On this petition to review an order of re-determination made by the United States Board of Tax Appeals sustaining a determination by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue that the petitioner earned profits in the years 1918 and 1919 and was liable for income taxes in corresponding amounts, 6 B. T. A. 570, the petitioning taxpayer raises two questions:
(1) The right of the Commissioner when determining income taxes to disregard the books and records of the taxpayer and sub *92 stitute therefor as a basis of computation the average profits of corporations in the same line of business.
(2) Whether the petitioning taxpayer earned the income determined by the Commissioner or suffered actual losses during the tax years in question as shown by his returns.
The first question is a mixed question of law and fact; the second is one purely of fact involving, however, the lawfulness of the order. Both raise a question of the scope of the jurisdiction' of Circuit Courts of Appeals to review the decisions of United States Board of Tax Appeals. That jurisdiction is conferred by the Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 119, section 1003b [26 USCA § 1226 (b)]) and is contained in the one sentence:
“Upon such review, such courts shall have power to affirm or, if the decision of the Board is not in accordance with law, to modify or to reverse the decision of the Board, * * * as justice may require.”
This provision is within the trend of recent legislation respecting fact finding tribunals with special judicial powers such as the Federal Trade Commission whose “findings of fact; if supported by testimony,” are made conclusive (Comp. Stat. § 8836a-k [15 USCA §§ 41-51]; Curtis Pub. Co. v. Federal Trade Commission [C. C. A.]
As such an inquiry touches matters of law, we turn to the law of the ease. The Revenue Act approved February 24, 1919 (40 Stat. 1057), known as the Revenue Act of 1918, exacted of every one in a prescribed class taxes on his net income, defined the term “net income” and provided the method by which it should be computed (sections 210-214 [Comp. St. §§ 6336⅛e-6336⅛g]) with respect to items to be included and items to be deducted. It further provided that net income “shall be computed * * * in accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed in keeping the books of such taxpayer.” But the Act further provided (section 1305 [26 USCA § 1254; Comp. St. § 6371½e]) that every person liable for income tax shall keep and maintain such ae *93 counting records as will enable him to make a return of his true income. Realizing human infirmities in keeping accounts, the Congress by the same Act authorized the Treasury Department to make and issue regulations in respect to keeping books in a manner that would enable taxpayers to make true returns of their incomes and required all taxpayers to conform to such regulations. Further realizing that some taxpayers would, innocently or otherwise, fail to do so, the Congress provided (section 212b [Comp. St. § 6336⅛f (b) ]) that, “if no such method of accounting has been so employed, or if the method employed does not clearly reflect the income, the computation shall be made upon such basis and in such manner as in the opinion of the Commissioner does clearly reflect the income.”
This provision is obviously necessary to insure a full collection of taxes. Otherwise citizens liable for taxes could evade payment merely by keeping books badly or by not keeping them at all. Acting under this provision the Commissioner in this ease resorted to a rule of his own, based not on the facte of the taxpayer’s books of account because they did not disclose them sufficiently but on his observation of earnings made and taxes paid by corporations in a like business. This rule, the petitioner says, was wholly arbitrary and unjust. Clearly the Commissioner, bound by law to determine income and assess a tax, was authorized to act upon some facts other than the undisclosed facts of the case, but whether the method he pursued was just or unjust is a matter we are not presently called upon to decide because the Commissioner, -speaking through his attorney, now says that wholly aside from his method of computation, the taxes determined by him and later re-determined by the Board, when reckoned on earnings which the evidence at the hearing showed were the very minima of what the petitioner had made, are right. And so we find that the earnings determined, though impossible of precise ascertainment, were at least the earnings made. We come to this judgment by a train of reasoning beginning with the postulate that the Commissioner’s finding was, in consonance with the settled rule in respect to assessments, prima facie correct. United States v. Rindskopf,
That the petitioner has not sustained that burden is shown by the highly complicated yet admirable analyses of the evidence in conjunction with the taxpayer’s income tax returns made by the attorneys for the opposing parties. Though this evidence is in sharp conflict we have, after much labor, come to the judgment that, aside from the Commissioner’s method of determining the taxpayer’s earnings and corresponding taxes. and aside from the admitted fact that from the returns and supplemental evidence no one can accurately compute and determine what was the true income, the taxpayer did not sustain the burden, and that he in fact made earnings and that the earnings and the respiting taxes were at least those determined by the Board. As this court is reviewing the Board’s order of re-determination, not the reasoning that moved it to the order, we find that the order is sustained by the evidence and therefore must be
Affirmed.
