DocketNumber: No. 9102-02
Judges: Laro
Filed Date: 8/25/2003
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*255 Judgment entered for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
LARO, Judge: Petitioners petitioned the Court to redetermine a $ 29,771 deficiency in their 1997 Federal income tax, a $ 4,115 addition thereto under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some facts were stipulated. The stipulated facts and the accompanying exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. We find the stipulated facts accordingly. Petitioners resided in Montgomery, Texas, when their petition was filed.
Petitioners filed with respondent a 1997 Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, using the filing status of "Married filing joint return" and reporting2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*256 their "total tax" and "total [tax] payments" for the year as $ 13,340 and $ 16,327, respectively. The return consisted of seven single-sided pages. The information that petitioners furnished in the signature block on page 2 of the Form 1040 (i. e., signatures, date of signatures, and occupations) was all written by hand, as were two "X" s that were placed in the "No" blocks to questions requiring the checking of a "Yes" or "No" box. All other information petitioners reported on their 1997 return was typed. Petitioners reported on the 1997 return that they had each signed the return on April 15, 1998.
Walter R. Huff (Mr. Huff) testified at trial that he mailed petitioners' 1997 return to respondent between 10: 30 p. m. and 10: 45 p. m. on April 15, 1998, in an envelope that also contained petitioners' completed 1997 Form 4868, Application for Automatic Extension of Time to File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return. Mr. Huff testified that he mailed this envelope by placing it in a post office box at a post office near his home in Chino Hills, California. Respondent's records indicate that his department in Fresno, California, received petitioners' 1997 tax return on April 23, 1999, and2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*257 respondent filed that return as of that date. Respondent mailed the subject notice of deficiency to petitioners on March 7, 2002.
Petitioners' 1997 Form 4868 is a one-page document on which petitioners listed their names, address, Social Security numbers, and numeric answers to requested information concerning their 1997 Federal income tax. The requested information was "4 Total tax liability for 1997", "5 Total 1997 payments", and "6 Balance. Subtract 5 from 4". Petitioners answered that their total tax liability for 1997 was "15,800", that their total 1997 tax payments equaled "15,800+", and that their balance was zero. All of the information that petitioners listed on their 1997 Form 4868 was written by hand. Petitioners requested through this Form 4868 an extension of time until August 15, 1998, to file their 1997 Federal income tax return. Respondent filed this Form 4868 as of April 15, 1998.
During the subject year, Mr. Huff was an attorney specializing in personal injury work in the State of California. 2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*258 These withholdings were the only Federal income tax payments petitioners made during 1997.
Respondent's records show that petitioners filed their 1991 Federal income tax return untimely on June 5, 1994, that they filed their 1992 Federal income tax return untimely on October 20, 1993, that they filed their 1993 Federal income tax return untimely on February 9, 1995, that they filed their 1994 Federal income tax return untimely on October 15, 1995, that they filed their 1995 Federal income tax return untimely on June 11, 1997, that they filed their 1999 Federal income tax return untimely on September 13, 2001, and that they filed their 2000 Federal income tax return untimely on September 17, 2001. 2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*259 their 1998 Federal income tax return timely on April 15, 1999.
OPINION
Petitioners argue that the applicable period of limitations under
Mr. Huff testified that he mailed petitioners' 1997 return to respondent on April 15, 1998. We2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*260 find that testimony to be uncorroborated and incredible.
Mr. Huff during his testimony2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*261 had a selective loss of memory; for example, he could vividly recall specific facts that supported his case but generally had no recollection as to many other facts which could have been detrimental to his case (e. g., whether he filed timely his 1997 State income tax return, whether he filed timely his 1991 through 1993 Federal income tax returns). He also testified that he prepared petitioners' 1997 Form 4868 immediately after he had finished preparing their 1997 Form 1040 and that he prepared the former document because he was concerned that the latter document would not be postmarked timely. In that the 1997 Form 1040 reports for 1997 that petitioners' total tax and total tax payments equal $ 13,340 and $ 16,327, respectively, petitioners' reporting on their 1997 Form 4868 that their total tax and total tax payments for that year equaled $ 15,800 and "$ 15,800+", respectively, indicates that Mr. Huff did not readily know when he prepared the 1997 Form 4868 the precise amount of either petitioners' total tax or their tax payments.
The fact that Mr. Huff testified that he mailed the 1997 Form 1040 and the 1997 Form 4868 to respondent in the same envelope also undercuts his testimony2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*262 that he filed the Form 4868 simply out of concern that the Form 1040 would not be postmarked timely. A request for an automatic extension of time to file a tax return must be filed before the unextended due date of that return. See
The thrust of petitioners' argument is that they must prevail because respondent has not produced the envelope in which respondent received their 1997 tax return. Petitioners note that respondent acknowledges that respondent lost or destroyed this envelope and that respondent's witness, an employee of respondent, testified that respondent attaches to all late filed returns the envelope in which the return was received. Petitioners assert that the envelope, by its postmark, would have confirmed Mr. Huff's testimony that he mailed petitioners' 1997 tax return to respondent on April 15, 1998, that
We disagree with petitioners that respondent's failure to produce the envelope in which respondent received their 1997 tax return means as a matter of law that we must decide this case for them. In order to reach their desired end, petitioners rely erroneously on
Because respondent has failed to produce the envelope containing petitioners' return, we decide this case as if the postmark were missing; thus, petitioners may rely upon extrinsic2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 255">*266 evidence to prove that the postmark, if present, would have been timely. See
Decision will be entered for respondent.
1. As of May 5, 2003, the date of trial, Mr. Huff had been practicing law for 14 years.↩
2. Petitioners had received extensions until Aug. 15, 1995, and Aug. 15, 2001, to file their returns for 1994 and 2000, respectively.↩
3. Although petitioners reported on their 1997 return that they each signed the return on Apr. 15, 1998, we do not find that to be the date on which the return was filed.↩
4.
5. We understand petitioners to argue that we should decide this case by following the jurisprudence of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. While we generally follow a decision squarely in point of a circuit in which a case is appealable, see
6. Mr. Huff testified that he used his private postage meter machine to stamp the date on the envelope used to mail petitioners' 1997 return to respondent. In certain cases, privately metered mail received after a due date may be considered timely even if the mail actually was received beyond the normal delivery period.
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