Welp v. United States

201 F.2d 128, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 136, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4237
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1953
Docket14617_1
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 201 F.2d 128 (Welp v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welp v. United States, 201 F.2d 128, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 136, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4237 (8th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

COLLET, Circuit Judge.

The appellant-taxpayer sued to recover income taxes and interest which he paid as a result of what he claims was an illegal assessment by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for the tax year 1946. From a judgment denying recovery he appeals.

Appellant started a small produce business in the town of Bancroft, Iowa, in 1923. It prospered and grew. Through the succeeding years he added to his business operations a chicken hatchery, a hennery, a feed mill and a farm. He kept accurate books of his operations — always on the cash basis — deducting the purchase cost of grain and feed and raw materials for processing bought each year from total cash receipts for that year and reporting the resulting figure, less operating expenses, as his income for tax purposes. On a number of occasions prior to’ 1946 his books were checked by revenue agents without objection to his practice of keeping them on the cash basis. As the business grew the purchase of materials and supplies 'and their conversion into the products sold became of more and more comparative magnitude and importance. His business was seasonal. His practice was to stock up with feed and other supplies in the fall and early winter each year for use during the next calendar year. The result naturally was that he would have on hand at the beginning of each calendar (tax) year a substantial inventory of such supplies — purchased during the preceding year or years, paid for out of prior gross money receipts, and the cost thereof deducted 'from gross money receipts in calculating income for tax purposes for those prior periods. Sometime subsequent to 1946 when appellant’s books were examined by a tax agent for the year 1946, at appellant’s request, for purposes not now material, the agent determined that his method of keeping his books on a cash basis did not properly reflect his income for 1946. In March, 1950, appellant received a copy of the Internal Revenue agent’s report of his examination of the 1946 income tax return in which the agent had calculated the income for 1946 and 1947 upon an accrual basis, had estimated the value of the materials 'and supplies on hand at the close of the year 1946, had treated the value of that inventory as income for the year 1946, and added the total amount thereof, $44,330.00, to the previously reported net income of $64,189.19 for that year, without making or taking into consideration an inventory of materials and supplies on hand at the beginning of the year. Appellant had paid a tax of $33,855.-69 for 1946. With the addition of the in *130 ventory on hand at the close of 1946 to net income for that year the tax liability for 1946 was increased $46,144.75. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined a deficiency of that amount. Appellant paid it, making his total payment of income taxes for 1946, $80,000.44, plus $9,588.63 interest. When appellant got the agent’s report, he made up an inventory for the beginning of 1946. It amounted to $107,209.95. He also made up an inventotry of his own for the close of the year 1946 of $116,955.81, which is conceded to be more accurate than the agent’s estimated inventory of $44,330.00.

From the foregoing recitation of the facts, the gravamen of the present controversy is apparent. Appellant contends that the Commissioner should not, by applying the accrual method for determining income for 1946, have eliminated from consideration án opening inventory for that year because by doing so income earned in previous years was included in income for 1946. It is readily apparent that if an opening inventory of $107,209.95 and a closing inventory of $116,955.81 is used for 1946 1 and the difference between those amounts is treated as income for that year, the resulting tax deficiency would be very much more favorable to the taxpayer than the deficiency of $46,144.75 assessed by the Commissioner. The Commissioner insists that the use of the accrual method was necessary and proper in order to reflect appellant’s true income, and that the elimination of an inventory for the beginning of the year 1946 was proper in order to avoid the taxpayer taking credit twice for the cost or value of the materials, supplies, and products on hand at the beginning of 1946 — once in previous periods when their costs were treated in the same manner as operating expenses and deducted from operating revenue in arriving at income, and again in substantially the same manner in 1946. The parties agree that if it should be determined that the opening inventory of $107,209.95 must be taken into account for determining income for 1946, that appellant’s closing inventory of $116,955.81 should be substituted for the agent’s estimated closing inventory of $44,330.00, and the livestock items eliminated from both opening and closing inventories, reducing the opening inventory to $102,859.95 and the closing inventory to $101,026.96. 2

The trial court, in a carefully considered opinion reported at 103 F.Supp. 551, concluded that the Commissioner was justified in using the accrual method in determining appellant’s true income and that appellant had not sustained the burden of proving that the Commissioner erred in failing to consider appellant’s opening inventory for 1946. The sole question for determination is the correctness of the elimination of an opening inventory.

We will not repeat here the comprehensive review of the authorities so well done in the trial court's opinion. We agree that the reported cases at the time of the , trial left an undesirable uncertainty as to what circumstances will permit the elimination 'from consideration of opening inventories and including inventories at the close of the year in income for that year, thereby, in effect, making taxable in that year income actually earned in previous years, and when that cannot be properly done.

The question now involved arises in principle whether the taxpayer has kept his books in such a manner as to show his true income but for one reason or another has not accurately reported that income, as well as when he has so kept his books and records that they do not reflect the true income and has failed to 'accurately report the income. The objective of the Internal Revenue Code is the ascertainment and reporting of true income and the payment of the proper tax thereon. That objective should not be subordinated to formal methods or practices of bookkeeping or accounting to the extent that income actually accruing in one year be treated as accruing in another by reason of the application of a method of accounting. To do so would be inconsistent with the purpose of the statute authorizing the Commissioner to use such method of accounting as will clearly reflect the in *131 come. 26 U.S.C.A. § 41. 3 If an inventory-on hand at the beginning of a tax year is in fact income earned in a preceding year, a change from one method of accounting to another will not alter that fact. “Bookkeeping entries do not produce either income or losses for the purposes of taxation. They are intended to record facts, and are evidential, but they do not create or destroy facts.” Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Huston, 8 Cir., 126 F.2d 196, 199. “The bookkeeping creates nothing, and the question must be decided according to proven and established facts.” Sitterding v.

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Bluebook (online)
201 F.2d 128, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 136, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welp-v-united-states-ca8-1953.