DocketNumber: Docket No. 17042-09S.
Judges: DEAN
Filed Date: 9/14/2011
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
PURSUANT TO
Decision will be entered for respondent.
DEAN,
Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' Federal income taxes of $1,019 for 2004 and $2,011.30 for 2005.
The issue for decision is the location of Edward K. Glover's (petitioner's) tax home with respect to certain unreimbursed employee expenses for 2004 and 2005.*106
This case was submitted on a stipulation of facts and a supplemental stipulation of facts. The stipulated facts are so found. The stipulation of facts, the supplemental stipulation of facts, and the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by reference. Petitioners resided in Missouri when the petition was filed.
During the years at issue petitioners resided in Jackson, Missouri. Jeri L. Glover was employed by Southeast Missouri Hospital Association in Cape Girardeau. Petitioner was employed by Reinauer Transportation Cos., L.L.C. (Reinauer), which is headquartered in Staten Island, New York, and maintains an office in East Boston, Massachusetts. Petitioner was employed by Reinauer as a merchant mariner aboard certain tugboats and barges in 2004 and 2005. Reinauer is in the business of transporting petroleum and chemical products by tug and barge along the eastern seaboard of North America. Petitioner generally travels to the New York City area to pick up tugboat and barge combinations that *107 are used to load and deliver petroleum or chemical products, or both. Petitioner's pay begins when his vessel leaves the local dock. The collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between Reinauer and the union to which petitioner belonged for the years at issue states that Reinauer will use its employees to perform work in the area of "The Port of New York and vicinity" and "Any regular coastwise run having as one of its terminal points a point in or north of Norfolk, Virginia."
In addition, the CBA provides for reimbursement of employee travel expenses if: (a) The employee is required to go from one vessel to another; (b) not more than once a month the employee is given time off and must travel between his vessel and a common carrier; or (c) not more than once a month the employee travels round trip between his vessel and its home port or, if less expensive, another city.
In 2004 petitioner worked on the east coast of the United States from Maine through Virginia, and in 2005 he worked on the east coast from New Hampshire through Florida. Petitioner took 11 voyages in 2004 of which 9 originated in or around New York City. He disembarked from those trips five times in the New York City area. *108 In 2005 petitioner voyaged 12 times, embarking from the New York City area 9 times and disembarking there 9 times.
Petitioner paid various expenses to travel between his residence and the terminals from which he boarded and disembarked from the tugboats and barges on which he worked. Petitioner paid: (a) Vehicle expenses of $1,999 for 2005; (b) miscellaneous parking fees, tolls, and transportation expenses of $4,499 in 2004 and $1,482 in 2005; and (c) travel expenses while away from home overnight of $2,786 for 2004*109 for each of the vessels on which he served, showing the loading terminal, loading date, unloading terminal, and unloading date for each vessel.
An examination of petitioner's documentation raises some questions that are not answered by other evidence in the record. Petitioner presented receipts that show the purchase of a Southwest Airlines ticket for a 5:10 p.m. flight from St. Louis, Missouri, to Orlando, Florida, on September 27, 2005, and an American Airlines ticket for a flight from St. Louis, Missouri, to New York, New York, at 6:08 p.m. on the same date. The conflicting receipts are unexplained, although other stipulated evidence indicates that petitioner went to Orlando for a Port Canaveral embarkation on September 28, 2005. Petitioner presented an Airtran Airways receipt for a 8 p.m. flight from New York to Newport News, Virginia, on June 29, 2004, while other stipulated evidence indicates that he arrived in New York on that date in preparation for an embarkation on June 30, 2004.
Petitioner provided copies of ticket stubs showing that on October 13, 2004, at 4:45 p.m. he left Norfolk, Virginia, on Southwest Airlines, flew to Baltimore-Washington International Airport, then *110 to Chicago-Midway Airport, and finally to St. Louis International Airport. Petitioner also presented a copy of a receipt for an American Airlines flight leaving New York at noon and arriving in St. Louis at 1:47 p.m., on the same date, October 13, 2004. The employee schedule shows vessel RTC 120's having a voyage beginning on October 6, 2004, and ending on October 12, 2004. The 2004 port listing shows vessel RTC 120 loading at a terminal in New Jersey on October 7 and unloading in Connecticut on October 9, 2004, loading in Virginia on October 13 and unloading in Massachusetts on October 20, 2004. The summary table indicates that petitioner disembarked in Manhattan on October 13, 2004, and arrived in Jackson, Missouri, on October 14, 2004. The record does not explain why petitioner's documents show him leaving Virginia for St. Louis and leaving Manhattan for St. Louis on October 13; the summary shows him disembarking in Manhattan on the 13th, and the port listing shows his vessel loading in Virginia on the 13th.
In any event, almost all of petitioner's substantiated flights were between St. Louis International Airport and La Guardia Airport in New York City or Newark Liberty International *111 Airport.
The Commissioner's determinations are presumed correct, and generally taxpayers bear the burden of proving otherwise. Rule 142(a)(1);
Tax deductions are a matter of legislative grace, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving entitlement to the deductions claimed. Rule 142(a)(1);
Section 162 generally allows a deduction for ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on a trade or business. An expense is considered ordinary if commonly or frequently incurred in the trade or business of the taxpayer.
Section 162(a)(2) allows a taxpayer to deduct traveling expenses, including amounts expended for meals and lodging, if such expenses are: (1) Ordinary and necessary, (2) incurred while away from home, and (3) incurred in the pursuit of a trade or business.
This Court has generally defined the word "home" (or tax home) as used in section 162(a)(2) to mean the vicinity of a taxpayer's principal place of business.
On the other *113 hand, if a taxpayer accepts temporary employment outside the vicinity of his principal place of residence, his travel expenses are generally deductible because it would be unreasonable for him to move his residence for temporary employment.
If a taxpayer does not have a principal place of business, his personal residence will be considered his tax home.
In order to decide what expenses petitioners are *114 entitled to deduct, the Court must first decide the location of petitioner's tax home. The "determination of a taxpayer's tax home is a question of fact to be decided on the entire record."
Petitioners argue that petitioner's employment is in the "transportation industry" and on that basis alone he is entitled to treat his personal residence as his tax home. Petitioners rely heavily on the cases of
In
Respondent takes the position that petitioner's tax home was in the vicinity of New York City and that he maintained *116 his home in Jackson for personal reasons. The Court agrees with respondent.
Petitioner's employment situation is factually different from those of the taxpayers in
In
On the basis of the stipulated facts and the inferences reasonably to be drawn from them, the Court finds that petitioner's tax home in 2004 and 2005 was in the New York City area. Petitioners are not entitled to deduct petitioner's unreimbursed employee expenses.
We have considered all *119 of the parties' arguments, and, to the extent not addressed herein, we conclude that the arguments are moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Respondent determined that petitioners had unreported interest income of $14 for 2005. Petitioners failed to address the issue in either their pretrial memorandum or the stipulation of facts and supplemental stipulation of facts. The Court considers petitioners to have conceded the issue. See
2. Petitioners presented as substantiation a receipt from the Baymont Inns and Suites in Lexington, Kentucky, for a stay from June 28 to 29, 2004, but do not explain how it relates to petitioner's employment.↩
3. Petitioners offered no evidence of the home ports of the four vessels on which petitioner worked in the subject years, and the Court infers from the record that the home port of the vessels was in the New York City area.↩
Tucker v. Commissioner ( 1971 )
Bradley v. Commissioner ( 1993 )
James O. Henderson v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1998 )
Lee E. Daly and Rosemarie H. Daly v. Commissioner of ... ( 1981 )
Commissioner v. Flowers ( 1946 )
Anderson v. Commissioner ( 1973 )
Hammond v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1954 )
Lee E. Coombs and Judy B. Coombs v. Commissioner of ... ( 1979 )
Morton L. E. Chwalow and Esther L. Chwalow v. Commissioner ... ( 1972 )
Commissioner v. Heininger ( 1943 )
Indopco, Inc. v. Commissioner ( 1992 )
Hammond v. Commissioner ( 1953 )