Lori Novak v. Commissioner ( 2009 )


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  •                     T.C. Summary Opinon 2009-185
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    LORI NOVAK, Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 1176-08S.                Filed December 7, 2009.
    Lori Novak, pro se.
    Carol-Lynn E. Moran, for respondent.
    RUWE, Judge:     This case was heard pursuant to the provisions
    of section 74631 of the Internal Revenue Code in effect when the
    petition was filed.    Pursuant to section 7463(b), the decision to
    be entered is not reviewable by any other court, and this opinion
    shall not be treated as precedent for any other case.
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
    the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year at issue.
    - 2 -
    Respondent determined a $1,669 deficiency in petitioner’s
    2005 Federal income tax.   The issue we must decide is whether
    petitioner is entitled to an $8,772 alimony deduction for 2005.
    Background
    Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
    The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are
    incorporated herein by this reference.    Petitioner resided in
    Pennsylvania at the time the petition was filed.
    Petitioner and Joseph Kemp (Mr. Kemp) were married on
    November 10, 1984, and have four children.    Sometime during 2004
    petitioner left the marital residence.    During 2005 the children
    resided with their father, Mr. Kemp, in New Jersey.
    On April 8, 2005, the Superior Court of New Jersey Chancery
    Division--Family Part Gloucester County (superior court) in the
    case of “Joseph Kemp, Plaintiff vs. Lori Kemp, Defendant”, issued
    an order addressing petitioner’s motion and Mr. Kemp’s cross-
    motion dated February 28, 2005.   In the order, the superior court
    granted in part Mr. Kemp’s request that petitioner contribute to
    the household bills and ordered petitioner to pay $516 per week
    pendente lite2 toward “the marital bills” effective as of the
    filing date of the original motion, February 28, 2005.    The April
    2005 order provides, in pertinent part:
    2
    Pendente lite is a Latin term meaning “while the action is
    pending”. Black’s Law Dictionary 1248 (9th ed. 2009).
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    This number is based on * * * [petitioner’s] own Case
    Information Statement as to what the marital bills are
    each month. ($2,000/month mortgage, $430/month home
    equity loan, $250 heat, $200 electric and gas, $100
    water and sewer, $500 joint credit cards, $957 other
    long term debt = $4,437/month /2 = $2,219/each/month =
    $516/week@4.3weeks.[)]
    Petitioner’s payments to Mr. Kemp were to be made biweekly
    and facilitated through Gloucester County Probation via wage
    execution.   The superior court also denied Mr. Kemp’s request
    that petitioner pay child support.     Petitioner was liable for
    $516 per week from February 28 through June 17, 2005, for a total
    of 16 weeks.
    Because of a change in living arrangements between
    petitioner and Mr. Kemp and pursuant to the parties’ requests,
    the superior court, on June 17, 2005, issued an order granting
    petitioner’s request to “equitably recalculate the support” and
    directed petitioner to pay $214 per week “for child support” plus
    $50 per week on the arrears, effective as of the date of the
    order.   The June 2005 order also noted that petitioner was, at
    that time, “in arrears in support in the amount of $5,394.56.”
    The arrears reflected payments still due pursuant to the superior
    court’s April 2005 order.   The superior court stated that the
    recalculated payment was “determined to be the net figure based
    on the attached guidelines minus an alimony figure of $100 per
    week paid by * * * [Mr. Kemp].”
    - 4 -
    The first biweekly payment by petitioner pursuant to the
    June 2005 order was made on July 20, 2005, for $528.   The $528
    payment reflected a child support payment of $314 per week netted
    to $214 to offset the $100 per week alimony payments due from Mr.
    Kemp, equaling $428 biweekly plus a biweekly arrearage of $100.
    Petitioner made a total of six $528 payments to Mr. Kemp.    In the
    June 2005 order the superior court also granted Mr. Kemp’s
    request for exclusive possession of the marital residence and
    further required him to refinance the mortgage or list the
    marital residence for sale.   Both petitioner and Mr. Kemp agreed
    that the refinancing of the marital residence was to include the
    first and second mortgages.
    On September 9, 2005, the superior court issued an order
    terminating petitioner’s child support obligation and Mr. Kemp’s
    alimony obligation.   The superior court also stated that
    petitioner was entitled to a credit of $100 per week from June 17
    to September 9, 2005, for having provided for the children’s
    health care.   Thereafter, on September 28, 2005, the superior
    court issued a final judgment of divorce; the divorce decree,
    however, is not part of the record.
    - 5 -
    Pursuant to the April, June, and September 2005 superior
    court orders, petitioner made payments to Mr. Kemp via wage
    execution as follows:
    Check Date           Check Amount
    5/10/05               $923.81
    5/24/05              1,026.34
    6/9/05                911.29
    6/20/05                904.22
    7/6/05                862.93
    7/20/05                528.00
    8/3/05                528.00
    8/15/05                528.00
    9/2/05                528.00
    9/13/05                528.00
    9/26/05                528.00
    10/11/05                100.00
    10/24/05                100.00
    11/15/05                100.00
    11/21/05                100.00
    12/6/05                100.00
    12/19/05                100.00
    Total               8,396.59
    The record does not disclose why there is a difference between
    petitioner’s claimed $8,772 alimony deduction and the $8,396.59
    she paid to Mr. Kemp through wage execution.
    After filing her petition, petitioner returned to the
    superior court in August 2008 (almost 3 years after the divorce
    became final), requesting that the superior court clarify that
    her payments were spousal support, not child support.    The
    superior court, through a different judge, granted petitioner’s
    request stating:   “Prior to 10/17/07, there was no child support
    order in place between the parties.     There was however a spousal
    support obligation for * * * [petitioner] in 2005.”
    - 6 -
    Discussion
    Section 215(a) provides that an individual is allowed a
    deduction for alimony or separate maintenance payments
    (hereinafter collectively referred to as alimony) as defined in
    section 71(b).   Alimony must consist of an amount received by or
    on behalf of the payee spouse.    Sec. 71(b)(1)(A).     Thus a payment
    that satisfied the payor’s share of joint debts and obligations
    would not qualify.     Zinsmeister v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2000-
    364, affd. 
    21 Fed. Appx. 529
     (8th Cir. 2001).       Alimony does not
    include any part of a payment which the terms of the divorce
    instrument fix as a sum payable for the support of the children
    of the payor spouse.    Sec. 71(c); Zinsmeister v. Commissioner,
    supra.   Furthermore, payments which are part of a property
    settlement are capital in nature and are not subject to section
    71.   Zampini v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1991-395
     (citing Yoakum
    v. Commissioner, 
    82 T.C. 128
    , 134 (1984), Thompson v.
    Commissioner, 
    50 T.C. 522
     (1968), and Price v. Commissioner, 
    49 T.C. 676
     (1968)).
    While property interests of divorcing parties are determined
    by State law, Federal law governs the Federal income tax
    treatment of that property.     Zinsmeister v. Commissioner, supra
    (citing Hoover v. Commissioner, 
    102 F.3d 842
    , 845 (6th Cir.
    1996), affg. 
    T.C. Memo. 1995-183
    ).       State court adjudications
    retroactively changing the rights of parties are generally
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    disregarded for Federal income tax purposes.   Ianniello v.
    Commissioner, 
    98 T.C. 165
    , 175 n.5 (1992); see also Ali v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2004-284
     (retroactive imposition of
    support by a State court does not have retroactive effect for
    Federal tax purposes).   Consequently, we do not ascribe
    conclusive weight to the label placed on the payments pursuant to
    the superior court’s August 2008 order, which was entered by a
    different judge 3 years after the operative events.3   Whether
    petitioner’s payments to Mr. Kemp are considered alimony for
    Federal tax purposes will be determined under the guidelines of
    the applicable Federal law.
    In the April 2005 order the superior court delineated
    petitioner’s obligation to make payments to Mr. Kemp as a
    requirement to pay $516 per week “toward the marital bills.”     The
    superior court’s determination was made on the basis of
    petitioner’s own case information statement; i.e., petitioner was
    required to pay one-half of the monthly mortgage, the monthly
    home equity loan, the joint credit cards, the other long-term
    debt, and the utilities.   Although petitioner left the marital
    3
    We note that an exception to the general rule exists when
    a nunc pro tunc order retroactively corrects an order which
    failed to reflect the true intention of the court at the time it
    was rendered. Gordon v. Commissioner, 
    70 T.C. 525
    , 530 (1978);
    Johnson v. Commissioner, 
    45 T.C. 530
    , 532 (1966). There is no
    persuasive evidence that the superior court’s August 2008 order
    corrected an order which failed to reflect the true intention of
    the court at the time it was rendered.
    - 8 -
    residence sometime during 2004, Mr. Kemp and the children
    continued to reside in the marital residence throughout 2005.    At
    trial Mr. Kemp’s uncontradicted testimony was that the mortgage,
    home equity loan, joint credit cards, and other long-term debt
    were joint obligations.   To the extent petitioner was paying her
    share of the joint obligations, the payments do not qualify as
    alimony.   See Zinsmeister v. Commissioner, supra.   To the extent
    that the payments may have slightly exceeded petitioner’s share
    of the joint obligations, petitioner has not convinced us that
    they constitute alimony to Mr. Kemp.    Indeed, it would seem
    totally inconsistent to view any portion of petitioner’s payments
    as alimony when, according to the superior court’s order of June
    17, 2005, Mr. Kemp was being given credit for alimony that he was
    obligated to pay to petitioner.   In the June 2005 order the
    superior court not only granted Mr. Kemp’s request that
    petitioner pay child support but also fixed petitioner’s child
    support obligation at $214 per week.4
    Petitioner has failed to prove that any of the payments were
    for anything other than her joint debt obligations and child
    support.   In reaching our holdings herein, we have considered all
    4
    We note that the June 2005 order reduced petitioner’s
    payment obligation from $516 per week for the payment of marital
    bills to $214 per week child support plus an arrearage of $50.
    At the time the June order was issued, petitioner was in arrears
    by $5,394.56; a reflection of the payments still due pursuant to
    the superior court’s April order.
    - 9 -
    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 respondent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1176-08S

Filed Date: 12/7/2009

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2018