1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*93
Respondent issued a notice of deficiency with respect to income and excess profits taxes for 1941 after petitioner filed its 1942 return disclosing an unused excess profits tax credit. Thereafter, petitioner filed an application with respondent for relief under
24 T.C. 1087">*1088 OPINION.
Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's income tax for 1941 in the amount of $ 585.26 and an overassessment of excess profits tax for that year in the amount of $ 1,887.99. Petitioner had filed both (1) a claim for refund of 1941 taxes based on a carry-back of an excess profits tax credit unused in 1942 and (2) an application for relief under
All of the facts were stipulated by the parties. They are found accordingly and incorporated herein by reference.
Petitioner is a New Hampshire corporation with its principal office located at Claremont, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*97 New Hampshire. Its returns for the taxable years involved were filed with the then collector of internal revenue at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The returns were made for calendar years and on an accrual basis.
The petitioner filed excess profits tax returns for the years 1941, 1942, and 1943 on the respective dates, February 27, 1942, March 13, 1943, and February 29, 1944. The excess profits tax shown to be due in the 1941 return, $ 10,386.29, was paid in four installments during 1942. On September 13, 1943, respondent mailed to petitioner a notice of deficiencies in income and excess profits taxes for 1941. The deficiencies resulted from certain adjustments not here in controversy.
On September 14, 1943, petitioner filed with the respondent an application for excess profits tax relief under
On November 4, 1943, petitioner filed a petition in the Tax Court, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*98 Docket No. 3361, based on the deficiency notice of September 13, 1943, 24 T.C. 1087">*1089 contesting the deficiency for 1941. It alleged certain errors not here material, and there was no allegation of error with respect to any carry-back of 1942 unused excess profits credit.
After a hearing, the Tax Court, on March 12, 1945, entered a Memorandum Opinion in that case. Thereafter the parties submitted Rule 50 recomputations which were identical with respect to petitioner's income and excess profits tax liabilities for 1941, and on April 27, 1945, the Tax Court entered a decision in accordance therewith for an overpayment in income tax for that year of $ 41, and a deficiency in excess profits tax of $ 819.78. The deficiency of $ 819.78, plus interest of $ 178.67, was paid or satisfied as follows: $ 795.41 paid April 15, 1946; $ 41 credited against the 1941 income tax overpayment; and $ 162.04 credited against income tax overpayment for 1940.
For the year 1942 petitioner had an unused excess profits credit of $ 38,652.83 which it carried over, in its entirety, to the year 1943. No effect was given to any carry-back from 1942 to 1941 in either of the Rule 50 recomputations submitted to the1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*99 Court in Docket No. 3361. Previously, however, a revenue agent had examined petitioner's returns for 1941 and 1942 and a copy of his report dated February 14, 1944, had been transmitted to petitioner on July 17, 1944. In computing petitioner's excess profits tax liability for 1941, the agent gave effect to a carry-back from 1942 of the unused excess profits credit of $ 38,652.83.
On February 3, 1945, the respondent executed an agreement, previously executed by the petitioner, extending the statute of limitations for 1941 to June 30, 1946. Thereafter similar agreements were executed extending the statute to June 30, 1949.
On March 3, 1947, petitioner filed a claim for refund for the entire amount of excess profits tax paid for 1941 based on the carry-back of the $ 38,652.83 (adjusted to $ 38,524.63 on the basis of holdings in the Tax Court Opinion,
Petitioner filed the petition herein on April 27, 1949, alleging that the respondent erred (1) in disallowing in part petitioner's claim for refund under
Petitioner appealed the Tax Court's order to the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, and on May 7, 1952, that court, upon consideration of respondent's confession of error, vacated the Tax Court's order and remanded the case for further proceedings. In this respect, see
Thereafter, at the hearing held herein, petitioner waived the allegation of error with respect to the 722 claim, and submitted the remaining issue, pertaining to the carry-back of the 1942 unused excess profits credit. Respondent now contends that petitioner's claim for refund based on the carry-back was not timely filed within the requirements of
At the outset it should be noted that petitioner's income tax and excess profits tax liabilities for 1941 were once litigated before this Court and a decision in that case was entered on April 27, 1945. This decision subsequently became final and, in the absence of certain exceptions not here material, unless the provisions of
(g) Overpayments Attributable to Net Operating Loss Carry-Backs and Unused Excess Profits Credit Carry-Backs. -- If the allowance of a credit or refund of an overpayment of tax attributable to a net operating loss carry-back or to an unused excess profits credit carry-back is otherwise prevented by the operation of any law or rule of law other than section 3761, relating to compromises, such credit or refund may be allowed or made, if claim therefor is filed within the period provided in subsection (b) (6). If the allowance of an application, credit or refund of a decrease in tax determined under1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*103 section 3780 (b) is otherwise prevented by the operation of any law or rule of law other than section 3761, such application, credit or refund may be allowed or made if application for a tentative carry-back adjustment is made within the period provided in section 3780 (a). In the case of any such claim for credit or refund or any such application for a tentative carrying-back adjustment, the 24 T.C. 1087">*1091 determination by any court, including The Tax Court of the United States, in any proceeding in which the decision of the court has become final, shall be conclusive except with respect to the net operating loss deduction and the unused excess profits credit adjustment, and the effect of such deduction or adjustment, to the extent that such deduction or adjustment is affected by a carry-back which was not in issue in such proceeding.
Subsection (g) was added to the Code by the Tax Adjustment Act of 1945, and by section 5 (f) of the Act it was made effective with respect to all taxable years beginning after December 31, 1940, with certain exceptions not applicable here. It was one of a number of provisions added to the Code by that Act and the Revenue Act of 1945 in order to provide1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*104 for equitable and adequate operation of provisions relating to carry-back adjustments. In this respect, House Report No. 849, 79th Congress, reported in
In further recognition of the fact that the events which result in a net operating loss carry-back or an unused excess profits credit carry-back may not occur until a number of years after the close of the taxable year of the
It is our view, for the reasons hereinafter set forth, that petitioner's claim for refund attributable to the carry-back was not "filed within the period provided in
24 T.C. 1087">*1092 (6) Special Period of Limitation With Respect to Net Operating Loss Carry-Backs and Unused Excess Profits Credit Carry-Backs. -- If the claim for credit or refund relates to an overpayment attributable to a net operating loss carry-back or to an unused excess profits credit carry-back, in lieu of the three-year period of limitation prescribed in paragraph (1), the period shall be that period which ends with the expiration of the fifteenth day of the thirty-ninth month following the end of the taxable year of the net operating loss or the unused excess profits credit which results in such carry-back, or the period prescribed in paragraph (3) in respect of such taxable year, whichever expires later. * * *
This provision, as amended, was also made applicable to claims for credit or refund with respect to taxable years beginning after December 31, 1940. See section 5 (f) of the Tax Adjustment Act of 1945 and section 122(e)(2) of the Revenue Act1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*107 of 1945. The purpose of
Subsection (b) of section 5 adds a new paragraph (6) at the end of (1) The 3-year period provided in (2) The period within which claim for credit or refund may be allowed or made, or claim for credit or refund filed,
It is apparent from the legislative history of
The Congressional intent 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*109 in this respect is further illustrated by the provisions relating to the assessment of deficiencies attributable to the application of credit carry-backs. Section 5 (e) of the Tax Adjustment 24 T.C. 1087">*1093 Act of 1945 added
Thus, as in the case of credits or refunds, the period for making assessments is made coextensive with the period within which assessments may be made with respect to the taxable year of the claimed loss or unused excess profits credit. In the usual case, such period will be three years from the date the return for the taxable year of the claimed loss or unused excess profits credit was filed, but if the period within which a deficiency may be assessed with respect to such year is longer than such three years (due, e. g., to the execution of an agreement extending1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*110 such period, or to the filing of a fraudulent return, or to the substantial understatement of gross income), the period within which a deficiency with respect to a prior taxable year attributable to a carry-back from the year of the claimed loss or unused excess profits credit will be correspondingly longer. * * * Any deficiency attributable to a carry-back resulting from such loss or unused excess profits credit may be asserted at any time prior to the expiration of the period within which a deficiency may be assessed with respect to the taxable year of the claimed or actual net operating loss or unused excess profits credit.
Thus, for both the taxpayer and the Commissioner the timeliness of actions to claim refunds or to assess taxes arising from the application of a carry-back is determined by the year of the unused credit, not the year of overpayment. Therefore, unless it was filed within the special period measured with respect to 1942 as required by
Petitioner's claim for refund was filed on March 3, 1947. This date is clearly beyond the fifteenth day of the thirty-ninth month following December 31, 1942, within the meaning of the first alternative period provided in
24 T.C. 1087">*1094 Petitioner, in a supplemental memorandum, relies upon
Petitioner contends that the claim was timely on the theory that it was filed within the period of waivers executed by the parties to extend the period of limitations for assessment of 1941 taxes, such waivers being reciprocal under
1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 93">*114
1. Paragraph number (1) in the quotation refers to
2. Section 509 of the Revenue Act of 1943 provides in part as follows:
SEC. 509. RETROACTIVE EFFECT OF SECTION 169 OF THE REVENUE ACT OF 1942.
(a) In General. -- Section 169 (c) of the Revenue Act of 1942 (relating to the effective date of certain amendments to