Mary K. Feigh & Edward M. Feigh v. Commissioner , 152 T.C. No. 15 ( 2019 )


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    152 T.C. No. 15
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    MARY K. FEIGH AND EDWARD M. FEIGH, Petitioners v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 20163-17.                         Filed May 15, 2019.
    P-W received a Medicaid waiver payment pursuant to a State
    Medicaid waiver program for the care of Ps’ disabled adult children.
    Pursuant to Notice 2014-7, 2014-4 I.R.B. 445, which classifies such
    payments as difficulty of care foster care payments not includible in
    gross income under I.R.C. sec. 131, Ps excluded the payment from
    gross income. Ps also claimed an earned income tax credit and the
    refundable portion of a child tax credit. As relevant here, the credits
    are calculated with respect to “earned income” as defined in I.R.C.
    sec. 32. R argues that P-W’s Medicaid waiver payment does not
    qualify as “earned income” because it was excluded from gross
    income pursuant to Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    . Ps counter that a notice
    cannot reclassify otherwise “earned income” as unearned to remove a
    benefit provided by Congress through the I.R.C.
    Held: P-W’s Medicaid waiver payment does not fall under the
    plain text of I.R.C. sec. 131.
    -2-
    Held, further, Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , cannot reclassify P-W’s
    Medicaid waiver payment to remove a statutory tax benefit.
    Caleb B. Smith, for petitioners.
    John Schmittdiel and Timothy M. Peel, for respondent.
    OPINION
    GOEKE, Judge: Respondent issued a notice of deficiency on June 26,
    2017, determining an income tax deficiency of $3,972 for petitioners’ 2015 tax
    year. Petitioners timely filed a petition with this Court to challenge respondent’s
    determinations as set forth in his notice of deficiency.
    Background
    This matter was submitted fully stipulated by the parties pursuant to Rule
    122.1 At the time the petition was filed, petitioners resided in Minnesota.
    Petitioners timely filed a Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return,
    for the 2015 tax year. Petitioner Mary K. Feigh was issued a Form W-2, Wage
    and Tax Statement, from “MAINSL SERVICES MN” which reflected $7,353 in
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal
    Revenue Code (Code) as amended and in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule
    references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    -3-
    wages, tips, and other compensation. This amount qualifies as a Medicaid waiver
    payment for the care of petitioners’ related disabled adult children during the 2015
    tax year, and petitioners reported this payment on their 2015 tax return.2
    Petitioners had no other Form W-2 income for 2015 and reported no other such
    income on their 2015 tax return.
    The parties have stipulated that Medicaid waiver payments are treated as
    difficulty of care payments pursuant to Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Notice
    2014-7, 2014-4 I.R.B. 445, and that they are excludable from gross income under
    section 131, which excludes certain foster care payments from the gross income of
    a foster care provider.3 Although petitioners reported their Medicaid waiver
    payment as wages on their 2015 tax return, they excluded the payment from their
    calculation of gross income for 2015 pursuant to the instructions included with
    Form 1040.
    For 2015 petitioners claimed an earned income tax credit (EITC) of $3,319
    and an additional child tax credit (ACTC) of $653, which represented the
    2
    As used in this Opinion, a Medicaid waiver payment is a payment received
    by an individual care provider as part of a State’s Medicaid Home and
    Community-Based Services Waiver Program under sec. 1915(c) of the Social
    Security Act, 42 U.S.C. sec. 1396n(c) (2012).
    3
    We are not bound by the parties’ stipulation as to matters of law. Greene v.
    Commissioner, 
    85 T.C. 1024
    , 1026 n.3 (1985).
    -4-
    refundable portion of petitioners’ child tax credit. As set forth in his notice of
    deficiency, respondent disallowed petitioners’ claimed EITC and ACTC. To
    qualify for an EITC or an ACTC petitioners must demonstrate that they had
    “earned income” for 2015 as that term is defined in section 32(c)(2)(A).
    Respondent argues that petitioners’ Medicaid waiver payment was properly
    excluded from gross income and does not qualify as “earned income” for the
    purpose of determining EITC and ACTC eligibility. Therefore, respondent argues,
    petitioners are not entitled to an EITC or an ACTC for 2015.
    The sole issue for our consideration is whether Medicaid waiver payments,
    which are treated as difficulty of care payments that are excludable from gross
    income pursuant to Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , nevertheless qualify as “earned income”
    for determining eligibility to receive an EITC or an ACTC.
    Discussion
    This case involves a novel question: whether income that a taxpayer has
    excluded from gross income pursuant to Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , is considered
    earned income for the purposes of calculating EITC and ACTC eligibility.
    As a general rule, the Commissioner’s determinations in a notice of
    deficiency are presumed correct, and the taxpayer has the burden of proving that
    they are erroneous. Rule 142(a); Welch v. Helvering, 
    290 U.S. 111
    , 115 (1933).
    -5-
    Credits are matters of legislative grace, and a taxpayer bears the burden of proving
    he is entitled to the credits claimed. INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    503 U.S. 79
    , 84 (1992); Segel v. Commissioner, 
    89 T.C. 816
    , 842 (1987).
    Section 32(a)(1) allows an income tax credit for eligible individuals which
    is computed as a percentage of the taxpayer’s “earned income”. “Earned income”
    is defined under section 32(c)(2)(A)(i) as “wages, salaries, tips, and other
    employee compensation, but only if such amounts are includible in gross income
    for the taxable year”. (Emphasis added.) Section 24(a) allows a credit against tax
    with respect to each qualifying child of the taxpayer for which the taxpayer is
    allowed a dependency exemption deduction under section 151. As relevant here--
    where petitioners had no tax liability imposed--section 24(d) allows for a
    refundable portion of this child tax credit based in part on the taxpayer’s earned
    income as defined under section 32.
    For 2015 petitioners reported Form W-2 income that the parties stipulate
    qualifies as a Medicaid waiver payment. The parties agree that petitioners’ other
    forms of income reported on their 2015 tax return do not qualify as “earned
    income” under section 32. Thus, to qualify for the credits at issue, petitioners
    must establish that the income they received as a Medicaid waiver payment
    qualifies as section 32 “earned income”.
    -6-
    On January 3, 2014, the IRS announced its position in Notice 2014-7, 2014-
    4 I.R.B. at 446, that certain qualified Medicaid waiver payments such as the one
    petitioners received in 2015 will be treated as difficulty of care payments that are
    excludable from gross income under section 131, “and this treatment will apply
    whether the care provider is related or unrelated to the eligible individual.”
    Respondent believes that because these payments are now excludable from gross
    income under section 131 by virtue of Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , they are not
    “includible” in gross income and, therefore, fail to meet the statutory definition of
    “earned income” in section 32. Petitioners counter that there is no statutory,
    regulatory, or judicial authority that classifies Medicaid waiver payments as not
    includible in gross income under section 131; rather, the sole authority for this
    classification is Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    . Petitioners’ argument is that the IRS
    cannot, through a subregulatory notice, reclassify their otherwise “earned income”
    as unearned for purposes of determining tax credit eligibility. We must decide
    what deference, if any, we owe to the interpretation of the Code advanced by
    Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    .
    Section 131(a) provides: “Gross income shall not include amounts received
    by a foster care provider during the taxable year as qualified foster care
    payments.” Section 131(b) further defines a qualified foster care payment in
    -7-
    relevant part as a payment which is “made pursuant to a foster care program of a
    State or political subdivision” and which is “a difficulty of care payment.”
    In Notice 2014-7, 2014-4 I.R.B. at 446, the IRS announced the following
    guidance:
    To achieve consistent federal tax treatment of Medicaid waiver
    payments * * * as of January 3, 2014, the Service will treat qualified
    Medicaid waiver payments as difficulty of care payments under
    § 131(c) that are excludable under § 131, and this treatment will
    apply whether the care provider is related or unrelated to the eligible
    individual. * * *
    In announcing this guidance the IRS explained that it would no longer apply
    Program Manager Technical Advice 2010-007, which concluded that “a biological
    parent of a disabled child may not exclude payments under § 131 because the
    ordinary meaning of foster care excludes care by a biological parent.” Notice
    2014-7, 2014-4 I.R.B. at 445. They also announced that they would no longer
    apply our prior holdings that suggested “that a caregiver of a biological relative
    receiving qualified Medicaid waiver payments may not qualify as a foster care
    provider under § 131.”4 
    Id. at 446.
    Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , concludes that
    4
    The IRS announced it would no longer apply our holdings from Bannon v.
    Commissioner, 
    99 T.C. 59
    (1992), Alexander v. Commissioner, T.C. Summary
    Opinion 2011-48, or Harper v. Commissioner, T.C. Summary Opinion 2011-56.
    In Bannon, we did not address sec. 131 but held that payments received by a
    taxpayer for providing nonmedical care to her disabled adult daughter were not
    (continued...)
    -8-
    “treatment of qualified Medicaid waiver payments as ‘difficulty of care payments’
    is consistent with the definition under § 131(c).” However, these payments clearly
    do not meet the plain statutory definition found in the Code.
    Section 131(c)(1)(A) defines “difficulty of care payments” as, inter alia,
    “compensation for providing the additional care of a qualified foster individual”.
    A “qualified foster individual” is “any individual who is living in a foster family
    home” and who was placed there by an agency of the State or a qualified foster
    care placement agency. Sec. 131(b)(2). While “[s]ection 131 does not explicitly
    address whether payments under Medicaid waiver programs are qualified foster
    care payments”, the IRS reasoned that “Medicaid waiver programs and state foster
    care programs * * * share similar oversight and purposes.” Notice 2014-7, 2014-4
    I.R.B. at 446. As an initial matter, the plain text of section 131 renders it
    inapplicable to the care of biological adult children. In fact, in Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , the IRS acknowledged that it has “historically * * * challenged the
    4
    (...continued)
    nontaxable welfare benefits. In Alexander, we held that payments under
    Washington State’s Medicaid Personal Care program for the in-home care of the
    taxpayer’s biological parents did not meet the statutory requirements to be
    considered foster care payments under sec. 131 because the taxpayer’s parents
    were not “placed” in the home and the taxpayers did not operate a “foster family
    home”. In Harper, we again did not address sec. 131 but, citing Bannon, held that
    payments received by a taxpayer for providing care to her disabled adult son did
    not qualify as nontaxable welfare benefits.
    -9-
    excludability of payments to individual care providers caring for related
    individuals in the provider’s home”, and its own technical advice previously
    concluded that the ordinary meaning of foster care excludes care by a biological
    parent. Nevertheless, Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , concluded that qualified Medicaid
    waiver payments would be treated as difficulty of care payments “whether the care
    provider is related or unrelated to the eligible individual.”
    Additionally, a plain reading of the section 131 requirement that the care
    recipient be “placed” in a “foster family home” renders it inapplicable here where
    petitioners are caring for their related adult children in their own home.5 See sec.
    131(b) and (c). While “placed” is not defined under section 131, Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , concludes that “an eligible individual receiving care in the home of the
    individual care provider under the Medicaid waiver program will be treated as
    ‘placed’ * * * for purposes of § 131.” However, it provides no compelling
    rationale for this conclusion when the “qualified foster individual” remains in his
    5
    Although we are not bound by State law, Minnesota State law defines
    “foster care” as “24 hour substitute care for children placed away from their
    parents”. Minn. Stat. Ann. sec. 260C.007 subdiv. 18 (West 2015). In addition, for
    a child to remain in foster care past his 18th birthday the child must not be able to
    “safely return home”. Minn. Stat. Ann. sec. 260C.451 subdiv. 3(1) (West 2015).
    Citing the definition of “foster care”, the Minnesota Court of Appeals has
    concluded: “Because appellant [father] was living with his mother, she was not
    able to provide foster care for his children.” In re Welfare of Children of T.N.,
    No. A12-1099, 
    2012 WL 5896895
    , at *7 (Minn. Ct. App. Nov. 26, 2012).
    - 10 -
    own home. Instead, Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , cites our decision in Micorescu v.
    Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1998-398, 
    1998 WL 779705
    , to support its
    conclusion.
    In Micorescu v. Commissioner, 
    1998 WL 779705
    , at *5, we looked to the
    plain meaning of the verb “to place” in order to determine whether qualified foster
    individuals were placed in their foster family homes by the State or by a third-
    party organization; however, there was no dispute that the individuals had been
    placed. In reaching our holding that the third-party organization had placed the
    individuals we explained that they did such things as “assist in locating adult
    foster homes, provide transportation to view the homes, provide advice as to
    which home might be best for the individual, and negotiate with the foster home a
    price to be paid for the care of the individual.” Id. Notice-
    2014-7, supra
    , suggests
    that “States perform similar activities with respect to individuals participating in
    Medicaid waiver programs.” However, none of these things can reasonably be
    said to have been done in this case, where the individuals receiving care remained
    in their own home. Petitioners’ Medicaid waiver payment does not fall under the
    plain text of section 131; thus, we must examine the ability of Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , to classify the income as such.
    - 11 -
    Central to this dispute is what is meant in section 32 by the phrase
    “includible in gross income”. This Court has previously opined on the meaning of
    “includible” versus “included,” and we have held that these words are not
    functionally the same. See Venture Funding, Ltd. v. Commissioner, 
    110 T.C. 236
    ,
    240-242 (1998), aff’d without published opinion, 
    198 F.3d 248
    (6th Cir. 1999);
    see also Tesco Driveaway Co. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2001-294, slip op. at
    16 (noting that “includible” refers to “the date that the income should have been
    reported” while “included” means “the date that the recipient reported the
    income”). While “included” refers to the actual treatment of income, “includible”
    refers to a required treatment of income, whether or not the income was actually so
    treated. Venture Funding, Ltd. v. Commissioner, 
    110 T.C. 240-241
    ; 
    id. at 250
    (Colvin, J., concurring) (“The ‘ed’ ending refers to something done in fact * * *.
    The ‘ible’ (or ‘able’) ending refers to something legally required[.]”); see also
    Eichenberger v. ESPN, Inc., 
    876 F.3d 979
    , 984 (9th Cir. 2017) (“[T]he suffix
    ‘able’ means ‘capable of.’”). Thus, an item of income is “includible” in gross
    income if it is required to be included as income irrespective of whether the item
    was actually included in the taxpayer’s gross income. Because petitioners’
    Medicaid waiver payment is “includible” in their gross income but for Notice
    
    2014-7, supra
    , the question for us becomes whether a notice can effectively usurp
    - 12 -
    Congress’ authority in granting tax credits by denying petitioners a credit they
    would have been entitled to in the absence of the notice.
    To resolve this question, we must examine what substantive effect a notice
    can have where it provides guidance as to the treatment of certain income under
    the Code. As we have noted, IRS notices--as mere statements of the
    Commissioner’s position--lack the force of law. Phillips Petroleum Co. v.
    Commissioner, 
    101 T.C. 78
    , 99 n.17 (1993), aff’d, 
    70 F.3d 1282
    (10th Cir. 1995).
    Thus, they can only provide insight into the Commissioner’s interpretation of the
    law; they cannot effect substantive changes in the law. Nevertheless, we must
    consider whether this IRS notice may be entitled to some deference under the
    standards outlined in Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 
    323 U.S. 134
    (1944).
    We have previously afforded Skidmore deference to a series of revenue
    rulings reflecting “a ‘body of experience and informed judgment’ that the IRS has
    developed over four decades.” Webber v. Commissioner, 
    144 T.C. 324
    , 358
    (2015) (quoting 
    Skidmore, 323 U.S. at 140
    ). Of course, even in that context we
    acknowledged that “[w]e are not bound by revenue rulings; under Skidmore, the
    weight we afford them depends upon their persuasiveness and the consistency of
    the Commissioner’s position over time.” Webber v. Commissioner, 
    144 T.C. 352-353
    . In the context of Medicaid waiver payments the IRS opted to issue a
    - 13 -
    notice rather than a revenue ruling; however, even in this form the “agency’s
    interpretation may merit some deference * * * given the ‘specialized experience
    and broader investigations and information’ available to the agency”. United
    States v. Mead Corp., 
    533 U.S. 218
    , 234 (2001) (quoting 
    Skidmore, 323 U.S. at 139
    ).
    To determine what deference, if any, is owed to an IRS notice we must look
    at “the thoroughness evident in its consideration, the validity of its reasoning, its
    consistency with earlier and later pronouncements, and all those factors which
    give it power to persuade, if lacking power to control.” 
    Skidmore, 323 U.S. at 140
    . We have already discounted the thoroughness and persuasiveness of the
    reasoning in Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , and concluded that petitioners’ Medicaid
    waiver payment does not fit the plain statutory definition of a qualified foster care
    payment in section 131. Additionally, the notice acknowledges it is a reversal of
    the IRS’ historical practice of challenging the excludability of these payments and
    thus does not represent “the agency’s longstanding treatment” of Medicaid waiver
    payments. See Morehouse v. Commissioner, 
    769 F.3d 616
    , 621 (8th Cir. 2014),
    rev’g and remanding 
    140 T.C. 350
    (2013). In the light of these factors, we
    determine that the notice is entitled little, if any, deference.
    - 14 -
    The IRS cannot remove a statutory benefit provided by Congress.6
    Commissioner v. Schleier, 
    515 U.S. 323
    , 336 n.8 (1995) (“‘[I]nterpretive rulings
    do not have the force and effect of regulations’ * * * and they may not be used to
    overturn the plain language of a statute.” (quoting Davis v. United States, 
    495 U.S. 472
    , 484 (1990))); Corbalis v. Commissioner, 
    142 T.C. 46
    , 54 (2014) (“A
    procedural pronouncement cannot restrict or revise * * * [a Code section]. * * *
    The wording and context of the statute * * * control.” (Citations omitted.)); see
    also Mead 
    Corp., 533 U.S. at 228
    (“The fair measure of deference to an agency
    administering its own statute has been understood to vary with circumstances, and
    courts have looked to the degree of the agency’s care, its consistency, formality,
    and relative expertness, and to the persuasiveness of the agency’s position.”).
    That is exactly what respondent seeks to do here.
    The EITC and the ACTC are acts of legislative grace provided by Congress.
    We know the familiar rule that deductions and credits “depend upon legislative
    grace and are allowed only to the extent authorized by statute.” Estate of Guenzel
    v. Commissioner, 
    258 F.2d 248
    , 256 (8th Cir. 1958) (citing Deputy v. Du Pont,
    6
    Our holding addresses the power of the IRS, through a notice, to deem
    income otherwise includible as not includible for purposes of calculating a benefit
    bestowed by Congress. We do not reach the related issue of whether the IRS may
    properly classify income as not includible through a regulation.
    - 15 -
    
    308 U.S. 488
    , 493 (1940)), aff’g 
    28 T.C. 59
    (1957). However, the IRS is not free
    to circumscribe the credits that the legislature has chosen to authorize through
    statute; that is a power only Congress has. Therefore, to the extent respondent
    seeks to use Notice 
    2014-7, supra
    , to deprive petitioners of a benefit bestowed by
    Congress, we hold he may not do so.
    Respondent further argues that there is no statutory provision demonstrating
    congressional intent to allow petitioners a double tax benefit. Respondent
    suggests that if Congress intended to provide a double benefit here, it would have
    done so explicitly as it did in section 32(c)(2)(B)(vi) where it allowed taxpayers to
    treat as earned income combat service pay excluded from gross income under
    section 112. Respondent’s argument, however, misses that he, not Congress, has
    provided petitioners with a double tax benefit. Petitioners’ income cannot be
    reclassified by respondent, through a notice, to fall outside the plain text of section
    32. If left alone section 32 would allow petitioners the benefits of earned income
    for their Medicaid waiver payment, but that payment would remain subject to
    taxation under section 61. Respondent, however, has decided to disturb this
    equilibrium by telling taxpayers like petitioners that they need not pay tax on their
    Medicaid waiver payments. While respondent’s notice may be well intended and
    we are not critical of the motivation, our role is to apply the statutory provisions as
    - 16 -
    they present themselves.7 Congress, of course, may exercise its prerogative to
    definitively provide that these payments are earned income but not subject to
    taxation as it did with combat service pay under section 32(c)(2)(B)(vi).
    Our holdings clarify that, where income does not fall within the plain text of
    a statutory exclusion from gross income, the IRS cannot reclassify that income
    through a notice so that it no longer qualifies as “earned income” for the purpose
    of determining tax credits. We do not reach the question of whether, in the light of
    our holdings, petitioners should have included their Medicaid waiver payment in
    gross income. Respondent did not raise this issue in his notice of deficiency or
    plead it in this case. Instead, respondent argued that petitioners were precluded by
    his notice from including their payment in gross income.8 Respondent chose not
    7
    We assume respondent’s motive for issuing Notice 2014-7, 2014-4 I.R.B.
    445, was well intended; but we note that, at least as applied to petitioners, it may
    actually cause more harm than good. Applying the notice as they did, to exclude
    their Medicaid waiver payment from gross income, but include it in calculating
    earned income, petitioners had no tax liability and received over $4,000 in
    refundable tax credits. Even in the absence of respondent’s notice, petitioners
    would have no tax liability and over $2,500 in refundable tax credits. However, if
    petitioners had applied the notice as respondent argues they should have--to
    exclude their Medicaid waiver payment from gross income and from their earned
    income calculation--they would still have no tax liability, but would miss out on
    over $2,500 in refundable tax credits.
    8
    In his brief respondent argued that the IRS “announced that certain
    Medicaid waiver payments are within the ambit of the exclusion under I.R.C. §
    (continued...)
    - 17 -
    to argue in the alternative that petitioners’ Medicaid waiver payment should be
    included in gross income, as our Rules allow him to do, and we will not argue it
    for him. See Rule 31(c). Our job is to consider the issues advanced by the parties,
    not to craft alternative arguments never raised. Accordingly, we will not address
    whether petitioners properly excluded their Medicaid waiver payment from gross
    income.
    In reaching our holdings, we have considered all arguments made, and, to
    the extent not mentioned above, we conclude they are moot, irrelevant, or without
    merit.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    Decision will be entered for
    petitioners.
    8
    (...continued)
    131.” Therefore, according to respondent:
    The exclusion of qualified Medicaid waiver payments from gross
    income under I.R.C. § 131 does not depend upon a taxpayer’s
    election * * *. Petitioners’ belief that they elected to exclude
    qualified Medicaid waiver payments from gross income--and that
    such election simultaneously rendered the payments includible in
    gross income--is erroneous. There is simply no election available
    under I.R.C. § 131 or § 32 for Petitioners to make * * *