1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79">*79
Excess Profits Credit Based on Income -- Base Period Capital Addition -- Reduction of Deficit --
22 T.C. 1294">*1294 OPINION.
The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $ 3,103.99 in the income tax of the petitioner for 1950. The only issue for decision is whether the petitioner had a base period capital addition 22 T.C. 1294">*1295 which would increase its excess profits credit based on income (
The petitioner corporation was organized in 1927. It filed its excess profits tax return for 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79">*80 1950 with the collector of internal revenue for the first district of Illinois.
1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79">*82 The Commissioner, in determining the deficiency, held that the petitioner had no base period capital addition for 1950 under
Base Period Capital Additions | |||
Jan. 1, 1950 | Jan. 1, 1949 | Jan. 1, 1948 | |
1. Total assets at beginning | |||
of year | $ 2,476,649.50 | $ 2,404,013.58 | $ 2,062,394.62 |
2. Total liabilities at | |||
beginning of year | 2,077,191.65 | 2,646,805.58 | 2,401,677.60 |
3. Equity capital at beginning | |||
of year (line 1 minus | |||
line 2) | 399,457.85 | (242,792.00) | (339,282.98) |
4. 75 percent of borrowed | |||
capital at beginning | |||
of year | 48,850.00 | 90,000.00 | 150,000.00 |
5. Total of lines 3 and 4 | 448,207.85 | None | None |
6. Adjustment for interest on | |||
borrowed capital | 10,833.33 | ||
7. 75 percent of line 6 | 8,125.00 | ||
8. Inadmissible assets held at | |||
beginning of year reduced | |||
by 25 percent of the | |||
excess, if any, of the | |||
inadmissible assets over | |||
the amount on line 3 | 1,062,710.58 | ||
9. 75 percent of loans to | |||
members of controlled | |||
groups at beginning of | |||
taxable year | None | ||
10. Totals line 7, 8 and 9 | 1,070,835.68 | ||
11. Yearly base period capital | |||
(line 5 minus line 10) | None | None | None |
12. Excess, if any, column 1, | |||
line 11 over higher of: | |||
(a) Column 2, line 11; or | |||
(b) Column 3, line 11 | None | ||
13. 50 percent of excess, if | |||
any, of (a) Column 1, line | |||
11, or (b) Column 2, line | |||
11 whichever is lesser, | |||
over Column 3, line 11 | None | ||
14. Base period capital | |||
additions (sum of lines 12 | |||
and 13) | None | ||
15. 13 percent of line 14 | None | ||
Correct base period capital as | |||
above | None | ||
Base period credit based on | |||
income per return | 472,463.24 | ||
Corrected excess profits | |||
credit | $ 472,463.24 |
1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79">*83 The parties agree that all items under "1/1/50" in the above computation are correct as are items 1, 2, and 4 in the other two columns.
The petitioner states, under the points upon which it relies, that equity capital as used in
The petitioner has incorporated in its brief a computation showing, as the only difference between the excess profits credit allowed and that claimed, an addition of $ 20,524.56, representing 12 per cent of alleged "Base period capital additions" totaling $ 171,037.49. The latter figure is the sum of $ 152,792 and $ 18,245.49. The $ 152,792 (a minus figure) originates as the excess of liabilities over assets at 1/1/49 plus (i. e., reduced by) $ 90,000, 75 per cent of borrowed capital at that same date. A minus figure of $ 189,282.98 is1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79">*84 similarly arrived at for 1/1/48; from it is subtracted the $ 152,792; and one-half of the difference of $ 36,490.98, or $ 18,245.49, is regarded as a part of the base period capital addition. The Commissioner does not question any of the figures used by the petitioner in the computation.
22 T.C. 1294">*1297 The petitioner's theory seems to be that the excess of liabilities over assets, a deficit, reduced by 75 per cent of borrowed capital at the beginning of 1949 and 1948, represents yearly base period capital for those years; both are already below zero and may not be further reduced by inadmissible assets, which in each year exceeded $ 944,096, or by 75 per cent of the adjustment for interest on borrowed capital; the base period capital at 1/1/50 is conceded to be zero; and all of the 1949 minus amount and 50 per cent of the excess of the 1948 minus amount over the 1949 minus amount represent base period capital additions (reductions of minus amounts), computed under
The Commissioner is right in holding that Congress, in using the terms "equity capital" and "base period capital," had in mind actual capital as opposed to deficits or minus quantities and did not intend to give credit for a reduction in minus quantities or for nonexistent capital. See Regs. 130, sec. 40.435-6 (a) (2). A corporation which had equity capital of $ 1 on 1/1/48, $ 96,490.98 on 1/1/49, and $ 642,249.85 on 1/1/50, but otherwise was like the petitioner would be entitled to no base period capital addition although the amount of its earnings for 1948 and 1949 would be equal to those of the petitioner. It is unreasonable to suppose that Congress intended a deficit corporation to have a credit for base period capital additions where a corporation whose assets exceeded its liabilities would receive no such credit although the earnings left in the business by each were identical in amount. 2 Ordinary common sense should justify this conclusion and the petitioner points to nothing in the act or its legislative history which indicates a contrary intention upon the part of Congress. The fact that Congress1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79">*86 did not expressly state that where the computation of either item resulted in a minus figure it should not be used in computing base period capital additions is not significant since only positive amounts would normally be considered as existing capital of a business.
1. This parenthetical provision is the 1951 "clarifying" amendment to which the petitioner refers in its "points" upon which it relies.↩
2. Another example of an absurd and inequitable result under the petitioner's theory is: If the petitioner's equity capital for 1/1/48 had been $ 1 and a considerably larger amount of earnings had been retained than was actually retained in this case, the capital addition under the petitioner's theory would be less than it is contending for here.↩