This case presents a simple issue with significant monetary consequences— whether the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) properly construed the term “services” appearing in Revenue Procedure 71-21, 1971-
BACKGROUND
In 1987, American Express issued charge cards which entitled the cardholders to certain financial and travel-related products and services, insurance, and credit. Like virtually all corporations, American Express is an accrual basis taxpayer rather than a cash basis taxpayer. Under the ordinary tax accounting rules governing the reporting of income, the annual fee payments it receives from cardholders are reported as income when earned. Since it receives annual fee payments throughout the year, and the annual fee covers an entire year, one might assume that the fees necessarily were earned partially in the year of payment and partially in the next year. The analysis under the Internal Revenue Code (“I.R.C.” or “Code”) is, however, more complicated.
Section 446 of the Code provides the Commissioner of the IRS (“Commissioner”) with broad discretion to preclude a taxpayer from using a method of accounting that does not clearly reflect income and to require a taxpayer to use a method of accounting that, in the Commissioner’s opinion, does clearly reflect income.
1
Acting under that authority, the Commissioner has required accrual basis taxpayers to include prepaid fees as income in the year they were received. The Commissioner reasoned that at the time the taxpayer received the fees, all events had occurred that established the taxpayer’s right to the income. Treas. Reg. § 1.446 — l(c)(ii);
see also Auto. Club of Mich. v. C.I.R.,
In 1971, responding to taxpayer concerns about the claimed unfairness of the current year tax accounting óf prepaid income, the Commissioner, acting under the authority of § 446 of the Code, issued Rev. Proc. 71-21, 1971-
Until the 1987 tax year, American Express reported the full amount of onetime annual fee payments from cardholders as income in the month they were billed. On January 1, 1987, American Express changed its financial accounting method to a “Ratable Inclusion Method,” under which one-twelfth of the annual fee payments was included as income in the month the fee was billed and in each of the following 11 months. This change apparently coincided with a change in accounting standards to permit such a deferral. Financial Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 91 (Dec.1986). 3 On June 26, 1987, American Express filed Applications for Change in Method of Accounting (Forms 3115) with the IRS requesting permission to use the Ratable Inclusion Method for income tax accounting purposes but continued to report cardholder annual fee payments it billed in 1987 as income in the 1987 tax year.
The IRS took the position that “[t]he portion of the [annual] fees attributable to credit and goods are not deferrable under Rev. Proc. 71-21 because the revenue procedure applies only to advance payments for services performed by the taxpayer *1380 and credit and goods are not services.” Letter from Paul M. Ritenour, Chief Branch 8, IRS, to Daniel B. Rosenbaum, esq., Outside Counsel to American Express 3 (August 30, 1989). The IRS relied in part on General Counsel Memorandum (G.C.M.) 39,434, 1985 IRS GCM LEXIS 99, in which the IRS had previously interpreted bank credit card fees to represent loan commitment fees for a property right — -the right to use money — rather than a fee for services. The IRS offered American Express the opportunity to segregate payments for items that were not services, so that the services portion could be deferred pursuant to the Revenue Procedure, but unless American Express could make an adequate segregation, the IRS required that “the entire annual card fee must be included in the taxpayers’ gross income in the tax year in which the fees are received.” Letter from Mr. Ri-tenour at 3. American Express tried but failed to convince the IRS that its proposed segregation was satisfactory.
In 1996, American Express filed a timely claim for refund of income taxes for the 1987 tax year based on the requested change in accounting method. The IRS denied the refund, and American Express filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims on or about September 15,1997. Based on stipulated facts, the parties cross-moved for summary judgment. On June 30, 2000, the Court of Federal Claims denied the refund and granted the IRS’s motion for summary judgment because “G.C.M. 39,-434 and the text of Rev. Proc. 71-21 provide[d] an adequate basis in law for the Commissioner’s decision that the card fees in issue did not fall within the specified and limited circumstances of Rev. Proc. 71-21.”
Am. Express Co. v. United States,
DISCUSSION
This case involves no issue of statutory construction. Nor does it involve any questions as to the validity of the Revenue Procedure, which is plainly statutorily authorized.
See
I.R.C. § 446(b);
United States v. Mead Corp.,
— U.S.-, ——,
We consider first whether the IRS properly interpreted the Procedure’s reference to services as not including fees for the acquisition of credit. The credit float feature — that is, the ability to charge purchases and to pay later — is a common feature of all of the cards involved. 4
*1381
There is nothing on the face of IRS Rev. Proc. 71-21 that defines the term “services,” and American Express offers no dictionary definition that tells us, one way or the other, whether the extension of credit constitutes a form of service.
5
American Express relies on a footnote in the Supreme Court’s
American Automobile Association
decision, describing “services” offered by the taxpayer to “include furnishing road maps, routing, tour books, etc.; emergency road service through contracts with local garages; bail bond protection; personal automobile accident insurance and theft protection; ... motor license procurement, brake and headlight adjustment service, notarial duties and advice in the prosecution of small claims.”
The IRS has interpreted its Revenue Procedure to exclude credit from the definition of services. The IRS’s interpretation is reflected in General Counsel G.C.M. 39,434, in which the IRS determined that bank credit card fees were loan commitment fees for a property right — the right to use money — rather than for services. *1382 Id. at *1-2. The IRS interpretation is also reflected in its decision denying American Express’s Applications for Change in Method of Accounting pursuant to the Revenue Procedure. American Express argues that no deference is due these interpretations. We cannot agree.
The Supreme Court has firmly established that agency interpretations of their own regulations are entitled to substantial deference. For example, in
Auer v. Robbins,
American Express argues that an interpretation expressed in a General Counsel Memorandum or in a decision on a Revenue Procedure is not entitled to deference under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Christensen v. Harris County,
Finally, American Express relies on a variety of other court decisions, including
Hewlett-Packard Co. v. United States,
In
Hewlett-Packard,
we rejected the Commissioner’s factual determination that a taxpayer’s pool of rotable spare parts used to repair computers it had sold qualified as inventory rather than a capital asset under the Code, but the context there was entirely different. In that case, both the taxpayer and the government agreed that the case was governed by a Treasury regulation which provided in pertinent part that: “[i]n order to reflect taxable income correctly, inventories at the beginning and end of each taxable year are necessary in every case in which the production, purchase, or
sale of merchandise
is an income-producing factor.”
In its opening brief American Express agreed that we are not confronted here with a factual issue, since “[t]he determination of whether, on the basis of the stipulated facts, the Card Fees were payments for services is a legal question.” (citing
Garvey, Inc. v. United States,
American Express also relies on
Barnett Banks of Florida v. Commissioner,
In short, we agree that deference is due to the IRS interpretation of its own Revenue Procedure reflected both in the General Counsel memorandum and in the IRS’s decisions denying American Express’s applications to change its accounting method. Because the interpretation is reasonable, it attracts substantial judicial deference, and we conclude that the IRS properly determined that credit fees were not for services. Since American Express does not claim that the amounts charged for credit can be segregated, we hold that the refund was properly denied.
CONCLUSION
For the forgoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the Court of Federal Claims.
AFFIRMED.
COSTS
No costs.
Notes
. Section 446(b) provides "[i]f no method of accounting has been regularly used by the taxpayer, or if the method used does not clearly reflect income, the computation of taxable income shall be made under such method as, in the opinion of the Secretary, does clearly reflect income.” I.R.C. § 446(b).
Section 446(c) provides that "[sjubject to the provisions of subsections (a) and (b), a taxpayer may compute taxable income under any of the following methods of accounting—
(1) the cash receipts and disbursements method;
(2) an accrual method;
(3) any other method permitted by this chapter; or
(4) any combination of the foregoing methods permitted under regulations prescribed by the Secretary.”
Section 446(e) provides that "[ejxcept as otherwise expressly provided in this chapter, a taxpayer who changes tire method of accounting on the basis of which he regularly computes his income in keeping his books shall, before computing his taxable income under the new method, secure the consent of the Secretary.”
. Rev. Proc. 70-21, 1970-
. Paragraph 10 of this Statement provided that ''[ajvailable lines of credit under credit card and similar charge card arrangements are loan commitments, and fees collected in connection with such cards (credit card fees) are viewed in part as being loan commitment fees. However, those fees generally cover many services to cardholders. Accordingly, fees that are periodically charged to cardholders shall be deferred and recognized on a straight-line basis over the period the fee entitles the cardholder to use the card. This accounting shall also apply to other similar card arrangements that involve an extension of credit by the card issuer.” (emphasis added).
It is, of course, well established that tax and accounting treatments may differ, and that the refusal of the IRS to follow accounting rules for tax purposes does not itself render the IRS approach arbitrary.
Thor Power Tool Co. v. Comm’r,
. American Express argues that no part of the card fees should be treated as a fee to acquire credit because interest was charged on the credit. This confuses two separate credit features on the cards the right to defer payments from the date of purchase to the date of payment (sometimes called the float feature) and the right to make payments in installments. An interest charge was imposed only with respect to the latter feature which was available to holders of some cards. At least part of the annual fee was payment for the float feature.
. It is appropriate to consult dictionaries to discern the ordinary meaning of a term not explicitly defined by statute or regulation.
Int'l Bus. Machs. Corp. v. United States,
American Express also relies on authorities which refer to the provision of bank loans as a "service.”
Burbank Liquidating Corp.
v.
Comm
'r,
. The Fourth Circuit, in affirming the Tax Court's decision in
Signet,
found that the facts in that case "suggested] that the annual fee represented a general revenue raising measure as opposed to an attempt to charge users for the cost of services rendered,”
Signet,
