Appellants, C. Henry Haberkorn, III, and Hendrieka B. Haberkorn, his wife, brought this action in the District Court to recover $2,970.51 which they claim has been illegally collected from them as income taxes for the year 1942. The District Court dismissed thе action.
Haberkorn, during 1942 and 1943, was an employee of Haberkorn-Barry Company, a Michigan corporation engaged in the general contracting business in Detroit. The corporation kept its books on an accrual basis. Haberkorn’s compensation for 1942 was fixed by resolution of the Board of Directors at a salary of $255 per month and a bonus of 25% on all net income, as defined in the resolution, for the calеndar year 1942 over $10,000.
The corporation in setting up on its books the accrued profits from building contracts in process of completion failed to adopt the usual accounting practice of dеtermining the percentage of completion of each contract from the architect’s certificate, as a result of which the net profit of the corporation for 1942, before bonuses and inсome taxes, was erroneously calculated to be $64,813.69. On this basis Haberkorn was paid $16,9C0, including salary and bonus. During 1944, it was found that the correct gross .profit for 1942, upon which the corporate bonuses should have been bаsed, was $33,174.14, and that the proper amount of Haberkorn’s compensation for 1942 should have been $9,193.53 instead of $16,900. On December 30, 1944, the overpayment of $7,706.40 was added to Haberkorn’s account on the books of the Company under the item of account entitled “Advances to Executives.”
On January 1, 1945, Haberkorn entered the armed services, during which period he received a salary of $100 per month, which was from time to time credited against his indebtedness until $1600 had been paid thereon. On April 18, 1946, Haberkorn paid the balance of his indebtedness in full through a sale of his stock in the Haberkorn-Barry Company to the Company.
The appellants had, within the time provided, filed their joint returns with the Collector of Internal Revenue at Detroit, reporting their income tax for the years 1942 and 1943 and had paid the tax disclosed thereby. The returns included the amount of $16,900 paid to Haberkorn in 1942. On May 31, 1945, within the time permitted by statute, appellants filed their claim for a refund for the year 1942 in the amount of $2,970.51 on the theory that the 1942 income should have included only the amount of the bonus to which Haberkorn was entitled and not the excess amount which he had in fact been paid and had been required to repay later to the Company. Amended income tax returns for 1942 and 1943 were also filed. Following failure of the Commissioner tо act upon the claim, the appellants filed their present action in the District Court. The District Judge was of the opinion that the full amount of the money paid to Haberkorn in 1942 was received under a claim of right and was taxable in its entirety in the year in which received, and that appellant should claim deductions for the amount of the bonus he was required to repay in the years in which such repayments were made.
We agrеe with the conclusion of the District Judge that the case is controlled by the decision in North American Oil
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Consolidated v. Burnet,
These rulings result logically from the recognized and settled principle that the Federal income tax system is based on an annual accounting, which requires the determination of income at the close of the taxable year without regard to the effect of subsequent events. Burnet v. Sanford & Brooks Co.,
Appellants contend that this long established rule was modified by the Supreme Court in Commissioner v. Wilcox,
Nor was the general rule, recognized in this Circuit by our rulings in the cases hereinabove referred to, changed by our decision in Knight Newspapers v. Commissioner, 6 Cir.,
We recognize that there is authority to the contrary, particularly the two cases from the Court of Claims of Greenwald v. United States,
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
