Howe v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE

Decision Date03 July 1941
Docket NumberDocket No. 101426.
PartiesALEXANDER C. HOWE, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.
CourtU.S. Board of Tax Appeals

Charles H. Buckley, Esq., for the petitioner.

Allen T. Akin, Esq., for the respondent.

Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax against the petitioner for the year 1937 in the amount of $232.95. The only issue presented for determination is the correctness of respondent's action in refusing to allow as a credit against tax the amount of $228.36 representing Canadian income tax withheld and paid by Canadian corporations on dividends received by petitioner from such corporations during the taxable year.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The petitioner is a citizen of the United States and resides at 41 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York. He filed his income tax return for the year 1937 with the collector of internal revenue for the first collection district of New York, on March 12, 1938. The return was made on the cash basis and disclosed net income in the amount of $22,465.53. The total tax shown was $2,042.14, against which a credit of $62 was taken for income tax paid at source, leaving a balance of income tax payable by petitioner in the amount of $1,980.14. No credit was claimed on the return for income taxes paid to a foreign country.

The petitioner reported dividends received from domestic and foreign corporations in the amount of $21,648.86, which amount included the dividends received from Canadian corporations. The Canadian corporations from which the dividends had been received had withheld and paid Canadian income tax thereon in the amount of $228.36. In making his return the petitioner reported as dividends received from Canadian corporations only the amounts actually received and made no showing with respect to the Canadian income tax withheld.

The petitioner's return was prepared by Lillian T. McManus, a secretary employed by the law firm of McKercher & Link. The petitioner's dividend checks were received by her and a monthly record was made of such receipts. She also kept a record of his bond and mortgage interest and the petitioner sent her a list of his expenses. From the records so kept by her the petitioner's return was prepared. As a part of her duties in the office of McKercher & Link, Miss McManus regularly prepared a number of income tax returns. At the time she prepared petitioner's return she did not know that the amount of Canadian income tax withheld in respect of the dividends received by petitioner might be claimed as a credit against petitioner's Federal income tax. Subsequent to the filing of the return she was advised by a revenue agent who was examining another return that the full amount of the Canadian dividends should have been reported as gross income and the amount of the tax withheld claimed as a deduction. Thereafter she prepared a second return, the only difference between it and the first return being that the Canadian dividends were reported in full and the $228.36 Canadian income tax thereon was claimed as a credit against the tax shown on the return. The return so prepared, together with a formal statement on Treasury Form 1116 in support thereof, was filed on June 23, 1938.

On the basis of the return filed on March 12, 1938, the respondent determined the deficiency here in issue. The deficiency so determined resulted from the inclusion in income of dividends received from the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. not previously reported, from the adjustment of certain clerical errors, and the reduction of the $62 credit for income tax paid at the source to $19.20. None of these adjustments is contested by the petitioner. The respondent refused, however, to allow any part of the credit of $228.36 claimed on the second return with respect to the Canadian income tax withheld and paid by the Canadian corporations. In explanation of his refusal to allow the credit claimed, the respondent in his notice of deficiency stated: "It is held that inasmuch as on your original return you did not signify your desire to have the benefit of the credit but in effect deducted the said tax from gross income, you are precluded from amending your return and claiming the amount as a credit after the expiration of the due date for filing your return."

OPINION.

TURNER:

Section 23 (c) (2) of the Revenue Act of 1936 provides in short that "a taxpayer who does not signify in his return his desire to have to any extent the benefits of section 131" shall be allowed a deduction for income, war profits and excess profits taxes paid to a foreign country. Section 131 provides that if a citizen of the United States signifies in his return his desire to have the benefits of that section, the tax imposed is to be credited with "the amount of any income, war-profits, and excess-profits taxes paid or accrued during the taxable year to any foreign country."

The petitioner paid during the taxable year, through withholding by Canadian corporations from which he received dividends, $228.36 in income taxes to the Canadian Government. He did not signify in his income tax return filed on March 12, 1938, any desire to have the benefits of section 131, but by reporting only the net dividends received from Canadian corporations had in effect the benefit of a deduction of the said taxes as provided by section 23 (c) (2), supra. The record will not support a finding whether either the petitioner or Miss McManus was aware that the Canadian corporations had not transmitted the face amount of the dividends declared or had withheld the Canadian income tax thereon and had transmitted only the net amount of the dividends. About the most that may be said with certainty is that Miss McManus did not know the amount withheld until a later date. In the absence, however, of the expression by the petitioner "in his return" of a desire to have the benefit of the credit provided by section 131, there can be no question that in so far as the Canadian dividends are concerned the return filed on March 12, 1938, reported and disclosed a correct result. It may not be said therefore that the return was incorrect with respect to petitioner's income tax liability on the dividends received from the Canadian corporations.

The petitioner, relying on Ralph Leslie Raymond, 34 B. T. A. 1171, and Mead Coal Co. v. Commissioner, 106 Fed. (2d) 388, contends that his claim for credit made in the return filed on June 23, 1938, was a claim "in his return within the meaning of section 131" and that the respondent is in error in his denial thereof. The respondent relies on Shire v. McGowan, decided by the United States District Court for the Western District of New York on May 25, 1939, and Marcy v. McGowan, decided by the same court on May 20, 1940, and contends that inasmuch as the petitioner reported only the net amount of dividends in his return filed on March 12, 1938, which was the only return filed by the petitioner within the statutory period prescribed for the filing of such return, the petitioner in effect claimed the Canadian tax as a deduction and did not comply with the requirements of the statute with respect to the allowance of the Canadian tax as a credit.

Shire v. McGowan, supra, relied on by the respondent, is directly in point. In that case the taxpayers undertook to obtain by amended return the benefit of a credit for income taxes paid to the Dominion of Canada instead of the deduction benefit allowed under section 23 of the statute and obtained on the return originally filed. The court held that the taxpayers, having had the benefit of the deduction provided by section 23 and not having elected on their return to have the benefit of the credit, were not permitted a new election by means of an amended return. It does not appear that any question was raised as to the possible effectiveness of an amended return filed prior to the expiration of the period for filing a return for the year to which the amended return was applicable, but the facts show that the amended return to which effect was...

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