Thomas Joseph Ritter v. Commissioner ( 2017 )


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    T.C. Memo. 2017-185
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    THOMAS JOSEPH RITTER, Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 1584-16.                           Filed September 19, 2017.
    Thomas Joseph Ritter, pro se.
    Richard L. Wooldridge, for respondent.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    CHIECHI, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in, and an accuracy-
    related penalty under section 6662(a)1 on, petitioner’s Federal income tax (tax) for
    his taxable year 2013 of $7,250 and $1,450, respectively.
    1
    All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect for
    the year at issue. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
    Procedure.
    -2-
    [*2] The issue remaining for decision for petitioner’s taxable year 2013 is
    whether the $31,250 that he received in that year from a certain qualified settle-
    ment fund is includible in gross income.2 We hold that it is.
    Background
    The facts in this case, which the parties submitted under Rule 122, have
    been stipulated by the parties and are so found.
    Petitioner, Thomas Joseph Ritter, resided in Illinois at the time he filed the
    petition.
    On December 7, 2009, JP Morgan Chase Bank (Chase Bank) filed a
    complaint to foreclose mortgage with the Chancery Court of Bureau County,
    Illinois (chancery court), in which it sought to foreclose with respect to the
    mortgage loan on petitioner’s then principal residence. On January 20, 2010, that
    court entered a judgment of foreclosure against petitioner and in favor of Chase
    Bank.
    On March 8, 2010, petitioner filed a petition with the U.S. Bankruptcy
    Court for the Central District of Illinois (bankruptcy court) under chapter 7 of title
    11 of the U.S. Code (chapter 7). On March 17, 2010, Chase Bank filed a motion
    2
    Respondent concedes that petitioner is not liable for the accuracy-related
    penalty under sec. 6662(a) that respondent determined in the notice of deficiency
    (notice) issued to him for his taxable year 2013 (2013 notice).
    -3-
    [*3] for relief from stay in that bankruptcy proceeding, which the bankruptcy court
    granted on April 6, 2010.
    On July 2, 2010, the bankruptcy court granted petitioner a discharge under
    chapter 7.
    On September 22, 2010, the chancery court issued an order in which it
    approved the report of sale and distribution and confirmed the foreclosure sale of
    petitioner’s then principal residence.
    On April 13, 2011, Chase Bank and the Office of the Comptroller of the
    Currency (OCC) entered into a settlement agreement known as the Independent
    Foreclosure Review (IFR). Pursuant to that agreement, Chase Bank agreed to take
    certain actions in order to remedy certain “deficiencies and unsafe or unsound
    practices in [Chase Bank’s] residential mortgage servicing and in the Bank’s
    initiation and handling of foreclosure proceedings” that the OCC had identified.3
    3
    Separate from and independent of the IFR, the United States and 49 States
    and the District of Columbia entered into consent agreements with various
    mortgage loan servicers, including Chase Bank, known as the National Mortgage
    Settlement (NMS), to settle allegations by those governments that those mortgage
    loan servicers had violated various Federal and State laws (NMS settlement
    agreements). Pursuant to the NMS settlement agreements, the mortgage loan
    servicers were required to pay specified amounts to certain borrowers. Pursuant to
    one component of those agreements, each borrower covered was to receive a
    payment of $1,400 from a so-called borrower payment fund. As expressly set
    forth in the NMS settlement agreements, the purposes of the “payments [pursuant
    (continued...)
    -4-
    [*4] Petitioner was one of the borrowers harmed by those practices.
    On February 28, 2013, Chase Bank and the OCC entered into an agreement
    to amend the IFR (February 28, 2013 amendment) by superseding article VII,
    titled “FORECLOSURE REVIEW”, of the IFR “in the interest of providing the
    greatest benefit to borrowers potentially affected by the practices at the Bank
    addressed in the * * * [IFR] in a more timely manner than would have occurred”.
    Pursuant to the February 28, 2013 amendment to which Chase Bank and the OCC
    agreed, Chase Bank agreed to establish a qualified settlement fund (QSF) within
    the meaning of section 1.468B-1, Income Tax Regs., with certain other lenders
    that had also entered into certain other agreements with the OCC from which
    payments were to be made to those borrowers who had been harmed by Chase
    Bank’s (as well as certain other lenders’) banking practices and who had pending
    or completed foreclosures with respect to their primary residences during the
    period January 1, 2009, through December 31, 2010. Petitioner was one of the
    borrowers who received a payment from the QSF, which is the payment at issue
    here.
    3
    (...continued)
    to the NMS] * * * are remedial and relate to the reduction in the proceeds deemed
    realized by borrowers for tax purposes from the foreclosure sale of residential
    properties owned by the borrowers allegedly resulting from the allegedly unlawful
    conduct of” the mortgage loan servicers.
    -5-
    [*5] Pursuant to the IFR and the February 28, 2013 amendment, a borrower was
    not required to show financial harm or request a review through the IFR in order
    to receive a payment. The February 28, 2013 amendment expressly provided that
    the payments from the QSF did not “in any manner reflect specific financial injury
    or harm that may have been suffered by borrowers receiving payments”. More-
    over, the categories for the so-called standard payment amounts set forth in a
    document titled “Independent Foreclosure Review Payment Agreement Details”
    did not include any amounts for lost equity.
    A plan to distribute funds from the QSF (distribution plan) was prepared
    which established different categories of borrowers that were based upon different
    loan file characteristics and whether the borrower had requested a review through
    the IFR. The OCC and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
    (Federal Reserve Board) determined in their sole discretion a specific payment
    amount, a so-called standard payout amount, for each category of borrowers.
    Pursuant to the distribution plan, petitioner was categorized as a borrower who did
    not request review through the IFR and whose mortgage loan servicer (i.e., Chase
    Bank) initiated or completed foreclosure with respect to the mortgage loan on
    petitioner’s then principal residence while he was protected by Federal bankruptcy
    law. (For convenience, we shall refer to the category of borrowers into which
    -6-
    [*6] petitioner was placed who did not request review through the IFR and whose
    mortgage loan servicer (i.e., Chase Bank) initiated or completed foreclosure while
    the borrower was protected by Federal bankruptcy law as petitioner’s category of
    borrowers.) Petitioner’s category of borrowers was not eligible for a payment
    representing lost equity. Like all borrowers so categorized, the OCC and the
    Federal Reserve Board had determined that the standard payout amount payable to
    petitioner’s category of borrowers was $31,250.
    On November 8, 2013, pursuant to the IFR and the February 28, 2013
    amendment, the QSF issued to petitioner a check for $31,250, which he cashed.
    (We shall sometimes refer to the $31,250 that the QSF paid to petitioner as the
    $31,250 payment.)
    The QSF issued to petitioner, and sent to respondent a copy of, Form 1099-
    MISC, Miscellaneous Income (petitioner’s Form 1099), for his taxable year 2013.
    That form, which was accompanied by a letter to petitioner, showed that petitioner
    has “Other income” of $31,250 for that year and that no tax was withheld from
    that income. The letter that accompanied petitioner’s Form 1099 gave the follow-
    ing explanation why the QSF had issued that form:
    In the 2013 tax year, you received a payment as a result of an
    agreement between federal banking regulators and your mortgage
    servicer in connection with an enforcement action related to deficient
    -7-
    [*7] mortgage servicing and foreclosure processes. Your payment in-
    cluded a letter explaining the breakdown of your payment and other
    important information and disclosures. * * * Please visit
    www.independentforeclosurereview.com for tax information * * *.
    *             *           *          *           *          *           *
    Below is your IRS Form 1099-MISC, which you will need
    when you file your tax return for the period January 1, 2013 through
    December 31, 2013. * * * If you have questions about the taxability
    of your payment, you should contact a tax advisor.
    Petitioner timely filed Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income tax Return, for
    his taxable year 2013. In that return, petitioner did not include in gross income the
    $31,250 that he received from the QSF pursuant to the IFR and the February 28,
    2013 amendment.
    In the 2013 notice that respondent issued to petitioner, respondent deter-
    mined, inter alia, that the $31,250 payment is includible in gross income.
    Discussion
    Petitioner bears the burden of proving that the determination in the 2013
    notice that remains at issue, i.e., the $31,250 payment is includible in gross income
    for petitioner’s taxable year 2013, is erroneous.4 See Rule 142(a); Welch v.
    Helvering, 
    290 U.S. 111
    , 115 (1933).
    4
    We allowed the parties to file briefs. Petitioner chose not to do so.
    -8-
    [*8] Section 61(a) defines the term “gross income” in general to mean “all
    income from whatever source derived”. It is axiomatic that a taxpayer’s acces-
    sions to wealth are presumed to be includible in gross income. See, e.g., Commis-
    sioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co., 
    348 U.S. 426
    , 430-431 (1955). Accessions to
    wealth may be excluded from gross income only if the taxpayer establishes that
    the Code specifically provides such an exclusion. See 
    id.
    In determining the tax treatment of a payment to settle a claim, we must ask
    “[i]n lieu of what were the damages awarded”? Raytheon Prod. Corp. v. Commis-
    sioner, 
    144 F.2d 110
    , 113 (1st Cir. 1944), aff’g 
    1 T.C. 952
     (1943).
    Section 468B and the regulations thereunder provide special rules for the
    taxation of a designated settlement fund, like the QSF. Pursuant to section
    1.468B-4, Income Tax Regs., whether a distribution from a designated settlement
    fund, like the QSF, is includible in a payee’s gross income is generally determined
    by reference to the claim in respect of which the distribution is made and as if the
    distribution were made directly to the payee by the transferor to the designated
    settlement fund.
    The $31,250 payment that petitioner received from the QSF was a payment
    to remedy certain “deficiencies and unsafe or unsound practices in [Chase Bank’s]
    residential mortgage servicing and in the Bank’s initiation and handling of
    -9-
    [*9] foreclosure proceedings” that the OCC had identified. Pursuant to the IFR
    and the February 28, 2013 amendment, a borrower was not required to show
    financial harm or request a review through the IFR in order to receive a monetary
    payment. The February 28, 2013 amendment expressly provided that the pay-
    ments from the QSF did not “in any manner reflect specific financial injury or
    harm that may have been suffered by borrowers receiving payments”. Moreover,
    the categories for the so-called standard payment amounts set forth in a document
    titled “Independent Foreclosure Review Payment Agreement Details” did not
    include any amounts for lost equity.
    The distribution plan for distributions from the QSF established different
    categories of borrowers that were based upon different loan file characteristics and
    whether the borrower requested a review through the IFR. The OCC and the
    Federal Reserve Board determined in their sole discretion a specific payment
    amount, a so-called standard payout amount, for each category of borrowers.
    Pursuant to the distribution plan, petitioner was categorized as a borrower who did
    not request review through the IFR and whose mortgage loan servicer (i.e., Chase
    Bank) initiated or completed foreclosure with respect to the mortgage loan on
    petitioner’s then principal residence while he was protected by Federal bankruptcy
    law. Petitioner’s category of borrowers was not eligible for a payment represent-
    - 10 -
    [*10] ing lost equity. Like all borrowers so categorized, the OCC and the Federal
    Reserve Board had determined that the standard payout amount payable to
    petitioner’s category of borrowers was $31,250.
    The fully stipulated record is devoid of evidence establishing that the
    $31,250 payment was, or was intended to be, a deemed increase or decrease in the
    amount realized by petitioner from the foreclosure with respect to the mortgage
    loan on his then principal residence.5 Nor does that record contain any evidence
    establishing that petitioner is entitled under a specific Code section to exclude that
    payment from gross income.
    5
    Although petitioner does not rely on Rev. Rul. 2014-2, 2014-
    2 I.R.B. 255
    ,
    we address it briefly. That ruling considered the tax treatment of payments made
    pursuant to the NMS, which was totally separate from and independent of the IFR.
    See supra note 3. In Rev. Rul. 2014-2, supra, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
    answered the question “[i]n lieu of what were the damages [payments pursuant to
    the NMS] awarded”, Raytheon Prod. Corp. v. Commissioner, 
    144 F.2d 110
    , 113
    (1st Cir. 1944), aff’g 
    1 T.C. 952
     (1943), as follows: “Here, as reflected in the
    [NMS] settlement documents, the NMS Payment from the Fund is an additional
    amount realized on the foreclosure of the borrower’s principal residence. That
    amount realized is used to determine any gain or loss realized under * * * [section]
    1001, including gain that may be excluded under * * * [section] 121.” The
    payments pursuant to the NMS that the IRS analyzed in Rev. Rul. 2014-2, supra,
    are materially distinguishable from the payments pursuant to the IFR and the
    February 28, 2013 amendment, such as the $31,250 payment that petitioner
    received. Consequently, Rev. Rul. 2014-2, supra, does not control the tax
    treatment of that payment.
    - 11 -
    [*11] On the record before us, we find that petitioner is required to include in
    gross income for his taxable year 2013 the $31,250 payment that he received.
    We have considered all of the contentions and arguments of the parties that
    are not discussed herein, and we find them to be without merit, irrelevant, and/or
    moot.
    To reflect the foregoing and the concession of respondent,
    Decision as to the deficiency will be
    entered for respondent and as to the accu-
    racy-related penalty under section 6662(a)
    will be entered for petitioner.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1584-16

Filed Date: 9/19/2017

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 2/3/2020