Petitioner, a taxpayer on a cash basis, seeks review of a decision of the Tax Court of the United- States disallowing his deduction from income for interest paid in the year 1941, raising the question whether the interest deducted was paid in that year within the meaning of Section 23(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.G.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 23(b). Under that section interest paid by a taxpayer accounting on a cash basis is deductible in the year the interest is paid.
In 1941 the taxpayer gave to his bank promissory notes for $68,950, due at the end of five years. The bank charged interest in advance at the rate of 2)4 per cent,' amounting to $7756.88, deducted that amount from the face of the note and credited it to a reserve account known as “interest or discount collected in advance.” Each day it took from that account the amount of interest earned and credited it on its books to its earnings account. The bank credited to the taxpayer the net proceeds of the loan $61,193.12. No part of the notes was paid in the year 1941. The taxpayer deducted the item of $7756.8S as interest paid in the year 1941. The Tax Court held this deduction' improper for the reason that no interest was actually paid in the year 1941 and approved the Commissioner’s determination of a deficiency in income tax resulting from the deduction. The only question submitted to us is whether the evidence submitted to the Tax Court and reflected by its findings of fact supports a conclusion that the taxpayer, accounting for income taxes on a cash basis, did not actually pay any interest in the year 1941.
There is no question that, as between the .parties and as a matter of mercantile law, the transaction between the taxpayer and the bank was completed at the time of the borrowing and the execution of. the notes. In commercial practice the discount deducted was interest at the given rate on the face of the note from its date until maturity. From time immemorial it has been the custom of banks to make loans, deduct the interest included in the face of the note and credit the borrower with the remainder of the face of the note after deduction of the interest and treat the interest as paid in advance. Fleckner v. Bank,
The governing principles have been announced in various authoritative cases. Thus in United States v. Mitchell,
Here the undisputed facts show that the taxpayer actually paid no interest in the year 1941; that he promised to pay interest five years from that date and put the promise in writing in the form of promissory notes; that he was accounting for income upon a cash basis; ;that no cash payment had actually been made; and that, therefore, the deduction for interest paid was improper.
The decision is affirmed.
