*140 Decision will be entered for the petitioner.
Statute of Limitations --
*496 OPINION.
The respondent determined a deficiency in income tax for the year 1945 in the amount of $ 8,878.57. This determination was made after the 3-year statute of limitations for assessment, prescribed by
All of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. Those material to the controversy are set forth in our findings of fact.
1. The petitioner is an individual and a resident of the State of Washington. The returns for the calendar years 1944 and 1945 were filed by the petitioner with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Washington.
2. In filing his income*142 tax return for the year 1944 the petitioner claimed a deduction for amortization of bond premium in the aggregate amount of $ 37,439.25. Of said amount, $ 35,514.25 represented the amortization of "bond premium" paid for the acquisition on November 24, 1944, and November 25, 1944, of debentures of the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. and Commonwealth Edison Company in the respective amounts of $ 32,718.75 and $ 2,795.50.
3. The American Telephone & Telegraph Co. convertible debentures referred to above were purchased on November 24, 1944, at a total cost of $ 214,718.75, exclusive of purchase interest. Said debentures had a par value of $ 175,000, callable at $ 104 on 30-day notice. The total call price was therefore $ 182,000, and the petitioner charged off the excess cost in the amount of $ 32,718.75 paid for the acquisition of said debentures as "bond premium." Accordingly, $ 32,718.75 was claimed as a deduction on petitioner's 1944 return in accordance with his interpretation of the provisions of
4. On November 25, 1944, the petitioner also purchased $ 20,000 par value of 3 1/2 per cent convertible debentures of Commonwealth Edison*143 Company, as referred to in paragraph 2, at a total cost of $ 23,245.50 exclusive of interest. Said debentures were callable at $ 102.25 on *497 30-day notice. The total call price of these debentures was $ 20,450, and the petitioner charged off as "bond premium" the amount of $ 2,795.50 which was claimed as a deduction on his tax return for 1944, also in accordance with his interpretation of the provisions of
5. Between June 5, 1945, and June 11, 1945, the petitioner sold all of the American Telephone & Telegraph Company and the Commonwealth Edison debentures referred to above. In reporting the gain on his 1945 return, the petitioner used a cost for tax purposes for each block of debentures which was reduced by the amount of "amortizable bond premium" claimed by him as a deduction on his 1944 return. The petitioner received a total of $ 250,343.10 for the American Telephone & Telegraph Company and Commonwealth Edison debentures, and reported a long-term capital gain from the sale thereof in the amount of $ 47,883.10 on his return for the year 1945.
6. The petitioner's return for the year 1945 was filed with the respondent on January 15, 1946, and *144 was immediately examined in connection with the return filed for the year 1944. As a result thereof a report of examination was prepared under date of January 25, 1946, in which the revenue agent found that there was a deficiency in the 1944 income tax in the amount of $ 26,034.92, primarily by reason of disallowance of the bond premium expense deduction shown on petitioner's 1944 return. He also determined an overassessment in income tax for the year 1945 in the amount of $ 9,431.74, primarily attributable to the increase in the basis of the American Telephone & Telegraph debentures and the Commonwealth Edison debentures and the corresponding reduction in gross capital gains by said amount of $ 47,883.10. A report of the examination of both the 1944 and 1945 returns was transmitted to the petitioner on June 13, 1946.
7. The petitioner protested the determination of the agent's office with respect to the disallowance of the deduction for bond premium amortization as claimed on the 1944 return. However, he did not agree with the agent's findings and thereafter a statutory notice of deficiency was issued to him regarding the 1944 liability in which the following determination was*145 made:
Deduction of $ 32,718.75 and $ 2,795.50 claimed in your income tax return for the calendar year 1944 as bond premium expense attributable respectively to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company debentures, $ 175,000.00 par value, and Commonwealth Edison Company debentures, $ 20,000.00 par value acquired in that year, have been disallowed for the reason that the stated deductions did not represent true bond premiums within the meaning of the applicable provisions of the statute.
The facts show that the debentures in question were convertible at the option of the holder into capital stock of the issuing companies, and furthermore that substantially all of the excess of the purchase price thereof over *498 the call prices represented consideration paid for the conversion options as distinguished from premiums paid for the investment value of the debentures free of conversion options.
The petitioner filed his petition from said statutory notice of deficiency with The Tax Court of the United States on May 21, 1947, Docket No. 14104.
8. The petitioner did not file a claim for refund or execute any agreement with respect to acceptance of the overassessment determined by*146 the examining agent for the year 1945 in the amount of $ 9,431.75. However, the Commissioner authorized refund of said amount as shown in the report of the examination dated June 13, 1946. The check in the amount of $ 9,431.74 was paid to the petitioner by the respondent on July 15, 1947, as a result of said action. The check representing said sum was cashed and the amount thereof has been retained by the petitioner and has not been refunded to the Government subsequent to July 15, 1947.
9. The petitioner at no time signed or filed Treasury Department Form 872 or other agreement waiving and extending the statute of limitations with respect to the assessment of income tax for the year 1945.
10. Prior to the trial of the proceeding in Docket No. 14104 the parties filed a joint motion for continuance of the hearing and a request to place the proceeding on a reserve calendar of the Tax Court. Said motion was filed with the Court in April 1948. The grounds for said motion as expressed therein, are, in part, as follows:
3. This same question of law has recently been presented to this Court for determination in the appeal of Christian W. Korell, Docket No. 13942, which was heard before*147 a division of this Court at New York, N. Y., on December 8, 1947, and in the appeals of Joe and Rose Schoong, Docket Nos. 15475 and 15476, which were heard before a division of this Court at San Francisco, California, on March 22, 1948.
4. It is believed that the ultimate decisions in the causes mentioned in paragraph 3 above, will be determinative of the issue in the present proceeding and that the time of this Court and of the parties hereto may be conserved by deferring the hearing in this matter until the decisions in the foregoing appeals become final.
11. The case of Korell v. Commissioner, referred to above, was ultimately appealed to the Supreme Court and decision on the same issue in dispute in Docket No. 14104 entered therein,
*499 12. Following*148 the decision of the Supreme Court, the respondent's determination in Docket No. 14104 was conceded by the Government to the extent it involved the bond premium issue. Accordingly, a stipulation of the parties was filed with the Tax Court reflecting a deficiency in the amount of $ 807.80, and decision was entered therein January 16, 1951. The difference between the deficiency as determined and the reduced deficiency found by the Court was attributable entirely to the allowance by the respondent of the deduction in the year 1944 of the amortized "bond premium" claimed as an expense on his return and also eliminated by him on his 1945 return from the basis of said debenture bonds at the time of sale.
13. The liability of the petitioner for 1945 was reexamined thereafter by the respondent and a revised report prepared under date of August 22, 1951, recommending a deficiency of $ 8,857.51 for said year. A copy of said examination was transmitted to the petitioner under date of October 12, 1951. The petitioner did not protest said determination and the liability shown therein was the subject of the deficiency letter dated December 11, 1951, from which the petitioner appealed in the *149 present proceeding.
14. The decision of the Tax Court in Docket No. 14104 became final prior to the issuance of the deficiency letter in the present proceeding. The file of the Tax Court for Docket No. 14104 including all pleadings filed by the parties and the decision of the Court is evidence in this proceeding.
The fact situation before us is not complicated. In bare outline it is as follows:
The petitioner purchased bonds in 1944 and sold them in 1945. He claimed a deduction on his 1944 return of $ 35,514.25 representing amortizable bond premium allowed as a deduction by
Concededly, unless
*500 The shape of the argument permits us to attack the problem much the same as was done in the MacDonald case. Both parties argue the question whether the action of the petitioner in accepting and retaining the refund in 1945 amounted to the maintenance of an inconsistent position, one of the prerequisites to the application of
*152 We do not think the facts bring this case within (b) (2). Our determination in Docket No. 14104 allowed a deduction to the taxpayer in 1944 but we do not see that the deduction allowed was one "which was erroneously allowed to the taxpayer for another taxable year" as required by the statute. The taxpayer only claimed the deduction in a single year, 1944, and that was the year in which our determination allowed it. True, the amount of the deduction was a factor in adjusting the basis of the bonds for the purpose of determining the taxable gain on their sale in 1945, but that is a different matter from claiming "a deduction" in 1945.
Neither do we think (b) (5) is applicable. The prerequisite for calling that subsection into play is a determination (our decision in Docket No. 14104) which "determines the basis of property * * * for gain or loss on a sale * * *." But our decision in Docket No. 14104 did not determine the basis of the bonds for any purpose whatsoever. Cf.
For the reasons stated,
Decision will be entered for the petitioner.
Turner, J., dissenting: The facts, in my opinion, bring the instant case squarely within the provisions of
In keeping with the position maintained by the taxpayer, this Court, in the proceeding docketed at 14104, and pursuant to the pronouncements of the Supreme Court in
It is said in the Court's opinion herein, however, that, even so, the 1944 determination was a determination of a deduction from gross income, not a determination of petitioner's basis for the debentures for gain or loss on the sale or exchange thereof and, accordingly,
The conclusion, in my opinion, not only ignores the general scheme of the statute, but is contrary to specific provisions thereof. The general definition of basis of property for gain or loss purposes is cost.
It is accordingly my view that the contrary conclusions expressed by this Court in its opinion herein are erroneous.
Footnotes
1.
SEC. 3801 . * MITIGATION OF EFFECT OF LIMITATION AND OTHER PROVISIONS IN INCOME TAX CASES.(b) Circumstances of Adjustment. -- When a determination under the income tax laws --
(2) Allows a deduction or credit which was erroneously allowed to the taxpayer for another taxable year or to a related taxpayer; or
* * * *
(5) Determines the basis of property for depletion, exhaustion, wear and tear, or obsolescence, or for gain or loss on a sale or exchange, and in respect of any transaction upon which such basis depends there was an erroneous inclusion in or omission from the gross income of, or an erroneous recognition or nonrecognition of gain or loss to, the taxpayer or any person who acquired title to such property in such transaction and from whom mediately or immediately the taxpayer derived title subsequent to such transaction -- * * *
* For a detailed discussion of
Section 3801 see John M. Maguire, Stanley S. Surrey, and Roger John Traynor, "Section 820 of the Revenue Act of 1938,"48 Yale L. J. 719 , and H. Brian Holland, "Tax Consequences of Inconsistent Positions -- A Review ofSection 3801↩ ," New York University Tenth Annual Institute on Federal Taxation, p. 807.