Olson v. Dept. of Rev. ( 2020 )


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  •                                       IN THE OREGON TAX COURT
    MAGISTRATE DIVISION
    Income Tax
    JON OLSON, MARY LAVOIE,                                    )
    and DIGITAL STUDIO LLC,                                    )
    )
    Plaintiffs,                              )    TC-MD 180324N
    )
    v.                                                )
    )
    DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,                                     )
    State of Oregon,                                           )
    )
    Defendant.                               )    DECISION
    Plaintiffs appealed Defendant’s Notice of Assessment, dated August 9, 2018, for the
    2016 tax year.1 A trial was held on August 20, 2019, in the courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court.
    Joe Alexander, an Oregon licensed tax consultant, appeared on behalf of Plaintiff. Jon Olson
    (Olson) testified on behalf of Plaintiffs.2 Kristen Ennis, Assistant Attorney General, and Darren
    Weirnick, Senior Assistant Attorney General, appeared on behalf of Defendant. The parties filed
    stipulated facts on July 31, 2019. Plaintiffs offered no exhibits at trial. Defendant’s Exhibits A
    to L were received without objection.
    I. STATEMENT OF FACTS
    In 2016, Olson sold his house in Portland, Oregon. (Stip Facts at 2, ¶ 5.) He excluded
    gain from that sale from his gross income under the principal residence exception in Internal
    Revenue Code (IRC) section 121(a). (Stip Facts at 2, ¶ 12.) However, at audit and conference,
    Defendant denied Olson’s IRC section 121(a) exclusion. (Stip Facts at 2, ¶ 13.)
    1
    Plaintiffs appealed the 2015 and 2016 tax years. However, the 2015 tax year was resolved by a Stipulated
    Limited Judgment, entered September 23, 2019.
    2
    Olson was the only witness at trial. Unless otherwise noted, facts set forth in the Statement of Facts are
    based on Olson’s testimony.
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                                                 1
    Olson lived in Oregon starting in 1994. In 2009, he met Mary Lavoie (Lavoie), a Hawaii
    resident. Olson and Lavoie married in 2012. Olson’s house in Portland has never been Lavoie’s
    principal residence. (Stip Facts at 2, ¶ 11.) Lavoie and her children continued to live in Hawaii
    after the wedding. Olson eventually moved to Hawaii, although the timing of that move is at
    issue.
    Olson’s main connection to Oregon was his employment. He is the founder of a video
    production company that is an Oregon LLC and his business partners are from Oregon. Olson’s
    career required a lot of travel; he essentially “lived on an airplane.” Olson’s travel schedule from
    2014 through 2016 revealed that he worked in Oregon, California, Hawaii, Canada, Mexico,
    Alaska, South Dakota, Washington, Colorado, Nevada, Tahiti, and Iceland. (Def’s Ex J.)
    Olson used his Oregon house for business storage as well as a starting point for some
    business trips. His use of the house was contingent on whether he was working in Oregon and
    whether the house was leased to a tenant. Between September 2011 and September 2016, the
    Oregon house was rented on two occasions, each for a one-year period: May 2013 to May 2014
    and January 2015 to January 2016. During those two years, Olson did not use the Oregon house
    and instead stayed at hotels while working in Oregon. The Oregon house was not rented from
    September 2011 to May 2013, July 2014 to January 2015, and February 2016 to September
    2016. Olson testified that he used the Oregon house during those three periods. A review of his
    bank statements and travel schedule sheds some light on Olson’s actual use of the Oregon house
    as compared with his Hawaii house during times the Oregon house was available:
    ///
    ///
    ///
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                              2
    Dates in     Dates in
    Time Period
    Portland, OR Honolulu, HI
    August 2011 – April 20133                           84          85
    May 2013 – May 2014                                 06        1897
    June 2014 – December 2014                         208         1399
    January 2015 – January 2016                        010      26911
    February – September 2016                          312        1213
    (See Def’s Exs F, H, I, J, K, L.)
    Olson filed Oregon resident income tax returns in 2010 through 2014. (Def’s Ex E at 1,
    5, 9, 15, and 23.) He filed a nonresident return in 2015 but testified that his accountant made a
    mistake in doing so. (See Def’s Ex E at 29.) Olson filed a part-year resident return in 2016.
    3
    Bank records prior to April 2012 were not received by the court. Olson and Lavoie were married on April
    7, 2012, and starting from April 2012, Olson’s bank statements were addressed to Honolulu. (See Def’s Ex F.)
    Records spanning April 2012 to April 2013 are primarily recurring charges of Providence Health Plan and Comcast
    Cable.
    4
    Dates in Portland: 4/18/12; 4/27/12 – 5/2/12; 4/30/13.
    5
    Dates in Honolulu: 4/7/12 – 4/9/12; 4/13/12 – 4/16/12; 1/29/13.
    6
    Portland house leased out for the term spanning May 5, 2013 to May 4, 2014.
    7
    Dates in Honolulu: 5/13/13 – 6/17/13; 6/27/13 – 7/23/13; 8/1/13 – 8/13/13; 8/26/13 – 8/27/13; 8/29/13 –
    9/1/13; 10/14/13 – 10/22/13; 11/4/13 – 11/6/13; 11/15/13 – 11/29/13; 12/2/13 – 12/16/13;
    12/19/13 – 12/25/13; 1/6/14 – 1/11/14; 1/23/14 – 2/4/14; 2/14/14 – 3/18/14; 3/31/14 – 4/5/14.
    8
    Dates in Portland: 7/22/14 – 8/6/14; 9/30/14 – 10/1/14; 11/4/14 – 11/5/14.
    9
    Dates in Honolulu: 6/6/14 – 6/15/14; 6/21/14 – 7/19/14; 8/7/14 – 8/18/14; 8/23/14 – 9/9/14;
    10/14/14 – 11/2/14; 11/6/14 – 12/6/14; 12/11/14 – 12/28/14.
    10
    Portland house leased out for the term spanning January 17, 2015 to January 16, 2016.
    11
    Dates in Honolulu: 1/4/15 – 1/19/15; 1/26/15 – 2/25/15; 2/27/19; 3/3/15 – 3/19/15; 3/23/15 – 4/4/15;
    4/17/15 – 5/8/19; 5/11/15 – 5/14/19; 5/18/15 – 6/9/15; 6/15/15 – 7/3/19; 7/6/15 – 7/25/15; 8/10/15 – 9/2/15;
    9/11/15 – 9/24/15; 9/30/15 – 11/4/15; 11/7/15 – 11/30/15; 12/11/15 – 12/14/15; 1/22/16.
    12
    Dates in Portland: 6/29/16 – 7/2/16. Total excludes Portland dates when, based on receipts, Olson stayed
    in hotels: 1/18/16 – 1/20/16; 2/12/16 – 2/15/16. (See Def’s Ex H at 4-5.)
    13
    Dates in Honolulu: 2/16/16; 2/23/16; 4/18/16; 5/2/16; 5/4/16; 5/16/16; 5/20/16; 5/26/16; 6/08/16;
    6/10/16; 6/24/16; 10/13/16.
    The bank records from 2016 are largely limited to purchases at Costco and recurring charges, such as for garbage
    service. (See Def’s Ex F at 173-200.) Presumably Olson was in Honolulu on more days than those listed – for
    instance, it appears likely he spent most of May and June in Honolulu. (See also Def’s Ex J (listing work travel
    from April 21 to 26 and again from June 29 to July 2, but nothing in between).) Additionally, receipts show that,
    during this time, Olson visited pharmacies and physicians in Honolulu. (See also Def’s Ex K at 10-12.)
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                                              3
    (Def’s Ex D at 1.) His tax returns in each of those years list his Hawaii address. (See generally
    Def’s Exs D, E.) Olson reported the Oregon house as a rental property from 2013 to 2016.
    (Def’s Exs D at 13, E at 21, 27, 35.)
    Olson identified additional connections to Oregon. He maintained an Oregon driver’s
    license from September 2011 to September 2016. Olson owned a vehicle in Oregon but sold that
    vehicle to a business partner in July 2013 and did not purchase a new vehicle in Oregon
    thereafter. After the sale of the vehicle, Olson used rental vehicles while in Oregon. Olson’s
    personal and business bank accounts were created in Portland, Oregon. His voter registration
    remained in Oregon from September 2011 to September 2016.
    Olson used his Hawaii address for most correspondence, including bank statements from
    April 2012 to September 2016; travel receipts from 2014; and health insurance correspondence
    from 2016. (Def’s Exs F at 1-207; K at 1-8; and L at 5-7, 9, 10.) Olson testified that he used the
    Hawaii address, so Lavoie could manage bills while he traveled.
    II. ANALYSIS
    The issue is whether Olson’s Oregon house was his principal residence for at least two of
    the five years preceding its sale in 2016.
    Oregon’s personal income tax law is “identical in effect to the provisions of the Internal
    Revenue Code relating to the measurement of taxable income * * *.” ORS 316.007(1).14
    Plaintiffs, as the party seeking affirmative relief, bear the burden of proof by a preponderance of
    the evidence. See ORS 305.427. A preponderance of the evidence means the “the greater
    weight of evidence, the more convincing evidence.” Feves v. Dept. of Rev., 
    4 OTR 302
    , 312
    (1971). “[I]f the evidence is inconclusive or unpersuasive, the taxpayer * * * failed to meet [the]
    14
    The court’s references to the Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) are to 2015.
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                                4
    burden of proof.” Reed v. Dept. of Rev., 
    310 Or 260
    , 238 (1990).
    IRC section 121(a) provides, “[g]ross income shall not include gain from the sale or
    exchange of property if, during the [five]-year period ending on the date of the sale or exchange,
    such property has been owned and used by the taxpayer as the taxpayer’s principal residence for
    periods aggregating [two] years or more.” When the taxpayer alternates between two properties,
    “the property that the taxpayer uses a majority of the time during the year ordinarily will be
    considered the taxpayer’s principal residence.” Treas Reg § 1.121-1(b)(2). The regulation
    provides the following example to illustrate that rule:
    “Taxpayer A owns [two] residences, one in New York and one in Florida. From
    1999 through 2004, he lives in the New York residence for [seven] months and
    the Florida residence for [five] months of each year. In the absence of facts and
    circumstances indicating otherwise, the New York residence is A’s principal
    residence. A would be eligible for the section 121 exclusion of gain from the sale
    or exchange of the New York residence, but not the Florida residence.”
    Treas Reg § 1.121-1(b)(4) (Example 1).
    In addition to the taxpayer’s use of the property, the rule identifies six non-exhaustive
    factors relevant to determining the taxpayer’s principal residence: (i) the taxpayer’s place of
    employment; (ii) the principal place of taxpayer’s family members; (iii) the address listed on the
    taxpayer’s federal and state tax returns, driver’s license, automobile registration, and voter
    registration; (iv) the taxpayer’s mailing address for bills and correspondence; (v) the location of
    the taxpayer’s banks; and (vi) the location of religious organizations and recreational clubs with
    which the taxpayer is affiliated. Treas Reg § 1.121-1(b)(2).
    A.     Olson’s Use of the Oregon House
    Olson maintains that the Oregon house was his principal residence for at least two years
    from September 2011 to September 2016. To determine Olson’s principal residence, the court
    first looks to his use of the Oregon house before analyzing the six factors. See IRC § 121(a).
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                                5
    Olson’s exact use of the Oregon house is difficult to calculate because he traveled so
    frequently. Additionally, the court received little evidence pertaining to the time period of
    September 2011 through March 2012. Although Olson maintains that he used the Oregon house
    whenever it was not leased to a tenant, his bank records and travel schedule reveal limited use
    during those time periods, particularly as compared with his time spent in Hawaii during those
    time periods. The evidence of Olson’s use of his Oregon house as compared to his Hawaii house
    tends to support a finding that the Hawaii house was his principal residence. Given the
    incomplete evidence of Olson’s use of the two houses, the court next considers the six factors.
    B.     Application of the Principal Residence Factors
    In addition to use of the property, the regulations identify six non-exhaustive factors
    relevant to determining the taxpayer’s principal residence. See Treas Reg § 1.121-1(b)(2).
    1.      Place of employment
    The first factor is Olson’s place of employment. Treas Reg § 1.121-1(b)(2)(i). In
    Wickersham, the court held that the taxpayers’ place of employment was neutral because the
    taxpayers spent only one weekend per month at their place of employment. See Wickersham v.
    Comm’r, 102 TCM (CCH) 101 (2011), 
    2011 WL 3241353
     (US Tax Ct). Olson’s business was
    founded and based in Oregon. However, given the nature of Olson’s business, he traveled
    frequently within and without Oregon. Even when working in Oregon he often stayed at hotels.
    Like Wickersham, Olson’s work connection to Oregon is tempered somewhat because it required
    only limited use of his Oregon house. Olson’s place of employment weighs slightly in his favor.
    2.      Principal residence of taxpayer’s family members
    The second factor looks to the principal residence of family members. Treas Reg §
    1.121-1(b)(2)(ii). In Brewer, the court found that taxpayer’s principal residence was at the home
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                            6
    of his significant other rather than at a residential condominium he previously owned. Brewer v.
    Comm’r, 106 TCM (CCH) 721 (2013), 
    2013 WL 6847364
     (US Tax Ct). Olson married Lavoie
    in 2012. Lavoie and her children live in Hawaii. The court received no evidence regarding the
    location of Olson’s other family members. As in Brewer, it appears that Olson’s marriage to
    Lavoie caused him to spend more time with his family in Hawaii and less in Oregon. After the
    marriage, Olson sold his Oregon vehicle and leased out his Oregon house. This factor weighs
    against Olson.
    3.        The address on taxpayer’s tax returns and motor vehicle records
    The third factor is the address on Olson’s tax returns, driver’s license, vehicle
    registration, and voter registration. Treas Reg § 1.121-1(b)(2)(iii). In Foster, the court held that
    taxpayers’ principal residence remained at their long-time residence, the address of which they
    continued to identify on their driver’s licenses and tax returns. Foster v. Comm’r, 138 TC 51, 53
    (2012). Olson maintained his Oregon address on his driver’s license and voter registration and
    filed Oregon resident income tax returns for most of the years at issue. However, he used his
    Hawaii address on his tax returns and sold his Oregon vehicle in 2013. In weighing this factor,
    the court notes that the address on a driver’s license and voter registration carry forward year to
    year unless affirmatively changed or the license expires. Accordingly, the use of Olson’s Oregon
    address on his driver’s license and voter registration are given little weight. Olson’s filing of
    Oregon resident income tax returns weighs in his favor, though his use of the Hawaii address
    weighs against him. Overall, this factor is neutral.
    4.        Taxpayer’s address for bills and correspondence
    The fourth factor looks at the address on Olson’s bills and correspondence. Treas Reg §
    1.121-1(b)(2)(iv). Olson’s mail was sent to Hawaii so Lavoie could keep track of bills while he
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                                7
    traveled for work. Olson consistently used his Hawaii address on documents including his bank
    statements, health insurance correspondence, and hotel bills. This factor weighs against Olson.
    5.     The location of taxpayer’s banks and professional services
    The fifth factor is the location of Olson’s banks. Treas Reg § 1.121-1(b)(2)(v). The
    relevance of the fifth factor pertains to where the taxpayer receives professional services, such as
    banking, bookkeeping, medicine, and legal services. See Wickersham, 
    2011 WL 324135
     at *9.
    Olson’s personal and business accounts with Bank of America were opened in Oregon, though
    his statements were sent to his Hawaii address and the court received no evidence whether Olson
    conducted banking business in person in Oregon. Olson is insured through Providence Health
    Plan based in Portland, Oregon. (See Def Ex K at 1-8.) Based on the bank statements and other
    records, Olson visited doctors and dentists in Honolulu on numerous occasions from January
    2013 through August 2016. (See generally Def Ex F and K at 9-12.) The only healthcare-related
    visits in Portland were a doctor in April 2013 and a pharmacy in March 2016. (See id.) No
    further evidence was received concerning the location of other professionals who may have
    provided Olson with services during the years at issue. This factor weighs slightly against
    Olson.
    6.     Location of taxpayer’s religious organizations and recreational clubs
    The sixth factor is the location of Olson’s religious institutions or other clubs. Treas Reg
    § 1.121-1(b)(2)(vi). The court received no evidence on Olson’s religious institutions or
    recreational clubs. Thus, the sixth factor is neutral.
    C.       Balancing the Six Factors
    The factors indicate that at least as of May 2013, and likely earlier, Olson’s principal
    residence was his house in Hawaii. Not long after his marriage to Lavoie in 2012, Olson sold his
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                              8
    car in Oregon and began leasing out his Oregon house. He used the Hawaii address for his tax
    returns as early as 2011 (his 2010 return), suggesting that the Hawaii house was his principal
    residence earlier than May 2013. After Olson’s marriage to Lavoie, his use of the Oregon house
    was more akin to that of a secondary residence. He used it occasionally when he was working in
    Portland, but that use was limited compared to his use of the Hawaii house. The court finds that
    Olson did not maintain his principal residence at the Oregon house for at least two of the five
    years preceding its sale in 2016.
    III. CONCLUSION
    After careful consideration, the court finds that Plaintiffs have not met their burden of
    proof that Olson’s Oregon house was his principal residence under IRC section 121(a) for at
    least two of the five years preceding its sale in 2016. Now, therefore,
    IT IS THE DECISION OF THIS COURT that Plaintiffs’ appeal is denied.
    Dated this __day of January 2020.
    ALLISON R. BOOMER
    MAGISTRATE
    If you want to appeal this Decision, file a complaint in the Regular Division of
    the Oregon Tax Court, by mailing to: 1163 State Street, Salem, OR 97301-2563;
    or by hand delivery to: Fourth Floor, 1241 State Street, Salem, OR.
    Your complaint must be submitted within 60 days after the date of this Decision
    or this Decision cannot be changed. TCR-MD 19 B.
    This document was signed by Magistrate Allison R. Boomer and entered on
    January 14, 2020.
    DECISION TC-MD 180324N                                                                             9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: TC-MD 180324N

Judges: Boomer

Filed Date: 1/14/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/11/2024