                     116 T.C. No. 4



                 UNITED STATES TAX COURT



  RIDGE L. HARLAN AND MARJORY C. HARLAN, Petitioners v.
       COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

THEODORE S. OCKELS AND ROSEMARIE G. OCKELS, Petitioners v.
      COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



 Docket Nos. 21214-92, 24609-92.      Filed January 17, 2001.



      Ps are partners in partnerships (the 1st-tier
 partnerships); some of the 1st-tier partnerships are
 partners in other partnerships (the 2d-tier partnerships).
 R maintains that the 6-year period of limitations under sec.
 6501(e)(1)(A), I.R.C. 1986, applies to notices of deficiency
 sent in 1992 with respect to Ps’ 1985 tax year. In
 determining the applicability of sec. 6501(e)(1)(A), I.R.C.
 1986, R includes in Ps’ “gross income stated in the return”
 Ps’ distributive shares of the gross incomes of the 1st-tier
 partnerships, but does not take account of the 1st-tier
 partnerships’ distributive shares of the gross incomes of
 the 2d-tier partnerships. Ps contend to the contrary.

      Held: In determining the amount of “gross income
 stated in the return” (the denominator in the 25-percent
 test of sec. 6501(e)(1)(A), I.R.C. 1986) for petitioners,
 the 2d-tier partnerships’ information returns are treated as
                               - 2 -

     adjuncts to, and parts of, the 1st-tier partnerships’
     information returns, which in turn are treated as adjuncts
     to, and parts of, petitioner’s tax returns.



     Craig A. Etter, Timothy J. Jessell, and Michael I. Sanders,

for petitioners.

     Carol E. Schultze, for respondent.



                              OPINION

     CHABOT, Judge:   This matter is before us for determination

as to whether, in applying the 6-year period of limitations (sec.

6501(e)(1)(A))1, when a petitioner’s tax return reflects income

from a partnership (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the 1st-

tier partnership) that is itself a partner in another partnership

(hereinafter sometimes referred to as the 2d-tier partnership),

the statutory phrase “gross income stated in the return” (the

denominator in the 25-percent test) requires a tracing of the

flow of gross income from not only the 1st-tier partnership’s

information return but also from the 2d-tier partnership’s

information return in order to determine petitioners’ appropriate




     1
      Unless otherwise indicated, all subtitle, chapter,
subchapter, and section references are to subtitles, chapters,
subchapters, and sections of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as
in effect for 1985; except that references to section 6501 are to
section 6501 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as in effect
for notices of deficiency mailed in 1992.
                              - 3 -

distributive share of partnership gross income from the 1st-tier

partnership’s tax return.2

     Respondent determined deficiencies in individual income tax

and additions to tax under sections 6653(a) (negligence, etc.)

and 6661 (substantial understatement) against (1) petitioners

Ridge L. Harlan (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Ridge) and

Marjory C. Harlan (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Marjory)

(Ridge and Marjory are hereinafter sometimes referred to

collectively as the Harlans) and (2) petitioners Theodore S.

Ockels (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Theodore) and

Rosemarie G. Ockels (Theodore and Rosemarie G. Ockels are

hereinafter sometimes referred to collectively as the Ockels) for

1985 as follows:




     2
      On brief, petitioners state that this is a jurisdictional
issue. However, the instant cases are deficiency cases; thus,
the statute of limitations is an affirmative defense and not a
jurisdictional issue. See sec. 7459(e); Rule 39; Davenport
Recycling Associates v. Commissioner, 220 F.3d 1255, 1259-1260
(11th Cir. 2000), affg. T.C. Memo. 1998-347 (in deficiency cases,
assertion of the bar of the statute of limitations is an
affirmative defense, not a jurisdictional question); Columbia
Building, Ltd. v. Commissioner, 98 T.C. 607, 611 (1992) (same);
compare Commissioner v. Lundy, 516 U.S. 235 (1996) (in refund
cases in the Tax Court, the statute of limitations is a
jurisdictional question).

     Unless otherwise indicated, all Rule references are to the
Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
                                    - 4 -
                                             Additions to Tax
 Petitioners      Deficiency    Sec. 6653(a)(1) Sec. 6653(a)(2)   Sec. 6661
                                                     1
 The Harlans       $548,186        $27,409                        $137,047
                                                     2
 The Ockels          62,490          3,125                          15,623
     1
         50 percent of interest due on $548,186.
     2
         50 percent of interest due on $62,490.

     The instant cases have been severed from docket Nos. 15653-

92 and 15654-923 for briefing and opinion on the 2d-tier

partnership issue.

     The 2d-tier partnership issue has been submitted fully

stipulated; the stipulations and the stipulated exhibits are

incorporated herein by this reference.

                                 Background

     When the respective petitions in the instant cases were

filed, the Harlans resided in Hillsborough, California, and the

Ockels resided in Lafayette, California.




     3
      Cases of the following petitioners had originally been
consolidated: (1) Alan B. Steiner and Barbara W. Steiner, docket
No. 28182-92; (2) Estate of James Beaton, deceased, Shirley
Beaton, Executrix, and Shirley Beaton, docket No. 28181-92; (3)
James F. Ottinger and Bonnie J. Ottinger, docket No. 15654-92;
(4) Theodore S. Ockels and Rosemarie G. Ockels, docket No. 24609-
92; (5) Ridge L. Harlan and Marjory C. Harlan, docket No. 21214-
92; and (6) Estate of William H. Abildgaard, deceased, William
Abildgaard, Jr., Executor, and Marlene Abildgaard, docket No.
15653-92. See Steiner v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1995-122. The
Beaton, docket No. 28181-92, and Steiner, docket No. 28182-92,
cases were severed from the group and were disposed of on another
issue. See Beaton v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-140.
                                 - 5 -

A.   The Harlans

      The Harlans filed their joint 1985 tax return on or about

August 12, 1986.     On June 26, 1992, respondent issued a notice of

deficiency to the Harlans for 1985.

      The 3-year period of limitations for assessment of tax under

section 6501(a) with respect to the Harlans for 1985 expired

before the notice of deficiency was mailed.      The Harlans did not

execute any extensions of the period of limitations on assessment

with respect to 1985.

      The Harlans’ 1985 tax return has attached to the Form 1040,

the following:     Schedules A, B, C, D, E, and SE; Forms 3468,

3800, 4136, 4797, 4868, 6251, 1116, 2210, 4562, 4835, 4952; 27

numbered “statements”; and a Treasury Department Form TD F 90-

22.1.

      The Harlans’ 1985 tax return shows an ordinary loss of

$56,069 from several partnerships, identified by name, address,

and employer identification number.      The record includes 1985

partnership information returns, or parts of those returns, from

each of the identified partnerships, as well as stipulations as

to the Harlans’ shares of the partnerships’ gross incomes,

determined without regard to the 2d-tier partnership gross

incomes.

      During 1985, Ridge was a partner in three single-tier

partnerships, and Marjorie was a partner in one single-tier

partnership.
                               - 6 -

     During 1985, Ridge was a partner in two multiple tier

partnerships:   (1) Pacific Real Estate Investors Partnership

(hereinafter sometimes referred to as Pacific) and (2) Carlyle

Real Estate Limited Partnership-VI (hereinafter sometimes

referred to as Carlyle).

     Pacific was a partner in at least one other partnership.

Pacific’s 1985 information return shows an ordinary loss of

$7,705 from another partnership, identified by name and employer

identification number.   The record does not include information

as to the amount of the gross income stated on this 2d-tier

partnership’s 1985 information return.

     Carlyle was a partner in several other partnerships.

Carlyle’s 1985 information return shows ordinary income of

$674,791.81 from four other partnerships, each identified by name

and employer identification number.    The record does not include

information as to the amounts of Carlyle’s shares of the gross

incomes stated on these 2d-tier partnerships’ 1985 information

returns.

     On one of the schedules attached to their 1985 tax return,

the Harlans show their gross income as $1,216,099. This schedule

is for purposes of Form 1116, part I, line 2.d.(v), and is an

element of the formula used in the computation of their foreign

tax credit.   Nevertheless, the parties have stipulated that the

gross income for purposes of section 6501(e) that is “reflected
                                - 7 -

on the Harlan’s 1985 Form 1040 and on the first-tier partnership

returns of the partnerships in which Ridge or Marjory Harlan

owned a direct interest”, i.e., excluding “the flow of gross

income from” the 2d-tier partnerships, is $1,410,077.

B.   The Ockels

     The Ockels filed their 1985 joint tax return on October 15,

1986.   On August 11, 1992, respondent issued a notice of

deficiency to the Ockels for 1985.

     The 3-year period of limitations for assessment of tax under

section 6501(a) with respect to the Ockels for 1985 expired

before the notice of deficiency was mailed.    The Ockels did not

execute any extensions of the period of limitations on assessment

with respect to 1985.

     The Ockels’ 1985 tax return has, attached to the Form 1040,

the following:    Schedules A, B, C, D, E, and SE; Forms 2688,

3468, 4797, 6198, 6251, 4684, 8283, 4255, 4562, 4868, 4952, 8082,

6248; and numerous schedules, attachments, and other documents.

     The Ockels’ 1985 tax return shows net income of $7,900 from

several partnerships and one independent oil producer, identified

by name and employer identification number.    The record includes

1985 partnership information returns, or parts of those returns,

from each of the identified partnerships, and a 1985 windfall

profit tax information return (Form 6248) from the oil producer,

as well as stipulations as to Theodore’s shares of the
                               - 8 -

partnerships’ gross incomes, and the oil producer’s gross sales

price, determined without regard to the 2d-tier partnerships’

gross incomes.

     During 1985, Theodore was a partner in nine single-tier

partnerships.

     During 1985, Theodore was a partner in one multiple tier

partnership, Mission Resources Development Drilling Program -

Belridge II (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Mission

Resources).   Mission Resources was a partner in at least one

other partnership.   Mission Resources’ 1985 information return

shows ordinary income of $286,137 from another partnership,

identified by name but not otherwise.     The record does not

include information as to the amount of the gross income stated

on this 2d-tier partnership’s 1985 information return.

     The Ockels do not claim a foreign tax credit on their 1985

tax return, and so do not have any equivalent of the Harlans’

above-noted schedule.   The parties have stipulated that the gross

income for purposes of section 6501(e) that is “reflected on the

Ockels’ 1985 Form 1040 and on the first-tier partnership return

[sic] of the partnerships in which the Ockels owned a direct

interest”, i.e., excluding “the flow of gross income from” the

2d-tier partnerships, is $407,819.     This total includes

Theodore’s share of the gross receipts of the independent oil

producer.
                                - 9 -

C.    The VeloBind Stock

      At the start of 1985, Ridge owned 80,000 shares of junior

common stock in VeloBind that he had bought in 1983 for $3 per

share.    In 1985, Theodore owned 7,500 shares of junior common

stock in VeloBind that he had bought in 1983 for $3 per share.

In Steiner v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1995-122, we determined

that these shares converted to VeloBind common stock in 1985.

The VeloBind common stock traded at $17 per share on February 12,

1985.

      In the respective notices of deficiency, respondent

determined that the Harlans4 and the Ockels5 received 1985 income

from the stock conversion.

                             Discussion

I.   The Parties’ Contentions; Summary of Court’s Conclusion

      Petitioners have properly raised in their petitions the

affirmative defense of the statute of limitations for 1985.     See

Rule 39.

      The parties have stipulated that the 3-year period of

limitations (sec. 6501(a)) expired for both the Harlans and the


      4
      In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that the
Harlans’ income from the VeloBind stock conversion was
$1,275,200. However, in respondent’s answer and on brief,
respondent asserts the correct income amount was $1,120,000.
      5
      In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that the
Ockels’ income from the VeloBind stock conversion was $119,550.
However, in respondent’s answer and on brief, respondent asserts
the correct income amount was $105,000.
                             - 10 -

Ockels before respondent issued the respective notices of

deficiency.

     Respondent contends that the instant cases fall within an

exception to the 3-year rule--the 6-year statute of limitations

set forth in section 6501(e)(1)(A)--because each set of

petitioners has omitted from gross income more than “25 percent

of the amount of gross income stated in the return” for that set

of petitioners.

     Petitioners contend that the income that respondent contends

was omitted from their 1985 tax returns6 is less than 25 percent

of the amounts of gross income stated in their respective tax

returns because (1) their tax returns are treated as having set

forth their shares of the gross incomes set forth on the

information returns of their 1st-tier partnerships and (2) the

information returns of their lst-tier partnerships should be

treated as setting forth their 1st-tier partnerships’ respective

shares of the gross incomes set forth on the information returns

of their 2d-tier partnerships.

     Respondent argues that the 2d-tier partnerships’ information

returns are to be ignored because (1) “The plain language of the

Code and the regulations” require consideration of only



     6
      The question of whether petitioners omitted any gross
income--whether the 1985 conversions of the Velobind stock
produced gross income and, if so, then in what amounts--has been
set aside for determination at a later date.
                              - 11 -

petitioners’ tax returns and not the partnerships’ information

returns, (2) the regulations’ concept of setting forth on a tax

return applies only to what is set forth on petitioners’ tax

returns, and (3) a contrary interpretation “would impose an

excessive administrative burden on the Service and on taxpayers.”

     Petitioners maintain that section 702(c) and the regulations

plainly require that whenever it is necessary to determine the

amount of a partner’s gross income, that amount is to include the

partner’s distributive share of the partnership’s gross income.

As applied to the instant cases, in order to determine the amount

of petitioners’ gross income from the 1st-tier partnerships,

there must first be determined the amount of each 1st-tier

partnership’s gross income.   Section 702(c)’s rule then applies,

petitioners contend, so that in order to determine the amount of

any 1st-tier partnership’s gross income, there must first be

determined the amount of each 2d-tier partnership’s gross income.

Petitioners maintain that this rule is consistent with the “look-

through” approaches of other subchapter K provisions (e.g., in

secs. 1.704-3(a)(8), 1.704-2(k), and 1.752-4, Income Tax Regs.),

and provisions outside subchapter K, such as sections

108(a)(1)(C) and 904(d).

     Under section 6501(e)(1)(A), the denominator of the 25-

percent fraction is “the amount of gross income stated in the

return”.   But the taxpayer ordinarily does not state the amount
                              - 12 -

of gross income anywhere on the tax return.7   As a result, we

must look through the various forms, etc., attached to the

taxpayer’s basic tax return form in order to identify the

components of gross income that must be added together in order

to determine the total amount of gross income stated in the

taxpayer’s tax return.   It has long been accepted that, for these

purposes, the information return of the taxpayer’s properly

identified 1st-tier partnership is treated as part of the

taxpayer’s tax return.   But the 1st-tier partnership’s

information return suffers from the same “defect” in that we must

look through the various forms, etc., attached to the 1st-tier

partnership’s information return in order to identify the

components of gross income that must be added together in order

to determine the total amount of gross income stated in the 1st-

tier partnership’s information return.   Every explanation that

has been drawn to our attention, or that we have discovered, as

to why we must treat the properly identified 1st-tier

partnership’s information return as part of the taxpayer’s tax

return applies with equal force to treating the properly

identified 2d-tier partnership’s information return as part of

the 1st-tier partnership’s information return.

     Accordingly, we agree with petitioners’ conclusion.




     7
      As is the case in the Harlan’s docket, even if the taxpayer
does state such an amount and clearly labels it as such, that may
not be the correct amount for purposes of sec. 6501(e)(1)(A),
even if it is the correct amount for other purposes.
                                 - 13 -

II.   Overview

      In general, section 6501(a)8 bars assessment of an income


      8
       Sec. 6501 provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

      SEC. 6501. LIMITATIONS ON ASSESSMENT AND COLLECTION.

           (a) General Rule.--Except as otherwise provided in this
      section, the amount of any tax imposed by this title shall
      be assessed within 3 years after the return was filed
      (whether or not such return was filed on or after the date
      prescribed) * * * and no proceeding in court without
      assessment for the collection of such tax shall be begun
      after the expiration of such period.

                   *    *    *     *      *   *   *

           (e) Substantial Omission of Items.--Except as otherwise
      provided in subsection (c)--

                (1) Income Taxes.--In the case of any tax imposed
           by subtitle A [relating to income taxes]--

                      (A) General rule.--If the taxpayer omits from
                 gross income an amount properly includible therein
                 which is in excess of 25 percent of the amount of
                 gross income stated in the return, the tax may be
                 assessed, or a proceeding in court for the
                 collection of such tax may be begun without
                 assessment, at any time within 6 years after the
                 return was filed. For purposes of this
                 subparagraph--

                            (i) In the case of a trade or business,
                       the term “gross income” means the total of
                       the amounts received or accrued from the sale
                       of goods or services (if such amounts are
                       required to be shown on the return) prior to
                       diminution by the cost of such sales or
                       services; and

                            (ii) In determining the amount omitted
                       from gross income, there shall not be taken
                       into account any amount which is omitted from
                       gross income stated in the return if such
                                                      (continued...)
                                - 14 -

tax deficiency more than 3 years after the later of the date the

tax return was filed or the due date of the tax return.    The

parties stipulated that the 3-year general period of limitations

on assessment under section 6501(a) expired for petitioners’ 1985

tax year before the respective notices of deficiency were sent.

Respondent has the burden of proving the applicability of an

exception to the general limitations period.    See Rule 142; Reis

v. Commissioner, 142 F.2d 900 (6th Cir. 1944), affg. 1 T.C. 9, 12

(1942), as modified by a Memorandum Opinion of this Court dated

June 4, 1943.   In particular, as respondent acknowledges, in

order for the 6-year period of limitations under section 6501(e)

to apply, respondent must show that the taxpayer has omitted an

amount of gross income which is more than 25 percent of the

amount of gross income stated in the tax return.    See Davenport

v. Commissioner, 48 T.C. 921, 928 (1967) (taxpayers’ tax returns

showed net losses from a partnership; 6-year statute of

limitations did not apply because the Commissioner “has not shown

whether a partnership return was filed for those years and if so

the gross income reported thereon”); Hurley v. Commissioner, 22

T.C. 1256, 1264-1265 (1954), affd. 233 F.2d 177 (6th Cir. 1956)



     8
      (...continued)
                       amount is disclosed in the return, or in a
                       statement attached to the return, in a manner
                       adequate to apprise the Secretary of the
                       nature and amount of such item.
                                - 15 -

(using net worth method, Commissioner showed omission of net

income; held, Commissioner failed to carry burden of proving how

much of this omission was due to omission of gross income);

Seltzer v. Commissioner, 21 T.C. 398, 402-403 (1953)

(Commissioner failed to prove taxpayer’s basis in a sold capital

asset, and so “has not sustained his burden of proof to show”

that taxpayer omitted gross income which was more than 25 percent

of the gross income stated in her tax return); see also Colestock

v. Commissioner, 102 T.C. 380, 383, 390-391 (1994); Estate of Fry

v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 1020, 1023 n.8 (1987); Stratton v.

Commissioner, 54 T.C. 255, 289 (1970), and cases there cited;

Philipp Bros. Chemicals, Inc. v. Commissioner, 52 T.C. 240, 254-

255 (1969), affd. 435 F.2d 53 (2d Cir. 1970); Rhombar Co. v.

Commissioner, 47 T.C. 75, 85 (1966), affd. 386 F.2d 510 (2d Cir.

1967); Bardwell v. Commissioner, 38 T.C. 84, 92 (1962), affd. on

another issue 318 F.2d 786 (10th Cir. 1963); Green v.

Commissioner, 7 T.C. 263, 277 (1946), affd. 168 F.2d 994 (6th

Cir. 1948).

     The test for the extended limitations period under section

6501(e) may be expressed as a fraction.    The numerator is the

amount of properly includable gross income that was omitted from

a taxpayer’s return, and the denominator is “the amount of gross

income stated in the return”.    Sec. 6501(e)(1)(A).   If the

fraction exceeds 25 percent, then the 6-year limitations period
                               - 16 -

under section 6501(e) applies.     In the instant cases, the

parties’ dispute focuses on the denominator.

    Two aspects of this dispute make it clear that more is

involved than meets the eye, as follows:

       Firstly, although the statutory language is “the amount of

gross income stated in the return” (emphasis added), both sides

agree that, where the taxpayer is a partner in a 1st-tier

partnership, the language is treated as including amounts that do

not appear anywhere on the only document that has been filed as

the taxpayer’s tax return.

       Secondly, although the potential for the parties’ dispute

herein has existed since the 1934 enactment of the predecessor of

section 6501(e)(1)(A), both sides agree that this is a matter of

first impression.

       In light of the foregoing, we start our analysis with

matters that are not in dispute between the parties, in order

better to understand the context in which the disputed matters

operate.

III.    Evolution of the Statute

       Section 250(d) of the Revenue Act of 1918 (Pub. L. 65-254,

40 Stat. 1057, 1083) provided a general 5-year statute of

limitations, but no limit in the case of fraud.
                               - 17 -

     Section 250(d) of the Revenue Act of 1921 (Pub. L. 67-98, 42

Stat. 227, 265) reduced the general period of limitations to 4

years.

     The Revenue Act of 1924 (Pub. L. 68-176, 43 Stat. 253, 299)

kept the 4-year general statute of limitations, as section

277(a)(1); it provided that there was no limit in the case of

fraud or failure to file a tax return, as section 278(a).

     Section 277(a)(1) of the Revenue Act of 1926 (Pub. L. 69-20,

44 Stat. 9, 58, 59) reduced the general period of limitations to

3 years; the 1926 Act left unchanged the fraud and failure-to-

file rule.

     Section 275(a) of the Revenue Act of 1928 (Pub. L. 70-562,

45 Stat. 791, 856, 857) reduced the general statute of

limitations to 2 years; section 276(a) of the 1928 Act left

unchanged the fraud and failure-to-file rule.   Both of these

rules remained unchanged by the Revenue Act of 1932.   Pub. L. 72-

154, 47 Stat. 169, 237, 238.

     In what became the Revenue Act of 1934 (Pub. L. 73-216, 48

Stat. 680), the House Bill provided (1) that the general statute

of limitations be lengthened to 3 years and (2) that the fraud

and failure-to-file rule be expanded to apply also to substantial

understatements of gross income.   The Ways and Means Committee

report (H. Rept. 73-704, pp. 34, 35 (1934), 1939-1 C.B. (Part 2)

554, 580) explains these changes as follows:
                                - 18 -

          Section 275. Period for assessment and collection. The
     present law limits the time for assessments to 2 years from
     the date the return is filed. Experience has shown that
     this period is too short in a substantial number of large
     cases, resulting oftentimes in hastily prepared
     determinations with the result that additional burdens are
     thrown upon taxpayers in getting ill-advised assessments
     removed. In other cases, revenue is lost by reason of the
     fact that sufficient time is not allowed for disclosure of
     all the facts. Subsection (a), therefore, increases the
     period of 2 years to 3 years.

                  *    *    *     *      *   *   *

          Section 276(a). No return or false return. The present
     law permits the Government to assess the tax without regard
     to the statute of limitations in case of failure to file a
     return or in case of a fraudulent return. The change in
     this section continues this policy, but enlarges the scope
     of this provision to include cases wherein the taxpayer
     understates gross income on his return by an amount which is
     in excess of 25 percent of the gross income stated in the
     return. It is not believed that taxpayers who are so
     negligent as to leave out of their returns items of such
     magnitude should be accorded the privilege of pleading the
     bar of the statute.

     The House passed the following statutory language:

     SEC. 276.   SAME--EXCEPTIONS.

          (a) No Return or False Return.--If the taxpayer fails
     to file a return, or files a false or fraudulent return with
     intent to evade tax, or omits from gross income an amount
     properly includible therein which is in excess of 25 per
     centum of the amount of gross income stated in the return,
     the tax may be assessed, or a proceeding in court for the
     collection of such tax may be begun without assessment, at
     any time. [Emphasis added.]

     In the Senate, the Finance Committee changed the approach,

explaining in the report as follows (S. Rept. 73-558, pp. 43-44

(1934), 1939-1 C.B. (Part 2) 586, 619-620):
                                  - 19 -

       Section 275.   Period for assessment and collection

          The present law limits the time for assessments to 2
     years from the date the return is filed. Experience has
     shown that this period is too short in a substantial number
     of large cases resulting oftentimes in hastily prepared
     determinations, with the result that additional burdens are
     thrown upon taxpayers in contesting ill-advised assessments.
     In other cases, revenue is lost by reason of the fact that
     sufficient time is not allowed for disclosure of all the
     facts. Subsection (a), therefore, increases the period of 2
     years to 3 years.

                 *    *      *      *      *   *   *

          The present law permits the Government to assess the
     tax without regard to the statute of limitations in case of
     failure to file a return or in case of a fraudulent return.
     The House bill continues this policy, but enlarges the scope
     of this provision to include cases wherein the taxpayer
     understates gross income on his return by an amount which is
     in excess of 25 percent of the gross income stated in the
     return. Your committee is in general accord with the policy
     expressed in this section of the House bill. However, it is
     believed that in the case of a taxpayer who makes an honest
     mistake, it would be unfair to keep the statute open
     indefinitely. For instance, a case might arise where a
     taxpayer failed to report a dividend because he was
     erroneously advised by the officers of the corporation that
     it was paid out of capital or he might report as income for
     one year an item of income which properly belonged in
     another year. Accordingly, your committee has provided for
     a 5-year statute in such cases. This amendment also
     necessitates a change in section 276(a) of the bill.

           Section 276(a).       False return or no return

          This section is explained in connection with the change
     in section 275.

     Although the Finance Committee’s rationale was different

from that of the Ways and Means Committee, the Finance

Committee’s statutory language describing the omission that would

trigger a 5-year limitation period (sec. 275(c)) was the same as
                              - 20 -

the language that the Ways and Means Committee used to trigger a

broadening of the fraud exception (sec. 276(a) of the House

bill).

     In conference, the House receded and the Senate amendments

were agreed to.   See H. Rept. (Conference Report) 73-1385, at 25

(1934), 1939-1 C.B. (Part 2) 627, 634.   None of the referenced

committee reports explains the intended meaning of the phrase

“the amount of gross income stated in the return”.    Also, we have

not found in the hearings or the floor debates any discussion of

the meaning of that phrase.   See Estate of Klein v. Commissioner,

63 T.C. 585, 594 (1975), affd. 537 F.2d 701 (2d Cir. 1976).

     The language of section 275(c) continued unchanged in the

later revenue acts and through the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.

     Section 275(c), I.R.C. 1939, became section 6501(e)(1)(A),

I.R.C. 1954, with three modifications, as follows:

          (1) the 5-year limitations period of former law was
     changed to 6 years;

          (2) “gross income” from a trade or business was
     redefined for these purposes to not include the subtraction
     for cost of sales or services; and

          (3) for purposes of the numerator of the fraction,
     adequate disclosure of an item will preclude that item being
     treated as omitted.

     The Ways and Means Committee report for H.R. 8300, which

became the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (H. Rept. 83-1337,

p. 107 (1954)), describes these changes as follows:
                                  - 21 -

          (2) The period of limitation for assessment is made 6
     years instead of 5 in the case of the omission of 25 percent
     of gross income, and a similar rule is applied in the bill
     to the estate and gift taxes. However, under the bill this
     longer period is not to apply if disclosure of the nature
     and amount of omitted items is made on or with the tax
     return.

The report goes on to state as follows (id. at A414):

          Several changes from existing law have been made in
     subsection (e) of this section. In paragraph (1), which
     relates to income tax, the existing 5-year rule in the case
     of an omission of 25 percent of gross income has been
     extended to 6 years. The term gross income as used in this
     paragraph has been redefined to mean the total receipts from
     the sale of goods or services prior to diminution by the
     cost of such sales or services. A further change from
     existing law is the provision which states that any amount
     as to which adequate information is given on the return will
     not be taken into account in determining whether there has
     been an omission of 25 percent.

     The Finance Committee report is almost identical to the Ways

and Means Committee report.       See S. Rept. 83-1622, pp. 143-144,

584 (1954).

     In addition, in section 702(c) (no corresponding provision

in prior law) the Congress provided as follows:

     SEC. 702. INCOME AND CREDITS OF PARTNER.

                 *    *       *      *     *   *    *

          (c) Gross Income of a Partner.--In any case where it is
     necessary to determine the gross income of a partner for
     purposes of this title [i.e., title 26, the Internal Revenue
     Code], such amount shall include his distributive share of
     the gross income of the partnership.

     This provision is explained as follows in the Ways and Means

Committee report, H. Rept. 83-1337, supra at 65-66:
                               - 22 -

    A. General rules (secs. 701-707)

         (1) Income of partners.--Under your committee’s bill,
    as under present law, partners will be liable individually
    for income tax on their distributive shares of partnership
    income. The bill provides that the partnership will act as
    a mere conduit as to income and loss items, transferring
    such items directly to the individual partners.

         The items required to be segregated will retain their
    original character in the hands of the partner as though
    they were realized directly by him from the same source from
    which realized by the partnership and in the same manner.
    After excluding the items required to be separately treated,
    the remaining income or loss, which corresponds to the
    ordinary income or loss of the partnership under present
    law, is attributed to the partners.

         The computation of partnership income is generally on
    the same basis as existing law. The partnership is allowed
    the usual business deductions, but is denied the deductions
    peculiar to individuals.

         The bill provides that all elections with respect to
    income derived from a partnership (other than the election
    to claim a credit for foreign taxes) are to be made at the
    partnership level and not by the individual partners. This
    rule recognizes the partnership as an entity for purposes of
    income reporting. It avoids the confusion which would occur
    if each partner were to determine partnership income
    separately for his own purposes.

          (2) Distributive shares.--The taxation of partnership
     income or other items directly to the partners requires a
     determination of each partner’s share of such items. In
     general, such shares will be determined in accordance with
     the partnership agreement as under existing practice.

The report goes on to state as follows, id. at A221, A222:

    Section 702. Income and credits of partner

         This provision represents no change in current law and
    practice. It incorporates provisions of sections 182,
    183(c), 184, 186, and 189 of present law.

                 *    *    *     *      *   *    *
                                - 23 -

          Subsection (c) makes clear that, whenever the gross
     income of a partner is to be determined, such amount shall
     include his distributive share of the partnership gross
     income. For example, a partner is required to include his
     distributive share of partnership gross income in
     determining his individual gross income for the purposes of
     determining the necessity of filing a return, the
     application of the provision permitting the spreading of
     income for services rendered over a 3-year period, the
     amount of gross income received from possessions of the
     United States, and whether the extended period of limitation
     provided in the case of 25-percent omission from gross
     income is applicable. [Emphasis added.]

The Finance Committee report, S. Rept. 83-1622, supra at 378, is

almost identical, and does not even note that the Finance

Committee proposed to amend section 702(c) by applying it to

determinations “for purposes of this title” (i.e., the entire

Internal Revenue Code), while the House would have applied

section 702(c) to determinations “for purposes of this chapter”

(i.e., chapter 1, relating to income taxes).     The statute of

limitations is in chapter 66, not chapter 1.     The Senate version

was enacted.   See H. Rept. (Conf. Rept.) 83-2543, at 14 (1954),

relating to Senate Amendment 177.

     In 1956, the Treasury Department promulgated regulations

(T.D. 6175, 1956-1 C.B. 211, 214-216) dealing with the extended

limitations period, as follows:

     Sec. 1.702-1. Income and credits of partner.--

                  *    *    *     *      *   *    *

          (c) Gross income of a partner.--

                  *    *    *     *      *   *    *
                              - 24 -

               (2) In determining the applicability of the 6-year
          period of limitation on assessment and collection
          provided in section 6501(e) (relating to omissions of
          more than 25 percent of gross income), a partner’s
          gross income includes his distributive share of
          partnership gross income (as described in section
          6501(e)(1)(A)(i)). In this respect, the amount of
          partnership gross income from which was derived the
          partner’s distributive share of any item of partnership
          income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit (as included
          or disclosed in the partner’s return) is considered as
          an amount of gross income stated in the partner’s
          return for the purposes of section 6501(e). For
          example, A, who is entitled to one-fourth of the
          profits of the ABCD partnership, which has $10,000
          gross income and $2,000 taxable income, reports only
          $300 as his distributive share of partnership profits.
          A should have shown $500 as his distributive share of
          profits, which amount was derived from $2,500 of
          partnership gross income. However, since A included
          only $300 on his return without explaining in the
          return the difference of $200, he is regarded as having
          stated in his return only $1,500 ($300/$500 of $2,500)
          as gross income from the partnership.

     In providing for an extended limitations period, the

Congress did not indicate why gross income, rather than adjusted

gross income or any other concept, was chosen as the touchstone

for the extended statute of limitations,9 nor did the Congress

provide a clue as to what is meant by “the return” for purposes

of determining the amount of the denominator in the 25-percent

calculation.   Compare Colony, Inc. v. Commissioner, 357 U.S. 28

(1958), in which the Supreme Court relied on legislative history

to decide what is meant by “omits from gross income” for purposes


     9
      Note that a taxpayer’s omission of gross income does not
necessarily result in an adjustment to the taxpayer’s taxable
income. See Colony, Inc. v. Commissioner, 357 U.S. 28, 36
(1958); Colestock v. Commissioner, 102 T.C. 380 (1994).
                                 - 25 -

of determining the amount of the numerator in the 25-percent

calculation.   Neither side cites Colony, Inc., and neither side

points to any aspect of the legislative history that may shed

light on the meaning that the Congress intended to give to the

statutory term “the return.”

IV.   Evolution of the Caselaw

      In Masterson v. Commissioner, 1 T.C. 315 (1942), revd. on

another issue 141 F.2d 391 (5th Cir. 1944), the taxpayer had

filed two 1935 income tax returns on the same day, one for

herself and the other signed by her “individually, and as

independent executrix of the Estate of” her late husband.     See

id. at 322-323.   Each of these tax returns referred to the other.

See id. at 323.   The Commissioner determined that the taxpayer

should have reported on her individual tax return the corrected

net income of the estate.   See id. at 323.   The notice of

deficiency was issued more than 3 years, but less than 5 years,

after the due date of the taxpayer’s tax return.   We held that

the two tax returns would not be treated together as “the return”

within the meaning of section 275(c) of the Revenue Act of 1934.

See id. at 324.   We said that the statute would not be construed

to permit such combining because (1) the tax returns were of

different taxpayers and (2) the estate’s income tax return was of

a different type of taxpayer and it might be that the “facts

necessary to a correct determination of the tax due would not
                               - 26 -

appear from two returns of the type before us here”.         See id.

The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed because the panel’s

majority concluded that the Commissioner’s adjustment was

incorrect; the Circuit Court of Appeals did not indicate any

disagreement with our statute of limitations analysis.

     In Ratto v. Commissioner, 20 T.C. 785 (1953), the taxpayer

and her husband were California residents, operated a liquor

business owned by them in community, and filed separate 1946 tax

returns.   See id. at 786.   The taxpayer’s husband reported the

liquor business operations on his Schedule C, on which he showed

“gross profit” of $30,462.96 and “net profit” of $10,029.19.           He

then “computed his income tax on one-half of this amount [the net

profit] with the explanation ‘½   Community Income Reported By

Wife,’ and which he listed as a deduction.”      Id.   The taxpayer

reported on her Schedule E $5,014.60 as “½ community income.”

See id. at 786.   Apparently, she did not show on her tax return

any other information about the liquor business.       The

Commissioner determined that the taxpayer omitted $10,216.88

gross profits from the liquor business,10 together with about

$3,600 of other small items.   See id. at 787.    The notice of

deficiency was sent more than 3 years, but less than 5 years,

after the taxpayer filed her 1946 tax return.     We held that the



     10
      One-half of $30,462.96, less the $5,014.60 that was
reported.
                                 - 27 -

taxpayer’s husband’s tax return was separate from the taxpayer’s

tax return.    We concluded as follows (id. at 789-790):

       This Court and the circuit courts of appeals have
       specifically held that for the purposes of applying section
       275(c) of the Internal Revenue Code, consideration may only
       be given to the return of the particular taxpayer and that
       the return of another taxpayer may not be considered.

                   *    *    *     *      *   *    *

            Petitioner’s complaint that “it does not seem equitable
       to deny a taxpayer the benefit of the statute of limitations
       merely because of a failure to duplicate the purely
       mechanical computation of gross sales less cost of sales to
       show the gross income amount which has already been fairly
       reported” is also without merit. Section 275(c) is not
       limited to situations involving bad faith. * * *

            The gross income stated in petitioner’s income tax
       return is therefore limited to the $5,014.60 shown therein
       and does not include any amounts stated in her husband’s
       return.

       In Switzer v. Commissioner, 20 T.C. 759 (1953), the

taxpayer-husbands (H’s) were partners whose partnership interests

constituted community property under California law.     Each H and

each of the taxpayer-wives (W’s) filed separate timely tax

returns for 1944 and 1945.    The partnership filed timely

information returns for these years.      The notices of deficiency

were sent to the H’s and W’s more than 3 years, but not more than

5 years, after the respective tax returns were filed.      See id. at

761.    The taxpayers argued that the partnership’s information

returns should be treated as being part of the taxpayers’

individual tax returns, to the extent of their partnership

interests, in the same manner as a Schedule C is treated as being
                                 - 28 -

part of an individual Form 1040 for a sole proprietor.    See id.

at 767.     We rejected their arguments, relied on Masterson v.

Commissioner, supra, and held that the denominator of the section

275(c) fraction is to be determined by what is stated on the

taxpayer’s tax returns without regard to the partnership’s

information returns.    See Switzer v. Commissioner, 20 T.C. at

768.    However, our determination was remanded by the Court of

Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on September 17, 1954, with

directions (in accordance with the stipulation of the parties in

Switzer) to vacate our decisions and enter decisions for the

taxpayers.    See Rose v. Commissioner, 24 T.C. 755, 768 (1955);

Rev. Rul. 55-415, 1955-1 C.B. 412, 413.11


       11
      Rev. Rul. 55-415, 1955-1 C.B. 412, although issued after
the enactment of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, is the
Commissioner’s interpretation of section 275(c) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1939. The ruling states, in pertinent part, as
follows (1955-1 C.B. at 413):

       It is well recognized that gross income, as earned, belongs
       to some taxable entity, and that a partnership is not a
       taxable entity. It logically follows that the partners
       should be considered as the owners of partnership gross
       income.

                    *   *    *     *      *   *   *

            * * * it is held that for the purpose of section 275(c)
       of the Code “gross income” of a member of a partnership
       includes his proportionate share of the gross income of the
       partnership. See Harry Landau et al. v. Commissioner, 21
       T.C. 414 [1953]. Any partner’s share of the gross income
       reported in the partnership information return should be
       considered as having been returned by the taxpayer as such
       information return is a return by or on behalf of each
                                                     (continued...)
                                 - 29 -

       In Rose v. Commissioner, supra, the taxpayer-husband (H)

owned and operated a retail store as a sole proprietorship in

Ventura, California, and another retail store as a partnership

with his brother in Santa Barbara, California.       See id. at 757.

H’s interests in the Ventura store and the Santa Barbara

partnership constituted community property.       See id. at 758-759,

768.    H and W filed separate tax returns for 1943.     See id. at

757.    The Santa Barbara partnership filed a partnership

information return for 1943.     See id. at 758, 768.    The Ventura

store filed a partnership information return for 1943, at the

suggestion of a revenue agent, in order to facilitate the

reporting of H’s and W’s community income derived from that

store.      See id. at 758-759, 769.   If H and W were treated as

having stated in their tax returns their shares of the gross

income of the Ventura store, then the denominators of their

section 275(c) fractions were more than four times the gross

income that the Commissioner determined H and W omitted, the

regular 3-year statute of limitations applied, and the notices of

deficiency for 1943 were untimely.        See Rose v. Commissioner, 24

T.C. at 760, 766-770.     We analyzed the situation as follows (id.

at 768-769):




       11
        (...continued)
       partner.
                        - 30 -

     The Ventura store was not operated by a partnership.
It was community property of the petitioners and the income
therefrom was community income. Each of the petitioners,
therefore, should have reported one-half of the gross income
from the business. Leslie A. Sutor, 17 T.C. 64, 67. The
respondent urges that they did not do so in their individual
returns, and that their failure to do so is an omission from
gross income by each of them. But we think it is
unrealistic to say that the petitioners did not report the
gross income of the Ventura store (with the exception of the
$17,946.97 which each of them omitted). They did so on Form
1065, a “partnership return.” Although there was no
partnership between them in the business of this store, Form
1065 returns were filed for the years 1938 to 1948,
inclusive, at the suggestion of a revenue agent to
facilitate the reporting of the community income of the
store. The so-called partnership return filed for 1943
reported the gross income of the Ventura store in which
petitioners each had an equal interest. It was not the
return of another taxable entity. Cf. Corrigan v.
Commissioner, 155 F.2d 164, 166 (C.A. 6); Elvina Ratto, 20
T.C. 785, 789. It showed income of the community, a
nontaxable entity. In the circumstances we think that the
so-called partnership return filed for the Ventura store was
merely an adjunct to the individual returns of Jack and Mae
Rose and must be considered together with such individual
returns and treated as part of them. This case is thus
distinguished from the Switzer case where the return in
question was a proper partnership return, whereas here it
was nothing unless it was an adjunct to the individual
returns. But if the Commissioner is now and henceforth to
concede, contrary to our decision in the Switzer case, that
a valid partnership return may be read with the return of an
individual partner to arrive at the total gross income
stated in the partner’s return, then, a fortiori, the Form
1065 return in this case which was filed merely to
facilitate the reporting of community income of the
petitioners, similar returns having been accepted for a
number of years for that purpose by the Commissioner, would
have to be read together with the individual returns of the
partners to ascertain how much gross income was reported by
each of them. Cf. Germantown Trust Co. v. Commissioner, 309
U.S. 304; Atlas Oil & Refining Corporation, 22 T.C. 552,
557. We hold, therefore, that one-half of the gross income
appearing on the Ventura store “partnership” return must be
imputed to the individual return filed by each petitioner in
determining the total gross income stated therein for the
purposes of section 275(c). [Emphasis added.]
                               - 31 -

     In Roschuni v. Commissioner, 44 T.C. 80 (1965), the

taxpayer-wife owned an S corporation, which filed an information

return for 1958, a year for which the Commissioner determined a

deficiency against the taxpayers.    The notice of deficiency was

issued more than 3 years, but less than 6 years, after

petitioners filed their 1958 tax return.    We quoted extensively

from our opinion in Rose v. Commissioner, supra, concluded that

the S corporation was not a taxable entity, and stated that the

principle of Rose v. Commissioner applied.     See Roschuni v.

Commissioner, 44 T.C. at 85-86.     We described this principle as

requiring the information return of the nontaxable entity to be

treated as an adjunct of the taxpayers’ tax return.    See id. at

85-86.   We also held that the taxpayers’ reference, in their 1958

tax return, to the S corporation’s 1958 information return and

the disputed transaction, was sufficient to satisfy the

requirements of section 6501(e)(1)(A)(ii), and so any omitted

gross income from that transaction was not to be taken into

account.   See id. at 85-86.

     In Davenport v. Commissioner, 48 T.C. 921 (1967), the

taxpayers’ 1958, 1959, and 1960 tax returns reported losses from

a specified partnership.   See id. at 924-925.    The taxpayer-wife

contended that assessment of any deficiencies for these 3 years

was barred by the statute of limitations; the Commissioner

contended that the 6-year limitations period applied.     See id. at
                              - 32 -

927-928.   We held that the Commissioner failed to carry the

burden of proving an omission of more than 25 percent of the

gross incomes stated in the taxpayers’ tax returns, as follows

(id. at 928, 929):

          To satisfy his burden in proving the omission,
     respondent must show the amount of gross income stated in
     the return and the amount of income properly includable
     therein which has been omitted. Elizabeth Bardwell, 38 T.C.
     84 (1962), affd. 318 F. 2d 786 (C.A. 10, 1963), and Lois
     Seltzer, 21 T.C. 398 (1953). In the instant case respondent
     has not shown the amount of gross income stated in the
     return. On each of the returns for the years 1958 through
     1960 there is reported on Schedule H a net loss figure for
     certain partnership income. Respondent has not shown
     whether a partnership return was filed for those years and
     if so the gross income reported thereon. Under section
     6501(e)(1)(A) the term “gross income from a trade or
     business” means the amount received or accrued from the
     sales of goods or services undiminished by the cost of such
     goods or services. Since there is no evidence indicating
     the manner in which petitioner arrived at the loss figure
     for income from the partnership, there is nothing in the
     record to show petitioner’s gross income from the
     partnership. Respondent’s Rev. Rul. 55-415, 1955-1 C.B.
     412, following his ruling in I.T. 3981, 1949-2 C.B. 78, as
     to a partner’s gross income for the purpose of section 251
     of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, provides, and this
     Court has recognized, that a partnership return is to be
     considered together with an individual return in determining
     the total gross income stated in the individual return for
     the purpose of determining whether the 6-year statute of
     limitations is applicable. Jack Rose, 24 T.C. 755, 768-769
     (1955). See also Elliott J. Roschuni, 44 T.C. 80 (1965),
     and Genevieve B. Walker, 46 T.C 630, 637-738 (1966).
     [Emphasis added.]

          We therefore conclude that respondent has failed to
     establish that petitioner and Richard omitted from any one
     of their joint Federal income tax returns for the years
     1958, 1959, and 1960 an amount of gross income properly
     includable therein in excess of 25 percent of the amount of
     gross income stated in such return and therefore respondent
     has failed to show that the 6-year statute is applicable.
                                - 33 -

                   *   *    *     *      *      *    *

          We, therefore, sustain respondent’s determination as
     modified by the stipulation of the parties filed in this
     case for the years 1961, 1962, and 1963 but hold that the
     assessment or collection of any deficiency against
     petitioner is barred by the statute of limitations for the
     years 1958, 1959, and 1960.

     In Estate of Klein v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 585 (1975),

affd. 537 F.2d 701 (2d Cir. 1976), we were called upon to

determine the meaning of “the amount of gross income stated in

the return”, within the meaning of section 6013(e)(1)(A),

relating to relief from joint liability, as that provision

applied to 1955.   See 63 T.C. at 589.       Relying in part on section

6013(e)(2)(B), we held that the quoted phrase in section

6013(e)(1)(A) must be given the same meaning that it has in

section 6501(e)(1)(A), and that under the latter provision--

    the only way “the amount of gross income stated in the
    return” can be determined, where a partner of a partnership
    which has filed a return is concerned, is to consider the
    partnership return together with the individual return in
    determining “the total gross income stated in the return” of
    the individual partner. Genevieve B. Walker, 46 T.C. 630
    (1966). See Nadine I. Davenport, 48 T.C. 921, 928 (1967);
    accord, Elliott J. Roschuni, 44 T.C. 80 (1965), and Jack
    Rose, 24 T.C. 755 (1955). Cf. sec. 702(c); sec. 1.702-
    1(c)(2), Income Tax Regs. [Estate of Klein v. Commissioner,
    63 T.C. at 590-591.]

    As a result, we held, for the Commissioner, that--

    the partnership return, must be read as an adjunct with the
    individual partner’s return in determining the total gross
    income stated in the individual’s return. Indeed, that
    determination with respect to partnerships arose from the
    gloss upon the section by the decided cases, compare L.
    Glenn Switzer, 20 T.C. 759 (1953), with Genevieve B. Walker,
                                   - 34 -

       supra, and Nadine I. Davenport, supra; cf. Elliott J.
       Roschuni, supra; Jack Rose, supra.9 [Emphasis added.]


       ______________
          9
              See also Harry Landau, 21 T.C. 414 (1953); Norman Rodman, T.C.
       Memo. 1973-277; and Vernie S. Belcher, T.C. Memo. 1958-180, where it is
       pointed out that a “partner’s share of the gross income on the
       partnership returns must be imputed to the individual return.” And that
       if the partnership return is not in evidence it is impossible to know
       the “gross income stated in the return.” The 6-year limitation does not
       apply if disclosure “is made on or with the tax return.” (Emphasis
       supplied.) H. Rept. No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 107 (1954); S.
       Rept. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 143-144 (1954).

[Id. at 592.]

Taking into account the taxpayers’ share of the gross income

shown on their partnership’s information return as having been

shown on the taxpayers’ tax return, we held that the gross income

omitted from the taxpayers’ tax return was less than 25 percent

of the gross income stated on the taxpayers’ tax return.             See

Estate of Klein v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. at 588.            We concluded

from this that the taxpayer-wife failed to qualify for relief

from joint liability under the law then in effect.            See id. at

589.    Although we ruled for the Commissioner based on the

language of sections 6013 and 6501, we commented as follows on

the Commissioner’s argument under section 702(c) (Estate of Klein

v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. at 591 & n.6):

       As we read the first sentence [of the Finance Committee
       report on the 1970 enactment of sec. 6013(e)] we think “the
       income reported” by a partner includes his share of the
       gross income, as defined in section 6501(e)(1)(A)(i), of the
       partnership. Rev. Rul. 55-415, 1955-1 C.B. 412; I.T. 3981,
       1949-2 C.B. 78.6
       _____________
          6
              Respondent cites sec. 702(c) and sec. 1.702-1(c)(2), Income Tax
       Regs., in support of this position. We note in passing our belief that
                                 - 35 -
     the example given in sec. 1.702(c)(2), Income Tax Regs., conflicts with
     sec. 6501(e)(1)(A)(i) and (ii) because under the latter section “gross
     income” is specially defined and if a partnership return is filed the
     entire amount of such “gross income” allocable to a partner is deemed
     reported on the return. We do not think the gross income referred to in
     sec. 702(c) is the equivalent of the “gross income” defined under sec.
     6501(e)(1)(A).

     In affirming our determination and agreeing with our

analysis, the Court of Appeals took the occasion to state

agreement with our comment on section 702(c), as follows (537

F.2d at 705 n.9):

     We further note that we share the tax court’s opinion that
     the example in Treas. Reg. § 1.702-1(c) appears to conflict
     with § 6501(e)(1)(A)(ii)’s method for determining the amount
     “omitted” from gross income when a partnership return has
     been filed.

     We conclude that one pattern that emerges from our prior

opinions dealing with the denominator in the 25-percent

calculation, is relevant to the limited matter now before us.            In

dealing with documents that were not physically attached to the

taxpayer’s tax return, we have consistently12 drawn a line

between (1) documents that have been filed as tax returns of


     12
      In Switzer v. Commissioner, 20 T.C. 759, 767-768 (1953),
we pointed to computational anomalies that might result from
applying this approach to partnerships, and there declined to so
apply this approach. However, on appeal the Commissioner joined
the taxpayers to persuade the Court of Appeals to order us to
vacate our decisions and enter decisions for the taxpayers.
After we complied with the Court of Appeals’ order in the Switzer
dockets, we recognized that the Commissioner had, in effect,
conceded error in Switzer’s statute of limitations rulings and
meant to apply that concession generally. See Rose v.
Commissioner, 24 T.C. 755, 768-769 (1955). In Rose, we merely
distinguished Switzer but did not formally overrule it. See 24
T.C. at 769. However, since that time, we have not followed
Switzer on this point. In the instant cases, neither side cites
Switzer. Clearly, Switzer has been sapped of its vitality.
                              - 36 -

other taxpayers, and (2) documents that, even if filed as tax

returns, were not tax returns of other taxpayers.   Documents in

the former category have not been taken into account in

determining the amount of gross income “stated in the return”,

see, e.g., Masterson v. Commissioner, supra; Ratto v.

Commissioner, supra.

      On the other hand, the second category--documents that were

not filed as tax returns of other taxpayers--have been treated as

adjuncts to and part of the taxpayers’ tax returns for purposes

of determining “the amount of gross income stated in the return”.

This approach has been applied to partnership tax returns (see,

e.g., Davenport v. Commissioner, supra), S corporation tax

returns (see, e.g., Roschuni v. Commissioner, supra), and other

documents which are not tax returns of taxpayers, see, e.g., Rose

v. Commissioner, supra.

V.   Analysis

      Section 6501(e) and its predecessors require omitted gross

income to be compared to gross income stated in the return.    In

Green v. Commissioner, 7 T.C. 263, 277 (1946), affd. 168 F.2d 994

(6th Cir. 1948), we concluded that “‘Gross income’ has a well

established meaning in the revenue laws, denoting statutory gross

income as defined by section 22 [of the Revenue Act of 1938,

predecessor of present sec. 61].”   In enacting the Internal

Revenue Code of 1954, the Congress added clause (i) to section
                                - 37 -

6501(e)(1)(A) to modify the definition of gross income in the

case of trades or businesses.    Except for that modification, “the

general definition of gross income found in the Code applies.”

Northern Ind. Pub. Serv. Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 101 T.C.

294, 299 n.7 (1993).

     However, taxpayers’ tax returns ordinarily do not provide

any place for stating gross income.13     See, e.g., Estate of Klein

v. Commissioner, 537 F.2d at 704; Davis v. Hightower, 230 F.2d

549, 552, 553 (5th Cir. 1956).    We have held that “total income”,

as used in the Form 1040 is not the equivalent of “gross income”

for purposes of the extended statute of limitations.     See Green

v. Commissioner, 7 T.C. at 276-277.      As a result, we have dealt

with the taxpayers’ tax returns by determining whether one or

another item was properly an item of gross income within the

appropriate contemporary statutory definition of gross income.

     As noted, supra, when the taxpayers’ tax returns stated

taxable income from partnerships or S corporations, we declared

that the information returns of these pass-through entities would

be treated as adjuncts to, and part of, the taxpayers’ tax

returns.   See, e.g., Davenport v. Commissioner, supra



     13
      See supra our findings with regard to the Harlans’ 1985
tax return. Note that the parties have stipulated that the
Harlans’ gross income stated on their tax return ($1,410,077) is
almost $200,000 more than the amount that the Harlans’ tax return
labeled as gross income ($1,216,099), even without taking account
of flow of gross income from the 2d-tier partnerships.
                               - 38 -

(partnership), Roschuni v. Commissioner, supra (S corp.).

Indeed, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit described the

process thusly in Estate of Klein v. Commissioner, 537 F.2d at

704:

       Schedule H [more recently, Schedule E] of Form 1040,
       labelled “Income from Partnerships, Estates, Trusts, and
       Other Sources,” provides only one line for reporting
       partnership income together with the name and address of the
       partnership from which that income was derived. Schedule H
       speaks in terms of “[t]otal income (or loss),” the reference
       to losses obviously suggesting only a net (adjusted gross)
       rather than a gross income figure. Given that limitation
       upon the scope of the Form 1040, it is clear that the return
       neither intends nor purports to show a taxpayer’s gross
       income when that taxpayer has partnership income. Indeed,
       gross income is not “stated in the return” in the case of
       such a taxpayer unless one looks at the partnership return
       as being a part of the personal income tax return. * * *

       When we take the partnership’s information return into

consideration as part of the partner’s tax return, we find the

same limitations in the former document that the Court of Appeals

described in Estate of Klein v. Commissioner, supra, as to the

latter document.    That is, the 1985 partnership information

returns for Pacific and Carlyle (Ridge’s 1st-tier partnerships)

and for Mission Resources (Theodore’s 1st-tier partnership) do

not provide for a showing of “gross income”.    There is a line for

“total income (loss) (combine lines 3 through 10)”, (Form 1065,

1st p., l.11), but it is evident that several of the components

of total income are themselves net amounts.    In those instances,

recourse must be had to other forms, schedules, statements, and

other documents attached to the 1st-tier partnership’s
                              - 39 -

information return in order to determine the amount of gross

income stated on the partnership’s information return, which in

turn is necessary in order to determine the amount of the

taxpayer partner’s gross income stated in the taxpayer’s tax

return.   There does not appear to be any dispute that these other

forms, schedules, statements, and other documents of the 1st-tier

partnership’s information return are treated collectively as

adjuncts to, and part of, the taxpayer partner’s tax return for

purposes of determining the amount of gross income stated on the

taxpayer partner’s tax return, even though they are not attached

to the taxpayer partner’s tax return.

     If the 1st-tier partnership’s information return discloses

net income or loss from a 2d-tier partnership, then the same

analysis requires us to consider the 2d-tier partnership’s

information return as merely another document that is an adjunct

to, and part of, the taxpayer partner’s tax return.   That is, to

paraphrase the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (see

Estate of Klein v. Commissioner, 537 F.2d at 704), gross income

is not “stated in the return” of a taxpayer partner who reports

net partnership income from a 1st-tier partnership which in turn

reports net partnership income from a 2d-tier partnership unless

one looks at the 1st-tier partnership’s information return

together with all its adjuncts--among them being the 2d-tier
                              - 40 -

partnership’s information return--as being part of the taxpayer

partner’s tax return.

      Thus, we conclude that petitioners are correct in their

contention that 2d-tier partnerships’ information returns are to

be taken into account in determining, for purposes of section

6501(e)(1)(A), the amount of gross income stated in the

taxpayer’s tax return.

VI.   Other Considerations

      Both sides rely on section 702(c) and section 1.702-1(c)(2),

Income Tax Regs.   Respondent asserts that “The plain language of

the Code and the regulations requires” consideration of only the

1st-tier partnerships’ information returns.   Petitioners assert

that “Therefore, under this explicit statutory rule [sec.

702(c)], * * * respondent must necessarily” take account of the

2d-tier partnerships’ gross income.    The short answer is that the

texts of both section 702(c) and section 1.702-1(c)(2), Income

Tax Regs., are silent on the matter of 2d-tier partnerships.    The

little legislative history we have found regarding section 702(c)

also is silent on this matter.   We have not found any indication

that the Congress was aware of the question when it considered

and crafted section 702(c), or that the Treasury Department was

aware of the question when it issued the regulation.   Indeed, it

may be argued that the statutory language (“determine the gross

income of a partner”) may apply to the numerator of the 25-
                              - 41 -

percent fraction of section 6501(e)(1)(A) (“omits from gross

income an amount properly includible therein”) but not to the

denominator--“amount of gross income stated in the return”

(emphasis added).   See also the comments of this Court and the

Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit in Estate of Klein v.

Commissioner, 63 T.C. at 591 n.6, affd. 537 F.2d at 705 n.9,

pointing out that “gross income” within the meaning of section

702(c) differs from “gross income” within the meaning of section

6501(e)(1)(A).   Thus, notwithstanding both sides’ reliance, we

conclude that neither section 702(c) nor section 1.702-1(c)(2),

Income Tax Regs., leads us to a resolution of the 2d-tier

partnership matter, especially in the context of the denominator

of the 25-percent fraction.

     Respondent contends as follows:

           The partnership return (Form 1065) itself further
     supports looking only to the direct partnership return to
     determine gross income for section 6501(e) purposes. The
     total gross income of the partnership is the sum of the
     amounts on lines 1 through 7 with the exception of the
     I.R.C. § 6501(e)(1)(A)(i) exclusion for cost of goods sold.
     * * *

     These contentions do not support respondent’s position.    The

sum of the items on lines 1 through 7 frequently is not “The

total gross income of the [1st-tier] partnership.”   Firstly, an

element of gross income may appear on another line, after line 7.

Secondly, several of the items on lines 1 through 7 are net

amounts, and the underlying gross income may have to be
                                      - 42 -

determined by inspection of other parts of the partnership

information return, Form 1065.           This may be illustrated in the

instant cases by comparing lines 1 through 11 of the stipulated

1985 Pacific partnership information return with the parties’

stipulation as to Pacific’s gross income.

                                     Table 1

         Pacific’s Partnership
         Information Return                       Pacific’s Stipulated
          (Form 1065, 1st. page)1                 Gross Income2

 4. Ordinary income (loss)      -7,705       Rental income (gross)        $13,708
     from other partnerships                 Rental income (gross)         11,730
     and fiduciaries See STMT#2              Rental income (gross)         17,048
                                             Rental income (gross)          9,024
6a. Gross rents $63,723       -275,383       Rental income (gross)         12,213
    6b. Minus rental expenses                  Total rental income         63,723
    $ STMT ATTACHED                          Form 4797, line 19           703,950
    6c. Rental income (loss)                 Form 4797, line 1d           246,000

                                               Total                     1,013,673
 9. Net gain (loss)(Form 4797,      34,935
      line 17)

11. TOTAL income (loss)       -248,153
    (combine lines 3 through 10)
     1
         Lines 1,2,3,5,7,8, and 10 do not have any entries.
     2
         The stipulation specifically excludes any gross income
         from Pacific’s 2d-tier partnership.

     As is apparent, more than 90 percent of Pacific’s stipulated

gross income shown on its partnership information return is

related to line 9, and not lines 1 through 7.              Further, line 9

does not tell the whole story--it shows only $34,935 net income

from Form 4797, but the parties’ stipulation shows a total of

$949,950 gross income from Form 4797.            Thus, contrary to the

implications of respondent’s contentions, respondent’s actions in

the stipulations show that it is necessary to examine more than
                                - 43 -

lines 1 through 7 of Pacific’s Form 1065 in order to determine

Pacific’s gross income.   When we do that, we find that on line 4

of Pacific’s Form 1065 we are told to “See STMT #2”.

     That statement is as follows:

     STATEMENT # 2 -            INC OTH PARTNERSHIPS

          TEROS-PER K-1                           -6,633
          XX-XXXXXXX
          INTEREST-33%
          SECTION 743 (B) ADJ                     -1,072

     TOTAL STATEMENT # 2 - TO FORM 1065, LINE 4            -7,705

The record does not include information about the gross income

stated in the information return of Pacific’s 2d-tier

partnership.

     We conclude that (1) respondent’s contentions are contrary

to the parties’ stipulations and (2) the parties’ stipulations

are consistent with the Court’s analysis.    That is, (a) the 1st-

tier partnership’s information return is treated as an adjunct

to, and a part of, the taxpayer’s tax return, (b) the 2d-tier

partnership’s information return is treated as an adjunct to, and

a part of, the 1st-tier partnership’s tax return, and (c) in

determining the amount of gross income stated in the taxpayer’s

tax return, neither the Court nor the parties are limited to what

is stated on the first page of the tax return.

     Respondent’s brief closes as follows:

          Finally, respondent’s interpretation of Section 6501(e)
     yields a sensible, administrable result. Looking through to
     the lower tiers might require an audit of each of those
                             - 44 -

     partnerships. This would impose an excessive administrative
     burden both on the Service and on taxpayers.

     Petitioners respond as follows:

          Respondent claims that following statutory mandate of
     Code section 702(c) would cause an “excessive administrative
     burden” on the IRS and taxpayers. Incredibly, respondent
     states that adopting a “look-through” rule to lower-tier
     partnerships “might require an audit of each of those
     partnerships.” In this case, respondent was able to make
     computations of gross income of the Upper-Tier Partnerships
     without an audit. There is no reason to suggest an audit of
     the Lower-Tier Partnerships would be required.

     The record in the instant cases thus far does not disclose

either the magnitude of the problem respondent warns against or

the extent of respondent’s activities with regard to the gross

income stated in the 1st-tier partnerships’ information returns.

We note that the parties’ stipulations deal with the components

of the gross incomes stated on the partnership information

returns of 16 entities, and there are only three 2d-tier

partnerships involved in the instant cases.   Thus, whatever the

level of effort that respondent expended, it does not appear that

including the 2d-tier partnerships would cause that level to be

substantially increased in the instant cases.

     In addition, the Supreme Court’s opinion in Colony, Inc. v.

Commissioner, 357 U.S. at 36-37, suggests that respondent is not

obligated to audit or otherwise examine beyond what is disclosed

on the tax return, for purposes of applying the amount of the

denominator in the 25-percent fraction.   Clearly, it is now

accepted that respondent must deal with the 1st-tier
                              - 45 -

partnerships’ information returns.     This was established before

1958, when the Supreme Court ruled in Colony, Inc.      We have no

reason to believe that the standards for respondent’s work on the

1st-tier partnerships’ information returns were intended to be

any different from those applicable to the taxpayers’ tax

returns.   Given that these obligations exist as to the 1st-tier

partnerships’ information returns, we do not see any principled

basis for concluding that the 2d-tier partnerships’ information

returns require so heightened a level of examination or audit,

that our analysis of the law ought to be affected by that

heightened level.   Respondent’s brief, almost afterthought,

speculation is far short of a cogent argument that principled

distinction can be drawn between 1st-tier partnerships’

information returns and all 2d-tier partnerships’ information

returns.

     We do not change our analysis on account of respondent’s

warning.

     Our holding in this opinion will be incorporated into the

decision to be entered in these cases when all the other issues

are resolved.14




     14
      The parties’ stipulations and stipulated exhibits are not
treated as exhausting the record as to the subject matter of the
instant opinion. In further proceedings, the parties will be
free to provide such additional evidence on this subject matter
as is not inconsistent with our holdings and is otherwise
admissible. See also Reis v. Commissioner, 142 F.2d 900, 902,
903 (6th Cir. 1944), affg. 1 T.C. 9 (1942), as modified by a
Memorandum Opinion of this Court dated June 4, 1943.
