Uni-Term Stevedoring Co. v. Commissioner

3 T.C. 917, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 29, 1944
DocketDocket No. 1465
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 3 T.C. 917 (Uni-Term Stevedoring Co. 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
Uni-Term Stevedoring Co. v. Commissioner, 3 T.C. 917, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114 (tax 1944).

Opinion

OPINION.

Murdock, Judge\

The parties have raised and argued a jurisdictional question on the petitioner’s motion for leave to file an amended petition. The question which they have argued is, Has this Court jurisdiction to consider and rule upon an application by the petitioner for relief under section 722 of the Internal Revenue Code in this proceeding, which is based entirely upon a notice of deficiency in excess profits taxes for 1940 ?

The petitioner, a corporation, filed two returns for the calendar year 1940 with the collector for the second district of New York. One return was for income, declared value excess profits, and defense taxes. The other was for excess profits tax. The petitioner represented on its income tax return that it was a personal service corporation and signified its desire not to be subject to excess profits tax. Accordingly, it reported no tax due on the excess profits tax return. The Commissioner mailed the petitioner a notice of deficiencies in income tax, declared value excess profits tax, and excess profits tax for 1940. He also advised the petitioner in that notice of his holding that the petitioner was not entitled to classification as a personal service corporation under section 725 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The petitioner filed a petition with this Court on April 29, 1948, based upon the above deficiency notice, contesting only the excess profits tax deficiency. The single error assigned was the failure of the Commissioner to recognize that the petitioner was a personal service corporation. Issue was joined and the proceeding came on for hearing on April 5, 1944, at which time counsel for the petitioner stated that the claim for personal service classification was abandoned. He asked leave at that time to amend the petition in order to attack the deficiency in excess profits tax on the ground that the Commissioner had erroneously failed to grant relief under section 722 of the Internal Revenue Code. About six months previously, on September 15, 1943, the petitioner had filed with the Commissioner an application for relief under section 722, in which it claimed a refund or credit of $83,669.16, the same amount as the deficiency in excess profits tax determined by the Commissioner. The petitioner has not paid any excess profits tax for 1940. The Commissioner has not acted upon the application for relief under section 722.

Congress has provided that the excess profits tax imposed by section 710 of subchapter E of chapter 2 shall first be computed, returned, and paid without regard to any possible relief under section 722, except in a case not here material. Sec. 722 (d). A complete system of assessing and collecting this excess profits tax, including any deficiency therein determined by the Commissioner, without regard to possible relief under 722, has been provided. Section 729 (a), relating to excess profits tax, states that all provisions of law applicable in respect of income taxes “shall insofar as not inconsistent with this subchapter, be applicable in respect of the tax imposed by this subchapter.” Thus, the receipt of the notice of deficiency in excess profits tax and the filing of the original petition in this case gave this Court jurisdiction to make “a redetermination of the deficiency.” The petitioner has now withdrawn its only assignment of error as to the deficiency and a decision for the respondent is in order.

Congress separately provided a procedure for the consideration of relief under 722, for the determination by the Commissioner of the extent to which relief should be granted, and for review of that determination by this Court under certain circumstances. Section 732, entitled “Review of Abnormalities,” provides that the Commissioner, if he disallows a claim under section 722, shall send a notice of his disallowance to the taxpayer by registered mail and the taxpayer may file a petition with this Court within 90 days for a redetermination of the excess profits tax.1 It further provides that “such notice of dis-allowance shall be deemed to be a notice of deficiency for all purposes relating to the assessment and collection of taxes Or tbe refund or credit of overpayments.”

Thus, proceedings may come to this Court in two different- ways— one, following the receipt of a notice of a deficiency in excess profits taxes, and the other, following a notice of the disallowance of a claim under 722. The present proceeding is one which has arisen under the first method, not the second. Jurisdiction in this case depends entirely upon the provisions of section 729 (a).

Congress obviously intended and provided that the application for relief under section 722 should first be considered by the Commissioner before the matter should be “reviewed” by this Court.2 The regulations are consistent with this interpretation of the law. Section 732, the only section which specifically confers jurisdiction on this Court to consider questions arising under section 722, confers jurisdiction to make a redetermination after the Commissioner has acted by denying in whole or in part a claim for refund. There is now no provision authorizing this Court to consider or decide the question of relief under 722 in the absence of prior action by the Commissioner.

The relief provided by section 722 is in the form of a refund or credit of excess profits tax paid. Until some tax is paid, there is no basis for that relief. The relief is not effected through reduction of a deficiency in the excess profits tax. The petitioner in this case has paid no excess profits tax for 1940 and, consequently, is not in position to ask for any relief. It can not be entitled to a refund or credit of excess profits tax until it pays the deficiency which the Commissioner has determined.3 It will have two years after payment within which to make a claim to the Commissioner for relief under section 722. See section 322(b) in the light of section 722(d).4 Here there has been neither payment of the tax nor action by the Commissioner. The petitioner’s request that we take jurisdiction in this proceeding over the question of relief under 722 is premature.

It is apparent from the provisions of the statute that Congress intended to limit the jurisdiction of this Court, based upon a notice of deficiency in excess profits taxes, to a redetermination of that deficiency without regard to any possible relief under 722, and that our jurisdiction to consider the question of possible relief under 722 can be invoked only after the Commissioner has mailed a notice of the dis-allowance of a claim for that relief as provided in section 732.5 The present petitioner in a deficiency proceeding under section 729(a) is seeking to invoke the jurisdiction to consider its right to relief as if the proceeding had originated under section 732. Congress did not intend that this should be done and to allow it would defeat the purposes which Congress had in mind.

Furthermore, no good purpose could be served by retaining jurisdiction in this proceeding pending the action of the Commissioner on the claim for relief under 722.6 The entry of an order finding a deficiency in the amount determined by the Commissioner will in no way prejudice the petitioner in its efforts to have its claim for relief under 722 adequately considered in accordance with the provisions of the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 T.C. 917, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uni-term-stevedoring-co-v-commissioner-tax-1944.