This appeal raises the question of a taxpayer’s power to have his income tax for the year 1929 computed by the use of inventories under section 22 (c) of the Revenue Act of 1928 (26 USCA § 2022 (c). He was a stockbroker in New York City, associated with, but not a member of, a firm, some of whose orders he executed on the floor of the exchange; but he also did business upon his own account, buying and selling for himself on margin. He was, as we understand it, what is commonly known as a “floor trader,” and he had no personal customers. In making his return he claimed the right to compute his income by subtracting from the sum of his inventory at the beginning of the year plus his purchases during the year, the sum of his inventory at the end of the year, plus his sales during the year. This both the commissioner and the Board refused to allow, and the taxpayer appealed.
Section 22 (c) of 1928 leaves altogether to the discretion of the commissioner the question of when inventories may be used, and the regulations promulgated under it have the force of law. Finance & Guaranty Co. v. Commissioner,
The uncertainty arises from the fact that not' only must a “merchant” sell to customers, but he must have “an established place of business.” We should have therefore expected the last sentence, which was redundant anyway, to read: “Taxpayers, who buy and sell or hold securities for investment or speculation,
or
not in the course of an established business.” “And,” in place of “or,” suggests that those who buy and sell or hold in the course of an established business might be “dealers.” But though this may throw a faint shadow across the earlier words, it cannot obscure them. A “floor trader” would indeed be quite naturally described as “a dealer in securities,” but nobody would think of calling him a “merchant” with “customers.” The intent is clear at the outset, and it is much more reasonable to substitute the disjunctive than to seize on such a fragile inference to make the whole article equivocal, if not incomprehensible. Our own decision in Harriman National Bank v. Commissioner,
One other question remains. Seeley had always made up his returns upon the same theory, beginning in 1924, and the commissioner had always passed them. He argues that this acquiescence should control the year 1929. We do not understand that this is put forward as more than a makeweight in interpretation; as such, it is certainly not enough. Whatever the commissioner may have thought before, the article is much too clear for us to yield to his construction of it. So far as the argument asserts that, having passed the earlier returns, the commissioner in some way disabled himself from later correcting his error, it is so plainly unsound as to need no discussion. Sweets Co. v. Commissioner,
Order affirmed.
