. 144, 75 L.Ed. 397. A majority of the Board of Tax Appeals in this case, supported the Commissioner’s interpretation, So does a square decision of the 6th Circuit. Black Motor Co., Inc., v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 6 Cir., 1942, 125 F.2d 977, petition for rehearing denied, April 6, 1942. Apart from authority, we think that the construction offered by the Commissioner leads to more consistent results and presumably, therefore, is within the Congressional intent. A construction is unreasonable when it produces an absurdity,9 and some of the results of applying the taxpayer’s construction are at least incongruous. For example:
A corporation with an adjusted net income of $50,000 is not entitled to a specific credit. If its undistributed net income is also $50,000, its tax under § 14 would be $10,250. If the corporation’s adjusted and undistributed net incomes were one cent less or $49,999.99, it would fall within § 14(c) (1). Under the taxpayer’s construction the tax would be $9,250 or $1000 less; under that of the Commissioner, $10,250.10 The specific credit would be $5000 and 0 respectively.
We believe that the meaning ascribed to § 14(c) (1) by the Treasury Regulations is the more reasonable. By it the specific credit decreases proportionately as the adjusted net income approaches the $50,000 limit and the undistributed profit tax approaches uniformly, not by leaps and bounds, the tax at the $50,000 level.11
The petitioner supports its construction by two major arguments. First, it main-tains that under the interpretation urged by the Commissioner, every corporation, regardless of the size of its undistributed net income is alloted up to $5,000 of that [380]*380income for taxation at 7%.12 If Congress had intended this result, it could, so runs the argument, easily have so provided. But it did not.
But the taxpayer oversimplifies the effect of the supposed intent of Congress. If we look for a iqoment at the Commissioner’s interpretation, it becomes apparent that it produces an additional result which would not have been accomplished had Congress worded § 14(c) (1) in the manner petitioner speaks of. The illustrations in footnote 11 show that as the adjusted net income approaches $50,000, the specific credit decreases. By § 14(c) (2) (A), the specific credit is deducted from the undistributed net income. Thus, the final amount of undistributed net income subject to surtax rates depends, in part, upon the amount of the specific credit. Since the surtax rates are graduated, § 14(b), that is higher as the undistributed net income increases, the lower the specific credit, the greater is the portion of undistributed net income subject to those higher surtax rates. Thus, although $5,000 is always taxed at 7%, the respective amounts of its components (the specific credit and 10% of the adjusted net income), which admittedly are variable, determine the final surtax rates applicable, and hence, the total tax.
Secondly, the taxpayer argues that its construction in allowing a larger specific credit effectuates the intent of Congress to favor small corporations; that under the Regulations the specific credit is determined without regard to the undistributed net income.13 This argument is ingenious but is less forceful when it is borne in mind that Congress did not make the rate of the tax to be paid dependent upon the amount of undistributed net income alone. We believe that the sought for Congressional purpose would be better attained if, as the corporation’s adjusted net income approached $50,000, the specific credit decreased. This result is obtained under the Regulations. However, under the taxpayer’s construction, any corporation with an undistributed net income of $5,555.55 and thus necessarily an adjusted net income of at least the same, amount, or anywhere in excess of that sum, would have a specific credit of $5,000.14 may conceded that the specific credit is computed independently of the undistributed net income. But it cannot be overlooked that the specific credit is but one of the factors which determines the final amount of the tax. The size of the undistributed net income, although usually not a real factor in arriving at the specific credit, is very important in the determination of tax liability. After all, the total effect of § 14 is to determine the amount of the tax to be paid, and as such its subdivisions define the separate components to be considered together in arriving at the final result.
On this question, therefore, we agree with the conclusion of the Commissioner, the Board of Tax Appeals, and the Sixth Circuit.
The third point involves petitioner’s liability under § 501(a) (2) of the Unjust Enrichment Act.15 That section imposes a tax “equal to 80 per centum of the net income from reimbursement received by such person from his vendors of amounts representing Federal excise-tax burdens included in prices paid by such person to such vendors, to the extent that such net income does not exceed the amount of such Federal excise-tax burden which such person in turn shifted to his vendees.” The primary purpose of this act was to tax the profits realized in the form of refunds as a result of the Agricultural Ad[381]*381justment Act16 being declared unconstitutional,17 in those cases where the taxpayer had passed the processing tax on to his vendees.18
In 1936 petitioner was paid back by its vendors the amount of $15,030.34 on cotton yarn it had previously purchased. Petitioner filed an unjust enrichment return, but reported no tax liability. The Commissioner determined a deficiency in tax of $1,314.37 on unjust enrichment in the amount of $2,737.29. Of this sum $954.74 represented payments from one concern, Clyde Fabrics, received through its broker, the Palmetto Yarn Corporation and $1,417.23 from another, the Johnston Mills Company. These payments do not appear to have been made pursuant to contract.19 The Board of Tax Appeals sustained the Commissioner’s determination.20
Petitioner, on appeal to this Court, pressed the same three contentions it had raised before the Board. We shall consider them in order.
First. Petitioner maintains that its vendors did not shift to it the burden of the tax because the goods were invoiced at a flat rate per pound, the processing tax not being identified as a separate item of cost. All but one of the cases cited in support of this contention involved suits by purchasers to recover from their vendors monies paid for taxes which were later declared invalid. They are governed by principles of contract law which are not controlling here. The exception is Cudahy Packing Co. v. United States, D.C.N.D.Ill.1941, 37 F.Supp 563. That case involved a suit for refund of processing taxes .paid to the United States and although the District Court held that when the tax was absorbed in the price, the tax burden was not shifted, on appeal, that decision was reversed. 7 Cir., 1942, 126 F.2d 429. The Circuit Court of Appeals held that title VII21 not only referred to “legal burden” (where the tax is added as an identifiable item), but also to “economic burden” (where the tax is absorbed in the total price).
We believe that the same meaning is to be given to title III. As the Commissioner points out, the language used in that section of the Act shows that it was meant to include a shift in the tax burden whether direct or indirect. Thus, 501(e) prescribes that the extent of the shift of the burden may be determined by deducting from the selling price the cost of the articles sold plus the average margin with respect to the quantity involved. See, also, §§ 501(a) (2), 501(d), 501(f) and 501(i). Finally, the Committee Reports reveal that the framers of the statute had in mind that any actual shift of burden should fall within the Act.22
The Board of Tax Appeals stated that when the petitioner sold its product to its customers it included “in the sales price the burden of the processing taxes which it had paid to its vendors.” The testimony of taxpayer’s officers does not contradict the Board’s finding of fact. Admittedly the tax was charged, as a separate [382]*382item, to vendees on contracts in force on August 1, 1933. Subsequently, the tax was not invoiced as an identifiable charge. There was uncertainty and lack of positive knowledge whether August prices were increased over previously prevailing figures. No books or records were produced to show the absence of such increase. We think it is clear that the petitioner failed to carry its burden of proof in this respect.
Second. Petitioner argues that since its vendors were not legally obligated to reimburse it, the refunds were gifts or gratuities, and in any event not income. The general question whether a given payment is to be treated as a gift or compensation . is one which has caused some difficulty.23 All the authorities agree however that to have a gift there must be a ■donative intent on the part of the transferor.24 The Board found in this case that there “is no evidence that they [the repayments] were made with a donative intent,” and to the extent that this conclusion is reviewable by us,25 we agree with the Board.26
Nor can it be doubted, we think, that the payments were income to the petitioner. The non-existence of a legal obligation to reimburse the petitioner is not controlling. The situation wherein bonuses paid to employees were held to be taxable as income is a good illustration of this.27 The courts have tended to treat that situation not as a gift, but as voluntary additional compensation for services rendered. So here, we cannot shut our eyes to the real nature of the transactions. The parties involved were buyer and sellers, concerns engaged in continuous business dealings. It is not altogether certain that the Clyde Fabrics and Johnston firms believed +hat they were under no legal obligation to reimburse petitioner.28 Be that as it may, we think it is not unreasonable to consider the payments or credits as made for maintaining the good will of the petitioner and encouraging future business. There is no doubt that while the vendors sought, at the least, an intangible benefit, the petitioner realized a real profit. The effect of the refunds was to reduce the price paid by petitioner for the goods which it had previously sold. The payments thus made increased the gain on those sales. It is at this increment of gain that the Unjust Enrichment Act was aimed. This additional profit constituted taxable income.29
Third. Petitioner contends that if the reimbursements constitute taxable [383]*383income, they were not taxable in 1936, but rather in 1935 when the goods were sold. The refunds were received in 1936. As such they were income for that year whether taxpayer was on a cash or accrual basis. Ben Bimberg & Co. v. Helvering, 2 Cir., 1942, 126 F.2d 412.
The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is affirmed.