[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 11]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.1312-3]

[Page 632-633]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1312-3  Double exclusion of an item of gross income.

    (a) Items included in income or with respect to which a tax was 
paid. (1) Paragraph (3)(A) of section 1312 applies if the determination 
requires the exclusion, from a taxpayer's gross income, of an item 
included in a return filed by the taxpayer, or with respect to which tax 
was paid, and which was erroneously excluded or omitted from the gross 
income of the same taxpayer for another taxable year or of a related 
taxpayer for the same or another taxable year.
    (2) The application of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. (i) A taxpayer received payments in 1951 under a contract 
for the performance of services and included the payments in his return 
for that year. After the expiration of the period of limitations for the 
assessment of a deficiency for 1950, the Commissioner issued a notice of 
deficiency to the taxpayer for the year 1951 based upon adjustments to 
other items, and the taxpayer filed a petition with the Tax Court of the 
United States and maintained in the proceedings before the Tax Court 
that he kept his books on the accrual basis and that the payments 
received in 1951 were on income that had accrued and was properly 
taxable in 1950. A final decision of the Tax Court was rendered in 1955 
excluding the payments from 1951 income. An adjustment in favor of the 
Commissioner is authorized with respect to the year 1950, whether or not 
a tax had been paid on the income reported in the 1951 return.
    (ii) Assume the same facts as in (i), except that the taxpayer had 
not included the payments in any return and had not paid a tax thereon. 
No adjustment would be authorized under section 1312(3)(A) with respect 
to the year 1950. If the taxpayer, however, had paid a deficiency 
asserted for 1951 based upon the inclusion of the payments in 1951 
income and thereafter successfully sued for refund thereof, an 
adjustment would be authorized with respect to the year 1950. (See 
paragraph (b) of this section for circumstances under which correction 
is authorized with respect to items not included in income and on which 
a tax was not paid.)
    Example 2. A father and son conducted a partnership business, each 
being entitled to one-half of the net profits. The father included the 
entire net income of the partnership in his return for 1948, and the son 
included no portion of this income in his return for that year. Shortly 
before the expiration of the period of limitations with respect to 
deficiency assessments and refund claims for both father and son for 
1948, the father filed a claim for refund of that portion of his 1948 
tax attributable to the half of the partnership income which should have 
been included in the son's return. The court sustains the claim for 
refund in 1955. An adjustment is authorized with respect to the son's 
tax for 1948.

    (b) Items not included in income and with respect to which the tax 
was not paid. (1) Paragraph (3)(B) of section 1312 applies if the 
determination requires the exclusion from gross income of an item not 
included in a return filed by the taxpayer and with respect to which a 
tax was not paid, but which is includible in the gross income of the 
same taxpayer for another taxable year, or in the gross income of a 
related taxpayer for the same or another taxable year. This is one of 
the two circumstances in which the maintenance

[[Page 633]]

of an inconsistent position is not a requirement for an adjustment, but 
the requirements in paragraph (a) of Sec. 1.1311(b)-2 must be fulfilled 
(correction not barred at time of erroneous action).
    (2) The application of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. The taxpayer, A, who computes his income by use of the 
accrual method of accounting, performed in 1949 services for which he 
received payments in 1949 and 1950. He did not include in his return for 
either 1949 or 1950 the payments which he received in 1950, and he paid 
no tax with respect to such payments. In 1952 the Commissioner sent a 
notice of deficiency to A with respect to the year 1949, contending that 
A should have included all of such payments in his return for that year. 
A contested the deficiency on the basis that in 1949 he had no accruable 
right to the payments which he received in 1950. In 1955 (after the 
expiration of the period of limitations for assessing deficiencies with 
respect to 1950), the Tax Court sustains A's position. The Commissioner 
may assess a deficiency for 1950, since a deficiency assessment for that 
year was not barred when he sent the notice of deficiency with respect 
to 1949.
    Example 2. B and C were partners in 1950, each being entitled to 
one-half of the profits of the partnership business. During 1950, B 
received an item of income which he treated as partnership income so 
that his return for that year reflected only 50 percent of such item. C, 
however, included no part of such item in any return and paid no tax 
with respect thereto. In 1952, the Commissioner sent to C a notice of 
deficiency with respect to 1950, contending that his return for that 
year should have reflected 50 percent of such item. C contested the 
deficiency on the basis that such item was not partnership income. In 
1955, after the expiration of the period of limitations for assessing 
deficiencies with respect to 1950, the Tax Court sustained C's position. 
The Commissioner may assess a deficiency against B with respect to 1950 
requiring him to include the entire amount of such item in his income 
since assessment of the deficiency was not barred when the Commissioner 
sent the notice of deficiency with respect to such item to C.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 12034, Nov. 26, 1960]