DocketNumber: Docket No. 27465-07
Judges: THORNTON
Filed Date: 11/29/2010
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
Decision will be entered for respondent.
THORNTON,
For 2001 and 2002 Burch & George sent Mrs. McGhee Forms W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, reporting only the wages paid to her ($34,145 for 2001 and $12,253 for 2002) and none of the embezzled funds. On or about April 8, 2002, petitioner and Mrs. McGhee filed their joint Federal income tax return for 2001. On or about August 15, 2003, they filed their joint Federal income tax return for 2002. On these joint returns they reported their wages but no embezzlement income. *300 The taxes reported on these returns were paid in full. Petitioner personally prepared these joint returns.
On February 18, 2004, Burch & George mailed Mrs. McGhee Forms 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, reporting nonemployee compensation of $126,772 for 2001 and $117,587 for 2002. These amounts represented the funds that she had embezzled from Burch & George. On November 20, 2004, after the IRS had commenced an audit of petitioner and Mrs. McGhee's 2002 joint return, petitioner and Mrs. McGhee filed amended joint Federal income tax returns for 2001 and 2002, reporting as income the embezzlement proceeds reported on the Forms 1099-MISC. The 2001 amended return reflects additional tax of $40,366 and a balance due of $40,366. The 2002 amended return reflects additional tax of $33,920 and a balance due of $35,399. Respondent accepted the amended joint returns, processed them, and on February 7, 2005, assessed the tax stated on them. Neither petitioner nor Mrs. McGhee paid the balances due on the amended returns.
On March 22, 2005, petitioner filed Forms 8857, Request for Innocent Spouse Relief, requesting relief with respect to the additional taxes reported on the amended joint returns for 2001 and 2002. On August 27, 2007, respondent sent *301 petitioner a notice of determination denying his requests for relief. Respondent has issued no statutory notice of deficiency to petitioner for 2001 or 2002.
In general, married taxpayers may elect to file a joint Federal income tax return.
The assertion of a tax deficiency is a prerequisite to our granting relief under A taxpayer who does not qualify for relief under If the threshold conditions are met, the Commissioner ordinarily will grant equitable relief under A requesting spouse such as petitioner, who satisfies the threshold conditions under Petitioner and Mrs. McGhee have been married at all relevant times. Although petitioner was frequently away from home because of business and military service, these temporary absences are not considered separation for this purpose, since it could be reasonably expected that he would return (as he did) to the family household. See Because petitioner and Mrs. McGhee have not divorced, this factor is neutral. The parties agree that Mrs. McGhee never abused petitioner. This factor is neutral. The parties agree that petitioner had no serious physical or mental health problems during 2001 or 2002 or at any other pertinent time. This factor is neutral. Respondent concedes that petitioner's compliance with the income tax laws in years following the years at issue favors relief. This factor favors relief if paying the tax debt would leave the requesting spouse unable to pay "reasonable basic living expenses." This factor weighs against relief if the requesting spouse "received significant benefit (beyond normal support) from the unpaid income tax liability or item giving rise to the deficiency." As petitioner and Mrs. McGhee reported on their amended joint tax returns, Mrs. McGhee embezzled over $240,000 ($126,772 in 2001 and $117,587 *309 in 2002). Petitioner has offered no detailed explanation of what became of these funds. Mrs. McGhee testified vaguely that she spent the embezzled funds on food and clothing for herself and her children and for the children's soccer and cheerleading activities. Petitioner has introduced *310 no evidence by which we might evaluate what might be considered "normal" support for him and has produced no specific evidence of lifestyle expenditures and asset acquisitions before, during, or after the years at issue. This factor weighs against relief if the requesting spouse knew or had reason to know that the nonrequesting spouse would not pay the income tax liability. It is unpersuasive to argue, as does respondent, that petitioner's voluntary filing of an amended 1996 return and her attendant payment of the delinquent taxes attributable to the omission of income from the original 1996 return militate against equitable relief simply because she had to have known of the omission before she filed the amended return and made the payment. * * * Furthermore, as this Court reasoned in It would seem a trap for the unwary—and an inefficient requirement from the IRS's perspective—to require spouses to go through an audit whose outcome is preordained in a situation like that faced by the widow Rosenthal or Mr. Billings, rather than fess up by filing an amended return. Respondent suggests that More particularly, on August 15, 2003, when petitioner signed the original 2002 joint return, he had actual knowledge *313 of Mrs. McGhee's embezzlements, which had been the subject of both a civil suit and criminal charges. On April 8, 2002, when petitioner signed the original 2001 joint return, he did not yet have actual knowledge of Mrs. McGhee's embezzlements, but he had reason to know, we believe, of items that "may be said to have reflected an understatement in tax". See In deciding whether a requesting spouse had reason to know of an understatement, "a key factor is the extent to which family expenditures, of which the spouse had knowledge, exceeded reported income." The $126,772 that Mrs. McGhee embezzled in 2001 exceeded the $114,874 of total wages reported on the original 2001 joint return. According to Mrs. McGhee's testimony, she used these embezzled funds to cover family living expenses. As previously discussed, this would mean that family expenses covered in this manner exceeded petitioner and Mrs. McGhee's combined wages by more than 100 percent. Considering petitioner and Mrs. McGhee's financial circumstances during and shortly before 2001, it would appear reasonable to conclude, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the level of expenditures occasioned by this influx of embezzled funds was unusual compared with past spending levels. *315 He testified that he "took care of the mortgage and the bills and insurance and utilities and stuff like that." During 2001 Mrs. McGhee deposited the embezzled funds in a Bank of Oklahoma checking account that she held jointly with petitioner. Petitioner testified that he never saw any of the bank statements for this account until much later and that he did not even know it was a joint account or in which bank it was held. The evidence shows, however, that petitioner *316 wrote several checks on this joint account during the years at issue. Moreover, we find petitioner's testimony difficult to square with the application for an offer-in-compromise that he and Mrs. McGhee submitted to the IRS in August 2001 and signed under penalties of perjury. This application required petitioner and Mrs. McGhee to submit Form 433-A, Collection Information Statement for Wage Earners and Self-Employed Individuals, listing all bank accounts and balances. Although the record does not contain the Form 433-A submitted with their offer-in-compromise, the offer acceptance report of respondent's Appeals Office, which is in evidence, indicates that they had reported a Bank of Oklahoma checking account with a balance of $654. It seems apparent, then, that petitioner had knowledge of and access to the joint Bank of Oklahoma checking account before signing the original 2001 joint income tax return on April 8, 2002. Petitioner claims that Burch & George initially indicated that it intended to treat the embezzled funds as a loan and that they expected repayment. He claims that he was advised that the embezzlement proceeds would not constitute taxable income. On cross-examination, *317 however, he conceded that Mrs. McGhee's criminal lawyer had advised him that it was doubtful that the embezzled funds would be treated as a loan for tax purposes unless petitioner or Mrs. McGhee made a lump-sum repayment. As indicated by the foregoing analysis, four factors are neutral. Two of the factors—compliance with Federal tax laws and economic hardship—favor relief. Two of the factors—significant benefit and knowledge—weigh against relief. Thus, as respondent acknowledges, a "strictly mathematical balancing of the factors shows them to be in equipoise". If we were to conclude on this score that there is an evidentiary tie, then petitioner would lose for failure to carry his burden of proof. But rather than decide this case on that basis, we conclude on a preponderance of all the evidence that petitioner is not entitled to equitable relief. In reaching this conclusion, we take into account petitioner's lack of credibility on several key points as well as his seeming lack of good faith in waiting until after the IRS had opened an audit on his 2002 tax year to file amended joint returns reflecting the embezzlement proceeds that he had, at that point, long known about but had not previously reported. Petitioner is not entitled to relief under
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Numbers have been rounded to the nearest dollar.↩
3. On Dec. 16, 2002, after the criminal proceedings had been instituted, Burch & George withdrew this civil cause of action.↩
4. Petitioner testified that he paid Burch & George $30,000 on the day of Mrs. McGhee's sentencing. The record does not reveal what other amounts, if any, have been repaid to Burch & George.↩
5. On their original 2001 joint Federal income tax return, petitioner and Mrs. McGhee reported wages of $114,874, of which $34,145 was attributable to Mrs. McGhee's wages from Burch & George. On their original 2002 joint Federal income tax return, petitioner and Mrs. McGhee reported wages of $96,052, of which $12,253 was attributable to Mrs. McGhee's wages from Burch & George.
6. This circumstance also precludes relief under
7. Petitioner does not contend that the burden of proof should shift to respondent pursuant to
8. Before our decision in
9. The seven threshold conditions are: (1) The requesting spouse must have filed a joint return for the taxable years for which relief is sought; (2) the requested relief must not have been available to the requesting spouse under
10. We do not find this testimony entirely credible. It seems unlikely that in about a year Mrs. McGhee would have spent more than $240,000 of embezzled funds on food, clothing, and children's activities, especially in the light of petitioner's testimony that he also gave Mrs. McGhee funds from his separate bank accounts to pay for food, groceries, and soccer fees. There appears to be no dispute, however, that Mrs. McGhee spent the embezzled funds almost as quickly as she got them. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, it seems likely that the embezzled funds were used to subsidize petitioner and Mrs. McGhee's general lifestyle.↩
11. Given that petitioner was the primary breadwinner in his household (disregarding the embezzlements), it would appear that he normally would have supported Mrs. McGhee rather than the other way around.↩
12. In 1998 or 1999 petitioner and Mrs. McGhee filed for bankruptcy. In 2001 petitioner and Mrs. McGhee offered to pay the IRS $42,000 to compromise over one-half million dollars of tax liability for tax years 1993 through 1998. According to information included in the administrative record, in accepting this offer the IRS determined that their combined annual wages for 2000 were $87,049, that their equity in all their assets (not counting the income stream from their wages) was about $13,000, and that their allowable monthly living expenses were $4,840 per month. The record contains no suggestion that petitioner and Mrs. McGhee, in seeking an offer-in-compromise, ever claimed living expenses exceeding their combined wages.↩
13. Petitioner testified that he could not remember whether he discussed this matter with a tax lawyer. We find it difficult to believe that petitioner would have relied on a criminal lawyer for this important tax advice without consulting a tax lawyer.↩
Kathryn Cheshire v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 2002 )
Mitchell, Herbert v. Cmsnr IRS ( 2002 )
Jacquelyn Hayman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1993 )
Estate of Krock v. Commissioner ( 1989 )
Jonson v. Commissioner ( 2003 )
Estate of Jackson v. Commissioner ( 1979 )