Chabot, Judge:
Respondent determined a deficiency in Federal individual income tax against petitioners for 1975 in the amount of $7,736.85. The issues for decision are as follows:
(1) Whether respondent should be equitably estopped from disallowing a portion of petitioners’ claimed foreign tax credit because of petitioner-husband’s asserted reliance on advice understood by petitioner-husband as having been given to him by respondent’s agents; and
(2) Whether "basis” for purposes of the investment credit under section 381 is greater than "basis” for depreciation and capital gain purposes, in the case of property purchased with tax-deferred funds withdrawn from petitioner-husband’s capital construction fund ordinary income account established under the Merchant Marine Act, 1936.2
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated; the stipulation and the stipulated exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
When the petition in this case was filed, petitioners Peter Zuanich (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Zuanich) and Mary Ann Zuanich, husband and wife, resided in Bellingham, Wash.
I. Foreign Tax Credit
During 1975: Zuanich owned a majority of the stock of Armstrong Paper Products, Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as Armstrong), a corporation formed and incorporated under the laws of Canada; Armstrong had an unknown amount of income which resulted in Armstrong’s tax payment to the Canadian Government in 1975 of at least $6,986.94; Zuanich received $9,966.60 in interest, $4,500 in rents, and $14,3.96.95 in capital gain, as to all of which tax of $5,768.90 was withheld and paid over to the Canadian Government; and .Zuanich received $3,500 in director’s fees from Armstrong orí which no tax was paid to the Canadian Government. i <•
At some time before the filing of petitioners’ 1975 return, Zuanich spoke with several of respondent’s revenue agents who worked in Bellingham, Wash., about the tax consequences of his dealings with Armstrong. Zuanich understood those people to say that he would be entitled to a foreign tax credit for the $6,986.94 in taxes paid by Armstrong to the Canadian Government. He structured his business dealings in reliance on that understanding. : i
On Form 1116 (Computation of Foreign Tax Credit) attached to petitioners’ 1975 joint Federal individual income tax return, petitioners claimed a foreign tax credit of $12,755.84. Of this amount, respondent allowed the $5,768.90 withheld amount and disallowed the remaining $6,986.94.
II. Investment Credit
During 1975, Zuanich was active as a commercial fisherman and wastepaper dealer; he conducted these businesses under the name "Puget Sound Salvage Co.”
In 1974, as a commercial fisherman, Zuanich deposited $30,000 into a "capital construction fund ordinary income account” under section 607(e) of the Merchant Marine Act, 1936. For tax purposes, Zuanich deducted the $30,000 from his gross fishing receipts for 1974.
In 1975, Zuanich made a "qualified withdrawal”3 of $7,616.58 from the account and purchased a new hydraulic fishing reel assembly (hereinafter referred to as the reel) for his commercial fishing boat. The reel, which he placed into service in the spring of 1975, was used to retrieve a fishing net. The reel had a useful life of 7 or more years when placed into service.
Zuanich did not add the purchase price of the reel to his adjusted cost basis in his commercial fishing boat for purposes of claiming depreciation. He did claim an investment credit of $761.66 with respect to the reel; respondent disallowed this credit.
OPINION
Petitioners have no legal right to the foreign tax credit under sections 334 and 9015 on account of Armstrong’s payment of the Canadian tax. Biddle v. Commissioner, 302 U.S. 573 (1938); sec. 1.901-2(a), Income Tax Regs. (26 C.F.R. sec. 4.901-2(a)(l), Temporary Income Tax Regs.). See Gleason Works v. Commissioner, 58 T.C. 464, 474 (1972).
Petitioners do not claim that they are legally entitled to the foreign tax credit under sections 33 and 901; instead, they make an equitable claim that they relied to their detriment on respondent’s agents’ advice and respondent should be estopped or otherwise prohibited from disallowing the claimed credit. Petitioners describe their detrimental reliance as follows:
(1) Under the advice they received from respondent’s agents (that petitioners would be allowed a foreign tax credit for income tax paid to Canada by Armstrong), petitioners would have netted about $10,500 after tax from Armstrong.
(2) Because of this advice, Zuanich did not cause Armstrong to pay out its profit to Zuanich as director’s fees. If Zuanich would have caused the payout, petitioners say, they would have netted about $7,000 after tax from Armstrong.
(3) Under respondent’s current position, petitioners would net about $3,500 after tax from Armstrong.
Respondent argues that (1) petitioners are not entitled to the foreign tax credit under sections 33 and 901 for amounts paid by Armstrong, (2) there is a factual dispute as to what Zuanich and respondent’s personnel said to each other, and (3) even had respondent’s personnel given erroneous advice to Zuanich, that would not result in petitioners’ being entitled to the credit.
We agree with respondent.
Firstly, petitioners have failed to prove the facts which would give rise to an estoppel. The record fails to show that Zuanich completely explained the relevant facts to the revenue agents and fails to show that they definitively advised him as to the tax consequences of structuring the transaction as he did. At most, there appears to have been a discussion and a misunderstanding. On this record, we would not invoke the doctrine of equitable estoppel, even were we allowed to do so. See Boulez v. Commissioner, 76 T.C. 209, 214-215 (1981); Underwood v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 468 (1975), affd. 535 F.2d 309 (5th Cir. 1976); Schwartz v. Commissioner, 40 T.C. 191, 193 (1963).
Secondly, even were we able to find that respondent’s agents misled Zuanich about the tax consequences of structuring the transaction as he did, we would be unable to grant petitioners the relief they ask. The doctrine of equitable estoppel does not bar respondent froni correcting a mistake of law. Automobile Club of Michigan v. Commissioner, 353 U.S. 180 (1957).
Petitioners cite several cases in support of their argument that "an estoppel in fact will run against the government on tax matters.” The matter about which petitioners claim to have been misled appears to be a matter of law. The cases cited by petitioners all predate the opinion of the Supreme Court in Automobile Club of Michigan v. Commissioner, supra . These cases do not detract from the sweeping rule enunciated therein, that "The doctrine of equitable estoppel is not a bar to the correction by the Commissioner of a mistake of law”6 (353 U.S. at 183), nor from the elaboration in Dixon v. United States, 381 U.S. 68, 73 (1965), that "He may do so even where a taxpayer may have relied to his detriment on the Commissioner’s mistake.”
Petitioners cite Schuster v. Commissioner, 312 F.2d 311, 316 (9th Cir. 1962), affg. in part and revg. in part 32 T.C. 998 (1959), and First Western Bank & Trust Co. v. Commissioner, 32 T.C. 1017 (1959), in conceding a point. The only aspect of Schuster which might arguably have supported petitioners’ position relates to a governmental determination forcing a disinterested third party to take an irreversible action. That is not the situation in the instant case. Schuster is distinguishable. See Puls v. United States, 387 F. Supp. 760, 764 (N.D. Cal. 1974).
On this issue, we hold for respondent.
Petitioners argue that Zuanich’s investment in the reel "qualifies for the investment tax credit irrespective of the source of the funds invested.” Respondent argues that petitioners are entitled to no investment credit because Zuanich made no "qualified investment” in the reel, since all the funds used to purchase the reel were withdrawn tax free from Zuanich’s ordinary income account under the Merchant Marine Act, 1936.
Under section 607(g)(2) of the Merchant Marine Act, 1936 (46 U.S.C. 1177(g)(2)),7 Zuanich’s basis in the reel is reduced to the extent that the reel was purchased with funds he withdrew tax free from his capital construction fund ordinary income account (hereinafter referred to as ordinary income account).8 In this case, the investment credit is 10 percent of Zuanich’s basis in the reel. Since all the funds Zuanich used to buy the reel had been withdrawn by him tax free from his ordinary income account, his basis in the reel is zero. Consequently, his investment credit is zero.
We have found no evidence that the Congress focused specifically on the interrelationships between section 607, MMA, and the investment credit before 1976. However, the Congress on several occasions has focused on the relationship between the investment credit and eligibility for special tax benefits (see text at notes 14-16 infra)] sometimes it has allowed both, sometimes it has disallowed the investment credit if the special tax benefit is claimed, and sometimes it has imposed restrictions on the investment credit if the special tax benefit is claimed. On several occasions, the Congress first followed one course of action and then another, with respect to the same special benefit.
We are convinced that the Congress intended to provide an indefinite tax deferral with respect to funds remaining in Zuanich’s capital construction fund or withdrawn for qualified purposes;9 our. conclusion herein is consistent with this intent. Similarly, we are convinced that the Congress intended tax basis to be a critical element in calculating the investment credit (where it intended otherwise, it specifically so provided); our conclusion herein is also consistent with this intent.
In sum, the result we reach — zero investment credit — is commanded by the language used by the Congress in the statute, and it conflicts with neither the legislative history nor the Congress’ policy.
The remainder of the opinion sets forth the statutory framework of the investment credit (A.I.), and the Merchant Marine Act (A.2.); it analyzes the statutes (B.I.), and the cases (B.2.); it deals with the Court of Claims opinions that are contrary (C.); it then holds that section 46(g) has no effect on the instant case (D.).
A. Statutory Framework
1. Investment Credit
Section 3810 provides for the investment credit. Section 46(a)(1)(A)11 provides that, in general, the amount of the credit is 10 percent of the "qualified investment.” Section 46(c)(1)12 provides that the qualified investment is the basis of new section 38 property,13 times a percentage (the percentage to be determined under section 46(c)(2)).
Section 48(a)(8)14 provides that the investment credit is not to be available as to property with respect to which the taxpayer has elected the benefits of certain 5-year depreciation or amortization provisions, as described in table I.
When the Congress first enacted the investment credit (by sec. 2 of the Revenue Act of 1962, Pub. L. 87-834, 76 Stat. 962, 970), section 48(g)15 provided that the basis of section 38 property — but not the basis for determining the investment credit — was to be reduced by 7 percent of the qualified investment in the property. This rule, differentiating investment credit basis from basis generally, was repealed by section 203(a)(1) of the Revenue Act of 1964 (Pub. L. 88-272, 78 Stat. 33).
The Tax Reform Act of 1976 (sec. 804(a), Pub. L. 94-455, 90 Stat. 1591, 1592) added section 48(k), relating to investment credit for movie and television films. Paragraph (4)(B)16 of this provision differentiates investment credit basis from basis, generally, in the case of such property. 2. Merchant Marine Act, 1936
Section 607, MMA, as enacted in 1936, provided that any person entering into a contract for Federal operating-differential subsidies (essentially, in foreign trade) was to make deposits into a capital reserve fund and a special reserve fund. As so enacted, section 607(f), MMA (Pub. L. 74-835, 49 Stat. 2007), provided that earnings deposited into these funds were to "be exempt from all Federal taxes.” This provision was modified in 1938 to add a sentence stating that earnings withdrawn from the special reserve fund were to be taxed "as if earned during the year of withdrawal.” (Sec. 28, Pub. L. 75-704, 52 Stat. 961. This provision also redesignated sec. 607(f), MMA, as sec. 607(h), MMA.) Before 1970, the law was administered through a series of closing agreements with the small number of affected taxpayers, and on the basis that the law provided deferral, not permanent exemption.17
In 1970, the Congress decided to make "a tax deferred reserve fund” available in unsubsidized as well as subsidized trade, and in certain types of trade in addition to foreign trade.18 As part of the "expansion of the availbility of the tax deferral privilege,” the 1970 Act "provides a more specific statutory framework for determining the tax status of deposits into and withdrawals from the fund,”19 i.e., the taxpayer’s capital construction fund, as authorized by the act.
Table I
investment Later history credit by-Enacted by-Provision Disqualified
Revenue Act of 1971 Tax Reform Act of 1969 Low income rental housing Sec. 167(k)
Disqualification removed by Tax Reform Act of 1976.1 do. do. Pollution control equipment Sec. 169
do. do. Railroad rolling stock Sec. 184
Provision repealed by Tax Reform Act of 1976. do. do. Coal mine safety equipment Sec. 187
do. Revenue Act of 1971 Child care facilities Sec. 188
Revenue Act of 1978 Tax Reform Act of 1976 Historic structure rehabilitation Sec. 191
Section 607(d), MMA,20 provides that, for purposes of the Internal Revenue Code, the taxpayer generally is not to take into account income deposited into the capital construction fund and earnings of the fund.
Section 607(e), MMA, sets forth the three accounts that are to be maintained in the fund. In general, of the amounts contributed to the capital construction fund, (1) amounts that would have been excludable anyway (such as municipal bond interest) or deductible anyway (such as depreciation), become part of the capital account, (2) amounts that otherwise would have been taxed as long-term capital gain, become part of the capital gain account, and (3) amounts that otherwise would have been taxed as ordinary income or short-term capital gain, become part of the ordinary income account.
Section 607(g), MMA,21 provides for the tax treatment of any qualified withdrawal from the fund;22 in general, it provides that the basis of the new or rebuilt vessel, barge, or container for which the withdrawal is made is to be reduced by the amount of qualified withdrawal for which the taxpayer had previously received a deduction or exclusion under section 607(d), MMA. In particular, if an amount withdrawn from a taxpayer’s capital construction fund is used to acquire a qualified vessel, and if the withdrawal is treated as made out of the ordinary income account, then "the basis of such vessel * * * shall be reduced by an amount equal to such” withdrawal (sec. 607(g)(2), MMA).23
Section 607(h), MMA, provides that a withdrawal which is not a qualified withdrawal is to be taxed in the year withdrawn, in accordance with the type of account from which the withdrawal is made, and with interest from the due date for income tax for the year the amount was deposited into the capital construction fund.
B. Analysis
1. The Statutes
The amount of the investment credit (other requirements having been met) depends on basis. Sec. 46(a)(1)(A) (note 11 supra); sec. 46(c)(1)(A) (note 12 supra). Because of section 607(g)(2), MMA (note 21 supra), Zuanich’s basis in the reel is zero. It follows that petitioners’ investment credit is zero.
The Congress has understood that basis is critical to computation of the credit. When the Congress has wanted to depart from the general basis rules, it has done so. See original section 48(g) (note 15 supra), section 46(c)(1)(B) (note 12 supra), section 48(c)(3)(B) (note 13 supra), section 48(k)(4)(B) (note 16 supra). The Congress has not departed from the regular basis rules as to the matter before us.
In section 607(g), MMA, the Congress provided that, as applied to the instant case, Zuanich has a zero basis in the reel. This is so only because Zuanich purchased the reel entirely with funds coming from a qualified withdrawal from the ordinary income account of his capital construction fund.24 Petitioners concede that this is so. Nothing in the statute or the legislative history suggests that the Congress enacted a bifurcated basis rule sub silentio, in contrast to its specific basis rules in other investment credit situations.25
Further, the Congress has not evidenced any intention that we should override its specific language in order to provide both the investment credit and Merchant Marine Act tax benefits in the case of qualified withdrawals from the ordinary income account of a capital construction fund. On the different occasions when the Congress has faced the question of whether the investment credit should be allowed together with other tax benefits, the Congress has come to different conclusions. In 1962, the Congress decided that taking the investment credit should preclude taking a portion of the depreciation otherwise allowable. In 1964, it changed its mind and no longer required a depreciation adjustment. (See text at note 15 supra.) In 1971, it provided that a choice of 5-year amortization or depreciation in five areas should preclude the investment credit. (See table I supra.) In 1976, it removed the total disqualification from the investment credit as to pollution control equipment, but replaced it with a different restrictive rule, which was further modified in 1978, and again in 1980. In 1976, it allowed the full investment credit for property subject to 5-year amortization for historical structure rehabilitation, but in 1978, it decided that an election of 5-year amortization for such property should preclude the investment credit. In short, there simply is no general policy evidenced by the Congress that should lead us to depart from the language used by the Congress in the case before us.
In analyzing the foregoing statutory scheme, we may appropriately adhere to the guidance of the Supreme Court (United States v. Olympic Radio & Television, 349 U.S. 232, 236 (1955)), as follows:
It may be that Congress granted less than some thought or less than was originally intended. We can only take the Code as we find it and give it as great an internal symmetry and consistency as its words permit. We would not be faithful to the statutory scheme, as revealed by the words employed, if we gave "paid or accrued” a different meaning for the purposes of § 122(d)(6) than it has in the other parts of the same chapter.
Our precedents, too, offer guidance in this area, as follows:
However, there is "no more persuasive evidence of the purpose of a statute than the words by which the legislature undertook to give expression to its wishes.” United States v. Amer. Trucking Ass’ns., 310 U.S. 534, 543 (1940); Silvio Gutierrez, 53 T.C. 394, 400 (1969), affd._F.2d_(C.A.D.C. 1971). Unless the language of the statute is plainly at variance with the legislative policy, we cannot look beyond the normal meaning of the words chosen by Congress. We cannot depart from the statutory language to effectuate what we may merely surmise was the congressional purpose. Cf. General Electric Co. v. Burton, 372 F.2d 108, 111 (C.A. 6,1967). * * * [Busse v. Commissioner, 58 T.C. 389, 392 (1972), affd. 479 F.2d 1147 (7th Cir. 1973).]
In any event, it is well settled that "if Congress has made a choice of language which fairly brings a given situation within a statute, it is unimportant that the particular application may not have been contemplated by the legislators.” Rechner v. Commissioner, 30 T.C. 186 (1958); Barr v. United States, 324 U.S. 83 (1945). [Catterall v. Commissioner, 68 T.C. 413, 422 (1977), affd. sub nom. Vorbleski v. Commissioner, 589 F.2d 123 (3rd Cir. 1978).]
Since the legislative history does not cause us to believe that the Congress intended "basis” in section 607(g)(2), MMA, to have a meaning different from "basis” in section 46(c)(1)(A) and since the Congress has not evidenced a consistent policy which would be thwarted by giving the words consistent interpretations,26 we conclude that (1) Zuanich’s basis in the reel is zero, (2) his qualified investment in the reel is zero, and (3) petitioners’ investment credit on account of the reel is zero.
2. The Cases
In Wolfers v. Commissioner, 69 T.C. 975 (1978), the taxpayers’ subchapter S corporation purchased an air-conditioning system and other equipment with funds paid under the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970. We held that the Relocation Act payments consituted contributions to capital by nonshareholders and that the basis reduction rules of section 362(c)27 applied. We then concluded (69 T.C. at 989-990) as follows:
We hold, accordingly, that the only basis HLW has for depreciation purposes in its new improvements is the basis it had in the assets it lost. No new qualified investment, therefore, was made for investment tax credit purposes. Sec. 46(c)(1). Accordingly, we need not reach the issue whether certain new assets constitute section 38 property.
In Anderson v. Commissioner, 54 T.C. 1035 (1970), affd. 446 F.2d 672 (5th Cir. 1971), the taxpayers had sold production payments from oil and gas leases subject to a pledge that the amounts realized would be used to equip the wells. The amounts were so used and the taxpayers claimed the investment credit on their share of the equipment. The parties agreed that the taxpayers had no basis in the equipment for purposes of depreciation.
Respondent relied on paragraphs (a) and (b) of section 1.48-1, Income Tax Regs. The taxpayers argued that the regulations were contrary to the statute. We stated (54 T.C. at 1039) as follows:
We do not believe that it is necessary to rely on respondent’s regulations. While we reach the same result, the requirement that the petitioners have a tax basis or cost in the property stems, in our opinion, not from the definition of section 38 property but from provisions relating to the determination of the amount of the credit. Any depreciable property which otherwise meets the tests in section 48(a) would come within the broad definition of section 38 property. However, unless the taxpayer also has a tax basis or cost in the property — an essential element for the allowance of depreciation — whatever might be the taxpayer’s interest in that property, an essential element for the allowance of the investment credit is also lacking. In this respect, the regulations are consistent with the statute. [Fn. ref. omitted; emphasis supplied.]
After analyzing the mechanics of the statute, we concluded (54 T.C. at 1040) as follows:
Without a basis in the property, there could be no "qualified investment.” Applying the multiplier in section 46(c)(2) would produce a "zero” investment credit. It is thus clear that, as a prerequisite to the allowance of an investment credit, the taxpayer must have some "basis” or "cost,” just as the taxpayer must have a "basis” or "cost” for purposes of obtaining a depreciation allowance.4
The Court of Appeals, in affirming our decision, concluded that the regulations were valid (thereby precluding an investment credit for the taxpayers) and also concluded that our analysis was valid (again precluding an investment credit for the taxpayers).
In Anderson, this Court and the Court of Appeals both proceeded by analyzing the investment credit’s requirement of "basis” as being the basis for depreciation, except where the Congress specifically provided otherwise (see our analysis in 54 T.C. at 1041-1042).
In Millers National Insurance Co. v. Commissioner, 54 T.C. 457 (1970), we were presented with the question of whether property used both in the underwriting activity and the investment activity of a mutual insurance company qualified in full for the investment credit. For the year before the Court (1962), underwriting income was not taxable. The Supreme Court had previously held that assets used in the underwriting activity were not depreciable because Congress intended to limit. the deductions to expenses related to taxed income. Rockford Life Ins. Co. v. Commissioner, 292 U.S. 382 (1934). In Millers National, we concluded (54 T.C. at 458-459) as follows:
During 1962 petitioner, like the taxpayer in the foregoing case, was taxed on its investment income but not on its underwriting income. Since petitioner was not entitled in 1962 to depreciation on assets used in its underwriting activities, concomitantly under the provisions of section 48 petitioner also should not be entitled in 1962 to an investment credit on those same assets. [Fn. ref. omitted.]
The property involved in Wagensen v. Commissioner, 74 T.C. 653 (1980) (the taxpayer’s partnership’s breeding livestock) would have been section 38 property if it had been depreciable. It would have been depreciable if it had not been included in inventory used to determine profits. We concluded (74 T.C. at 661) as follows:
because the cost of the breeding cattle was included in inventory and used to determine profits, the cattle are not depreciable, and petitioner is not entitled to an investment credit for them. See sec. 1.167(a)-6(b), Income Tax Regs. While this seems to be an unfortunate result, we see no alternative under the statute and regulations as they are written.
To the same effect is Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Baltimore v. United States, 203 Ct. Cl. 18, 487 F.2d 528 (1973), in which the taxpayer sought the investment credit with respect to its investment in returnable glass bottles and cases. The Court of Claims held that the taxpayer’s cost recovery method amounted to current expensing, and thus was not a method of depreciation. The Court of Claims relied (203 Ct. Cl. at 27-28, 487 F.2d at 533) on Anderson and Millers National, as follows:
In Anderson, depreciation was not allowable to the taxpayers because they had no basis in the oil well equipment, and in Millers Nat’l Life Ins. Co., depreciation was not allowable to the taxpayer because the asset was used in the production of non-taxable underwriting income. The instant case is clearly analogous to the two aforementioned cases. Here depreciation is not allowable to the taxpayers because they elected instead to expense the bottles and cases.
One strong indication that Congress did not intend to allow the investment credit to taxpayers who recovered their cost by expensing rather than through some method of depreciation, is the fact that in 1962 and 1963, section 48(g) required taxpayers to reduce their depreciable basis in the investment credit property by the amount of investment credit. Obviously, such a basis adjustment could not be accomplished where taxpayer has written off the entire cost of the property since there would be no basis left to adjust. [Fn. ref. omitted.]
In each of the foregoing cases, the courts concluded that there was no basis for depreciatiori and so no investment credit. The reasons for the absence of a basis for depreciation varied from case to case, but the result — the link between basis for depreciation and allowance of investment credit— was the same in all the cases.
In United Telecommunications, Inc. v. Commissioner, 65 T.C. 278 (1975), Supplemental Opinion 67 T.C. 760 (1977), affd. 589 F.2d 1383 (10th Cir. 1978), we upheld sections 1.46-3(c)(l) and 1.48-l(b)(4), Income Tax Regs., to the extent they provided that the investment credit basis of self-constructed property does not include depreciation sustained with respect to a constructing asset on which investment credit has been allowed. This limited departure from the regular basis rules as interpreted in Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., 418 U.S. 1 (1974), was justified on the grounds that it was specifically required by regulations and it was consistent with the Congress’ evident intent to prevent a double allowance of investment credit. In contrast, the situation presented in the instant case involves neither a clear regulatory mandate nor a clear legislative intent to depart from depreciation basis in the case of adjustments required by section 607(g)(2), MMA. Also, the courts noted in United Telecommunications that the scheme of the regulations would, on the average, be likely to yield results similar to those which would follow from use of the recapture rules (of sec. 47) together with full basis; no such similarity of average results appears as a likely consequence of petitioners’ proposal in the instant case.
In United Telecommunications, the majority of this Court read the regulations as requiring a further departure from the depreciation basis rules. The majority understood the regulations to provide that the investment credit basis of self-constructed property does not include depreciation sustained with respect to a constructing asset even if no investment credit has been allowed with respect to this constructing asset. The majority concluded that this latter departure from the depreciation basis rules was more than what was required by the Congress. The majority then invalidated the regulations to the extent they required this excessive departure from the depreciation basis rules. The concurring judges of this Court would have reached the same result in that case by reading the regulations more narrowly, that is, by reading them to require only so much departure from depreciation basis as was necessary to effect the Congress’ purpose of prohibiting a double investment credit. In affirming, the Court of Appeals tended to agree with the concurring judges of this Court.
United Telecommunications, then, illustrates that this Court (and the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit) will depart from depreciation basis in investment credit situations not specifically called for by the statute only when the departure is plainly required by the regulations and necessary to effectuate the Congress’ evident purpose. Even then, the departure will not be permitted beyond the extent necessary to effectuate the Congress’ plain purpose. Thus, United Telecommunications is in harmony with the other cases discussed supra.
In contrast with United Telecommunications, no such justification for departure from depreciation basis appears in the instant case. We conclude that a basis for depreciation of zero leads to an investment credit of zero in the instant case.
Section 1.46-3(c)(l), Income Tax Regs.,28 acknowledges that basis for investment credit purposes is to be determined under "the general rules for determining the basis.” It then provides that investment credit basis "generally” is (1) cost, (2) unreduced by the pre-1964 section 48(g)(1) adjustment (see text at note 15 supra), and (3) unreduced by "any other adjustment to basis, such as that for depreciation,” (4) but including "all items properly included by the taxpayer in the depreciable basis of the property.” Nevertheless, the general rule does not cover every case. For example, pursuant to the third sentence of the regulation (as upheld in United Telecommunications, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra), the basis of a self-constructed asset, for investment credit purposes, does not include capitalized depreciation on the constructing assets. Also, the next-to-last sentence of the regulation specifies a basis adjustment that is to be taken into account — that under section 1031. In addition, we have held that the basis adjustment required by section 362(c) is to be given effect for the investment credit. Wolfers v. Commissioner, supra.
The regulation provides a general rule. It also provides a number of specific rules, some of which may be modifications of the general rule. Nothing in the regulation indicates an intention to deal specifically with the section 607(g)(2), MMA, adjustment to basis. In Wolfers, we followed the general rule as to basis. In the instant case, we follow the general rule as to basis.
We conclude that the regulation does not purport to, and is not intended to, provide a rule requiring us to ignore the Congress’ command in section 607(g)(2), MMA.
C. The Court of Claims Decisions
Petitioners argue that the reasoning in Pacific Far East Line, Inc. v. United States, 211 Ct. Cl. 71, 544 F.2d 478 (1976), is "decisive in this case.” We disagree with the reasoning of the Court of Claims in Pacific Far East Line and the other Court of Claims decisions reaching the same result.
Pacific Far East Line involved ships placed in service in 1962. The ships were paid for in part out of withdrawals from the taxpayer’s reserve funds allocated to tax-deferred earnings. Pursuant to a closing agreement, the taxpayer’s bases in the ships were reduced by the amounts of the respective withdrawals.
The Court of Claims in Pacific Far East Line emphasized an investment credit legislative history "special reference to regulated industries and that the major purpose was to reduce the cost of acquiring new equipment.” The Court of Claims stated that the reference to regulated industries "should not be considered lightly” and deemed it "very material in the discussion to follow.” (211 Ct. Cl. at 82, 544 F.2d at 483-484.) The Court of Claims concluded that the amount of the taxpayer’s "qualified investment” in the vessel was its cost to the taxpayer, reasoning that section 1012 and sections 1.46-3(c) and 1.1012-1, Income Tax Regs., defined cost as "the amount of money * * * paid to acquire the property, whatever the source of the money.” The Court of Claims stressed (211 Ct. Cl. 84, 544 F.2d at 485) that the legislative history of the 1962 Act has "no reference to whether the funds spent as part of the 'cost’ of the property had their source in untaxed income. The cost of property to the taxpayer is the amount of money that he paid to acquire the property, whatever the source of the money.” The Court of Claims then maintained that the amount of the investment credit would not be affected by whether the taxpayer’s funds to acquire the property came from borrowing, gifts, interest earned on tax-exempt municipal bonds, income earned abroad on which the foreign tax credit eliminated the Federal income tax, or retirement income subject to a retirement income credit. (211 Ct. Cl. at 84, 544 F.2d at 485.) The Court of Claims found no reason to reduce basis for purposes of the investment credit, stating that to do so would violate the congressional purpose underlying the investment tax credit. (211 Ct. Cl. at 85, 544 F.2d at 486.) The Court of Claims then analyzed and rejected an argument, based on section 1.48-l(b)(2), Income Tax Regs., that to the extent vessels were acquired with tax-free amounts from the fund, they were not "section 38 property” because no depreciation was allowable under the closing agreement (211 Ct. Cl. at 88, 544 F.2d at 486-487),29 and concluded that the closing agreement, by its own terms, did not determine basis for investment tax credit purposes. (211 Ct. Cl. 88-93, 544 F.2d at 487-490).30
The issue presented in Pacific Far East Line was again faced by the Court of Claims in Oglebay Norton Co. v. United States, 221 Ct. Cl. 749, 610 F.2d 715 (1979); the only significant difference between the cases was that in the latter case the basis adjustment, rather than being based on a provision in a closing agreement, was set forth in section 607(g)(2), MM A.
Most of the opinion of the Court of Claims in Oglebay Norton tracks the opinion in Pacific Far East Line, quoting from it extensively; the Oglebay Norton opinion states that section 607(g), MM A, merely codifies the previous arrangements reached in the closing agreements. (221 Ct. Cl. at_, 610 F.2d at 723.) Finding that the 1970 Act was not intended to change the tax rules that had applied previously, the Court of Claims decided that the same result should be reached in Oglebay Norton as had been reached in Pacific Far East Line. (221 Ct. Cl. at_, 610 F.2d at 726-727.) The Court of Claims allowed the investment credit, as it had in Pacific Far East Line.31
We are unable to agree with the reasoning of the Court of Claims. First, the Court of Claims’ approach that the basis adjustment of section 607(g)(2), MMA, is not taken intd account for investment tax credit purposes conflicts with the principle that one gives to the words in a statute their ordinary meaning unless, for example, something in the legislative history or the regulations justifies doing otherwise; as explained in preceding portions of this opinion, no such justification exists.
.Second, the Court of Claims’ reliance on congressional intent is unpersuasive, because the legislative history gives no indication that the Congress focused on the interrelationship between the Merchant Marine Act and the investment credit in 1962 or 1971. When the Congress did focus on the relationship between the investment credit and other provisions of the tax laws, it sometimes chose to allow both the investment credit and the other special treatment, but also it sometimes chose to disallow one or the other benefit. The Congress may have thought highly of the investment credit, but it hedged the provisions about with great numbers of restrictions. It is not for us (or for respondent, qua litigant) to question the wisdom of the Congress in establishing the investment credit32 (see Tipps v. (Sommissioner, 74 T.C. 458, 472 (1980)), nor is it for us (or petitioners, qua litigants) to question the wisdom of the restrictions on the investment credit. As to the Congress’ intent, it seems clear that the Congress intended to condition the amount of the investment credit on the amount of the taxpayer’s basis; also, it intended to reduce the taxpayer’s basis in an asset to the extent the taxpayer used capital construction fund tax-deferred withdrawals to acquire this asset.
Third, in analyzing the effect of source of funds, the Court of Claims ignores two related matters. Firstly, the Congress chose to make the amount of the credit depend on basis, and those sources of funds which are cited by the Court of Claims (borrowing, gifts, etc.) do not affect basis. Secondly, in contrast, in the case of capital construction funds, the Congress specifically required the basis adjustment that has given rise to the dispute. Indeed, the Court óf Claims implicitly conceded that a congressionally mandated basis reduction outside the investment credit area would be given effect in the investment credit area (211 Ct. Cl. at 85-86, 544 F.2d at 486), as follows:
Outside the sections dealing with the credit, nevertheless, incorporated into the investment credit provisions by sec. 1012 via sec. 46(c)(1) and regulations thereunder, sec. 362(c)(2) provides that if money is contributed to a corporation by a non-stockholder, any basis of property acquired within one year with such money shall be reduced by the amount of the contribution!33] In the absence of such expressed provision, Congress must have intended that the basis be the full amount of the moneys invested, undiminished by reason of events involved in the taxpayer’s acquisition of the moneys.
In Pacific Far East Line, the Court of Claims ignored the specific congressional action in the 1970 Act, presumably because the case before it involved 1962. In Oglebay Norton, the Court of Claims held that the 1970 Act was of no significance because it merely codified the prior practice as to closing agreements. The result of this "end-around” play is to ignore the fact that, with respect to capital construction funds after the Merchant Marine Act of 1970, the Congress mandated just the sort of basis-adjustment rule depending on source of funds to which the Court of Claims said it would give effect.
Fourth, we fail to understand the Court of Claims’ emphasis on the 1962 Act legislative history language dealing with regulated industries. Evidently, the reference to regulated industries that the Court of Claims quotes (from H. Rept. 87-2508 (Conf.), at 14 (1962), 1962-3 C.B. 1142) was merely setting to rest the dispute that had surfaced earlier as to whether rate-regulated public utilities should be entitled to any investment credit at all. See General Explanation of Committee Discussion Draft of Revenue Bill of 1961, Released for Information and Study, August 24,1961, at 9 (Sept. 29,1961);34 H.Rept. 87-1447 (Revenue Act of 1962), at 8, 1962-3 C.B. 412.35 The dispute was resolved by allowing rate-regulated public utilities of the sort specified in detail in the statute to secure the benefits of the investment tax credit with respect to their "public utility property,” but only at three-sevenths of the level of benefits available to other taxpayers.36 There is no indication that the properties involved in either Pacific Far East Lipe or the instant case constitute "public utility property.” Consequently, the 1962 Act legislative history reference to regulated industries appears to be of no special significance to the situation we face in the instant case.
Fifth, we fail to understand the Court of Claims’ emphasis oh the 1962 Act legislative history language describing the investment credit as producing a net reduction in cost of assets. This is the view of the investment credit that led the Córigreás to enact old section 48(g) (see note 15 supra), which reduced the depreciation basis of the asset by the amount of the investment credit.37 However, this provision was repealed by the Revenue Act of 1964. In the Revenue Act of 1971, the Congress treated the investment credit as a reduction in the cost of the asset for purposes of one alternative restriction on flow-through of the credit to customers of rate-regulated utilities, but treated it as a reduction in tax liability for purposes of another alternative restriction.38
In its work on the Revenue Act of 1971, the Congress understood that most businesses treated the credit as a reduction in tax liability and not as a reduction in cost of the asset.39 In order to forestall attempts to require businesses to treat the credit as a cost reduction,40 the Congress enacted section 101(c) of the Revenue Act of 1971.41 This provision established a Federal neutrality in the dispute between the concepts of tax reduction and cost reduction. It does not appear that there is any special significance, for purposes of the instant case, to the 1962 Act legislative history references to the investment credit as a reduction in cost.
D. Effect of Section 46(g)
As a final matter, we will deal with respondent’s contentions regarding the significance of the Congress’ action in 1976, in adding subsection (g) to section 46 (sec. 805(a) of the Tax Reform Act of 1976, Pub. L. 94-455, 90 Stat. 1596). In general, section 46(g) "provides for an investment credit of one-half the regular credit on the tax-deferred amounts withdrawn from the capital construction fund which are used to purchase qualified vessels.” (S. Rept. 94-1236 (Conf.), at 447 (1976), 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 3) 851. See Joint Committee on Taxation, 94th Cong., 2d Sess., General Explanation of the Tax Reform Act of 1976, at 187, 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 199.) On brief, respondent analyzes section 46(g) and its legislative history, and concludes as follows:
We make two points. First, statutory law as it currently reads does not allow the full credit for amounts withdrawn under MMA. Secondly, the pertinent legislative history described above states that Congress did not contemplate the interplay between depreciation and the investment credit. At the very least, then, the effect of Congressional intent on the instant issue has been fully neutralized, thereby undercutting the principal support cited by the Court of Claims for its decision in Pacific Far East Line, supra. That decision no longer represents sound authority. The law, we think, is quite clear. Prior to January 1, 1976, no investment credit was allowable with respect to the nondepreciable property purchased under MMA. Code sec. 48(a)(1).
Although we agriee with respondent’s conclusions in the instant case, we disagree with his reading of the significance of the enactment of section 46(g). As the portions of section 46(g) set forth in the margin42 make clear, the Congress decided to temporize as to the future. The half-credit rule referred to supra is merely a "floor” (in the present context, a more felicitous term may be "safe harbor”). The courts are to decide whether more than half is available without considering the enactment of section 46(g). In order to make more plain the mission of the courts, the conferees’ Joint Explanatory Statement on the Tax Reform Act of 1976 (S. Rept. 94-1236 (Conf.), at 448 (1976), 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 3) 852 (see Joint Committee General Explanation 188, 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 200)), concludes on this provision as follows:
The conference agreement applies to taxable years beginning after December 31, 1975. This is not intended to provide any inference as to the application of existing law with respect to the availability of the credit for prior (as well as future) years.
From the foregoing, we conclude that the Congress has instructed us not only to ignore the text of section 46(g) but also to treat the matter before us as though section 805 of the Tax Reform Act of 1976 had never been proposed, reported, described, or amended in the course of the Congress’ consideration of the Tax Reform Act of 1976.
On the investment credit issue, also, we hold for respondent. Accordingly,
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
Reviewed by the Court.