210 Wis. 625 | Wis. | 1933
The following opinion was filed January 10, 1933:
While it is important for the purpose of raising revenue that every taxable item be disclosed so that
Appellant reported income on the cash receipts and disbursements basis, including the contract entered into by him with Bonwit and the partial payment made in 1929. Under this method of reporting the assessor of incomes was informed of all that had been received, and had Bonwit been able to continue further payments all would have been reported as received. The statute in force at the time has been interpreted to mean that some method of reporting income must be^ used by the taxpayer which will clearly tell of his true income. “The imperative condition of this statute is, that any report made upon whatever basis must clearly reflect the income which the law subjects to a tax.” Wisconsin Ornamental I. & B. Co. v. Tax Commission, 202 Wis. 355, 229 N. W. 646, 233 N. W. 72.
Different businesses may require various methods of reporting details so as to disclose with the most possible exactness profits earned during the year. The legislature realized this and made provision for it. State ex rel. Waldheim & Co. v. Tax Commission, 187 Wis. 539, 204 N. W.
“The books of the company were so kept that they reflected the cost of the materials so shipped. ... We cannot escape the conclusion that the profit shown on the products billed represents income earned as of that date, which the law subjects to the payment of an income tax. It represents goods sold, furnished, and delivered, a great deal of which has been paid for, and the balance of which represents profit just as clearly as did the contracts held to constitute income in State ex rel. Waldheim & Co. v. Tax Commission.”
In the Waldheim Case Mr. Justice Crownhart said:
“Credit is secure'd on a conditional sales contract, under which goods may be repossessed in case of default by the purchaser. . . . Modern business is very largely done on credit. Books are kept, and profits are determined from inventories and cash receipts at stated periods. In such inventories bad accounts are charged off, goods on hand are carried at their true value, and profits or losses are determined from a balancing of accounts. Manifestly, profits or losses cannot be ascertained to perfection. In the administration of the income tax law, where profits of one year have been overestimated, deductions may be made in subsequent years to equalize, but uniform rules or methods must be adopted by the commission in order to bring about equity' and justice between the government and the taxpayers.”
The method of reporting used by a taxpayer may be affected by the character of the business in which the tax
The evidence concerning the cash value of appellant’s contract is to the effect that in his opinion his interest in the contract did not have a readily realizable market value in 1929; that he could not have sold his interest in that contract in 1929, although upon negotiations and the allowance of a substantial discount perhaps he might have disposed of it. Of course in estimating the value of this contract conditions obtaining in 1929 would naturally be material as against subsequent events, but it does appear that appellant was unable to borrow $75,000 during the early part of the year 1930 upon this contract. The appellant explains the lack of security for the carrying out of .the contract on the part of Bonwit by saying: “We certainly asked for security and collateral; we did not get it; we made quite a fight for it.” The evidence also'shows that the purchase by Bonwit from appellant was to enable Bonwit to refinance the company; it can be readily understood that while in this process the value of the contract would be very uncertain. If the buyer is successful he pays, if not the seller loses. The transaction is .too speculative to warrant assigning a fixed value. In the case of enterprises doing business on the instalment plan there exists assurance in the nature of the business that both the state and the taxpayer’s interests can be protected even if profits are anticipated to some extent. So, too, where a sale on time is so secured as to be negotiable or readily convertible into cash. In the case of an isolated contract such as this, where the arrangement does not amount to a new investment, and, as happened here, the contract becomes of doubtful value, it would necessarily be arbitrary and beyond the scope and intent of the income tax law to visit upon the taxpayer an assessment for that which in fact never was and may never b.e income.
We are of the opinion that the initial assessment is not involved in this appeal, and have confined our consideration of matters entirely to the validity of the additional assessment based on treating the entire profit as income of 1929.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, with directions to vacate the additional assessment.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on March 7, 1933.