|
Page 785
58 L.Ed.2d 785
99 S.Ct. 773
439 U.S. 522 THOR POWER TOOL COMPANY, Petitioner,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE.
No. 77-920.
Argued Nov. 1, 1978.
Decided Jan. 16, 1979.
Syllabus
Inventory accounting for tax purposes is
governed by §§ 446 and 471 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1954. Section 446 provides
that taxable income is to be computed under
the taxpayer's normal method of accounting
unless that method "does not clearly reflect
income," in which event taxable income is to
be computed "under such method as, in the
opinion of the [Commissioner], does clearly
reflect income." Section 471 provides that
"[w]henever in the opinion of the
[Commissioner] the use of inventories is
necessary in order clearly to determine the
income of any taxpayer, inventory shall be
taken by such taxpayer on such basis as the
[Commissioner] may prescribe as conforming
as nearly as may be to the best accounting
practice in the trade or business and as
most clearly reflecting income." The
implementing Regulations require a taxpayer
to value inventory for tax purposes at cost
unless "market" (defined as replacement
cost) is lower. The Regulations specify two
situations in which inventory may be valued
below "market" as so defined: (1) where the
taxpayer in the normal course of business
has actually offered merchandise for sale at
prices lower than replacement cost; and (2)
where the merchandise is defective. In 1964,
petitioner, a tool manufacturer, wrote down
in accord with "generally accepted
accounting principles" what it regarded as
"excess" inventory to its own estimate of
the "net realizable value" (generally scrap
value) of the "excess" goods (mostly spare
parts), but continued to hold the goods for
sale at their original prices. It offset the
write-down against 1964 sales and thereby
produced a net operating loss for that year.
The Commissioner disallowed the offset,
maintaining that the write-down did not
reflect income clearly for tax purposes.
Deductions for bad debts are covered by §
166. Section 166(c) provides that an
accrual-basis taxpayer "shall be allowed (in
the discretion of the [Commissioner]) a
deduction for a reasonable addition to a
reserve for bad debts." In 1965, petitioner
added to its reserve and asserted as a
deduction under § 166(c) a sum that
presupposed a substantially higher
charge-off rate for bad debts than it had
experienced in immediately preceding years.
The Commissioner ruled that the addition was
exces-
Page 523
sive, and determined, pursuant to the
"six-year moving average" formula derived
from
Black Motor Co. v. Commissioner, 41
B.T.A. 300, what he regarded as a lesser
but "reasonable" amount to be added to
petitioner's reserve. On petitioner's
petition for redetermination, the Tax Court
upheld the Commissioner's exercise of
discretion with respect to both the
inventory write-down and the bad-debt
deduction, and the Court of Appeals
affirmed. Held :
1. The Commissioner did not
abuse his discretion in determining that the
write-down of "excess" inventory failed to
reflect petitioner's 1964 income clearly,
since the write-down was plainly
inconsistent with the governing Regulations.
Pp. 531-546.
(a) Although conceding that
"an active market prevailed" on the
inventory date, petitioner made no effort to
determine the replacement cost of its
"excess" inventory and thus failed to
ascertain "market" in accord with the
general rule of the Regulations. Petitioner,
however, failed to bring itself within
either of the authorized exceptions for
valuing inventory below "market." Whereas
the Regulations demand concrete evidence of
reduced market value, petitioner provided no
objective evidence whatever that its
"excess" inventory had the value management
ascribed to it. Pp. 535-538.
(b) There is no presumption
that an inventory practice conformable to
"generally accepted accounting principles"
is valid for tax purposes. Such a
presumption is insupportable in light of the
statute, this Court's past decisions, and
the differing objectives of tax and
financial accounting. Pp. 538-544.
(c) While petitioner argues
that it should not be forced to defer a tax
benefit for inventory currently deemed
unsalable until future years, when the
"excess" items are actually disposed of,
petitioner's "dilemma" is nothing more than
the choice every taxpayer with a paper loss
must face. Pp. 545-546.
2. The Commissioner did not
abuse his discretion in recomputing a
"reasonable" addition to petitioner's
bad-debt reserve according to the Black
Motor formula. Because petitioner did
not show why its debt collections in 1965
would be less likely than in prior years, it
failed to carry its "heavy burden" of
showing that application of the Black
Motor formula would have been arbitrary.
Pp. 546-550.
7th Cir., 563 F.2d 861,
affirmed.
Mark H. Berens, for petitioner.
Page 524
Stuart A. Smith, Washington,
D. C., for respondent.
Mr. Justice BLACKMUN delivered
the opinion of the Court.
This case, as it comes to us,
presents two federal income tax issues. One
has to do with inventory accounting. The
other relates to a bad-debt reserve.
The Inventory Issue. In
1964, petitioner Thor Power Tool Co.
(hereinafter sometimes referred to as the
taxpayer), in accord with "generally
accepted accounting principles," wrote down
what it regarded as excess inventory to
Thor's own estimate of the net realizable
value of the excess goods. Despite this
write-down, Thor continued to hold the goods
for sale at original prices. It offset the
write-down against 1964 sales and thereby
produced a net operating loss for that year;
it then asserted that loss as a carryback to
1963 under § 172 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. § 172. The
Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
maintaining that the write-down did not
serve to reflect income clearly for tax
purposes, disallowed the offset and the
carryback.
The Bad-debt Issue. In
1965, the taxpayer added to its reserve for
bad debts and asserted as a deduction, under
§ 166(c) of the Code, 26 U.S.C. § 166(c), a
sum that presupposed a substantially higher
charge-off rate than Thor had experienced in
immediately preceding years. The
Commissioner ruled that the addition was
excessive, and determined, pursuant to a
formula based on the taxpayer's past experi-
Page 525
ence, what he regarded as a lesser but
"reasonable" amount to be added to Thor's
reserve.
On the taxpayer's petition for
redetermination, the Tax Court, in an
unreviewed decision by Judge Goffe, upheld
that Commissioner's exercise of discretion
in both respects. 64 T.C. 154 (1975). As a
consequence, and also because of other
adjustments not at issue here, the court
redetermined, App. 264, the following
deficiencies in Thor's federal income tax:
calendar year
1963$494,055.99
calendar year
1965$59,287.48
The United States Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit affirmed.
563 F.2d 861 (1977). We granted certiorari,
435 U.S. 914, 98 S.Ct. 1466, 55 L.Ed.2d 504
(1978), to consider these important and
recurring income tax accounting issues.
I
The Inventory Issue
A.
Taxpayer is a Delaware
corporation with principal place of business
in Illinois. It manufactures hand-held power
tools, parts and accessories, and rubber
products. At its various plants and service
branches, Thor maintains inventories of raw
materials, work-in-process, finished parts
and accessories, and completed tools. At all
times relevant, Thor has used, both for
financial accounting and for income tax
purposes, the "lower of cost or market"
method of valuing inventories. App. 23-24.
See Treas.Reg. § 1.471-2(c), 26 CFR §
1.471-2(c) (1978).
Thor's tools typically contain
from 50 to 200 parts, each of which taxpayer
stocks to meet demand for replacements.
Because of the difficulty, at the time of
manufacture, of predicting the future demand
for various parts, taxpayer produced liberal
quantities of each part to avoid subsequent
pro-
Page 526
duction runs. Additional runs entail
costly retooling and result in delays in
filling orders. App. 54-55.
In 1960, Thor instituted a
procedure for writing down the inventory
value of replacement parts and accessories
for tool models it no longer produced. It
created an inventory contra-account and
credited that account with 10% of each
part's cost for each year since production
of the parent model had ceased. 64 T.C., at
156-157; App. 24. The effect of the
procedure was to amortize the cost of these
parts over a 10-year period. For the first
nine months of 1964, this produced a
write-down of $22,090. 64 T.C., at 157; App.
24.
In late 1964, new management
took control and promptly concluded that
Thor's inventory in general was overvalued.1
After "a physical inventory taken at all
locations" of the tool and rubber divisions,
id., at 52, management wrote off
approximately $2.75 million of obsolete
parts, damaged or defective tools,
demonstration or sales samples, and similar
items. Id., at 52-53. The
Commissioner allowed this writeoff because
Thor scrapped most of the articles shortly
after their removal from the 1964 closing
inventory.2 Management also wrote
down $245,000 of parts stocked for three
unsuccessful prod-
Page 527
ucts. Id., at 56. The Commissioner
allowed this write-down too, since Thor sold
these items at reduced prices shortly after
the close of 1964. Id., at 62.
This left some 44,000 assorted
items, the status of which is the inventory
issue here. Management concluded that many
of these articles, mostly spare parts,3
were "excess" inventory, that is, that they
were held in excess of any reasonably
foreseeable future demand. It was decided
that this inventory should be written down
to its "net realizable value," which, in
most cases, was scrap value. 64 T.C., at
160-161; Brief for Petitioner 9; Tr. of Oral
Arg. 11.
Two methods were used to
ascertain the quantity of excess inventory.
Where accurate data were available, Thor
forecast future demand for each item on the
basis of actual 1964 usage, that is, actual
sales for tools and service parts, and
actual usage for raw materials,
work-in-process, and production parts.
Management assumed that future demand for
each item would be the same as it was in
1964. Thor then applied the following aging
schedule: the quantity of each item
corresponding to less than one year's
estimated demand was kept at cost; the
quantity of each item in excess of two
years' estimated demand was written off
entirely; and the quantity of each item
corresponding to from one to two years'
estimated demand was written down by 50% or
75%. App. 26.4 Thor presented no
statistical evidence to rationalize
Page 528
these percentages or this time frame. In
the Tax Court, Thor's president justified
the formula by citing general business
experience, and opined that it was "somewhat
in between" possible alternative solutions.5
This first method yielded a total write-down
of $744,030. 64 T.C., at 160.
Page 529
At two plants where 1964 data
were inadequate to permit forecasts of
future demand, Thor used its second method
for valuing inventories. At these plants,
the company employed flat percentage
write-downs of 5%, 10% and 50% for various
types of inventory.6 Thor
presented no sales or other data to support
these percentages. Its president observed
that "this is not a precise way of doing
it," but said that the company "felt some
adjustment of this nature was in order, and
these figures represented our best estimate
of what was required to reduce the inventory
to net realizable value." App. 67. This
second method yielded a total write-down of
$160,832. 64 T.C., at 160.
Although Thor wrote down all
its "excess" inventory at once, it did not
immediately scrap the articles or sell them
at reduced prices, as it had done with the
$3 million of obsolete and damaged
inventory, the write-down of which the
Commissioner permitted. Rather, Thor
retained the "excess" items physically in
inventory and continued to sell them at
original prices. Id., at 160-161. The
company found that, owing to the peculiar
nature of the articles involved,7
price reductions were of no avail in moving
this "excess" inventory.
Page 530
As time went on, however, Thor gradually
disposed of some of these items as scrap;
the record is unclear as to when these
dispositions took place.8
Thor's total write-down of
"excess" inventory in 1964 therefore was:
Ten-year amortization of parts
for
discontinued tools $22,090
First method (aging formula based
on 1964 usage) 744,030
Second method (flat percentage
write-downs) 160,832
-----------
Total $926,952
Thor credited this sum to its
inventory contra-account, thereby decreasing
closing inventory, increasing cost of goods
sold, and decreasing taxable income for the
year by that amount.9 The company
contended that, by writing down excess
inventory to scrap value, and by thus
carrying all inventory at "net realizable
value," it had reduced its inventory to
"market" in accord with its "lower of cost
or market" method of accounting. On audit,
the Commissioner disallowed the write-down
in its entirety, asserting that it did not
serve clearly to reflect Thor's 1964 income
for tax purposes.
The Tax Court, in upholding the
Commissioner's determination, found as a
fact that Thor's write-down of excess
inventory did conform to "generally accepted
accounting principles"; indeed, the court
was "thoroughly convinced . . . that such
was the case." Id., at 165. The court
found that if Thor had failed to write down
its inventory on some reason-
Page 531
able basis, its accountants would have
been unable to give its financial statements
the desired certification. Id., at
161-162. The court held, however, that
conformance with "generally accepted
accounting principles" is not enough; §
446(b), and § 471 as well, of the 1954 Code,
26 U.S.C. §§ 446(b) and 471, prescribe, as
an independent requirement, that inventory
accounting methods must "clearly reflect
income." The Tax Court rejected Thor's
argument that its write-down of "excess"
inventory was authorized by Treasury
Regulations, 64 T.C., at 167-171, and held
that the Commissioner had not abused his
discretion in determining that the
write-down failed to reflect 1964 income
clearly.
B
Inventory accounting is
governed by §§ 446 and 471 of the Code, 26
U.S.C. §§ 446 and 471. Section 446(a) states
the general rule for methods of accounting:
"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." Section 446(b)
provides, however, that if the method used
by the taxpayer "does not clearly reflect
income, the computation of taxable income
shall be made under such method as, in the
opinion of the [Commissioner], does clearly
reflect income." Regulations promulgated
under § 446 and in effect for the taxable
year 1964, state that "no method of
accounting is acceptable unless, in the
opinion of the Commissioner, it clearly
reflects income." Treas. Reg. §
1.446-1(a)(2), 26 CFR § 1.446-1(a)(2)
(1964).10
Section 471 prescribes the
general rule for inventories. It states:
"Whenever in the
opinion of the [Commissioner] the use
Page 532
of inventories is necessary in
order clearly to determine the income of any
taxpayer, inventories shall be taken by such
taxpayer on such basis as the [Commissioner]
may prescribe as conforming as nearly as may
be to the best accounting practice in the
trade or business and as most clearly
reflecting the income."
As the Regulations point out, §
471 obviously establishes two distinct tests
to which an inventory must conform. First,
it must conform "as nearly as may be" to the
"best accounting practice," a phrase that is
synonymous with "generally accepted
accounting principles." Second, it "must
clearly reflect the income." Treas. Reg. §
1.471-2(a)(2), 26 CFR § 1.471-2(a)(2)
(1964).
It is obvious that on their
face, §§ 446 and 471, with their
accompanying Regulations, vest the
Commissioner with wide discretion in
determining whether a particular method of
inventory accounting should be disallowed as
not clearly reflective of income. This
Court's cases confirm the breadth of this
discretion. In construing § 446 and its
predecessors, the Court has held that "[t]he
Commissioner has broad powers in determining
whether accounting methods used by a
taxpayer clearly reflect income."
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v.
Hansen, 360 U.S. 446, 467, 79 S.Ct.
1270, 1282, 3 L.Ed.2d 1360 (1959). Since
the Commissioner has "[m]uch latitude for
discretion," his interpretation of the
statute's clear-reflection standard "should
not be interfered with unless clearly
unlawful."
Lucas v. American Code Co., 280 U.S.
445, 449, 50 S.Ct. 202, 203, 74 L.Ed. 538
(1930). To the same effect are
United States v. Catto, 384 U.S. 102,
114, 86 S.Ct. 1311, 1317, 16 L.Ed.2d 398
(1966);
Schlude v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, 372 U.S. 128, 133-134, 83 S.Ct.
601, 604, 9 L.Ed.2d 633 (1963);
American Automobile Assn. v. United
States, 367 U.S. 687, 697-698, 81 S.Ct.
1727, 1732, 6 L.Ed.2d 1109 (1961);
Automobile Club of Michigan v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 353
U.S. 180, 189-190, 77 S.Ct. 707, 712-713, 1
L.Ed.2d 746 (1957);
Brown v. Helvering, 291 U.S. 193,
203, 54 S.Ct. 356, 360, 78 L.Ed. 725 (1934).
In construing § 203 of the Revenue Act of
1918, 40 Stat. 1060, a predecessor of § 471,
the Court held that the taxpayer bears a
"heavy burden of [proof]," and that the
Commissioner's dis-
Page 533
allowance of an inventory accounting
method is not to be set aside unless shown
to be "plainly arbitrary."
Lucas v. Structural Steel Co., 281
U.S. 264, 271, 50 S.Ct. 263, 266, 74 L.Ed.
848 (1930).
As has been noted, the Tax
Court found as a fact in this case that
Thor's write-down of "excess" inventory
conformed to "generally accepted accounting
principles" and was "within the term, 'best
accounting practice,' as that term is used
in section 471 of the Code and the
regulations promulgated under that section."
64 T.C., at 161, 165. Since the Commissioner
has not challenged this finding, there is no
dispute that Thor satisfied the first part
of § 471's two-pronged test. The only
question, then, is whether the Commissioner
abused his discretion in determining that
the write-down did not satisfy the test's
second prong in that it failed to reflect
Thor's 1964 income clearly. Although the
Commissioner's discretion is not unbridled
and may not be arbitrary we sustain his
exercise of discretion here, for in this
case the write-down was plainly inconsistent
with the governing Regulations which the
taxpayer, on its part, has not challenged.11
It has been noted above that
Thor at all pertinent times used the "lower
of cost or market" method of inventory
accounting. The rules governing this method
are set out in Treas. Reg.
Page 534
§ 1.471-4, 26 CFR § 1.471-4 (1964). That
Regulation defines "market" to mean,
ordinarily, "the current bid price
prevailing at the date of the inventory for
the particular merchandise in the volume in
which usually purchased by the taxpayer." §
1.471-4(a). The courts have uniformly
interpreted "bid price" to mean replacement
cost, that is, the price the taxpayer would
have to pay on the open market to purchase
or reproduce the inventory items.12
Where no open market exists, the Regulations
require the taxpayer to ascertain "bid
price" by using "such evidence of a fair
market price at the date or dates nearest
the inventory as may be available, such as
specific purchasers or sales by the taxpayer
or others in reasonable volume and made in
good faith, or compensation paid for
cancellation of contracts for purchase
commitments." § 1.471-4(b).
The Regulations specify two
situations in which a taxpayer is permitted
to value inventory below "market" as so
defined. The first is where the taxpayer in
the normal course of business has actually
offered merchandise for sale at prices lower
than replacement cost. Inventories of such
merchandise may be valued at those prices
less direct cost of disposition, "and the
correctness of such prices will be
determined by reference to the actual sales
of the taxpayer for a reasonable period
before and after the date of the inventory."
Ibid. The Regulations warn that
prices "which vary materially from the
Page 535
actual prices so ascertained will not be
accepted as reflecting the market." Ibid.
The second situation in which a
taxpayer may value inventory below
replacement cost is where the merchandise
itself is defective. If goods are "unsalable
at normal prices or unusable in the normal
way because of damage, imperfections, shop
wear, changes of style, odd or broken lots,
or other similar causes," the taxpayer is
permitted to value the goods "at bona fide
selling prices less direct cost of
disposition." § 1.471-2(c). The Regulations
define "bona fide selling price" to mean an
"actual offering of goods during a period
ending not later than 30 days after
inventory date." Ibid. The taxpayer
bears the burden of proving that "such
exceptional goods as are valued upon such
selling basis come within the
classifications indicated," and is required
to "maintain such records of the disposition
of the goods as will enable a verification
of the inventory to be made." Ibid.
From this language, the
regulatory scheme is clear. The taxpayer
must value inventory for tax purposes at
cost unless the "market" is lower. "Market"
is defined as "replacement cost," and the
taxpayer is permitted to depart from
replacement cost only in specified
situations. When it makes any such
departure, the taxpayer must substantiate
its lower inventory valuation by providing
evidence of actual offerings, actual sales,
or actual contract cancellations. In the
absence of objective evidence of this kind,
a taxpayer's assertions as to the "market
value" of its inventory are not cognizable
in computing its income tax.
It is clear to us that Thor's
procedures for writing down the value of its
"excess" inventory were inconsistent with
this regulatory scheme. Although Thor
conceded that "an active market prevailed"
on the inventory date, see 64 T.C., at 169,
it "made no effort to determine the purchase
or reproduction cost" of its "excess"
inventory. Id., at 162. Thor thus
failed to ascertain "market" in accord with
the general rule of the
Page 536
Regulations. In seeking to depart from
replacement cost, Thor failed to bring
itself within either of the authorized
exceptions. Thor is not able to take
advantage of § 1.471-4(b) since, as the Tax
Court found, the company failed to sell its
excess inventory or offer it for sale at
prices below replacement cost. 64 T.C., at
160-161. Indeed, Thor concedes that it
continued to sell its "excess" inventory at
original prices. Thor also is not able to
take advantage of § 1.471-2(c) since, as the
Tax Court and the Court of Appeals both
held, it failed to bear the burden of
proving that its excess inventory came
within the specified classifications. 64
T.C., at 171; 563 F.2d, at 867. Actually,
Thor's "excess" inventory was normal and
unexceptional, and was indistinguishable
from and intermingled with the inventory
that was not written down.
More importantly, Thor failed
to provide any objective evidence whatever
that the "excess" inventory had the "market
value" management ascribed to it. The
Regulations demand hard evidence of actual
sales and further demand that records of
actual dispositions be kept. The Tax Court
found, however, that Thor made no sales and
kept no records. 64 T.C., at 171. Thor's
management simply wrote down its closing
inventory on the basis of a well-educated
guess that some of it would never be sold.
The formulae governing this write-down were
derived from management's collective
"business experience"; the percentages
contained in those formulae seemingly were
chosen for no reason other than that they
were multiples of five and embodied some
kind of anagogical symmetry. The Regulations
do not permit this kind of evidence. If a
taxpayer could write down its inventories on
the basis of management's subjective
estimates of the goods' ultimate salability,
the taxpayer would be able, as the Tax Court
observed, id., at 170, "to determine
how much tax it wanted to pay for a given
year."
13
Page 537
For these reasons, we agree with the Tax
Court and with the Seventh Circuit that the
Commissioner acted within his discretion in
deciding that Thor's write-down of "excess"
Page 538
inventory failed to reflect income
clearly. In the light of the well-known
potential for tax avoidance that is inherent
in inventory accounting,14 the
Commissioner in his discretion may insist on
a high evidentiary standard before allowing
write-downs of inventory to "market."
Because Thor provided no objective evidence
of the reduced market value of its "excess"
inventory, its write-down was plainly
inconsistent with the Regulations, and the
Commissioner properly disallowed it.15
C
The taxpayer's major argument
against this conclusion is based on the Tax
Court's clear finding that the write-down
conformed to "generally accepted accounting
principles." Thor points to language in
Treas. Reg. § 1.446-1(a)(2), 26 CFR §
1.446-1(a)(2) (1964), to the effect that
"[a] method of accounting which reflects the
consistent application of gen-
Page 539
erally accepted accounting principles . .
. will ordinarily be regarded as
clearly reflecting income" (emphasis added).
Section 1.471-2(b), 26 CFR § 1.471-2(b)
(1964), of the Regulations likewise stated
that an inventory taken in conformity with
best accounting practice "can, as a
general rule, be regarded as clearly
reflecting . . . income" (emphasis added).16
These provisions, Thor contends, created a
presumption that an inventory
practice conformable to "generally accepted
accounting principles" is valid for income
tax purposes. Once a taxpayer has
established this conformity, the argument
runs, the burden shifts to the Commissioner
affirmatively to demonstrate that the
taxpayer's method does not reflect
income clearly. Unless the Commissioner can
show that a generally accepted method
"demonstrably distorts income," Brief for
Chamber of Commerce of the United States
Page 540
as Amicus Curiae 3, or that the
taxpayer's adoption of such method was
"motivated by tax avoidance," Brief for
Petitioner 25, the presumption in the
taxpayer's favor will carry the day. The
Commissioner, Thor concludes, failed to
rebut that presumption here.
If the Code and Regulations
did embody the presumption petitioner
postulates, it would be of little use to the
taxpayer in this case. As we have noted,
Thor's write-down of "excess" inventory was
inconsistent with the Regulations; any
general presumption obviously must yield in
the face of such particular inconsistency.
We believe, however, that no such
presumption is present. Its existence is
insupportable in light of the statute, the
Court's past decisions, and the differing
objectives of tax and financial accounting.
First, as has been stated
above, the Code and Regulations establish
two distinct tests to which an inventory
must conform. The Code and Regulations,
moreover, leave little doubt as to which
test is paramount. While § 471 of the Code
requires only that an accounting practice
conform "as nearly as may be" to best
accounting practice, § 1.446-1(a)(2) of the
Regulations states categorically that "no
method of accounting is acceptable unless,
in the opinion of the Commissioner, it clear
reflects income" (emphasis added). Most
importantly, the Code and Regulations give
the Commissioner broad discretion to set
aside the taxpayer's method if, "in [his]
opinion," it does not reflect income
clearly. This language is completely at odds
with the notion of a "presumption" in the
taxpayer's favor. The Regulations embody no
presumption; they say merely that, in most
cases, generally accepted accounting
practices will pass muster for tax purposes.
And in most cases they will. But if the
Commissioner, in the exercise of his
discretion, determines that they do not, he
may prescribe a different practice without
having to rebut any presumption running
against the Treasury.
Page 541
Second, the presumption
petitioner postulates finds no support in
this Court's prior decisions. It was early
noted that the general rule specifying use
of the taxpayer's method of accounting "is
expressly limited to cases where the
Commissioner believes that the accounts
clearly reflect the net income." Lucas v.
American Code Co., 280 U.S., at 449, 50
S.Ct., at 203. More recently, it was held in
American Automobile Assn. v. United
States, that a taxpayer must recognize
prepaid income when received, even though
this would mismatch expenses and revenues in
contravention of "generally accepted
commercial accounting principles." 367 U.S.,
at 690, 81 S.Ct., at 1730. "[T]o say that in
performing the function of business
accounting the method employed by the
Association 'is in accord with generally
accepted commercial accounting principles
and practices,' " the Court concluded, "is
not to hold that for income tax purposes it
so clearly reflects income as to be binding
on the Treasury." Id., at 693, 81
S.Ct., at 1730. "[W]e are mindful that the
characterization of a transaction for
financial accounting purposes, on the one
hand, and for tax purposes, on the other,
need not necessarily be the same."
Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 435
U.S. 561, 577, 98 S.Ct. 1291, 1300, 55
L.Ed.2d 550 (1978).
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Idaho
Power Co., 418 U.S. 1, 15, 94 S.Ct.
2757, 2765, 41 L.Ed.2d 535 (1974).
Indeed, the Court's cases demonstrate that
divergence between tax and financial
accounting is especially common when a
taxpayer seeks a current deduction for
estimated future expenses or losses. E.
g.,
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Hansen,
360 U.S. 446, 79 S.Ct. 1270, 3 L.Ed.2d 1360
(1959) (reserve to cover contingent
liability in event of nonperformance of
guarantee);
Brown v. Helvering, 291 U.S. 193, 54
S.Ct. 356, 78 L.Ed. 725 (1934) (reserve
to cover expected liability for unearned
commissions on anticipated insurance policy
cancellations); Lucas v. American Code
Co., supra (reserve to cover expected
liability on contested lawsuit). The
rationale of these cases amply encompasses
Thor's aim. By its president's concession,
the company's write-down of "excess"
inventory was founded on the belief that
many of the articles inevitably would become
use-
Page 542
less due to breakage, technological
change, fluctuations in market demand, and
the like.17 Thor, in other words,
sought a current "deduction" for an
estimated future loss. Under the decided
cases, a taxpayer so circumstanced finds no
shelter beneath an accountancy presumption.
Third, the presumption
petitioner postulates is insupportable in
light of the vastly different objectives
that financial and tax accounting have. The
primary goal of financial accounting is to
provide useful information to management,
shareholders, creditors, and others properly
interested; the major responsibility of the
accountant is to protect these parties from
being misled. The primary goal of the income
tax system, in contrast, is the equitable
collection of revenue; the major
responsibility of the Internal Revenue
Service is to protect the public fisc.
Consistently with its goals and
responsibilities, financial accounting has
as its foundation the principle of
conservatism, with its corollary that
"possible errors in measurement [should] be
in the direction of understatement rather
than overstatement of net income and net
assets."
18 In view of the
Treasury's markedly different goals and
responsibilities understatement of income is
not destined to be its guiding light. Given
this diversity, even contrariety,
Page 543
of objectives, any presumptive
equivalency between tax and financial
accounting would be unacceptable.19
This difference in objectives
is mirrored in numerous differences of
treatment. Where the tax law requires that a
deduction be deferred until "all the events"
have occurred that will make it fixed and
certain,
United States v. Anderson, 269 U.S.
422, 441, 46 S.Ct. 131, 134, 70 L.Ed. 347
(1926), accounting principles typically
require that a liability be accrued as soon
as it can reasonably be estimated.20
Conversely, where the tax law requires that
income be recognized currently under "claim
of right," "ability to pay," and "control"
rationales, accounting principles may defer
accrual until a later year so that revenues
and expenses may be better matched.21
Financial accounting, in short, is
hospitable to estimates, probabilities, and
reasonable certainties; the tax law, with
its mandate to preserve the revenue, can
give no quarter to uncertainty. This is as
it should be. Reasonable estimates may be
useful, even essential, in giving
shareholders and creditors an accurate
picture of a firm's overall financial
health; but the accountant's conservatism
cannot bind the Commissioner in his efforts
to collect taxes. "Only a few reserves
voluntarily established as a mat-
Page 544
ter of conservative accounting," Mr.
Justice Brandeis wrote for the Court, "are
authorized by the Revenue Acts." Brown v.
Helvering, 291 U.S., at 201-202, 54
S.Ct., at 360.
Finally, a presumptive
equivalency between tax and financial
accounting would create insurmountable
difficulties of tax administration.
Accountants long have recognized that
"generally accepted accounting principles"
are far from being a canonical set of rules
that will ensure identical accounting
treatment of identical transactions.22
"Generally accepted accounting principles,"
rather, tolerate a range of "reasonable"
treatments, leaving the choice among
alternatives to management. Such, indeed, is
precisely the case here.23
Variances of this sort may be tolerable in
financial reporting, but they are
questionable in a tax system designed to
ensure as far as possible that similarly
situated taxpayers pay the same tax. If
management's election among "acceptable"
options were dispositive for tax purposes, a
firm, indeed, could decide
unilaterallywithin limits dictated only by
its accountantsthe tax it wished to pay.
Such unilateral decisions would not just
make the Code inequitable; they would make
it unenforceable.
Page 545
D
Thor complains that a decision
adverse to it poses a dilemma. According to
the taxpayer, it would be virtually
impossible for it to offer objective
evidence of its "excess" inventory's lower
value, since the goods cannot be sold at
reduced prices; even if they could be sold,
says Thor, their reduced-price sale would
just "pull the rug out" from under the
identical "non-excess" inventory Thor is
trying to sell simultaneously. The only way
Thor could establish the inventory's value
by a "closed transaction" would be to scrap
the articles at once. Yet immediate
scrapping would be undesirable for demand
for the parts ultimately might prove greater
than anticipated. The taxpayer thus sees
itself presented with "an unattractive
Hobson's choice: either the unsalable
inventory must be carried for years at its
cost instead of net realizable value,
thereby overstating taxable income by such
overvaluation until it is scrapped, or the
excess inventory must be scrapped
prematurely to the detriment of the
manufacturer and its customers." Brief for
Petitioner 25.
If this is indeed the dilemma
that confronts Thor, it is in reality the
same choice that every taxpayer who has a
paper loss must face. It can realize its
loss now and garner its tax benefit, or it
can defer realization, and its deduction,
hoping for better luck later. Thor, quite
simply, has suffered no present loss. It
deliberately manufactured its "excess" spare
parts because it judged that the marginal
cost of unsalable inventory would be lower
than the cost of retooling machinery should
demand surpass expectations. This was a
rational business judgment and, not
unpredictably, Thor now has inventory it
believes it cannot sell. Thor, of course, is
not so confident of its prediction as to be
willing to scrap the "excess" parts now; it
wants to keep them on hand, just in case.
This, too, is a rational judgment, but there
is no reason why the Treasury should
subsidize Thor's hedging of its bets. There
Page 546
is also no reason why Thor should be
entitled, for tax purposes, to have its cake
and to eat it too.
II
The Bad-debt Issue
A.
Deductions for bad debts are
covered by § 166 of the 1954 Code, 26 U.S.C.
§ 166. Section 166(a)(1) sets forth the
general rule that a deduction is allowed for
"any debt which becomes worthless within the
taxable year." Alternatively, the Code
permits an accrual-basis taxpayer to account
for bad debts by the reserve method. This is
implemented by § 166(c), which states that
"[i]n lieu of any deduction under subsection
(a), there shall be allowed (in the
discretion of the [Commissioner]) a
deduction for a reasonable addition to a
reserve for bad debts." A "reasonable"
addition is the amount necessary to bring
the reserve balance up to the level that can
be expected to cover losses properly
anticipated on debts outstanding at the end
of the tax year.
At all times pertinent, Thor
has used the reserve method. Its reserve at
the beginning of 1965 was approximately
$93,000. See 64 T.C., at 162. During 1965,
Thor's new management undertook a stringent
review of accounts receivable. In the
company's rubber division, credit personnel
studied all accounts; a 100% reserve was set
up for two accounts deemed wholly
uncollectible, and a 1% reserve was
established for all other receivables.
Ibid. In the tool division, credit
clerks analyzed all accounts more than 90
days past due with balances over $100; a
100% reserve was established for accounts
judged wholly uncollectible, and an
identical collectibility ratio was applied
to accounts under $100 of the same age. A
flat 2% reserve was set up for accounts more
than 30 days past due, and a 1% reserve for
all other accounts. Id., at 162-163.
These judgments, approved by three levels of
management, indicated that $136,150 should
be added to
Page 547
the bad-debt reserve, bringing its
balance at year-end to a figure slightly
below $229,000. Id., at 162. Thor
claimed this $136,150 as a deduction under §
166(c).
The Commissioner ruled that the
deduction was excessive. He computed what he
believed to be a "reasonable" addition to
Thor's reserve by using the "six-year moving
average" formula derived from the decision
Black Motor Co. v. Commissioner, 41
B.T.A. 300 (1940), aff'd on other
grounds, 125 F.2d 977 (CA6 1942). This
formula seeks to ascertain a "reasonable"
addition to a bad-debt reserve in light of
the taxpayer's recent chargeoff history.24
In this case, the formula indicated that,
for the years 1960-1965, Thor's annual
chargeoffs of bad debts amounted, on the
average, to 3.128% of its year-end
receivables. 64 T.C., at 163. Applying that
percentage to Thor's 1965 year-end
receivables, the Commissioner determined
that $154,156.80 of accounts receivable
could reasonably be expected to default. The
amount required to bring Thor's reserve up
to this level was $61,359.20, and the
Commissioner decided that this was a
"reasonable" addition. Accordingly, he
disallowed the remaining $74,790.80 of
Thor's claimed § 166(c) deduction. Both the
Tax Court, 64 T.C., at 174-175, and the
Seventh Circuit, 563 F.2d, at 870, held that
the Commissioner had not abused his
discretion in so ruling.
B
Section 166(c) states that a
deduction for an addition to a bad-debt
reserve is to be allowed "in the discretion"
of the Commissioner. Consistently with this
statutory language, the courts uniformly
have held that the Commissioner's
determination of a "reasonable" (and hence
deductible) addition
Page 548
must be sustained unless the taxpayer
proves that the Commissioner abused his
discretion.25 The taxpayer is
said to bear a "heavy burden" in this
respect.26 He must show not only
that his own computation is reasonable but
also that the Commissioner's computation is
unreasonable and arbitrary.27
Since it first received the
approval of the Tax Court in 1940, the
Black Motor bad-debt formula has enjoyed
the favor of all three branches of the
Federal Government. The formula has been
employed consistently by the Commissioner,28
approved by the courts,29 and
collaterally recognized by the Congress.30
Thor faults the Black Motor formula
because of its retrospectivity: By
ascertaining current additions to a reserve
by reference to past chargeoff experience,
the formula
Page 549
assertedly penalizes taxpayers who have
delayed in making writeoffs in the past, or
whose receivables have just recently begun
to deteriorate. Petitioner's objection is
not altogether irrational, but it falls
short of rendering the formula arbitrary.
Common sense suggests that a firm's recent
credit experience offers a reasonable index
of the credit problems it may suffer
currently. And the formula possesses the not
inconsiderable advantage of enhancing
certainty and predictability in an area
peculiarly susceptible of taxpayer abuse. In
any event, after its 40 years of
near-universal acceptance, we are not
inclined to disturb the Black Motor
formula now.
Granting that Black Motor
in principle is valid, then, the only
question is whether the Commissioner abused
his discretion in invoking the formula in
this case. Of course, there will be cases
indeed, the Commissioner has acknowledged
that there are cases, see Rev.Rul. 76-362,
1976-2 Cum.Bull. 45, 46in which the formula
will generate an arbitrary result. If a
taxpayer's most recent bad-debt experience
is unrepresentative for some reason, a
formula using that experience as data cannot
be expected to produce a "reasonable"
addition for the current year.31
If the taxpayer suffers an extraordinary
credit reversal (the bankruptcy of a major
customer, for example), the "six-year moving
average" formula will fail.32 In
such a case, where the taxpayer can point to
conditions that will cause future debt
collections to be less likely than in the
past, the taxpayer is entitled toand the
Commissioner is prepared to allowan
addition larger than Black Motor
would call for. See Rev.Rul. 76-362,
supra.
Page 550
In this case, however, as the Tax Court
found, Thor "did not show that conditions at
the end of 1965 would cause collection of
accounts receivable to be less likely than
in prior years." 64 T.C., at 175. Indeed,
the Tax Court "infer[red] from the entire
record that collectibility was probably
more likely at the end of 1965 than it
was [previously] because new management had
been infused into petitioner" (emphasis
added). Thor cited no changes in the
conditions of business generally or of its
customers specifically that would render the
Black Motor formula unreliable; new
management just came in and second-guessed
its predecessor, taking a "tougher"
approach. Management's pessimism may not
have been unreasonable, but the Commissioner
had the discretion to take a more sanguine
view.33
For these reasons, we agree
with the Tax Court and with the Court of
Appeals that the Commissioner did not abuse
his discretion in recomputing a "reasonable"
addition to Thor's bad-debt reserve
according to the Black Motor formula.
Thor failed to carry its "heavy burden" of
showing why the application of that formula
would have been arbitrary in this case.
The judgment of the Court of
Appeals is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
1 In August 1964,
Stewart-Warner Corp., Thor's principal
shareholder (owning approximately 20% of
petitioner's outstanding common shares),
agreed with Thor to purchase substantially
all of Thor's assets. Its ensuing
examination and audit led Stewart-Warner to
conclude that petitioner's assets were
substantially overstated and its liabilities
understated. The purchase agreement then was
rescinded and Stewart-Warner agreed,
instead, to provide management assistance to
Thor.
2 Both in his brief, Brief
for Respondent 6, 17, 30-31, and at oral
argument, Tr. of Oral Arg. 24-25, the
Commissioner has maintained that the reason
for the allowance of Thor's $2.75 million
writeoff was that the items were scrapped
soon after they were written off. The Court
of Appeals accepted this explanation. 563
F.2d 861, 864 (1977). Thor challenges its
factual predicate, and asserts that 40% of
the obsolete parts in fact remained
unscrapped as late as the end of 1967. Reply
Brief for Petitioner 8. The record does not
enable us to resolve this factual dispute;
in any event, we must accept the
Commissioner's explanation at face value.
3 The inventory items broke
down as follows:
Raw materials 4,297
Work-in-process 1,781
Finished parts and accessories 33,670
Finished tools 4,344
----------
Total number of inventory items 44,092
64 T.C. 154, 158 (1955).
4 The operation of Thor's
aging formula is well illustrated by a chart
set forth in the opinion of the Tax Court.
Id., at 159. The chart assumes that
100 units of each of five hypothetical items
were on hand at the end
of 1964, but that the number of units
sold or used in that year varied from
20-100:
ANTICIPATED DEMAND
Units on Units sold Percent of
hand at or used 0-12 13-18 19-24 + 24
write-
Item 12-31-64 in 1964 Months Months
Months Months down
A 100 20 20 10 10 60
0% 50% 75% 100%
------ ------ ------ ------
0 5 7.5 60 =72.5
B 100 40 40 20 20 20
0% 50% 75% 100%
------- ------- ------ ------
0 10 15 20 = 45.0
C 100 60 60 30 10 0
0% 50% 75% 100%
------- ------- ------- -------
0 10 0 0 = 22.5
D 100 100 80 20 0 0
0% 50% 75% 100%
------- ------- ------- -------
0 10 0 0 =10.0
E 100 100 100 0 0 0
0% 50% 75% 100%
------ ------ ------ ------
0 0 0 0 =0.0
----------
5 "So here is where I fell
back on my experience of 20 years in
manufacturing of trying to determine a
reasonable basis for evaluating this
inventory in my previous association. We had
generally written off inventory that was in
excess of one year. In this case, we felt
that that would be overly conservative, and
it might understate the value of the
inventory. On the other hand, we felt that
two years . . . would be too optimistic and
that we would overvalue the inventory [in
view of] the factors which affect inventory,
such as technological change, market
changes, and the like, that two years, in
our opinion, was too long a period of time.
"So what we did is we came up with a
formula which was somewhat in between . . .
writing off, say, everything over one year
as compared to writing everything [off] over
two years, and we came up with this formula
that has been referred to in this Court
today." App. 57.
6 This write-down was
formulated as follows:
Write-down Write-down
Type of Inventory Percentage Amount
(1) tool parts and motor
parts at plant A 5 $26,341
(2) raw materials, work-
in-process, and finished
goods at plants
A and B 10 99,954
(3) hardware items at
plant A 50 34,537
---------
$160,832
64 T.C., at 159-160; App. 209.
7 The Tax Court found that
the finished tools were too specialized to
attract bargain hunters; that no one would
buy spare parts, regardless of price, unless
they were needed to fix broken tools; that
work-in-process had no value except as
scrap; and that other manufacturers would
not buy raw materials in the secondary
market. 64 T. C., at 160-161.
8 It appears that 78% of the
"excess" inventory at two of Thor's plants
was scrapped between 1965-1971. Id.,
at 161; App. 218.
9 For a manufacturing concern
like Thor, Gross Profit basically equals
Sales minus Cost of Goods Sold. Cost of
Goods Sold equals Opening Inventory, plus
Cost of Inventory Acquired, minus Closing
Inventory. A reduction of Closing Inventory,
therefore, increases Cost of Goods Sold and
decreases Gross Profit accordingly.
10 The Regulations define
"method of accounting" to include "not only
the over-all method of accounting of the
taxpayer but also the accounting treatment
of any item. Treas. Reg. § 1.446-(a)(1), 26
CFR § 1.446-1(a)(1) (1964).
11 See 64 T.C., at 166; Tr.
of Oral Arg. 17-19. Even if Thor had made a
timely challenge to the Regulations, it is
well established, of course, that they still
" 'must be sustained unreasonable and
plainly inconsistent with the revenue
statutes,' and 'should not be overruled
except for weighty reasons.' "
Bingler v. Johnson, 394 U.S. 741,
750, 89 S.Ct. 1439, 1445, 22 L.Ed.2d 695
(1969), quoting
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. South
Texas Lumber Co., 333 U.S. 496, 501, 68
S.Ct. 695, 698, 92 L.Ed. 831 (1948).
As an alternative to his argument that
Thor's write-down was inconsistent with the
Regulations, the Commissioner argues that he
was justified in disallowing the write-down
in any event because it constituted a
"change of accounting method," for which
Thor failed to obtain the Commissioner's
prior consent, as required by § 446(e), 26
U.S.C. § 446(e). The Regulations define a
change of accounting method to include "a
change in the treatment of a material item."
Treas. Reg. § 1.446-1(e)(2)(i), 26 CFR §
1.446-1(e)(2)(i) (1964). In view of our
disposition of the case, we need not reach
this alternative contention.
12 E. g.,
D. Loveman & Son Export Corp. v.
Commissioner,
34 T.C. 776, 796 (1960), aff'd, 296 F.2d
732 (CA6 1961), cert. denied 369 U.S. 860,
82 S.Ct. 950, 8 L.Ed.2d 18 (1962). See
Schnelwar & Jurgensen, The New Inventory
Regulations in Operation and Other Inventory
Valuation Considerations, 33 N.Y.U.Inst. on
Fed.Tax. 1077, 1093-1094 (1975); AICPA
Accounting Principles Board, Accounting
Research Bulletin No. 43, ch. 4, Statement 6
(1953), reprinted in 2 APB Accounting
Principles 6016 (1973). Judge Raum
emphasized in D. Loveman & Son that
"market" ordinarily means the price the
taxpayer must pay to replace the
inventory; "it does not mean the price at
which such merchandise is resold or offered
for resale." 34 T.C., at 796.
13 Thor seeks to justify its
write-down by citing
Space Controls, Inc. v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 322 F.2d 144 (CA5
1963), and similar cases. In Space
Controls, the taxpayer
manufactured trailers under a fixed-price
contract with the Government; it was
stipulated that the trailers were suitable
only for military use and had no value apart
from the contract. The taxpayer experienced
cost overruns and sought to write-down its
inventory by the amount by which its cost
exceeded the contract sales price. The Court
of Appeals, by a divided vote, held that the
write down was authorized by Treas. Reg. §
1.471-4(b), reasoning that the taxpayer in
effect had offered the trailers for sale by
way of the fixed-price contract. 322 F.2d,
at 151. While not necessarily approving the
Fifth Circuit's decision to dispense with
the "actual sale" rule of § 1.471-4(b), we
note that that case is distinguishable from
this one. In Space Controls, the
fixed-price contract offered objective
evidence of reduced inventory value; the
taxpayer in the present case provided no
objective evidence of reduced inventory
value at all.
Petitioner's reliance at oral argument on
United States Cartridge Co. v. United
States, 284 U.S. 511, 52 S.Ct. 243, 76
L.Ed. 431 (1932), is, we think,
similarly misplaced. The taxpayer in that
case manufactured ammunition for the
Government during World War I. In 1918 the
taxpayer was instructed to stop production
immediately, with a provision that
settlement of its claims for unfinished and
undelivered ammunition would be negotiated
later. At the end of its taxable calendar
year 1918, the ammunition was unsalable at
normal prices and settlement negotiations
had not yet begun; the taxpayer,
accordingly, wrote down its 1918 closing
inventory to "market," which was agreed to
be $232,000. Id., at 519, 52 S.Ct.,
at 246. The question was whether the
taxpayer, in computing its 1918 taxable
income, should value its inventory at that
figure, or at $732,000, the sum it
ultimately realized upon settlement of its
claims with the Army in 1920-1922. This
Court held that, in accordance with the
annual accounting principle, market value
controlled, noting that the taxpayer at the
end of 1918 "had no assurance as to what
settlements finally would be made or that it
ever would receive more than the then market
value of the inventories." Id., at
520, 52 S.Ct., at 246. This case, we think,
may be said to support, rather than to
conflict with, the result we reach here.
Just as Thor cannot write down its
inventory, in the absence of objective
evidence of lower value, because of an
anticipated future loss, so the taxpayer in
United States Cartridge could not be
required to write up its inventory,
in the absence of objective evidence of
higher value, because of an anticipated
future gain. In this respect, at least, tax
accounting travels a two-way street.
14 See, e. g.,
H.R.Doc.No.140, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 14
(1961) (the President's tax message); B.
Bittker & L. Stone, Federal Income, Estate,
and Gift Taxation 843 (4th ed. 1972);
Skinner, Inventory Valuation Problems, 50
Taxes 748-749 (1972); Schwaigart, Increasing
IRS Emphasis on Inventories Stresses Need
for Proper Practices, 19 J.Tax. 66, 69
(1963).
15 The Commissioner also
contends that Thor's write-down of "excess"
inventory was prohibited by Treas. Reg. §
1.471-2(f), 26 CFR § 1.471-2(f) (1964). That
section states:
"The following methods . . . are not in
accord with the regulations in this part:
"(1) Deducting from the inventory . . .
an estimated depreciation in the value
thereof.
"(2) Taking work in process, or other
parts of the inventory, at a nominal price
or at less than its proper value.
"(3) Omitting portions of the stock on
hand."
See Rev.Rul. 77-364, 1977-2 Cum.Bull. 183
(percentage write-down of "slow" and
"doubtful" inventory violates §
1.471-2(f)(1)); Rev.Rul. 77-228, 1977-2
Cum.Bull. 182 (deduction from closing
inventory of "excess" items still retained
for sale violates § 1.471-2(f)(3)). The
Court of Appeals and the Tax Court did not
consider these contentions. In view of our
disposition, we need not consider them
either.
16 Until 1973, § 1.471-2(b)
of the applicable Regulations provided in
pertinent part:
"In order clearly to reflect income, the
inventory practice of a taxpayer should be
consistent from year to year, and greater
weight is to be given to consistency than to
any particular method of inventorying or
basis of valuation so long as the method or
basis used is substantially in accord with
§§ 1.471-1 to 1.471-9. An inventory that can
be used under the best accounting practice
in a balance sheet showing the financial
position of the taxpayer can, as a general
rule, be regarded as clearly reflecting his
income."
The inventory Regulations were amended in
1973 to require most taxpayers engaged in
manufacturing to use the "full absorption
method of inventory costing," currently set
forth in § 1.471-11. T.D. 7285, 1973-2
Cum.Bull. 163, 164; 26 CFR § 1.471-11
(1978). As part of these amendments, the
final sentence of § 1.471-2(b)containing
the "as a general rule" languagewas
deleted; further, the requirement that
inventory practices be "substantially in
accord with §§ 1.471-1 to 1.479-9
" was revised to require that such methods
be "in accord with §§ 1.471-1 through
1.471-11." 26 CFR § 1.471-2(b) (1978)
(emphasis added). The Tax Court and the
Court of Appeals both determined that the
1973 amendments to § 1.471-2(b) were
inapplicable to this case. 64 T.C., at 167;
563 F.2d., at 866 n. 11. We agree.
17 "I think it is pretty
obvious that [inventory representing a
10-year supply] has inherently less value
[than inventory representing a 1-year
supply] because of the things that can
happen to the inventory. Some of it will be
lost. Some of it may become damaged. Some of
it will become obsolete because of the
technological change. Some won't be sold
because of the fact that you have market
changes. So we were confronted with the
problem, as anybody in the manufacturing
field [would be], of trying to develop a
relationship between inventory quantity and
anticipated usage." App. 56-57 (testimony of
Thor's president).
18 AICPA Accounting
Principles Board, Statement No. 4, Basic
Concepts and Accounting Principles
Underlying Financial Statements of Business
Enterprises, 171 (1970), reprinted in 2
APB Accounting Principles 9089 (1973). See
Sterling, Conservatism: The Fundamental
Principle of Valuation in Traditional
Accounting, 3 Abacus 109-113 (1967).
19 Accord, Raby & Richter,
Conformity of Tax and Financial Accounting,
139 J. Accountancy 42, 44, 48 (Mar. 1975);
Arnett, Taxable Income vs. Financial Income:
How Much Uniformity Can We Stand?, 44
Accounting Rev. 482, 485-487, 492-493 (July
1969); Cannon, Tax Pressures on Accounting
Principles and Accountants' Independence, 27
Accounting Rev. 419, 419-422 (1952).
20 See, e. g.,
McClure, Diverse Tax Interpretations of
Accounting Concepts, 142 J. Accountancy 67,
68-69 (Oct. 1976); Kupfer, The Financial
Accounting Disclosure of Tax Matters;
Conflicts With Tax Accounting Technical
Requirements, 33 N.Y.U.Inst. on Fed.Tax.
1121, 1122 (1975); Healy, Narrowing the Gap
Between Tax and Financial Accounting, 22
Tulane Tax Inst. 407, 417 (1973); A
Challenge: Can the Accounting Profession
Lead the Tax System?, 126 J. Accountancy 66,
68-69 (Sept. 1968).
21 E. g., Raby &
Richter, supra, at 44; Arnett,
supra at 486; 126 J. Accountancy,
supra, at 68.
22 Arnett, supra, at
492 (noting that there are "many and diverse
'acceptable' practices in valuing
inventories, depreciating assets, amortizing
or not amortizing good will," and the like);
126 J. Accountancy, supra, at 69
(noting that "methods of determining
inventory costs vary widely and various
methods, if consistently applied, will be
acceptable for accounting purposes"); Eaton,
Financial Reporting in a Changing Society,
104 J. Accountancy 25, 26 (Aug. 1957); Cox,
Conflicting Concepts of Income for
Managerial and Federal Income Tax Purposes,
33 Accounting Rev. 242 (1958); Cannon,
supra at 421 (suggesting that
accountants "are quite prone to define
'generally accepted' as 'somebody tried it'
").
23 Thor's experts did not
testify that the company's write-down
procedures were the only "generally
accepted accounting practice." They
testified merely that Thor's inventory
needed to be written down, and that the
formulae Thor used constituted a
"reasonable" way of doing this. App. 166,
184, 196.
24 The details of the
calculation are set out in Black Motor
Co. v. Commissioner, 41 B.T.A., at 302.
See 2 CCH 1978 Stand. Fed. Tax Rep.,
1624.0992; Whitman, Gilbert, & Picotte, The
Black Motor Bad Debt Formula: Why It
Doesn't Work and How to Adjust It, 35 J.Tax.
366 (1971).
25
Malone & Hyde, Inc. v. United States,
568 F.2d 474, 477 (CA6 1978);
Business Dev. Corp. of No. Carolina v.
United States, 428 F.2d 451, 453
(CA4), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 957, 91 S.Ct.
355, 27 L.Ed.2d 265 (1970);
United States v. Haskel Engineering &
Supply Co., 380 F.2d 786, 789 (CA9 1967);
Patterson v. Pizitz, Inc., 353 F.2d
267, 270 (CA5 1965), cert. denied, 383
U.S. 910, 86 S.Ct. 895, 15 L.Ed.2d 666
(1966);
Ehlen v. United States, 323 F.2d 535,
539, 163 Ct.Cl. 35, 42 (1963);
James A. Messer Co. v. Commissioner,
57 T.C. 848, 864-865 (1972).
26
Atlantic Discount Co. v. United States,
473 F.2d 412, 414-415 (CA5 1973) (citing
cases);
Consolidated-Hammer Dry Plate & Film Co.
v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 317
F.2d 829, 834 (CA7 1963).
27 E. g., Malone & Hyde,
Inc. v. United States, 568 F.2d, at 477;
First Nat. Bank of Chicago v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 546
F.2d 759, 761 (CA7 1976), cert. denied,
431 U.S. 915, 97 S.Ct. 2176, 53 L.Ed.2d 225
(1977).
28 See, e. g.,
Rev.Rul. 76-362, 1976-2 Cum.Bull. 45, 46
("[A]s a general rule, the Black Motor
formula may be used to determine a
reasonable addition to a reserve for bad
debts" under § 166(c)).
29 E. g., Atlantic
Discount Co. v. United States, 473 F.2d,
at 413, 415; Ehlen v. United States,
323 F.2d, at 540-541, 163 Ct.Cl., at 45;
James A. Messer Co. v. Commissioner, 57
T.C., at 857, 865-866.
30 See § 585(b)(3) of the
1954 Code, 26 U.S.C. § 585(b)(3) (using
"six-year moving average" formula as
alternative method of computing reasonable
addition to bad-debt reserve for banks); §
586(b)(1) (using "six-year moving average"
formula to compute reasonable addition to
bad-debt reserve for small business
investment companies).
31 E. g.,
Westchester Development Co. v. Commissioner,
63 T.C. 198, 212 (1974), acq., 1975-2
Cum.Bull. 2 (Commissioner abused discretion
in invoking Black Motor where
taxpayer's recent bad-debt experience was
"wholly unrepresentative" given its
"comparatively brief operational history").
32 E. g.,
Calavo, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue,
304 F.2d 650, 651-652, 654 n. 4, 655
(CA9 1962) (extraordinary addition to
reserve to cover losses on accounts due from
debtor who recently became insolvent).
33 Indeed, as has been noted,
a significant portion of Thor's addition to
its reserve reflected blanket aging of
accounts. Both the Treasury, Rev.Rul.
76-362, 1976-2 Cum.Bull. 45, 46, and the
courts, United States v. Haskel
Engineering & Supply Co., 380 F.2d, at
787, 789; James A. Messer Co. v.
Commissioner, 57 T. C., at 857, 866,
have held that such mechanical formulae are
inadequate to overcome the Commissioner's
discretionary invocation of Black Motor
under § 166(c). |