This case requires us to interpret 26 U.S.C. § 404(a)(6), which concerns the timing of income tax deductions for contributions paid to multi-employer defined-benefit pension plans. Lucky Stores, Inc. (“Lucky”) appeals the judgment of the Tax Court upholding the Commissioner’s assessment of tax deficiencies. The Tax Court sustained the deficiencies because it concluded that Lucky had improperly deducted contributions to several defined-benefit pension plans that were paid after the end of the taxable year.
Lucky Stores, Inc. v. CIR,
I
Pursuant to various collective bargaining agreements, Lucky paid monthly contributions to several qualified multi-employer defined-benefit pension plans (“CBA plans”) on behalf of its unionized employees. CBA plan administrators pooled contributions from the participating employers into a single fund to provide benefits for covered employees, former employees, and their beneficiaries. The amount of Lucky’s required contributions varied from month to month, depending on fluctuations in the number of Lucky’s covered employees and the total hours or weeks of. service performed by those employees during each month.
II
In general, employers may deduct contributions to qualified pension plans in the taxable year during which the contribution is actually paid, regardless of whether the employer uses an accrual or a cash-basis method of accounting. See 26 U.S.C. § 404(a)(1); 26 C.F.R. § 1.404(a)-1(c). An exception to this rule provides that:
a taxpayer shall be deemed to have made a payment on the last day of the preceding taxable year if the payment is on account of such taxable year and is made not later than the time prescribed by law for filing the return for such taxable year (including extensions thereof).
26 U.S.C. § 404(a)(6).
Prior to 1986, Lucky deducted a total of twelve monthly contributions attributable to employee service during a particular taxable year from its taxable income for that same year. The twelfth payment was made after the end of the taxable year, but was attributed to the previous year as a payment “on account of’ that year pursuant to § 404(a)(6). Then, for its taxable year ending on February 2, 1986, Lucky changed its practice. Lucky obtained an extension of time and filed its timely return on or about October 15, 1986. On that return, it attributed to the taxable year ending February 2, 1986, not only the monthly payments made later in February to the various CBA plans, but also the payments made each month thereafter up to October 1986. It did so on its claim that it was making these payments “on account of’ the prior taxable year. Lucky thus sought to achieve a one-time benefit of the additional deductions of seven or eight months, added to the usual twelve.
3
The extra deductions totaled $36,661,529. It is
III
The plain meaning of § 404(a)(6) supports the Tax Court’s decision. The first payment that Lucky made after the end of the 1986 taxable year was clearly “on account of’ that year because the payment was required under the collective bargaining agreements for hours worked by covered employees during the final month of the taxable year. The following seven or eight payments were required to be paid because of work done during the taxable year ending in 1987, not the previous year. The bare language of the statute precludes the deduction of those payments on the 1986 return.
Lucky’s contention that it may deduct the additional payments in 1986 is based upon Revenue Ruling 76-28, which provides in pertinent part that, if the employer claims payments as deductions in the prior taxable year:
.[A] payment made after the close of an employer’s taxable year to which amended section 404(a)(6) applies shall be considered to be on account of the preceding taxable year if (a) the payment is treated by the plan in the same manner that the plan would treat a payment actually received on the last day of such preceding taxable year of the employer....
Rev. Rul. 76-28, 1976-
Where and how the money is deposited, however, reflects only one aspect of its treatment. In focusing solely on that factor, Lucky ignores the procedures that employers and administrators use to determine contribution amounts, as well as the process of accounting for contributions to ensure that employers keep pace with their obligations to the plans. The parties do not dispute the Tax Court’s findings that, under the terms of the relevant collective bargaining agreements, Lucky was required to make contributions to the CBA plans near the end of each month.
Lucky Stores, Inc.,
IV
Lucky asserts that the Tax Court abused its discretion in denying reconsideration. It does not support this contention with argument, and we reject it.
Lucky also contends that the Tax Court erred in rejecting its request to take judicial notice. We find no merit in the contention. The matter submitted by Lucky included non-noticeable material,
see
Fed.R.Evid. 201, and also included private letter rulings and technical advice memoranda upon which Lucky was not entitled to rely.
See
note 4, supra. The Tax Court considered and rejected Lucky’s written request; Lucky was not entitled to a formal hearing under Fed.R.Evid. 201.
See Allen v. Los Angeles,
V
The judgment of the Tax Court is, in all respects,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This case was argued along with
Airborne Freight Corp. v. United States,
.The benefit was one-time, of course, because in the future Lucky could not,, and did not, deduct payments for which a deduction had been claimed in an earlier year. Subsequent deductions were thus limited to twelve per taxable year.
. Although revenue rulings do not have the force of law, they "do constitute a body of experience and informed judgment to which courts may properly resort for guidance in the interpretation of relevant revenue statutes and regulations.”
Watts v. United States,
. Lucky relies on several private letter rulings and one technical advice memorandum of the Internal Revenue Service as establishing a prac
