Petitioner Resale Mobile Homes, Inc., appeals a decision of the Tax Court affirming the Commissioner of Internal Revenue’s determination of deficiencies in petitioner’s federal income tax returns for the years 1978-1981. The Tax Court, in its opinion reported as
Resale Mobile Homes, Inc.,
I
The Tax Court carefully and accurately outlined the facts of this case,
see
In all relevant years petitioner was in the business of selling mobile homes. Typically, when a purchaser bought one of petitioner’s mobile homes on credit, petitioner immediately sold the retail sales contract (consumer paper) to one of two finance companies, Midland Federal Savings & Loan Association of Denver (Midland) or Advance Mortgage Co. (Advance) (collectively “finance companies”). As consideration petitioner received from the finance companies the principal or face amount stated in the consumer paper plus the right to receive a portion of the interest rate charged to the purchaser (participation interest).
Also under petitioner’s arrangements with the finance companies before 1975, the participation interest was credited to reserve accounts on the finance companies’ books at the time these companies acquired the consumer paper from petitioner. 1 Amounts in these reserve accounts were held back by the finance companies as collateral for certain warranties, and when the reserve accounts reached specified levels payments were made to petitioner. If customers defaulted or prepaid on the consumer paper, and therefore did not pay the full amount of the interest specified in the paper, the finance companies calculated petitioner’s unearned participation interest and deducted that amount from the reserve accounts. Id. at 1088. Petitioner would then claim a tax deduction for the participation interest, which it had previously reported, in the year of the default or prepayment. Id.
In 1975, responding to a change in Colorado law making interest amounts in the event of early or late payments more difficult to forecast precisely in any given contract,
2
petitioner and the finance companies changed their agreements. Under the new Midland agreement Midland did not keep a reserve account, although it had the option of doing so.
3
Instead of a reserve account,
*821
the interest due petitioner was calculated after the obligor on the consumer paper made the monthly payment and it was then sent to petitioner.
Id.
at 1090. Although the new Advance agreement contemplated that Advance would continue to maintain a reserve account, petitioner asserts Advance never maintained one. We need not resolve this factual dispute; it was not determinative of the Tax Court’s opinion,
see
II
A
The Tax Court’s conclusions of law are reviewed de novo by this court, while the Tax Court’s findings of fact are reviewed under a clearly erroneous standard.
Love Box Co., Inc. v. Commissioner,
In this area of the tax law, however, the Commissioner is granted by statute “broad powers in determining whether accounting
*822
methods used by a taxpayer clearly reflect income,” and the Commissioner “may require that ‘computation shall be made in accordance with such method as in [his] opinion ... does clearly reflect the income.’ ”
Commissioner v. Hansen,
Petitioner at all relevant times was an accrual basis taxpayer.
See
I.R.C. § 446(c)(2). The key to the accrual method of accounting is the well recognized “all events” test. “Generally, under an accrual method, income is to be included for the taxable year when all the events have occurred which fix the right to receive such income and the amount thereof can be determined with reasonable accuracy.” Treas.Reg. § 1.446—l(c)(ii);
accord
Treas. Reg. § 1.451-l(a). Under this two-part analysis, income is accrued and must be reported when (1) the taxpayer has a fixed right to receive the income, and (2) the income can be determined with reasonable accuracy.
See Kent Homes, Inc. v. United States,
B
The law is firmly established that under the accrual method the right to receive income, not actual receipt of income, is controlling.
E.g., Spring City Foundry Co. v. Commissioner,
The Tax Court found that petitioner “acquired a fixed right to receive the participation interest when it sold the consumer paper to finance companies. While petitioner could not compel finance companies to immediately pay over the participation interest, such is not the key to the accrual of income.”
Although petitioner previously reported participation interest as accrued income in the year the consumer paper was sold to finance companies, it now argues that under the new agreements with the finance companies Hansen and its progeny are not controlling. Petitioner asserts that no money is paid into reserve accounts, and that petitioner has no fixed right to receive the participation interest until the mobile *823 home purchasers make their required monthly payments on the consumer paper. According to petitioner, a purchaser’s monthly payment is a condition precedent to any obligation to pay petitioner participation interest.
As to the issue of reserve accounts we agree with the Tax Court; whether the finance companies maintained reserve accounts under the new agreements is of no moment. The Tax Court reasoned as follows:
The finance companies intended to share the interest paid by the mobile home purchasers with petitioner; however, they obviously were unwilling to share interest which they did not receive due to the purchaser’s default or prepayment. Economically, holding back payment to petitioner until such time as participation interest was received by the finance company served the same purpose as the creation of a reserve account.
Furthermore, the 1975 contracts between petitioner and the finance companies gave the finance companies the option of establishing dealer reserve accounts. See supra notes 3-4. The option in the Midland agreement and the practice with Advance are evidence that operation without reserve accounts was in substance no different from operating with reserve accounts from petitioner’s point of view. The internal procedures of the finance companies cannot determine how petitioner should report its taxable income.
In support of its argument that it had no fixed right to receive the participation interest until the mobile home purchasers made their monthly interest payments, petitioner relies upon
United States v. General Dynamics Corp.,
We agree with the Tax Court that petitioner’s right to receive participation interest was firmly established upon sale of the consumer paper to a finance company. The finance company was legally obligated to pay the participation interest to petitioner when it bought the consumer paper. Although duty of the finance company to make payment was deferred until it received payment from the purchasers, both the mobile home purchasers and the finance companies were obligated to make their respective payments. Petitioner was not required to take any additional action in order to receive the participation interest.
Although the exact amounts that petitioner would eventually receive varied based upon time of payment, prepayments and defaults, similar contingencies existed under
Hansen. See Hansen,
The language of the 1975 agreement with Midland may be characterized as technically creating a condition precedent, but in substance it is no different from the prior agreements with reserve accounts; petitioner still will receive participation interest less any amount of interest not actually paid due to prepayment or default. That the participation interest is to be paid petitioner when interest is paid to the finance company in reality is an issue of timing and does not make the payment of participation interest less certain or genuinely conditional. Artful drafting cannot defeat the “all events” test. A simple word change without a change in substance cannot alter the income reporting requirements.
See Hansen,
C
Next, we must consider the Tax Court’s finding that the amount of income petitioner would receive from the participation interest could be determined with reasonable accuracy. The Tax Court found that “both the amount of interest to be earned on each individual contract of new consumer paper and the participation interest could be reasonably estimated by using an amortization schedule which assumed that all required payments would be made every 30 days.”
Ill
Finally, the Tax Court determined that petitioner improperly received a $9,302 tax refund for the 1980 tax year and found that the Commissioner was “entitled to the asserted $9,302 increase in deficiency for such year.”
In the Rule 155 computation of petitioner’s tax deficiency, adopted by the Tax Court in its final decision of July 20, 1990, the carry-back of net operating loss claimed in petitioner’s amended tax return, I R. doc. 9, ex. A, was considered and in fact resulted in a decreased tax deficiency. It is unclear to us what petitioner complains of and what relief it seeks. If petitioner is arguing that we should not consider the information contained in the amend *825 ed tax return, which the Commissioner relied upon in its amended answer, we would be required to increase petitioner’s deficiency back to the original $156,858 claimed in the notice of deficiency, see I R. doc. 2, ex. A, and original answer, see I R. doe. 4, ¶ 2 & ex. A, instead of the $147,503 approved by the Tax Court in its decision. See I R. doc. 25; see also I R. doc. 20 at 3-4 (showing Commissioner’s computations arriving at $147,503 amount). If petitioner is asking that we reject all the new allegations found in the amended answer, again we would be left with the original tax liability of $156,858. Petitioner surely would not have us increase the tax liability against it.
Petitioner argues in its reply brief in a footnote that “[although not material, the refund, in fact, has not been paid.” Reply Brief for Appellant at 10 n.*. If petitioner has not received the tax refund amount, it should have raised the issue, at the latest, by objecting to the Rule 155 computation as inaccurate instead of filing a Notice of No Objection. See I R. doc. 24.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Midland retained the whole amount of participation interest in the reserve account; Advance retained 50% of the participation interest in the reserve account and paid the other 50% to petitioner.
. Colo.Rev.Stat. § 5-2-210 was amended in 1975 to prohibit the use of the "Rule of 78’s" as a method for calculating the balance due on consumer paper in event of prepayment. Instead, the amended statute required use of simple interest in such calculations.
. The relevant provisions of the 1975 contract with Midland provides:
4.Midland’s compensation to Dealer shall be as follows: the difference between Midland’s buy rate and the Annual Percentage Rate charged the purchaser shall be called the "Dealer Participation Rate.”
b. On all consumer paper discounted by Midland on or after October 28, 1975, Midland shall pay Dealer monthly as follows; upon Midland's receipt of monthly payments from purchasers. Midland shall pay to Dealer an amount equivalent to a percentage of the simple interest earned on that consumer paper purchased from Dealer on which payments have been received. Such amount shall be computed according to the formula set forth in the form attached and labeled Exhibit B. This amount shall be the difference between Midland’s buy rate and the rate charged purchaser. Midland’s buy rate shall be indicated in the approval summary for each individual transaction. Dealer shall from time to time be furnished guidelines for *821 Midland's buy rates; the rate on any individual transaction shall be determined by Midland.
c. At its option, Midland may require Dealer to maintain a Dealer Reserve Account ... on all paper discounted on or after October 28, 1975. Should Midland exercise this option, paragraph 4(b) as set forth herein shall be inapplicable to Dealer so long as such Dealer Reserve Account shall be maintained.
Ill R. ex. 17-Q, ¶ 4 (emphasis added).
. One of petitioner’s employees testified that there was no holdback by Advance. II R. 77-78. Petitioner apparently equates "holdback” in context to mean reserve account. The clear language of the agreement, on the other hand, clearly anticipates a reserve account. The agreement states:
Dealer is engaged in the business of selling mobile homes at retail and, in the ordinary course of Dealer’s business, originates Retail Installment Sales Contracts ("Contracts") executed by customers of Dealer ("Buyers”) to finance the purchase at retail of mobile homes from Dealer. Dealer wishes to sell such Contracts to Advance, and Advance is willing to purchase such Contracts, on the following terms and conditions;
4. Advance shall retain on deposit and under Advance's sole control, a Dealer Reserve account to which shall be credited an amount to be determined by computing the "Reserve Rate” which is the difference between the interest rate charged by the Dealer on the contract and the existing corporate retention rate charged by Advance. The "Reserve Rate” (not to exceed 2%) shall then be multiplied by the term of the contract (not to exceed 10 years). The resulting percentage shall be applied to the unpaid cash price plus insurance charges and other fees. The resulting "Base Reserve Amount” shall be the total amount of money credited to the Dealer Reserve account for that particular contract and shall be paid to the Dealer only "as earned" during the entire term of the contract. The amounts retained in the reserve account need not be segregated or kept in a separate fund, and no interest shall be payable thereon. Dealer shall have no right to sell, assign, transfer, or convey Dealer’s interest in the reserve account or any part thereof. The Dealer Reserve is established as security for: (a) the performance of all of Dealer’s obligations hereunder; (b) the performance of all of Dealer’s obligations under all Contracts purchased by Advance; (c) the payment of any other indebtedness owed by Dealer to Advance; and (d) the payment of prepayment rebates to Buyers.
Ill R. ex. 18-R.
. Section 446(b) is the successor to the § 41 quoted in Hansen.
. We believe the Tax Court’s language merely recognized that, based upon its holding that petitioner had a tax deficiency for 1980, any refund was erroneous and must be considered in the final tax liability calculation.
