Petitioners, domestic building and loan associations, elected the reserve method for bad debts, and computed their annual additions to reserves under the "percentage of taxable income method." However, instead of crediting such additions to their "reserve for losses on qualifying real property loans," petitioners, during the years in issue, credited such additions to different reserve accounts denominated "Federal Insurance Reserve" and "Reserve for Contingencies." These two accounts were considered as constituting together a single reserve account -- the federal insurance reserve -- and were intended to serve as the statutory bad debt reserve on qualifying loans. These accounts had preexisting balances dating from years prior to the adoption of this practice, but no extraneous credits or charges to the accounts were made after such adoption. The credits to these accounts took the form of yearend approximations of the year's bad debt deductions, but no adjusting entries were made on the book accounts when the precise amounts of available deductions became known at the time returns were filed. Instead, reconciling entries were made on Schedule 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*82 M of their corporate income tax returns. Moreover, petitioner Evergreen never charged its reserve accounts for bad debts. Petitioner Centralia had no bad debts or recoveries in the years in issue. Under
66 T.C. 599">*600 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' income taxes in the amounts and for the years as follows:
Petitioner | Year | Deficiency |
Centralia Federal Savings & Loan Association | 1969 | $ 71,011.26 |
1970 | 47,023.66 | |
1971 | 70,213.52 | |
Evergreen First Federal Savings & Loan Association | 1969 | 52,619.41 |
1970 | 41,115.65 | |
1971 | 38,352.30 |
These cases were consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion.
The principal issue in these cases is whether the federal insurance reserve and the reserve for contingencies as maintained by each of the petitioners constitute reserves for bad debts within the requirements of
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
Centralia Federal Savings & Loan Association (Centralia) and Evergreen First Federal Savings & Loan Association (Evergreen) are domestic building and loan associations within the meaning of
Petitioners filed their Federal corporate income tax returns for the years in issue with the Internal Revenue Service Center in Ogden, Utah. These returns were kept as part of the petitioners' permanent records and books of account. Petitioners reported their income on the calendar year basis, used the accrual method of accounting, and employed the reserve method for bad debts. By reference to petitioners' records, it was possible to reconstruct their reserves for losses on qualifying real property loans as they should have been maintained. However, no single ledger card or subsidiary ledger account was maintained by means of which the correct balance in such accounts could be seen at a glance.
66 T.C. 599">*601 On their returns for the years in issue the petitioners claimed the following bad debt deductions:
Petitioner | Year | Bad debt deduction |
Centralia | 1969 | $ 134,491.00 |
1970 | 103,994.46 | |
1971 | 160,957.13 | |
Evergreen | 1969 | 99,658.00 |
1970 | 90,167.81 | |
1971 | 84,852.89 |
These claimed bad debt deductions were disallowed in full. Respondent does not question the mathematical computation of the claimed bad debt deductions as a percentage of income under
Petitioners' deposits are insured by the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corp., and petitioners are subject to the regulatory powers of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Under applicable regulations, petitioners are required to maintain an adequate "Federal Insurance Reserve" to protect the interests of depositors related to losses generally, including (but not confined to) bad debt losses. The federal insurance reserve was a sum determined as a function of the percentage of income in certain accounts and the volume of qualified loans.
Petitioners maintained general ledger reserve accounts as follows: (1) Federal insurance reserve, and (2) reserve for contingencies. Commencing prior to the years in issue, the reserve for contingencies has been considered by petitioners as part of their federal insurance reserve. The amount added annually to the reserve for contingencies represented the excess of the estimated bad debt deduction for the year over the amount added to the federal insurance reserve proper. Thus the sum of the two annual additions represented the 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*86 estimated bad debt deduction. The two reserves combined were intended by both petitioners to constitute their statutory bad debt reserve for qualifying real property loans as to the years in issue. Aggregate additions to the general ledger federal insurance reserve account and to the general ledger reserve for contingencies account were made by petitioners as follows: 66 T.C. 599">*602
Petitioner | Year | Additions |
Centralia | 1969 | $ 134,800.00 |
1970 | 106,108.32 | |
1971 | 160,623.59 | |
Evergreen | 1969 | 95,900.00 |
1970 | 92,350.00 | |
1971 | 84,450.00 |
Petitioners intended that the aggregate additions to the general ledger reserve accounts (federal insurance reserve and reserve for contingencies) would equal the estimated bad debt deduction allowable for additions to a reserve for losses on qualifying real property loans. Certain minor differences between such aggregate additions to these general ledger reserve accounts and the claimed bad debt deductions resulted from the more accurate determination of the allowable bad debt deduction made when the tax returns were prepared as compared to the computation made at the time of the prior posting to the general ledger accounts. These differences are reflected in the analysis of unappropriated retained 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*87 earnings per books on Schedule M-2 of the tax returns of both petitioners. 2 However, no corresponding adjusting entries were ever made to any ledger reserve accounts.
The federal insurance reserve and the reserve for contingencies were restricted to absorbing losses on qualifying real property loans, and could not be used for any other purpose without the prior approval of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. With such prior approval, however, these reserves could be used for other losses. In fact, no such use was ever made of these reserves. Dividends could not be paid from these accounts. The only entries made to those general ledger reserve accounts during the years in issue were additions to equal (and which approximately did equal) the bad debt deductions allowable under
66 T.C. 599">*603 Qualifying real property loans are secured by mortgages on real property. When any of such loans go bad, the result is reflected as 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*88 a profit or a loss on the sale of the foreclosed real property. Such profits and losses were recorded by petitioners on general ledger cards, and reflected on Schedule M-1 (reconciling book income to taxable income) of petitioners' tax returns. Such profits and losses were not added to or subtracted from the reserve accounts. During the years in issue, neither petitioner charged its federal insurance reserve or reserve for contingencies with any amounts, related to bad debts or otherwise.
Centralia and Evergreen maintained the following ledger cards prior to and during the years in issue:
Petitioner | Name of ledger card | Date of last entry |
Centralia | (a) Income reserve -- nonqualifying loans | 12/31/62 |
(b) Income tax returns -- qualifying loans | 12/31/65 | |
(c) Income tax -- supplementary | 12/31/64 | |
(d) Income tax return -- pre-1952 | 12/31/64 | |
Evergreen | (a) Reserve for losses -- nonqualifying loans | 8/31/66 |
(b) Reserve for losses -- qualifying loans | 12/29/67 | |
(c) Reserve for losses -- supplemental | 12/29/67 | |
(d) Reserve for losses -- pre-1952 | 8/31/66 |
Through 1967 (Evergreen) and 1965 (Centralia) petitioners annually credited their bad debt deductions to their qualifying loans reserves (ledger card (b) above).
After the 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*89 last entry in petitioner Centralia's "Income tax return -- qualifying loans" account and in petitioner Evergreen's "Reserve for losses -- qualifying loans" account, petitioners adopted, and during the years in issue followed, the practice of adding amounts representing their estimates of their bad debt deductions annually to their federal insurance reserve and reserve for contingencies. Both such reserves had substantial balances when this practice was adopted.
During the years in issue, there was no occasion for any activity in the nonqualifying loan reserve or supplemental reserve for losses, and such reserves remained inactive.
Centralia experienced no bad debt losses for a 5-year period including the 3 years in issue. Centralia experienced no activity in any of the above reserve accounts from 1965 to 1972 except in the reserve for qualifying loans. Additions to a reserve for bad debts would have increased the reserve for qualifying loans had they been added to that account instead of to the reserve accounts 66 T.C. 599">*604 entitled "Federal Insurance Reserve" and "Reserve for Contingencies."
Evergreen experienced no activity in any of the above reserve accounts from 1967 to 1972 except in the 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*90 reserve for qualifying loans. Additions to a reserve for bad debts would have increased the reserve for qualifying loans had they been added to that account instead of to the reserve accounts entitled "Federal Insurance Reserve" and "Reserve for Contingencies." Evergreen incurred certain bad debt losses during the years in issue, which were reflected on Schedule F (Form 1120) as an amount chargeable against the bad debt reserve. However, Evergreen did not make ledger entries charging any of its reserve accounts when there was such a bad debt, nor did it credit any such reserve when there was a recovery of a previous chargeoff. The record does not disclose whether any such recoveries were experienced.
OPINION
Petitioners in these cases kept their bad debt reserve accounts in an unorthodox manner. While they appear to have gained thereby no discernible tax or other advantage, except possibly simplified bookkeeping, respondent contends that the accounting irregularities were fatal to petitioners' reserve method bad debt deductions under
Under
In order to use the "reserve method," 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*92 petitioners were required to "establish and maintain" certain reserves.
(1) Establishment of reserves. -- Each taxpayer described in subsection (a) which uses the reserve method of accounting for bad debts shall establish and maintain a reserve for losses on qualifying real property loans, a reserve for losses on nonqualifying loans, and a supplemental reserve for losses on loans. For purposes of this title, such reserves shall be treated as reserves for bad debts, but no deduction shall be allowed for any addition to the supplemental reserve for losses on loans.
An amount deducted as an addition to the reserve for losses on qualifying real property loans is to be credited (added) to the reserve for losses on qualifying loans "by the close of the taxable year, or as soon as practicable thereafter."
Both petitioners in fact duly established ledger cards representing the three statutory reserves. Neither petitioner held any nonqualifying loans during the years in issue, nor was there any occasion to add to the supplemental reserve for losses on loans during those years. The complained-of irregularities, therefore, concern only the reserve for losses on qualifying real property loans (qualifying loans reserve).
Through 1967 (Evergreen) and 1965 (Centralia) petitioners annually credited their bad debt deductions to their qualifying loans reserve, which Evergreen denominated "Reserve for Losses -- Qualifying Loans" and Centralia denominated "Income Tax Returns -- Qualifying Loans." The record fails to disclose 66 T.C. 599">*606 whether Evergreen or Centralia had any loan losses during this period to charge against those amounts, or if they 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*94 did, whether they so charged them.
Starting with 1968 for Evergreen and 1966 for Centralia, a different accounting practice was adopted. The qualifying loans reserve ledger cards became inactive. Instead of crediting bad debt deductions to the qualifying loans reserve, they were credited to two other general ledger book accounts. These were labeled "Federal Insurance Reserve" and "Reserve for Contingencies." Both accounts had been previously used for other purposes and had substantial opening balances when this practice was adopted. The aggregate amounts so credited by each petitioner in each of the years in issue represented its best yearend estimate of the year's bad debt deduction. When the precise amount became known, Schedule M of each petitioner's corporate income tax return (Form 1120) contained a reconciling entry which represented the difference (or approximate difference) between the aggregate amount shown on the general ledger for the year in question as having been credited to the federal insurance reserve and the reserve for contingencies and the amount claimed as a bad debt deduction. The following table illustrates the reconcilation, for each year in issue, of the 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*95 bad debt deduction claimed with the aggregate addition to the two reserves:
Petitioner | Year | Added to reserve |
Centralia | 1969 | 1 $ 129,213.00 |
1970 | 106,108.32 | |
1971 | 160,623.59 | |
Evergreen | 1969 | 95,900.00 |
1970 | 92,350.00 | |
1971 | 84,450.00 |
Deduction | Schedule M | ||
Petitioner | claimed | Difference | entry |
Centralia | $ 134,491.00 | $ 5,278.00 | $ 5,278 |
103,994.46 | (2,113.86) | (2,114) | |
160,957.13 | 334.00 | 334 | |
Evergreen | 99,658.00 | 3,758.00 | 3,760 |
90,167.81 | (2,182.19) | (2,182) | |
84,852.89 | 402.89 | 438 |
The $ 2 discrepancy for Evergreen for 1969 is explained as a rounding error. The record provides no explanation for either Evergreen's $ 35.11 discrepancy for 1971 or for Centralia's 14-cent discrepancy in 1970.
The federal insurance reserve was a sum determined as a function of the percentage of income in certain accounts and the volume of qualified loans. The reserve for contingencies simply represented the excess of the estimated bad debt deduction over the federal insurance reserve. Thus the sum of the two annual additions represented the estimated bad debt deduction. In effect, 66 T.C. 599">*607 for present purposes, the two accounts together were considered as a single reserve -- the "Federal Insurance Reserve."
When petitioner Evergreen1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*96 incurred bad debt losses during the years in issue, these were reflected on its Schedule F (Form 1120) as an amount chargeable against the bad debt reserve. 3 Centralia did not fill out the Schedule F on its returns for the years in issue. It had no bad debt losses during such years. During the years in issue, neither petitioner made ledger entries charging either the federal insurance reserve, the reserve for contingencies, or their inactive qualifying loans reserve when there was a bad debt, nor did they credit any such reserve when there was a recovery of a previous chargeoff. After their change in procedure, neither petitioner charged its federal insurance reserve or reserve for contingencies for any purposes extraneous to bad debts.
Both petitioners maintained their corporate tax returns as part of their corporate records. By reference to petitioners' records, including their tax returns, it was possible to reconstruct the qualifying loans reserves as they should have been maintained. However, no single ledger card or subsidiary account 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*97 was maintained by means of which the correct balance in such account could be determined at a glance.
To recapitulate, the variances during the years in issue between petitioners' accounting methods and strict compliance with the regulations were as follows:
(1) The bad debt deduction was charged to two reserve accounts, both of which had been previously maintained for other purposes, so that determination of the portion thereof allegedly representing part of the "Reserve for Losses -- Qualifying Loans" was impossible without reference to the balance in those accounts as of the time accounting methods were changed.
(2) Instead of being charged to a reserve account denominated "Reserve for Losses -- Qualifying Loans," the annual credit was made, after the transition, to two different accounts, while the proper reserve was maintained as a dormant account holding a substantial balance. The amount which should have been held in the qualifying loans reserve was thereafter divided among three different accounts, two of which contained preexisting extraneous balances.
66 T.C. 599">*608 (3) Instead of deducting bad debts from and adding back recoveries to the reserve accounts to which the bad debt deductions 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*98 were credited, these items, in the case of Evergreen, were not reflected on any ledger cards or subordinate accounts. Centralia had no bad debts nor (so far as the record discloses) did either petitioner have any recoveries.
(4) Instead of crediting the reserve accounts with the precise bad debt deductions claimed, an estimated amount was used. No adjusting entries were made later when the correct amount became known. Hence reference to Schedule M of the tax return was also necessary to compute the intended reserve.
In order to reconstruct the intended balance in the qualifying loans reserves, reference would have been necessary to the following:
(1) The balance in the federal insurance reserve, the reserve for contingencies, and the reserve for losses -- qualifying loans, as of the date accounting methods were changed.
(2) All subsequent additions to the federal insurance reserve and reserve for contingencies.
(3) All intervening bad debts charged off and recoveries obtained.
(4) All intervening Schedule M reconciliations, applied as adjustments to the credit to the reserve.
Such reconstruction would not have been impossible, but would involve considerable accounting effort. The auditing 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*99 agent was unable readily to complete such a reconstruction, and respondent determined that the petitioners had strayed too far from the correct path.
That petitioners erred in their accounting treatment is indisputable. It is our task to determine whether the errors were fatal to the claimed bad debt deduction. The question is close, and the determination is not easy. We begin with a review of the prior authority.
Our leading decision, although it was decided under
Three issues were presented for our decision. On the first issue, we held (without dissent), that to the extent the deductions claimed exceeded amounts timely transferred to
On the second issue, with Judge Murdock dissenting, we held that the bad debt deduction included the amounts added to the "legal reserve account," despite the fact that that account included an initial $ 110,000 which had never been deducted, and that dividends in a lesser amount had been paid out of the account, including payments during 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*101 the years in issue. We stated that it was clear that the label attached to the account did not matter, and that there could be more than one bad debt reserve.
On the third issue, we held that no deduction was available for the amount placed in the reserve for contingencies, there being no 66 T.C. 599">*610 evidence it was intended to be a bad debt reserve. 41976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*102
In
(1) It must be available for absorbing losses.
(2) It must be available for transfer to ordinary income when the need for the reserve ends.
(3) It must be earmarked and not used for any other purpose.
The "nonwithdrawable capital stock account" failed to meet these requirements. Under Texas law it was not available to absorb losses from bad debts as they occurred, but could be drawn upon only under very limited circumstances and with regulatory approval.
As to 1963, the court held that the amendments to
In
To the same effect, under the amended
In
In
In
This Court finds persuasive the recent
Since the 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*108 undisputed facts show that plaintiff did not maintain a permanent subsidiary ledger, the requirement of periodic reconciliation is inapplicable. Accordingly, under these circumstances, and since plaintiff did maintain sufficiently accurate income tax returns and schedules along with its permanent records, the record keeping requirement of Int. Rev. Code of 1954,
From the above cases, we note that taxpayers which have been denied their deductions fall into two classes. In one class are those which simply delay too long. It is clear that the book entries must be made promptly after the close of the year, generally by the 66 T.C. 599">*613 time returns are filed.
Focusing on the facts of the present case, the issue is a narrow one. The
Before addressing the basic question of whether the federal insurance reserve had the proper character and function, we consider first the effect of the petitioners' failure to make book entries in their 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*111 reserve accounts adjusting for the relatively minor variations between the original yearend estimates of the year's additions and the figure as finalized on the returns and reconciled by Schedule M. Even if the tax returns are said to be part of the books of the taxpayer, mere entries on the return do not suffice to render deductible amounts not credited to any reserve.
As 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*112 a further preliminary question before addressing the main issue, we must consider the respondent's contention that petitioners' failure to charge bad debts and recoveries against their reserves is fatal to their bad debt reserve deductions. While petitioners had the privilege of reducing these reserves by the net amount of bad debts in excess of collections, their failure to exercise that privilege cannot adversely affect respondent. We need not decide what impact this failure would have, if any, upon the amount of income petitioners might be required to report when the time comes, as on liquidation, to restore any unused portions of these reserves to income. Had petitioner Evergreen properly credited its bad debts deduction to its qualifying loans reserve, we do not believe that mere failure to charge any bad debts against the reserve would have meant that such reserve was 66 T.C. 599">*615 not being "maintained." As to petitioner Centralia, moreover, there were no bad debt losses during the years at issue. While Evergreen apparently had a small amount of losses, we do not think that its failure to exercise its right to use such losses to reduce its reserve accounts should be fatal to its deduction. 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 81">*113 Respondent points to no case holding to the contrary.
Respondent, however, focuses principally on the nature of the federal insurance reserves. He does not contend that these reserves were available for dividends or that anything other than bad debt losses ever was in fact charged against them. However, he says there is no guarantee that a charge for losses other than from bad debts would not occur. He says that nomenclature aside, the federal insurance reserve is not properly
Under the law prior to 1963, this issue seems to be resolved by
We do not think that the 1963 amendments had this effect. As we said in
The legislative history similarly demonstrates that the status of the reserves must be maintained inviolate. 8 The deduction, then, is permitted only when the reserve is used for the sole purpose of absorbing bad debt losses.
The legislative history we cited there is most significant for our point. The committee report did not state that the theoretical
Having concluded that on the present facts the federal insurance reserve sufficiently met the statutory requirements to constitute a de facto reserve for losses on qualifying loans, we hold that petitioners were entitled to the bad debt deductions claimed up to but not in excess of such year's additions to that reserve (treating the reserve for contingencies as a part thereof).
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as in effect during the years in issue.↩
2. The Schedule M entries for the petitioners for the years in issue were as follows:
Petitioner | Year | Schedule M entry |
Centralia | 1969 | $ 5,278 |
1970 | (2,114) | |
1971 | 334 | |
Evergreen | 1969 | 3,760 |
1970 | (2,182) | |
1971 | 438 |
1. $ 134,800 minus $ 5,587 prior year adjustment.↩
3. For 1970, Evergreen deducted $ 90,167.81 but Schedule F showed an addition to reserve of $ 90,648.89. The $ 481.08 difference is unexplained.↩
4. In a Memorandum Opinion of this Court on which respondent relies heavily,
5. Also
6. Also
8. "[Any] charge to any such reserve for an item other than a bad debt will result in the inclusion in gross income of an amount equal to such charge." H. Rept. No. 1447, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 34 and A44 (1962); S. Rept. No. 1881, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 45 (1962).↩