Commissioner v. Asphalt Products Co.

*118Per Curiam.

Asphalt Products Co. (APC) manufactures emulsified asphalt, a paving material containing oil refining residues, principally for sale to Tennessee county governments for use in highway construction. For reasons related to the rise in oil prices attending the 1973 Arab oil embargo, APC’s 1974 year-end inventories and accounts receivable were substantially higher than in prior years. Because APC kept its books, and prepared its 1974 federal tax return, on a cash receipts and disbursements basis, its reported 1974 taxable income did not fully reflect these changes. APC’s 1974 return also claimed a deduction of $1,103.04 for the expense of transporting two trucks from their place of purchase in Seattle to Tennessee. The trucks were driven to Tennessee by way of California, where they picked up two trailer-mounted waste water treatment plants bought by APC’s shareholders in their individual capacities.

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined that, because of the increases in APC’s inventories and accounts receivable, the company’s traditional cash-basis bookkeeping did not “clearly reflect income,” 26 U. S. C. § 446(b), for the 1974 tax year, and APC was therefore required to compute its 1974 income on an accrual basis. The Commissioner also disallowed the deduction for the expense of transporting the trucks and trailers, on the ground that it was a personal expense of the shareholders. After several other adjustments, the Commissioner recomputed APC’s taxes to show a deficiency of $154,332.16.

The Commissioner further contended that APC’s use of the wrong accounting method and its deduction of the truck transportation expenses constituted negligence, and it added *119to the deficiency a penalty under 26 U. S. C. § 6653(a)(1), which then provided: “If any part of any underpayment. . . is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules or regulations (but without intent to defraud), there shall be added to the tax an amount equal to 5 percent of the underpayment.” (Section 6653 was amended in minor respects by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-514, § 1503, 100 Stat. 2742; unless otherwise indicated, all further references are to the pre-1986 statute.) The penalty totaled $7,716.61 — 5% of the full alleged underpayment of $154,332.16.

In the Tax Court, APC stipulated that the truck transportation expenses were not properly deductible, unsuccessfully contested the requirement that it use accrual accounting, and successfully contested certain other determinations, resulting in a recalculated deficiency of $133,248.69 — almost all of which was due to the change in accounting methods. The Tax Court concluded that APC’s use of cash-basis accounting was nonnegligent, but affirmed the Commissioner’s finding that APC had negligently deducted the truck transportation expenses. It thus added to APC’s tax a negligence penalty of $6,943.37, computed as before by reference to the full amount of the deficiency (adjusted for carryback credits, see 26 U. S. C. §§6211, 6653(c)(1)).

The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed, over a dissent, the Tax Court’s determination that APC was required to use accrual accounting, and unanimously (albeit with little enthusiasm) affirmed the finding that the deduction for truck transportation expenses was negligent. 796 F. 2d 843 (1986). APC has petitioned for certiorari on those two issues in No. 86-1054, and we deny that petition. Accordingly, for purposes of this opinion we accept, without approving, the Commissioner’s finding of negligence. The Court of Appeals reversed the Tax Court’s imposition of the negligence penalty on the full amount of the deficiency, concluding that the penalty “should be applied only to that portion of the deficiency attributable to the disallowed deduc*120tion.” Id., at 850. The Commissioner has petitioned for certiorari on that issue in No. 86-1058. Because this holding is in apparent conflict with Abrams v. United States, 449 F. 2d 662 (CA2 1971), and is in obvious conflict with the plain language of the statute, we grant certiorari in No. 86-1053 and reverse.

Section 6653(a)(1) could not be clearer. If “any part of any underpayment” is due to negligence, the Commissioner shall add to the tax a penalty of “5 percent of the underpayment.” It is impossible further to explain the statute without merely repeating its language — the penalty is imposed on “the underpayment,” not on the “part of [the] underpayment” attributable to negligence. By contrast (if contrast is thought necessary), the very next paragraph of the statute, § 6653(a)(2) (added in 1981, see Pub. L. 97-34, § 722(b)(1), 95 Stat. 342), limits the 50% penalty on interest due on negligent underpayments to “the portion of the underpayment . . . which is attributable to the [taxpayer’s] negligence.” The section imposing interest penalties on fraudulent underpayments contains the same proviso, § 6653(b)(2)(A), as does (after the 1986 Tax Reform Act) the provision for direct penalties on fraudulent underpayments. See § 1503(b)(1)(A), 100 Stat. 2742 (“If any part of any underpayment... is due to fraud, there shall be added to the tax ... 75 percent of the portion of the underpayment which is attributable to fraud”). As the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held in Abrams v. United States: “It is evident that it was intended that the five percent was to be assessed not just against that segment of the deficiency due to negligence but against the entire amount. The language is clear and leads to no other interpretation.” 449 F. 2d, at 664.

The taxpayers in Abrams argued “that a literal application of the statute could lead to absurd results where a comparatively insignificant item of income is negligently omitted,” ibid., and the court in Abrams expressly reserved judgment on that situation. Ibid. (“That case is not before us on this *121appeal and we therefore express no opinion whatever as to its proper disposition if it should ever arise”). The Court of Appeals in this litigation relied on that reservation, and on the absence of any “egregious attempts [by APC] to avoid the payment of taxes,” 796 F. 2d, at 849, to distinguish Abrams, concluding that the Commissioner’s construction of the statute lets “the tail wag the dog.” 796 F. 2d, at 850; ibid. (Nelson, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“Where the taxpayer is subject to a penalty only because of the negligent omission of a comparatively insignificant item of income, and the Commissioner also asserts that there is a large underpayment not claimed to be due to negligence, I agree with the court that it would be absurd to let the Commissioner calculate the negligence penalty by applying the statutory percentage to the sum of the negligent and non-negligent underpayments”). This was error. Judicial perception that a particular result would be unreasonable may enter into the construction of ambiguous provisions, but cannot justify disregard of what Congress has plainly and intentionally provided. Given the Government’s plausible interest in deterring negligent tax preparation and given the statute’s explicit limitation of other penalties to the amount of the negligent or fraudulent underpayment, no conclusion can be drawn from the provision here at issue except that Congress desired to impose a modest penalty (5%) upon underpayments any part of which was attributable to negligence of the taxpayer. It is not our assigned role to alter that disposition.

The decision of the Court of Appeals limiting the amount of the negligence penalty is

Reversed.