Thеse cases are before us upon petitions to review a decision of the Tax Court,
On September 20, 1942, Oklahoma Standard was in the process of completing threе construction contracts entered into as coadventures with other construction companies and which will be referred to as Gruber, Dalhart and Memorial Boulevard projects. On this date, Oklahomа *332 Standard, in a tax free reorganization, transferred all its assets subject to its liabilities to the parent company which, on that date, changed its name to the Standard Paving Company and will be referred to herein as Delaware Standard. All the stock of Oklahoma Standard was surrendered and cancelled and the corporation dissolved. Delaware Standard completed the contracts.
Prior to the reorganization, Oklahoma Standard had received substantial progress payments from the three projects. 1 The contracts were not fully completed and final payment was not made until some time later. Except for the Memorial Boulevard contract, which is now claimed to have been a mistake, Oklahoma Standard in its 1942 return reported no income from any of these contracts, while Delаware Standard reported the entire profit from the same for the year in which the contracts were completed. In his deficiency notice, the Commissioner accepted the company’s determination of the profit made on these three projects and computed the percentage of the completion as of the date of the reorganization. He then allocated that percentage of the total profit on the contracts to the income of Oklahoma Standard for the year 1942. It is acknowledged that the taxpayers in determining their income might use the completed contract method which prompts the theory of the taxpayers that Oklahoma Standard had no income on the date of the reorganization and that to permit such an allocation would create a tax in a tax free reorganization under Sec. 112(b) (6) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 112. The Commissioner’s position is that in these cases the strict application of the completed contract method does not clearly reflect the income of Oklahoma Standard for the year 1942 and that he had the right under Secs. 41 and 42 of the Internal Revenue Code to use a method which would prоperly reflect that income. The right to do this is the primary question presented by these petitions.
Sec. 41 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.A.1946 Ed. § 41), provides that if the method of accounting regularly employed by thе taxpayer does not clearly reflect the income, the computation shall toe made in accordance with such method as, in the opinion of the Commissioner, does clearly reflect the income.
2
The statute gives the Commissioner broad discretion in adopting a method which he believes properly reflects the income of the taxpayer. Brown v. Helvering,
“A corporation being a separate legal entity, its net earnings, whether ascertained or not, belong to it, and the tax upon unexempt income in each taxable year is chargeablе to it, Sec. 13(b) Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Code, § 13(b), and this liability cannot be discharged by the simple expedient of dissolution and the turning over of all its assets, including current and unreported income, to its sole stoсkholder, even though such corporation receives no money consideration for the transfer of such income. It is the actuality of income rather than its disposition that is important in determining the tax сonsequence.”
The taxpayer also complains that the determination of income based upon a percentage of the collection of the total profit realized from the сontracts takes into consideration indefinite amounts to be derived from money retained under the contract such as liquidated damages, renegotiation, and change orders, which could not have bеen received by Oklahoma Standard at the date of reorganization. It is said that conceding Oklahoma Standard’s liability for the tax on earned income as of the date of reorganization, the only аccurate method of determining such income is to ascertain Oklahoma Standard’s income and deduct therefrom the accrued costs as of that date. This might be one way of computing the incomе but it is not the method selected by the Commissioner and we are of the view that the Commissioner’s method is simple and accurate. The Tax Court, after hearing the evidence, was of the opinion that the work оn the projects at the date of reorganization had reached a certain percent of completion. 3 In arriving at the tax liability the total net profit as computed by Delaware Standаrd on the completed contracts was multiplied by these percentages.
Petitioners further contend that if Oklahoma Standard did realize income as of September 20, 1942, then any operating losses sustаined by Delaware Standard can be carried back through the reorganization to Oklahoma Standard as a net operating loss deduction under Secs. 23 (s) and 122, 26 U.S.C.A. §§ 23, 122.
To entitle a taxpayer to deductions in income tax liability, it must bring itself clearly within the statutory provisions. White v. United States,
The decisions of the Tax Court are Affirmed.
Notes
. Gruber Project: Tbe joint venture had received $2,209,845.96; Dalhart Project: $256,735.16; Memorial Boulevard Project: $81,249.37.
. 26 U.S.C.A. § 41: “Tbe net income shall bе computed upon tbe basis of the taxpayer’s annual accounting period (fiscal year or calendar year, as tbe case may be) in accordance with tbe method of accоunting regularly employed in keeping tbe books of such taxpayer; but if no such method of accounting has been so employed, or if the method employed does not clearly reflect the incomе, the computation shall be made in accordance with such method as in the opinion of the Commissioner does clearly reflect the income. If the taxpayer’s annual accounting period is other than a fiscal year as defined in section 48 or if the taxpayer has no annual accounting period or does not keep books, the net income shall be computed on the basis of the calendar year.”
. Gruber Project, 91.34%, Dalhart Project, 76.66%, Memorial Boulevard Project, 98.67%.
These percentages were different from those used by the Commissioner in his determination but no change was made by the Tax Court in the method of accounting adopted by the Commissioner.
