Petitioners, who operated dance studios, kept their books and
made their income tax returns on a fiscal year accrual basis. They
obtained from students contracts for dancing lessons over periods
of years, to be paid for partly in cash and partly in installments,
sometimes represented by negotiable notes which were discounted at
banks. For the years 1952, 1953 and 1954, they reported as gross
income only that portion of the advance payments received in cash
and the amounts of notes and contracts executed during the
respective years which corresponded with the number of hours
taught. The balance was reserved for accrual in future years when
additional lessons were taught, waived or forfeited.
Held: it was proper for the Commissioner, in the
exercise of his discretion under § 41 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1939 and § 446(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1954, to reject petitioners' accounting system as not clearly
reflecting income, and to include as income in a particular year
advance payments by way of cash, negotiable notes and contract
installments falling due but remaining unpaid during that year.
America Automobile Association v. United States,
367 U. S. 687. Pp.
372 U. S.
129-137.
296 F.2d 721 affirmed in part, reversed in part, and
remanded.
Page 372 U. S. 129
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is still another chapter in the protracted problem of the
time certain items are to be recognized as income for the purposes
of the federal income tax. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue
increased the 1952, 1953, and 1954 ordinary income of the taxpayers
[
Footnote 1] by including in
gross income for those years amounts received or receivable under
contracts executed during those years despite the fact that the
contracts obligated taxpayers to render performance in subsequent
periods. These increases produced tax deficiencies which the
taxpayers unsuccessfully challenged in the Tax Court on the ground
that the amounts could be deferred under their accounting method.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit agreed with
the taxpayers and reversed the Tax Court, 283 F.2d 234, the
decision having been rendered prior to ours in
American
Automobile Ass'n v. United States, 367 U.
S. 687. Following the
American Automobile
Association case, certiorari in this case was granted, the
judgment of the lower court vacated,
367 U.
S. 911, and the cause remanded for further consideration
in light of
American Automobile Association. 368 U.S. 873.
In a per curiam opinion, the Court of Appeals held that, in view of
American Automobile Association, the taxpayers' accounting
method "does not, for income tax purposes, clearly reflect income,"
and affirmed the judgment for the
Page 372 U. S. 130
Commissioner, 296 F.2d 721. We brought the case back once again
to consider whether the lower court misapprehended the scope of
American Automobile Association, 370 U.S. 902.
Taxpayers, husband and wife, formed a partnership to operate
ballroom dancing studios (collectively referred to as "studio")
pursuant to Arthur Murray, Inc., franchise agreements. Dancing
lessons were offered under either of two basic contracts. The cash
plan contract required the student to pay the entire downpayment in
cash at the time the contract was executed with the balance due in
installments thereafter. The deferred payment contract required
only a portion of the downpayment to be paid in cash. The remainder
of the downpayment was due in stated installments, and the balance
of the contract price was to be paid as designated in a negotiable
note signed at the time the contract was executed.
Both types of contracts provided that (1) the student should pay
tuition for lessons in a certain amount, (2) the student should not
be relieved of his obligation to pay the tuition, (3) no refunds
would be made, and (4) the contract was noncancelable. [
Footnote 2] The contracts prescribed a
specific number of lesson hours ranging from five to 1,200 hours,
and some contracts provided lifetime courses entitling the student
additionally to two hours of lessons per month plus two parties a
year for life. Although the contracts designated the period during
which the lessons had to be taken, there was no schedule of
specific dates, which were arranged from time to time as lessons
were given.
Page 372 U. S. 131
Cash payments received directly from students and amounts
received when the negotiable notes were discounted at the bank or
fully paid [
Footnote 3] were
deposited in the studio's general bank account without segregation
from its other funds. The franchise agreements required the studio
to pay to Arthur Murray, Inc., on a weekly basis, 10% of these cash
receipts as royalty and 5% of the receipts in escrow, the latter to
continue until a $20,000 indemnity fund was accumulated. Similarly,
sales commissions for lessons sold were paid at the time the sales
receipts were deposited in the studio's general bank account.
The studio, since its inception in 1946, has kept its books and
reported income for tax purposes [
Footnote 4] on an accrual system of accounting. In
addition to the books, individual student record cards were
maintained showing the number of hours taught and the number still
remaining under the contract. The system, in substance, operated as
follows. When a contract was entered into, a "deferred income"
account was credited for the total contract price. At the close of
each fiscal period, the student record cards were analyzed and the
total number of taught hours was multiplied by the designated rate
per hour of each contract. The resulting sum was deducted from the
deferred income account and reported as earned income
Page 372 U. S. 132
on the financial statements and the income tax return. In
addition, if there had been no activity in a contract for over a
year, or if a course were reduced in amount, an entry would be made
canceling the untaught portion of the contract, removing that
amount from the deferred income account, and recognizing gain to
the extent that the deferred income exceeded the balance due on the
contract,
i.e., the amounts received in advance. The
amounts representing lessons taught and the gains from
cancellations constituted the chief sources of the partnership's
gross income. [
Footnote 5] The
balance of the deferred income account would be carried forward
into the next fiscal year, to be increased or decreased in
accordance with the number of new contracts, lessons taught and
cancellations recognized.
Deductions were also reported on the accrual basis, except that
the royalty payments and the sales commissions were deducted when
paid, irrespective of the period in which the related receipts were
taken into income. Three certified public accountants testified
that, in their opinion, the accounting system employed truly
reflected net income in accordance with commercial accrual
accounting standards.
The Commissioner included in gross income for the years in
question not only advance payments received in
Page 372 U. S. 133
cash, but the full face amounts of notes and contracts executed
during the respective years. The Tax Court and the Court of Appeals
upheld the Commissioner, but the United States in this Court has
retreated somewhat, and does not now claim the includability in
gross income of future payments which were not evidenced by a note
and which were neither due by the terms of the contract nor matured
by performance of the related services. [
Footnote 6] The question remaining for decision, then,
is this: was it proper for the Commissioner, exercising his
discretion under § 41, [
Footnote 7] 1939 Code, and § 446(b), [
Footnote 8] 1954 Code,
Page 372 U. S. 134
to reject the studio's accounting system as not clearly
reflecting income, and to include as income in a particular year
advance payments by way of cash, negotiable notes, and contract
installments falling due but remaining unpaid during that year? We
hold that it was, since we believe the problem is squarely
controlled by
American Automobile Association,
367 U. S. 687.
The court there had occasion to consider the entire legislative
background of the treatment of prepaid income. The retroactive
repeal of § 452 of the 1954 Code, "the only law incontestably
permitting the practice upon which [the taxpayer] depends," was
regarded as reinstating longstanding administrative and lower court
rulings that accounting systems deferring prepaid income could be
rejected by the Commissioner.
"[T]he fact is that § 452, for the first time, specifically
declared petitioner's system of accounting to be acceptable for
income tax purposes, and overruled the longstanding position of the
Commissioner and courts to the contrary. And the repeal of the
section the following year, upon insistence by the Treasury that
the proposed endorsement of such tax accounting would have a
disastrous impact on the Government's revenue, was just as clearly
a mandate from the Congress that petitioner's system was not
acceptable for tax purposes."
367 U.S. at
367 U. S.
695.
Page 372 U. S. 135
Confirming that view was the step-by-step approach of Congress
in granting the deferral privilege to only limited groups of
taxpayers while exploring more deeply the ramifications of the
entire problem.
Plainly, the considerations expressed in
American Automobile
Association are apposite here. We need only add here that,
since the American Automobile Association decision, a specific
provision extending the deferral practice to certain membership
corporations was enacted, § 456, 1954 Code, added by § 1,
Act of July 26, 1961, 75 Stat. 222, continuing at least so far the
congressional policy of treating this problem by precise provisions
of narrow applicability. Consequently, as in the
American
Automobile Association case, we invoke the "long established
policy of the Court in deferring, where possible, to congressional
procedures in the tax field," and, as in that case, we cannot say
that the Commissioner's rejection of the studio's deferral system
was unsound.
The
American Automobile Association case rested upon an
additional ground which is also controlling here. Relying upon
Automobile Club of Michigan v. Commissioner, 353 U.
S. 180, the Court rejected the taxpayer's system as
artificial, since the advance payments related to services which
were to be performed only upon customers' demands, without relation
to fixed dates in the future. The system employed here suffers from
that very same vice, for the studio sought to defer its cash
receipts on the basis of contracts which did not provide for
lessons on fixed dates after the taxable year, but left such dates
to be arranged from time to time by the instructor and his student.
Under the contracts, the student could arrange for some or all of
the additional lessons or could simply allow their rights under the
contracts to lapse. But even though the student did not demand the
remaining lessons, the contracts permitted the studio to insist
upon payment in accordance with the obligations undertaken, and to
retain
Page 372 U. S. 136
whatever prepayments were made without restriction as to use and
without obligation of refund. At the end of each period, while the
number of lessons taught had been meticulously reflected, the
studio was uncertain whether none, some, or all of the remaining
lessons would be rendered. Clearly, services were rendered solely
on demand in the fashion of the
American Automobile
Association and
Automobile Club of Michigan cases.
[
Footnote 9]
Moreover, percentage royalties and sales commissions for lessons
sold, which were paid as cash was received from students or from
its note transactions with the bank, were deducted in the year
paid, even though the related items of income had been deferred, at
least in part, to later periods. In view of all these
circumstances, we hold the studio's accrual system vulnerable under
§ 41 and § 446(b) with respect to its deferral of prepaid
income. Consequently, the Commissioner was fully justified in
including payments in cash or by negotiable note [
Footnote 10] in gross income for the year
in which such payments were received. If these payments are
includible in the year of receipt because their allocation to a
later year does not clearly reflect income, the contract
installments are likewise includible in gross income, as the United
States now
Page 372 U. S. 137
claims, in the year they become due and payable. For an accrual
basis taxpayer "it is the right to receive, and not the actual
receipt, that determines the inclusion of the amount in gross
income,"
Spring City Foundry Co. v. Commissioner,
292 U. S. 182,
292 U. S. 184;
Commissioner v. Hansen, 360 U. S. 446, and
here the right to receive these installments had become fixed at
least at the time they were due and payable.
We affirm the Court of Appeals insofar as that court held
includible the amounts representing cash receipts, notes received
and contract installments due and payable. Because of the
Commissioner's concession, we reverse that part of the judgment
which included amounts for which services had not yet been
performed and which were not due and payable during the respective
periods, and we remand the case with directions to return the case
to the Tax Court for a redetermination of the proper income tax
deficiencies now due in light of this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
The controversy turns upon the accounting method employed by a
partnership in which the taxpayers were equal partners. Since a
partnership is not a taxable entity, the partners being liable in
their individual capacities for their distributive share of
partnership income, § 181, Int.Rev.Code of 1939; § 701,
Int.Rev.Code of 1954, the proper statement of the partnership's
income affects only the tax liabilities of the partners
individually. However, as there is no other dispute in the case,
for convenience, the discussion will center upon the partnership's
accounting method without further mention of its effect upon the
respective tax liabilities of the partners.
[
Footnote 2]
Although the contracts stated they were noncancelable, the
studio frequently rewrote contracts reducing the number of lessons
for a smaller sum of money. Also, despite the fact that the
contracts provided that no refunds would be made, and despite the
fact that the studio discouraged refunds, occasionally a refund
would be made on a canceled contract.
[
Footnote 3]
Notes taken from the students were ordinarily transferred, with
full recourse, to a local bank which would deduct the interest
charges and credit the studio with approximately 50% of the face
amount. The remaining 50% was held in a reserve account,
unavailable to the studio, until the note was fully paid, at which
time the reserved amount was transferred to the studio's general
bank account.
[
Footnote 4]
Though the studio is not a taxable entity, it is still required
to prepare and file an information return showing,
inter
alia, items of gross income and allowable deductions. §
187, 1939 Code; § 6031, 1954 Code.
[
Footnote 5]
The following schedule reflects ordinary net income on the
studio's books and returns:
bwm:
Gross income:
Contract amounts trans- 1952 1953 1954
ferred to earned income $143,949.63 $243,277.46 $325,266.97
Gains from cancellation. . 26,861.40 19,483.36 28,488.61
Other income . . . . . . . 4,041.21 11,426.23 16,987.31
----------- ----------- -----------
Total. . . . . . . . . . 174,852.24 274,187.05 370,702.89
Deductions. . . . . . . . . . 137,267.91 223,390.69
301,609.76
=========== =========== ===========
Ordinary net income . . . . . 37,584.33 50,796.36 69,093.13
ewm:
[
Footnote 6]
"Upon reconsideration, however, we concede the error of accruing
future payments which are neither due as a matter of contract nor
matured by performance of the related services. Indeed, the
Studio's right to collect the installment on its due date depends
on its continuing ability and willingness to perform. Until that
time, its right to receive payment has not fully ripened."
Brief for the United States, p. 67.
[
Footnote 7]
"
SEC. 41. GENERAL RULE."
"The net income shall be computed upon the basis of the
taxpayer's annual accounting period (fiscal year or calendar year,
as the case may be) in accordance with the method of accounting
regularly employed in keeping the 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 income, 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."
[
Footnote 8]
"
§ 446. GENERAL RULE FOR METHODS OF
ACCOUNTING"
"(a) GENERAL RULE. -- Taxable income shall be computed under the
method of accounting on the basis of which the taxpayer regularly
computes his income in keeping his books."
"(b) EXCEPTIONS. -- If no method of accounting has been
regularly used by the taxpayer, or if the method used does not
clearly reflect income, the computation of taxable income shall be
made under such method as, in the opinion of the Secretary or his
delegate, does clearly reflect income."
"(c) PERMISSIBLE METHODS. -- Subject to the provisions of
subsections (a) and (b), a taxpayer may compute taxable income
under any of the following methods of accounting-"
"(1) the cash receipts and disbursements method;"
"(2) an accrual method;"
"(3) any other method permitted by this chapter; or"
"(4) any combination of the foregoing methods permitted under
regulations prescribed by the Secretary or his delegate."
[
Footnote 9]
The treatment of "gains from cancellations" underlines this
aspect of the case. These gains, representing amounts paid or
promised in advance of lessons given, were recognized in those
periods in which the taxpayers arbitrarily decided the contracts
were to be deemed canceled. The studio made no attempt to report
estimated cancellations in the year of receipt, choosing instead to
defer these gains to periods bearing no economic relationship to
the income recognized.
Cf. Continental Tie & Lumber Co. v.
United States, 286 U. S. 290.
[
Footnote 10]
Negotiable notes are regarded as the equivalent of cash
receipts, to the extent of their fair market value, for the
purposes of recognition of income. § 39.22(a)-4, Treas.Reg.
118, 1939 Code; § 1.61-2(d)(4), Treas.Reg., 1954 Code;
Mertens, Federal Income Taxation (1961), § 11.07.
See
Pinellas Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Commissioner,
287 U. S. 462.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN, and MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG join, dissenting.
As the Court notes, this case is but the most recent episode in
a protracted dispute concerning the proper income tax treatment of
amounts received as advances for services to be performed in a
subsequent year by a taxpayer who is on an accrual, rather than a
cash, basis. The Government has consistently argued that such
amounts are taxable in the year of receipt, relying upon two
alternative arguments: it has claimed that deferral of such
payments would violate the "annual accounting" principle which
requires that income not be postponed from one year to the next to
reflect the long-term economic result of a transaction.
Alternatively, the Government
Page 372 U. S. 138
has argued that advance payments must be reported as income in
the year of receipt under the "claim of right doctrine," which
requires otherwise reportable income, held under a claim of right
without restriction as to use, to be reported when received despite
the fact that the taxpayer's claim to the funds may be disputed.
[
Footnote 2/1]
As I have elsewhere pointed out, neither of these doctrines has
any relevance to the question whether any reportable income at all
has been derived when payments are received in advance of
performance by an accrual-basis taxpayer. [
Footnote 2/2] The most elementary principles of accrual
accounting require that advances be considered reportable income
only in the year they are earned by the taxpayer's rendition of the
services for which the payments were made. The Government's
theories would
Page 372 U. S. 139
force upon an accrual basis taxpayer a cash basis for advance
payments in disregard of the federal statute, which explicitly
authorizes income tax returns to be based upon sound accrual
accounting methods. [
Footnote
2/3]
Apparently the Court agrees that neither the annual accounting
requirement nor the claim of right doctrine has any relevance or
applicability to the question involved in this case. For the Court
does not base its decision on either theory, but rather, as in two
previous cases, [
Footnote 2/4] upon
the ground that the system of accrual accounting used by these
particular taxpayers does not "clearly reflect income" in accord
with the statutory command. [
Footnote
2/5] This result is said to be compelled both by a
consideration of legislative history and by an analysis of the
particular accounting system which these taxpayers employed.
For the reasons I have elsewhere stated at some length,
[
Footnote 2/6] to rely on the
repeal of §§ 452 and 462 as indicating congressional
Page 372 U. S. 140
disapproval of accrual accounting principles is conspicuously to
disregard clear evidence of legislative intent. The Secretary of
the Treasury, who proposed the repeal of these sections, made
explicitly clear that no inference of disapproval of accrual
accounting principles was to be drawn from the repeal of the
sections. [
Footnote 2/7] So did the
Senate Report. [
Footnote 2/8] The
repeal of these sections was occasioned solely by the fear of
temporary revenue losses which would result from the taking of
"double deductions" during the year of transition by taxpayers who
had not previously maintained their books on an accrual basis.
[
Footnote 2/9]
The Court's decision can be justified, then, only upon the basis
that the system of accrual accounting used by the taxpayers in this
case did not "clearly reflect income" in accordance with the
command of § 41. In the
Automobile Club of Michigan
case, [
Footnote 2/10] the
taxpayer allocated yearly dues ratably over 12 months, so that only
a portion of the dues received during any fiscal year was reported
as income for that year. In the absence of any proof that services
demanded by the Automobile Club members were distributed in the
same proportion over the year, the Court held that the system used
by the taxpayer did not clearly reflect income. In the
American
Automobile Association case, [
Footnote 2/11] the taxpayer offered statistical proof
to show that its proration of dues reasonably matched the
proportion of its yearly costs incurred each month in rendering
services attributable to those dues. The Court discounted the
validity of this statistical evidence because
Page 372 U. S. 141
the amount and timing of the services demanded were wholly
within the control of the individual members of the Association,
and the Court thought that the Association could not, therefore,
estimate with accuracy the costs attributable to each individual
member's demands.
In the present case, the difficulties which the Court perceived
in
Automobile Club of Michigan and
American Automobile
Association have been entirely eliminated in the accounting
system which these taxpayers have consistently employed. The
records kept on individual students accurately measured the amount
of services rendered -- and therefore the costs incurred by the
taxpayer -- under each individual contract during each taxable
year. But, we are told, there is a fatal flaw in the taxpayers'
accounts in this case too: the individual contracts did not provide
"for lessons on fixed dates . . . , but left such dates to be
arranged from time to time by the instructor and his student." Yet
this "fixed date of performance" standard, it turns out, actually
has nothing whatever to do with those aspects of the taxpayers'
accounting system which the Court ultimately finds
objectionable.
There is nothing in the Court's opinion to indicate disapproval
of the basic method by which income earned by the rendition of
services was recorded. On the contrary, the taxpayers' system was
admittedly wholly accurate in recording lessons given under each
individual contract. It was only in connection with lessons which
had not yet been taught that the taxpayers were "uncertain whether
none, some, or all" of the contractual services would be rendered,
and the condemned "arbitrariness" therefore is limited solely to
the method by which cancellations were recognized. [
Footnote 2/12] It is, of course, true of
all businesses in
Page 372 U. S. 142
which services are not rendered simultaneously with payment that
the number and amount of cancellations are necessarily unknown at
the time advances are received. But surely it cannot be contended
that a contract which specified the times at which lessons were to
be given would make any more certain how many of the remaining
lessons students would in fact demand. Indeed, the Court does not
suggest that a schedule fixing the dates of all future lessons
would, if embodied in each contract, suffice to make petitioners'
accounting system "clearly reflect income."
Instead, the cure suggested by the Court for the defect which it
finds in the accounting system used by these taxpayers is that
estimated cancellations should be reported as income in the year
advance payments are received. I agree that such estimates might
more "clearly reflect income" than the system actually used by the
taxpayers. But any such estimates would necessarily have to be
based on precisely the type of statistical evaluations which the
Court struck down in the
American Automobile Association
case. Whatever other artificialities the exigencies of revenue
collection may require in the field of tax accounting, it has never
before today been suggested that a consistent method of accrual
accounting, valid for purposes of recognizing income, is not
equally valid for purposes of deferring income. Yet, in this case,
the Court says that the taxpayers, in recognizing income, should
have used the very system of statistical estimates which,
Page 372 U. S. 143
for income deferral purposes, the
American Automobile
decision held impermissible.
It seems to me that this decision, the third of a trilogy of
cases purportedly decided on their own peculiar facts, in truth
completes the mutilation of a basic element of the accrual method
of reporting income -- a method which has been explicitly approved
by Congress for almost half a century. [
Footnote 2/13]
I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The Commissioner has sometimes been successful in urging the
"claim of right doctrine" as a bar to the deferral of advances by
accrual basis taxpayers.
See e.g., Andrews v.
Commissioner, 23 T.C. 1026, 1032-1033;
South Dade Farms v.
Commissioner, 138 F.2d 818 (C.A.5th Cir.);
Clay Sewer Pipe
Ass'n v. Commissioner, 139 F.2d 130 (C.A.3d Cir.);
Automobile Club of Michigan v. Commissioner, 230 F.2d 585,
591 (C.A.6th Cir.),
aff'd on other grounds, 353 U. S. 353 U.S.
180.
In more recent cases, on the other hand, the Courts of Appeals
have held the claim of right doctrine irrelevant to this problem.
Bressner Radio, Inc. v. Commissioner, 267 F.2d 520, 524,
525-528 (C.A.2d Cir.);
Schuessler v. Commissioner, 230
F.2d 722, 725 (C.A.5th Cir.);
Beacon Publishing Co. v.
Commissioner, 218 F.2d 697, 699-701 (C.A.10th Cir.).
In the present case, the Commissioner urged that the "claim of
right doctrine" was applicable even to advance fees which were due
under the contract but not yet paid, a position from which he
receded only when the case reached this Court. The Tax Court, at
least in one case, has accepted the argument.
Your Health Club,
Inc. v. Commissioner, 4 T.C. 385.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See American Automobile Ass'n v. United States,
367 U. S. 687 at
367 U. S.
699-702 (dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 2/3]
"
§ 446. GENERAL RULE FOR METHODS OF
ACCOUNTING"
"(a) GENERAL RULE. -- Taxable income shall be computed under the
method of accounting on the basis of which the taxpayer regularly
computes his income in keeping his books."
"(b) EXCEPTIONS. -- If no method of accounting has been
regularly used by the taxpayer, or if the method used does not
clearly reflect income, the computation of taxable income shall be
made under such method as, in the opinion of the Secretary or his
delegate, does clearly reflect income."
"(c) PERMISSIBLE METHODS. -- Subject to the provisions of
subsections (a) and (b), a taxpayer may compute taxable income
under any of the following methods of accounting --"
"
* * * *"
"(2) an accrual method; . . . ."
[
Footnote 2/4]
Automobile Club of Michigan v. Commissioner,
353 U. S. 180, and
American Automobile Ass'n v. United States, 367 U.
S. 687.
[
Footnote 2/5]
See 372
U.S. 128fn2/3|>note 3,
supra. See also
§ 41, 1939 Code.
[
Footnote 2/6]
See American Automobile Ass'n v. United States, 367
U.S. at
367 U. S.
703-711 (dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 2/7]
H.R.Rep.No.293, 84th Cong., 1st Sess. 5.
[
Footnote 2/8]
S.Rep.No.372, 84th Cong., 1st Sess. 5-6.
See also
H.R.Rep.No.293, 84th Cong., 1st Sess. 4-5.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Since the taxpayers in the present case have consistently
maintained their books on an accrual basis, they could not have
taken advantage of a "double deduction" even under the repealed
sections.
[
Footnote 2/10]
353 U. S. 353 U.S.
180.
[
Footnote 2/11]
367 U. S. 367 U.S.
687.
[
Footnote 2/12]
The Court also urges that the taxpayers' treatment of the
commissions paid to sales personnel and royalties paid to Arthur
Murray, Inc., were inconsistent with an accrual accounting system.
It should be noted that § 1.461-1(a)(3), Treas.Reg., 1954
Code, specifically provides:
". . . However, in a going business, there are certain
overlapping deductions. If these overlapping items do not
materially distort income, they may be included in the years in
which the taxpayer consistently takes them into account."
If, however, the Court is holding that these items do
"materially distort income," then the case should be remanded for
recomputation as to these items.
[
Footnote 2/13]
See § 13(d) of the Revenue Act of 1916, 39 Stat.
771.