Wardman Mortgage & Discount Corporation is a Virginia corporation with its principal office in the city of Washington. In 1931 'it was placed in the hands of re-' ceivers appointed in a creditors’ suit in the District Court. Appellants here are the receivers. The corporation had failed to file income tax returns for either of the years 1928 and 1929. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, after an examination, assessed taxes in the amount of $12,514.11 for 1928 and $6,818.60 for 1929. The corporation kept its books on the • accrual basis. In 1933 the United States collector in Baltimore (appellee) filed in the District Court a claim in the amount of $24,830.45 — principal and interest and penalties on the amount of the two assessments — claiming priority of payment out of the assets of the corporation. 1 The receivers answered and objected to the allowance, and in January, 1936, the court referred the cause to an auditor to examine into and report to the court:
*123 (I) The amount of gross and net taxable income for the years 1928 and 1929 as shown by the books, etc.
' (2) The amount of gross and net income for the years 1928 and 1929 on a cash basis.
(3) The amount of income accrued, the .nature thereof, and cash collected thereon for the years 1928 and 1929.
(4) The amount of cash loaned to Wardman Construction Company by Ward-man Mortgage & Discount Corporation for the years 1924 to 1929, inclusive, and the amount of cash received from the Ward-man Construction Company by the Ward-man Mortgage & Discount Corporation for the same years.
(5) The amount and rate of interest accrued against loans to Wardman Construction Company and the rate of discount accrued.
(6) The nature of the so-called accrued discount.
(7) Cash payments received by the corporation and applied as collections of interest and discount.
(8) Credit standing of Wardman Construction Company, Inc., in 1928 and 1929 and its ability to meet its obligations.
(9) Amount the corporation actually collected as interest for 1928 and 1929 on the notes it held, of Wardman Construction Company, Inc.
(10) Combined charge accrued, both in percentage and amount, for the years 1928 and 1929 as earnings on the notes for money loaned to Wardman Construction Company, Inc.
(II) A detailed and summary analysis of the charges and credits on the books of the corporation.
(12) The total, both in percentage and amount, charged Wardman Construction Company, Inc., by the corporation for money loaned on both the note account and the account receivable during the years 1924 to 1929, inclusive.
The auditor took evidence 2 and filed his report which, on hearing, was confirmed, and the court in November, 1936, entered an order allowing the collector’s claim.
The auditor’s report shows that during the years 1924-26, inclusive, the mortgage corporation loaned the construction company $634,588.28. In 1928 the mortgage corporation accrued on its books as income from the construction company interest at the rate of 6 per cent, amounting to $51,-114 and discount at 9 per cent. (6 months) in the further sum of $34,200. The principal debt at this time had grown from $634,-588.28 to $832,000. In 1929 the mortgage corporation accrued on its books as income $49,920 representing 6 per cent, interest on the indebtedness of $832,000. There was no accrual of discount in 1929. The auditor found that the item of discount of $34,200 accrued for 1928 was in effect additional interest upon the loans and advances made by the mortgage corporation to the construction corporation. The collector concedes that what is called discount really amounted to usurious interest under the applicable statute. On the basis of this concession appellants (receivers) contend that, since the usury statute of the District of Columbia 3 provides that in an action to recover a debt where usurious interest is contracted to be paid the plaintiff may recover only the principal of the debt, the bookkeeping accrual of interest at usurious rates is not the realization of income under the tax laws. In other words, that because under the District statute not only the usurious interest but the lawful interest as well is legally uncollectible, the government should not be permitted to tax, under the claim of income, an amount of which, under the law, the taxpayer cannot enforce payment.
And so the question for decision as appellants frame it may be stated — Is uncollected accrued usurious interest taxable income when accrued as income on the taxpayer’s books? The trial court answered the question in the affirmative.
The correct answer, as we think, depends not so much, as appellants urge, upon the legal right to enforce collection as upon the existing probability of its being received. Certainly if the interest was actually received in the years’ in question there could be no contention that the amount was not taxable as income, and this would be true without regard to its legality or illegality. United States v. Sullivan,
In this view the question — the answer to which will decide this case — is whether when the mortgage corporation accrued the interest on its books it had by course of dealing with its debtor or otherwise a reasonable expectancy of receiving the amount so accrued. If it did, the accrual stands like accrued income generally.
This brings us to a somewhat more detailed examination of the auditor’s report. From this it appears that while interest and discount accrued in 1928 in the amount of $85,314.00, the amount of cash received and credited to interest amounted in that year to only $291.' But in that same year there was received by the mortgage corporation from the construction company, and in cash, $75,137, a sum equal to seven-eighths of the total interest and discount accrued. Apparently this amount was not applied directly on the books of account either to the payment of interest or the reduction of principal. Unless it was a gift, which of course it was not, it must have represented payment on existing loans and, if that is correct, it may be properly assumed that the full amount received by the mortgage corporation was applied to the payment of interest. Such an assumption merely recognizes the general rule in United States courts with regard to the application of an undesignated payment upon a debt; namely, that it shall first be applied to the liquidation of the interest due before any part is applied to the principal. Helvering v. Drier, 4 Cir.,
"in this view, while we may concede that usurious interest ordinarily is of doubtful collectibility by reason of the bar of the
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statute, that question is not present in this case. The question here is rather whether at the time it was accrued on the books of this corporation there was in the circumstances then confronting the taxpayer a reasonable anticipation it would be paid. There is no showing here that the construction company was insolvent and, that question being out of the case, the course of dealings between the two corporations and the regularity of payments in the past, in every instance largely in excess of legal interest, created a presumption in favor of payment. The construction company — the borrower — is not pleading usury, and we think that the plea could not be made by the mortgage corporation — the lender — and cannot be made by its receivers. Norton v. Commerce Trust Co. et al., 5 Cir.,
In what is said above we have not analyzed the accounts for 1929, because in that year no illegal interest was charged or accrued.
Affirmed.
