The question presented by this appeal is whether the Commissioner properly included in the petitioner’s gross income for 1929 certain discounts received in that year which had been reported as accrued income for the year 1928 and were used in computing the 1928 tax. From the stipulated facts it appears that in conducting its business‘as a trust company the petitioner, among other things, discounts commercial paper. Up to and including 1928 the petitioner used a method of accounting which was a combina-tion of the cash receipts and disbursements method and the accrual method; that is, some items of income or expense were recorded when received or disbursed, -while others were recorded when earned or - incurred irrespective of the date of payment. Discounts were treated as income at the time loans were made, whether payment of such discounts was made then or later. . The' petitioner’s income' tax returns for 1928. add prior years were,made in accordance-with the method of accounting above described, and were accepted,and closed by the Commissioner ' without objection thereto. The original return for 1929 was made on the same basis as the returns for former years, but subsequently an amended return for 1929 was filed on the cash receipts and disbursements basis. This, was done without having obtained the prior consent of the Commissioner, but he audited the return for 1929 on the basis of cash receipts and disbursements. In its amended return the petitioner reported all discounts actually received in 1929, regardless of the time as of which they accrued, and this resulted in including discounts of $146,133.33 which had accrued in 1928 and had been reported in the return for that year. In other words, this sum was included as income in both years and has been twice taxed. This duplication was called to the Commissioner’s attention by a claim for refund, but the claim was rejected and a deficiency for 1929 was determined based on other adjustments which are not here involved. The petitioner claims an overpayment of some $16,500. A closing agreement under section 606 (a, b) of the Revenue Act of 1928 (26 USCA § 2606 (a, b) has been entered into, precluding the petitioner from claiming any refund on account of the 1928 tax.
The petitioner contends that this is a case where the change from one proper basis of reporting income to another proper basis has resulted in a duplication of items in successive years, and that the Commissioner has, and should exercise, discretionary power to eliminate such duplication. .The respondent, on the other hand, contends that this is merely a case where the taxpayer is seeking to correct an error in the 1928 tax, which arose from the use of an improper and “hybrid” system of accounting, by the exclusion of income from the year 1929, in which year it is properly taxable.
If we were faced with a case in which a taxpayer on an accrual basis for an earlier year was forced to duplicate items of income for the ensuing year when he went upon a cash basis, we should find the petitioner’s argument very persuasive. It is unlikely that Congress intended that a change in the taxpayer’s method of bookkeeping should result in double taxation, and it may well be that section 42 of the Revenue Act of 1928 (45 Stat; 805, 26 USCA § 2042) and article 322 of Regulations 74 should be construed to give the Commissioner power to eliminate the duplication of items under ■such circumstances. See National Bank of
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South Carolina v. Lucas, 59 App. D. C. 157,
The petitioner kept its books for the year 1928 on an amorphous basis. Its counsel suggests that the items recorded on the cash basis may have been few, but the record does not bear this out. “Some items of income or expense” were recorded on the cash basis, while “others” were recorded on the accrual basis. For all that appears, the method of accounting may have been a hotchpot of cash and accrual items. Taken literally, section 41 (26 USCA § 2041) seems to recognize any “method of accounting regularly employed in keeping the books” of the taxpayer, provided that it should “clearly reflect the income.” See Morris-Poston Coal Co. v. Com’r,
“Art. 322. Bases of Computation. — Approved standard methods of accounting will ordinarily be regarded as clearly reflecting income. A method of accounting will not, however, be regarded as clearly reflecting income unless all items of gross income and all deductions are treated with reasonable consistency.”
This is a proper and valid regulation. When section 41 speaks of “the method of accounting,” it cannot mean to include a merely haphazard division between cash and accrual bases. Compare United States v. Mitchell,
It is urged that the Commissioner’s acceptance of the returns for 1928 and prior years is a recognition that the method used in those years was proper, but no estoppel can arise against the Commissioner from his acceptance of the return. In Niles Bement Pond Co. v. United States,
The order is affirmed.
