Surface Combustion Corp. v. Commissioner

9 T.C. 631, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1947
DocketDocket Nos. 7438, 7439, 7440, 7441, 7442
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 9 T.C. 631 (Surface Combustion Corp. 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
Surface Combustion Corp. v. Commissioner, 9 T.C. 631, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73 (tax 1947).

Opinions

OPINION.

Kern, Judge:

Janitrol. — The applicable sections of the excess profits tax act are set forth below.1 The first argument advanced by petitioner with respect to this issue is that the expenditures incurred by it in the correction of defective heating units were abnormal for petitioner, and were attributable to claims against petitioner, within the meaning of section 711 (b) (1) (H) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The heaters were sold under a warranty of freedom from defects and workmanship for a period of twelve months. When the defects were discovered, petitioner realized at once the potential danger of disaster inherent in the use of such defective units in crowded spaces, and the program described in our findings of fact, designed to correct the defect by the replacement of the affected parts, was immediately undertaken. Complaints had been received from users of the heaters, but we’are unable to determine the number or character thereof. The program referred to was intended to and did reach every unit which had been sold or stocked by dealers, regardless of whether a complaint had been received concerning it, or, indeed, whether any difficulty had been experienced in its operation.

Deferring for a moment a discussion of the abnormal character or amount of the expenditures, the applicability of section 711 (b) (1)’ (H) depends on an interpretation of the word “claim” used therein.

It is generally understood not to be limited strictly to adjudicated claims, or to such formal claims as are encountered in many fields of the law.

A claim for damages, which is accompanied and fortified by a threat of litigation, has been held to be within the language of the section. R. C. Harvey Co., 5 T. C. 431. The dictionary definition of the word, provided by Webster’s New International Dictionary, p. 408, is:

1. A demand of a right or supposed right; a calling on another for something due, or supposed to be due; an assertion of a right or fact;
2. A right to claim something * * *.

While the facts indicate that some portion of the expenditures here were attributable to complaints received, at least some of which were probably claims, as defined above, it must be admitted that it is equally apparent that not all the expenditures were. The fact that the expenditures which were not attributable to claims were intended by petitioner to obviate future claims, or to eliminate potential claims, does not seem to us to be sufficient to bring them within the plain language of the statute.

We are therefore of the opinion that the expenditures involved here have not-been shown to have been attributable to claim within the meaning of the statute.

Petitioner urges, next, that the expenditures were of a class abnormal for it, such as are covered by section 711 (b) (1) (J) (i).

The evidence shows that petitioner put a new model Janitrol heater on the market in September of 1937, in which defects were discovered which made its use under certain conditions potentially dangerous. Because of the warranty under which the heaters were sold, and its recognition of the possibility of its liability for damages in case of disaster, petitioner took immediate and extraordinary steps to replace the defective parts in every heater which had been sold and thereby incurred expenses far in excess of the amounts which were normally required for the replacement of defective units.

Bespondent contends that the expenditures were not abnormal in character, as indicated by the fact that petitioner regularly maintained a reserve on its books, which was set up on a basis devised by petitioner as a result of its experience over the years, against which it charged whatever expenditures were incurred for servicing unsatisfactory units, or replacing defective ones. Petitioner admits such items were common in its experience, but contends the expenditures in dispute were of a different class.

The question is not easily resolved. In Green Bay Lumber Co., 3 T. C. 824, we had for determination the question whether a certain group of bad debts, distinguishable only by the fact that they stemmed from loans to employees, constituted a class of deductions separate and apart from bad debts growing out of trade transactions. There, as here, the taxpayer did not deny it ordinarily and normally had bad debt deductions, but it claimed the bad debts which were there the subject of dispute grew out of transactions which were distinct and properly segregated from other bad debts. After reviewing the legislative history of the provision with which we are presently concerned, and stating it to be our view that it was intended to be a remedial statute, entitled to a reasonable and rational construction in order to give the intended relief, we reached the conclusion that the employees’ bad debts were of a different class from other bad debts.

Applying the reasoning which led to that conclusion to the facts here, it seems to support petitioner’s contention that the expenditures occasioned by the heaters of defective design were different and distinguishable from the expenditures ordinarily incurred for regular servicing and replacement of defective or broken parts.

The evidence is clear that the defects which occasioned the expenditures were basic defects of design of a character never before experienced by petitioner, and certainly of a type not normally expected or encountered in the conduct of a business. We have already indicated our belief that they are sufficiently distinguishable from the ordinary expense incurred in servicing or replacement on account of breakage or defects in material or workmanship normally incident to the manufacture and sale of merchandise to justify their separation into a separate classification. Therefore, the fact that petitioner’s experience normally embraced expenditures of the latter type does not make expenditures of the type here involved any the less abnormal. We are of the opinion that the deductions reflecting these expenditures were abnormal deductions within the meaning of the code.

However, in order to justify the statutory adjustment contended for by petitioner, it must also be established, as required by section 711 (b) (1) (K) (ii) of the code, that the abnormal expenditures were not a consequence of an increase in the gross income of the taxpayer in the base period, or a decrease in the amount of some other deduction in its base period, and were not a consequence of a change at any time in the type, manner of operation, size, or condition of its business.

With respect to the first factor mentioned in the statute, the gross income of the unit heater department, which is the department of petitioner’s business which made and sold the Janitrol heaters which proved to be defective, was less in 1937 than in 1936, and still less in 1938.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 T.C. 631, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surface-combustion-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1947.