DocketNumber: Docket No. 22806-09L.
Judges: LARO
Filed Date: 3/9/2011
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
Decision will be entered for respondent.
LARO, The parties' stipulation of facts and the accompanying exhibits are incorporated by this reference and are so found. When the petition was filed, petitioner lived in Illinois. Petitioner was born on September 11, 1936. She worked as a principal stenographer for Cook County, Illinois, and the City of Chicago, until her retirement in May 1993. At some time in or around 1993 *54 petitioner applied for and was approved to receive monthly payments under two separate annuity contracts. First, petitioner applied to the Retirement Board (city board) of the Municipal Employees' Annuity and Benefit Fund of Chicago (city) for an annuity (city annuity). By letter dated September 21, 1993, the city board approved a monthly annuity of $389.67 payable to petitioner for life beginning on May 29, 1993. The monthly payment under the city annuity increased by $11.69 in September 1996 and in each September thereafter. The letter stated that $27 in Federal income tax would be withheld each month and that the city annuity would become "fully taxable" to petitioner on January 29, 2015. Petitioner's investment in the city annuity was $6,507 and her expected return was $175,688. Second, petitioner applied to the Retirement Board (county board) of the County Employees' Annuity and Benefit Fund of Cook County (county) for an annuity (county annuity).*55 in each January thereafter. The record does not establish petitioner's investment in or expected return on the county annuity. The Northern Trust Co. (Trust), as the city's paying agent, issued to petitioner a 2003 Form 1099-R, Distributions From Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc. That form reported that during 2003 petitioner received gross distributions of $11,594.84, consisting of a taxable amount of $11,383.76 and employee contributions or insurance premiums of $211.08. The Trust withheld $864. The Cook County Pension Fund also issued to petitioner a 2003 Form 1099-R. That form reported gross distributions of $20,138.64, consisting of a taxable amount of $19,615.08 and employee contributions or insurance premiums of $523.56. The county withheld $1,268.10. We understand that included in the amounts reported on the Forms 1099-R were payments from annuity contracts with the city and the county earned by petitioner's biological father (father) but payable to her. The record does not establish how petitioner became entitled to these amounts, the amounts petitioner's *56 father contributed (if any), or the expected return. Petitioner did not timely file a Federal income tax return for 2003, and respondent prepared a substitute for return on behalf of petitioner for that year. See On or about October 13, 2006, petitioner sent to respondent a Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for 2003. That return reported, among other things, taxable pensions and annuities received by petitioner of $30,999 and Federal income taxes owed of $649. Petitioner did not pay all of the resulting tax liability, and respondent assessed the liability as well as additions to tax for failure to file a return timely and failure to pay tax.*57 On or about May 19, 2008, respondent issued to petitioner a Final Notice—Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing (final levy notice). The final levy notice informed petitioner that respondent proposed to levy upon petitioner's property to collect Federal income tax for 2003. The final levy notice advised petitioner that she could request a collection due process (CDP) hearing with Appeals as to the propriety of the proposed levy. On June 2, 2008, petitioner asked Appeals for the referenced CDP hearing. She also requested that the proposed levy be withdrawn. Appeals granted petitioner's request for a CDP hearing but did not withdraw the proposed levy. The CDP hearing was held with an Appeals officer by telephone on August 4, 2009. On August 25, 2009, Appeals issued to petitioner a Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under The applicable standard of review in an appeal brought under Petitioner did not receive a statutory notice of deficiency for 2003; and even though she reported taxes due on her 2003 Federal income tax return, she now asserts that she incorrectly included as gross income certain annuity payments she received. Because the underlying tax liability is properly at issue, we review the validity of petitioner's underlying tax liability de novo. See Petitioner mainly argues that annuity payments which she received in 2003 and reported as taxable on her tax return are not taxable to her. Respondent argues that these payments are taxable to petitioner as originally reported on her tax return. We agree with respondent. In general, amounts received by a taxpayer under an annuity contract must be included in that taxpayer's gross income. Petitioner argues that For the portion of the city annuity which petitioner received as part of her retirement, petitioner's investment was $6,507 and her expected return was $175,688. Thus, As explained above, we understand petitioner to have also received $5,890.28 in annuity payments from the city which were attributable to her father. Form 1099-R issued to petitioner by the Trust is consistent with our analysis. That form reported gross distributions of $11,594.84, consisting of a taxable amount of $11,383.76 and employee contributions or insurance premiums of $211.08. The $211.08 reported as employee contributions or insurance premiums, we believe, represents the nontaxable return of capital described above. The $11,383.76 reported as taxable *63 consists of the payments petitioner received from her retirement and on account of her father. Petitioner's reporting of the annuities on her 2003 Federal income tax return is consistent with our analysis as well as the Form 1099-R issued by the Trust. We conclude therefore that with respect to the annuity payments received from the city, petitioner's underlying tax liability is valid. Petitioner argues generally that the county annuity was not taxable to her. We disagree. Petitioner has not demonstrated what amount of the payments she received under the county annuity (if any) is to be excluded from her gross income. See Petitioner makes a number of other unpersuasive arguments to reduce or extinguish her 2003 tax liability. First, she contends that the payors of the annuities should be held liable for her 2003 Federal income tax liability because the Federal income taxes withheld were not sufficient to satisfy her tax liability. We disagree. The payor of an annuity is generally required to withhold amounts paid under an annuity contract as if those payments were wages paid by an employer to an employee. Second, petitioner argues that respondent may not enforce collection of her 2003 Federal income tax liability by virtue of her 2007 bankruptcy discharge. We are not persuaded. Petitioner offered no objective evidence as to when she filed her bankruptcy petition or whether her 2003 tax liability was discharged. But it is more than petitioner's lack of supporting evidence which leads us to conclude that her testimony is not reliable. According to her testimony, petitioner would have us believe that a bankruptcy discharge under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code discharged all of her liabilities as a matter of law. We reject petitioner's misstatement of the law. A debtor who files a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition is generally discharged from personal liability for all debts incurred before the bankruptcy petition was filed. Third, petitioner argues that she is entitled to an additional deduction by virtue of her age. Petitioner refers to the additional standard deduction amount available to taxpayers who reach the age of 65 before the close of the taxable year. See Where as here we have found the liability underlying a proposed levy to be valid, we review Appeals' determination to proceed with the levy for abuse of discretion. Where a taxpayer neglects or refuses to pay any tax for which he or she is liable within 10 days after notice and demand for payment, the Commissioner is authorized to collect such tax by levy upon the taxpayer's property. At the CDP hearing Appeals must take into consideration (A) the verification that the requirements of applicable law and administrative procedure have been met, (B) any relevant issue relating to the unpaid tax or the proposed levy, and (C) whether any proposed collection action balances the need for efficient collection of taxes with the legitimate concern of the taxpayer that the collection be no more intrusive than necessary. As documented in the notice of determination, Appeals complied with its obligations to petitioner under We have considered all arguments raised by the parties and have found those arguments not discussed herein to be irrelevant or without *70 merit. To reflect the foregoing,
1. Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. We refer to the city annuity and the county annuity collectively as annuities.↩
3. Petitioner filed for bankruptcy some time before November 29, 2007, on which date her bankruptcy was discharged.
4. The exclusion ratio is calculated as petitioner's investment in the contract, $6,507, divided by her expected return under the contract, $175,688, rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent. See
5. As it related to her retirement, the city annuity was to pay petitioner $471.50 per month from January until August 2003 and $483.19 from September until December 2003. Total payments for 2003 of $5,704.56 are calculated by adding 8 months of payments of $471.50, or $3,772, and 4 months of payments of $483.19, or $1,932.76.↩
6. Total annuity payments received of $5,704.56 multiplied by the exclusion ratio of 3.7 percent.
7. As it related to her father, we understand that the city annuity paid to petitioner an additional $5,890.28 (gross distribution of $11,594.84 less $5,493.48 payments received under the city annuity less employee contribution or insurance premium of $211.08).↩
8. Respondent does not challenge petitioner's ability to exclude from gross income the amount listed as employee contributions or insurance premiums on Form 1099-R issued by the county.↩
9. A taxpayer may elect not to have Federal income taxes withheld from an annuity payment made to him or her. See