Wilkins Pontiac v. Commissioner

34 T.C. 1065, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 72
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1960
DocketDocket No. 71822
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 34 T.C. 1065 (Wilkins Pontiac 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
Wilkins Pontiac v. Commissioner, 34 T.C. 1065, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 72 (tax 1960).

Opinion

OPINION.

Deennen, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner’s income tax for the year 1955 in the amount of $12,864.82. The sole issue is whether petitioner may deduct from its gross income a reasonable addition to a reserve for anticipated losses on conditional sales contracts which were sold with recourse.

All of the facts are stipulated and are so found.

Petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of California with its principal offices in Van Nuys, California. Its tax return for the calendar year 1955 was filed with the district director of internal revenue at Los Angeles, California.

Petitioner was incorporated on November 14, 1947, under the name of Paul R. Warmee, Inc. Its name was changed in 1955 to Wilkins Pontiac. Petitioner is engaged in the operation of a Pontiac automobile agency located at 5848 Van Nuys Boulevard in Van Nuys. It maintained its books and records and filed its income tax returns on an accrual basis of accounting.

Nearly all of the sales of automobiles by petitioner during the year in issue were made by sales contracts under which some cash or a used car was received from the purchaser at the time of purchase and a contract was given by the purchaser for the balance due. These contracts were sold and assigned by petitioner to the General Motors Acceptance Corporation, a finance company, hereafter referred to as GMAC, at face value without discount and with full recourse. The pertinent provision of the conditional sales contract entered into by petitioner and GMAC is as follows:

In consideration of your [GMAC] purchase of the within contract, undersigned [petitioner] guarantees payment of the full amount remaining unpaid thereon, and covenants if default be made in payment of any installment therein to pay the full amount then unpaid to General Motors Acceptance Corporation upon demand, * * *

By virtue of this guaranty provision, petitioner in 1955 reimbursed GMAC for losses in the amount of $5,030.17. This amount was reflected in petitioner’s books and in its Federal income tax return as a charge to “Cost of Sales” resulting in a reduction in gross profits of $5,030.17. The gross profit figure of $735,312.91 reported in petitioner’s Federal income tax return represents gross profit after deducting $5,030.17.

Each year for several years prior to and including 1955, it was the policy of petitioner to credit an account identified as “Reserve for Losses on Contracts Discounted” an amount sufficient to cover anticipated losses based on a percentage of the balance of such contracts outstanding at the close of the taxable year. In the year 1955 the amount of $16,440.75 was credited to this reserve and claimed as a deduction in petitioner’s Federal income tax return under the item identified as “Provision for losses on contracts discounted.” The reasonableness of the reserve is not in issue.

Petitioner’s books and records show a balance as of December 31, 1954, in the “Reserve for Losses on Contracts Discounted” in the amount of $7,874.63, and a balance as of December 31, 1955, of $24,315.38.

Credits made by GMAC to the dealer’s reserve as a result of the transactions between GMAC and petitioner were duly reported as income by petitioner in the year such credits were made.

In his notice of deficiency respondent disallowed the $16,440.75 deduction for increase in the reserve account for losses on contracts sold and also disallowed the $5,030.17 actual losses charged to cost of sales on the ground that it should have been charged to the $7,874.63 beginning balance in the reserve account. Petitioner agrees that if the increase in the reserve account is deductible, the actual losses paid are not deductible in 1955.

In Putnam v. Commissioner, 352 U.S. 82 (affirming a Memorandum Opinion of this Court), which involved the right of an individual to deduct as a loss or as a bad debt amounts paid as guarantor of notes of a corporation of which the individual was a stockholder, the Supreme Court said (pp. 85-88):

The familiar rule is that, instanter upon the payment by the guarantor of the debt, the debtor’s obligation to the creditor becomes an obligation to the guarantor, not a new debt, but, by subrogation, the result of the shift of the original debt from the creditor to the guarantor who steps into the creditor’s shoes. Thus, the loss sustained by the guarantor unable to recover from the debtor is by its very nature a loss from the worthlessness of a debt. * * *
There is, then, no justification or basis for consideration of Putnam’s loss under the general loss provisions of § 23(e) (2), i.e., as an ordinary nonbusiness loss sustained in a transaction entered into for profit. Congress has legislated specially in the matter of deductions of nonbusiness bad debt losses, i.e., such a loss is deductible only as a short-term capital loss by virtue of the special limitation provisions contained in §23(k)(4). * * *
*******
Here also the statutory scheme is to be understood as meaning that a loss attributable to the worthlessness of a debt shall be regarded as a bad debt loss, deductible as such or not at all.

It seems clear from the Putnam case that any payments made by petitioner as a result of its guaranty of its customers’ contracts, or any losses suffered as a result thereof, would be deductible, if at all, under section 166 of the 1954 Code. Section 166(a) provides in part that there shall be allowed as a deduction any debt which becomes worthless in the taxable year. Section 166(c) provides:

(c) Reserve for Bad Debts. — In lieu of any deduction under subsection (a), there shall be allowed (in the discretion of the Secretary or his delegate) a deduction for a reasonable addition to a reserve for bad debts.

The above provisions have appeared in the law in substantially the same form for a number of years. See sec. 23 (k), I.R.C. 1939.

Section 1.166-1, Income Tax Regs., interpreting section 166 of the 1954 Code, says:

(a) Allowance of deduction. — Section 166 provides that, in computing taxable income under section 63, a deduction shall be allowed in respect of bad debts owed to the taxpayer. * * * [Emphasis supplied.]
* * * * * * *
(c) Bona fide debt required. — Only a bona fide debt qualifies for purposes of section 166. A bona fide debt is a debt which arises from a debtor-creditor relationship based upon a valid and enforceable obligation to pay a fixed or determinable sum of money. * * *

While this language does not appear in prior regulations dealing with bad debt deduction, see Regs. 118, sec. 39.23 (k)-l, and Regs. Ill, sec.

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Wilkins Pontiac v. Commissioner
34 T.C. 1065 (U.S. Tax Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 T.C. 1065, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-pontiac-v-commissioner-tax-1960.