1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*276
1. Statute of Limitations --
2. Statute of Limitations --
3. Tax Court Policy -- Consideration of Reversal by Court of Appeals. -- The Tax Court, having national jurisdiction rather than a jurisdiction limited to only a portion of the Nation, when reversed on an issue by a Court of Appeals, must reconsider the point in the light of the reversing opinion and then decide whether to adhere to its original views or accept the views of the reversing court.
27 T.C. 713">*713 OPINION.
The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $ 2,931.14 in the income tax of the petitioners for 1948. The facts have been stipulated. The stipulation is adopted as the findings of fact.
The petitioners, husband and wife, filed a joint Federal income tax return for 1948 with the collector of internal revenue, Los Angeles, California, on May 31, 1949, an extension1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*278 to that date for filing having been granted. The notice of deficiency was not mailed until May 10, 1954, after the 3-year period, and after the 4-year period but before the 5-year period for assessment and collection had expired. The only question for decision is whether
(c) Omission from Gross Income. -- If the taxpayer omits from gross income an amount properly includible therein which is in excess of 25 per centum of the amount of gross income stated in the return, the tax may be assessed, or a proceeding in court for the collection of such tax may be begun without assessment, at any time within 5 years after the return was filed.
The petitioners have admitted that the deficiency determined by the Commissioner is correct. The Commissioner, in determining that deficiency, included in income over $ 20,000 of capital gain which the petitioners had omitted from gross income on their return. It was 27 T.C. 713">*714 not included in the computation of gross income on the return. Even the taxable one-half1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*279 of that amount is substantially "in excess of 25 per centum of the amount of gross income stated in the return." The petitioners do not contend otherwise.
The petitioners contend that they disclosed the nature and amount of the now admitted additional income in a manner adequate to apprise the Commissioner in a statement made a part of the return. Arthur acquired a portion of the stock of Midway Peerless Oil Company in 1942 and that company was liquidated on December 15, 1948. The liquidation resulted in the capital gain now determined by the Commissioner and agreed to by the petitioners. The petitioners reported on their return a long-term capital gain of $ 8,567.38, one item of the computation of which was as follows:
Date | Date | Gross sales | Cost or | |
Kind of property | acquired | sold | price | other basis |
211 Sh. Midway Peerless | ||||
Oil Co. -- Com | 4/7/42 | 12/24/48 | $ 10,539.71 | (A)$ 1,899.90 |
(A) See schedule attached.
The following appeared as a separate page of the return:
Schedule D | |||
Note A | |||
Arthur L. Lawrence and Alma P. Lawrence | |||
5818 1/4 Marmion Way, Los Angeles 42, California | |||
Form 1040 -- Individual Income Tax Return | |||
Computation of Gain on Liquidation of Midway Peerless Oil Company | |||
Value of assets distributed -- | |||
Estimated 12/15/48 (Basis | |||
for Form 1099L) | |||
Item | Description | ||
Share of A. L. | |||
Total | Lawrence | ||
(4.3421%) | |||
1 | Lease | $ 573,420.78 | $ 24,898.47 |
2 | Leasehold equipment | 34,713.00 | 1,507.27 |
3 | Buildings -- employee cottages | ||
4 | Inventories: | ||
(a) Crude oil on hand 12/15/48 | 1,911.40 | 83.00 | |
(b) Materials and supplies | 142.39 | 6.18 | |
$ 610,187.57 | $ 26,494.92 | ||
5 | Cash and other assets | 204,650.38 | 8,886.11 |
Totals | $ 814,837.95 | $ 35,381.03 |
Schedule D | |||
Note A | |||
Arthur L. Lawrence and Alma P. Lawrence | |||
5818 1/4 Marmion Way, Los Angeles 42, California | |||
Form 1040 -- Individual Income Tax Return | |||
Computation of Gain on Liquidation of Midway Peerless Oil Company | |||
Value of assets distributed -- | |||
Revised appraisal | |||
Item | Description | ||
Share of A. L. | |||
Total | Lawrence | ||
(4.3421%) | |||
1 | Lease | $ 448,726.99 | $ 19,484.15 |
2 | Leasehold equipment | 34,713.00 | 1,507.27 |
3 | Buildings -- employee cottages | 3,370.00 | 146.33 |
4 | Inventories: | ||
(a) Crude oil on hand 12/15/48 | 1,911.40 | 83.00 | |
(b) Materials and supplies | 142.39 | 6.18 | |
$ 488,863.78 | $ 21,226.93 | ||
5 | Cash and other assets | 204,650.38 | 8,886.11 |
Totals | $ 693,514.16 | $ 30,113.04 |
Item 1 -- Lease is not readily marketable and has no ascertainable market value. Based upon the decision Agnes F. Smith, Plaintiff v. Harry C. Westover, Defendant 48-2 USTC par. 9351, affirmed by the
Item 4 -- Part of lease, see item 1, above.
Computation of Value Received During 1948 by Arthur L. Lawrence | ||
Cash received (item 5, above) | $ 8,886.11 | |
Leasehold equipment (item 2, above) | 1,507.27 | |
Buildings -- employee cottages (item 3, above) | 146.33 | |
Total value received in 1948 -- Schedule D of return | $ 10,539.71 | |
Basis of stock -- Schedule D of return | 1,899.90 | |
Realized long-term gain -- calendar year 1948 | $ 8,639.81 |
27 T.C. 713">*715 It is obvious from the entire return that the taxpayers made a computation of their income and omitted "from gross income an amount properly includible therein which is in excess of 25 per centum of the amount of gross income stated in the return." The quoted words are from
For instance, a case might arise where a taxpayer failed to report a dividend because he was erroneously advised by the officers of the corporation that it was paid out of capital or he might report1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*282 as income for one year an item of income which properly belonged in another year. Accordingly, your committee has provided for a 5-year statute in such cases. * * * [1939-1 C. B. (Part 2) 619.]
The Tax Court can only apply the statute as Congress enacted it, and it has consistently held under similar circumstances that the 5-year period of limitations on assessment and collection applies rather than any shorter period, regardless of how honest the mistake and regardless of the possibility that from somewhere in the return or papers attached to it the information was given to the Commissioner of the transaction giving rise to the omitted income.
The position taken by the petitioners in this case has now been enacted into law by
In determining the amount omitted from gross income, there shall not be taken into account any amount which is omitted from gross income stated in the return if such amount is disclosed in the return, or in a statement attached to the return, in a manner adequate to apprise the Secretary or his delegate of the nature and amount of such item.
This provision was not made retroactive and its legislative history states that it was a "change from existing law," thus supporting the view consistently taken by the Tax Court as to the previously existing law. H. Rept. 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*284 No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., p. A414; S. Rept. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 584. The court in
This Court has also held that an omission within the meaning of
The only possible complication in the decision of the present case is whether it might be contrary to a fairly recent decision of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, to which this case could go on appeal. The reference is to the
One of the difficult problems which confronted the Tax Court, soon after it was created in 1926 as the Board of Tax Appeals, was what to do when an issue came before it again after a Court of Appeals had reversed its prior decision on that point. Clearly, it must thoroughly reconsider the problem in the light of the reasoning of the reversing appellate court and, if convinced thereby, the obvious procedure is to follow the higher court. But if still of the opinion that its original result was right, 1 a court of national jurisdiction to avoid confusion should follow its own1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*287 honest beliefs until the Supreme Court decides 27 T.C. 713">*717 the point. 2 The Tax Court early concluded that it should decide all cases as it thought right.
This was not too difficult if appeal in the later case would not lie to the reversing circuit.
The Tax Court and its individual Judges have always had respect for the 11 Courts of Appeals, have had no desire to ignore or lightly regard any decisions of those courts, and have carefully considered all suggestions of those courts. The Tax Court not infrequently has been persuaded by the reasoning of opinions of those courts to change its views on various questions being litigated. Cf.
This change of position sometimes backfires. The Tax Court, in
The Tax Court has always believed that Congress intended it to decide all cases uniformly, regardless of where, in its nationwide jurisdiction, they may arise, and that it could not perform its assigned functions properly were it to decide one case one way and another differently merely because appeals in such cases might go to different Courts of Appeals. Congress, in the case of the Tax Court, "inverted the triangle" so that from a single national jurisdiction, the Tax Court appeals would spread out among 11 Courts of Appeals, each for a different circuit or portion of the United States. Congress faced the problem in the beginning as to whether the Tax Court jurisdiction and approach was to be local or nationwide and made it nationwide. Congress expected the Tax Court to set precedents for the uniform application of the tax laws, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*292 insofar as it would be able to do that. Hearings Before Ways and Means Committee, Revenue Act of 1926, pp. 10, 869, 878, 911, 926, 932; H. Rept. No. 1, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 17-19; 67 Cong. Rec. 1136-7, 3749 (1925).
The Tax Court feels that it is adequately supported in this belief not only by the creating legislation and legislative history but by other circumstances as well. The Tax Court never knows, when it decides a case, where any subsequent appeal from that decision may go, or whether there will be an appeal. It usually, but not always, knows where the return of a taxpayer was filed and, therefore, the circuit to which an appeal could go, but the law permits the parties in all cases to appeal by mutual agreement to any Court of Appeals.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, who has the duty of administering the taxing statutes of the United States throughout the Nation, is required to apply these statutes uniformly, as he construes them. The Tax Court, being a tribunal with national jurisdiction over litigation involving the interpretation of Federal taxing statutes which may come to it from all parts of the country, has a similar obligation to apply with uniformity its interpretation of those statutes. 27 T.C. 713">*720 That is the way it has always seen its statutory duty and, with all due1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 276">*296 respect to the Courts of Appeals, it cannot conscientiously change unless Congress or the Supreme Court so directs.
The taxpayers also argue that the Commissioner had only 4 years instead of 5 years within which to send out the notice of deficiency on which he could then assess and collect the tax.
1. If the issue turned upon a rule of law peculiar to some State or States within that circuit, the practice of the Tax Court has been to follow the rule as laid down for that circuit.↩
2. The United States Customs Court and the Court of Claims are other national courts operating on the trial court level, but they do not have similar problems since the appeals in each case go to an appellate court which also has a nationwide jurisdiction.↩