DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 2718-09, 2720-09.
Judges: HOLMES
Filed Date: 12/19/2011
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
Decisions will be entered under
HOLMES,
He began to back off from such sentiments at trial and brought with him numerous documents that he'd never shared with the Commissioner. We reserved decision on the Commissioner's motion to exclude this evidence, and Thompson eventually collaborated with the Commissioner to settle many issues. Two remain for both years in issue: (1) investment-interest expense and (2) rental-real-estate loss. The Commissioner says Thompson didn't substantiate the former and didn't participate actively enough in the *290 rental real-estate activity to get the latter.
As a young man, Thompson left rural Milan, Minnesota, to go to Stanford, where he earned three degrees. He also served in the Peace Corps in Truk (or, as it is now known, Chuuk), Micronesia. And after his father died, he decided to return home to try to revitalize Milan.
He put his Stanford MBA to use by running the local bank, Prairie Sun Bank—where he eventually became chairman—and became part owner of Milan Agency, Inc., Prairie Sun Bank's holding company. He also founded Prairie Land & Lumber (Prairie), a real-estate company, where he is still president and director.*291 This helped Thompson bring a slice of Micronesia home—Prairie owned ten rental properties that housed 100 Micronesians, a substantial portion of Milan's 300 or so residents.
The immigrants found work in nearby meat-processing facilities, and business soon ticked up at the local gas station and grocery store. Thompson himself also did fairly well but decided to protest his disagreement with the federal government by not filing his tax returns.
This did not, of course, stop third parties from sending information to the IRS. The Commissioner used that information to prepare "substitutes for returns" (SFRs)*292 notices of deficiency with the SFRs attached. Thompson filed petitions with this Court. We issued our standing pretrial orders in January 2010 setting the case for trial at our June 2010 trial session in St. Paul. (Thompson was and remains a resident of South Dakota.) In April the Commissioner sent out a Branerton letter.*293 Within a few weeks, Thompson provided some information—just not the type that the Commissioner was hoping for: "You may be curious about my decision not to file * * * my actions are designed to call us back to the rule of law and stop the slaughter of innocents." The letter goes on at some length but leaves no doubt that Thompson intended to resist paying taxes because he disapproved of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He claimed to believe that paying his taxes would violate the Nuremberg Principles.*294 The pretrial order made clear that noncompliance, at least without good cause or both parties' consent, could lead to the exclusion of evidence.
The looming trial deadline finally spurred Thompson to get some information to the Commissioner. The week before trial Thompson faxed his unfiled 2004 tax return, a copy of his filed 2003 tax return, and public-record data of a condo he owned in Hawaii. These became stipulated exhibits. But when we called the case for trial, Thompson still banked on a continuance. As the Commissioner reminded us, however, Thompson had spent almost a year with the Appeals officer doing nothing. We therefore denied his request.
This finally jolted Thompson into action. He introduced twelve exhibits into evidence, and he testified about investment-interest expense and Prairie's losses.*295 dividend from Milan Agency, Inc.
The Commissioner moved to exclude Thompson's exhibits, and rather than grant the motion, we reserved decision in one last attempt to get Thompson to give documents verifying his expenses to the Commissioner. The Commissioner was to file an opening brief by September 9, 2010—Thompson had until then. If he refused, we made clear, his window of opportunity to produce documents would close.
On August 4, 2010, the Commissioner reported that Thompson's communication was minimal. To his credit, Thompson then did turn over some documents that enabled the Commissioner to verify gambling losses, mortgage interest, taxes paid, charitable gifts, and a capital-loss carryover. We are left with only Thompson's *296 investment-interest expense and his share of Prairie's losses to discuss.
We do not accept Thompson's claims that the Nuremberg Principles allow him to not file his returns. See, e.g.,
The Commissioner moved to exclude the exhibits that Thompson presented for the first time at trial, and he renews his motion on brief. He is surely correct that Thompson was dilatory in producing documents. We may exclude, and often do exclude, evidence that a party tries to get admitted contrary to our pretrial order. See
2004 | $11,374 | $8,868 | $2,506 |
2006 | 116,384 | 36,094 | 80,290 |
Thompson has the burden of proving losses and other deductions. See
Thompson argues that his 2003 tax return shows $170,494 of investment-interest expense *299 which he could carry forward to future years.
Although we thus have no information about interest paid before 2003, Thompson did provide some records of two United Bankers' notes for the years at issue. He borrowed over $500,000 on December 31, 2002, agreeing to pay a variable interest rate on a quarterly schedule. He then took out another loan in 2006, and used most of those proceeds to pay off the original 2002 loan. Thompson also gave us what appear to be 2006 quarterly statements and a renewal notice. Two of the quarterly statements related to the 2002 loan. They say he owed $4,391.22 in interest on March 31, 2006 (the renewal notice suggests he had to actually pay $4,399.13) and $7,500 in interest on June 30, 2006. Another statement lists interest of $4,326.40 on the 2006 loan due at the end of 2006. Finally, he gave us a bank slip noting an interest payment of $4,422.41 on the date he took out the 2006 loan.
The 2006 documentation convinces us that the 2002 note was still outstanding in 2004. We have, however, little proof of the timing or amount of interest actually paid in 2002. Thompson did document *301 $20,648
2004 | $36,247 | -0$36,247 | |
2006 | 34,607 | -034,607 |
The Commissioner argues that "petitioner was not able to establish that the rental activity was non-passive or that the activity was engaged in for a profit."*303 Showing unusual
It's true that if an issue is untimely raised—unfairly surprising the opposing party by not giving him a chance to adequately address it at trial—we'll refuse to consider it.
The final issues are additions to tax under
The Commissioner has the burden of production on additions and penalties, see
The Commissioner has also met his burden for the second addition to tax—the one imposed on those who fail to timely pay taxes shown on a return. See
Finally
Thompson instead asks us to give him a pass on account of his good faith—his willingness to show up for trial, the presentation of his 2003 return, and the Commissioner's recognition that some of the investment-interest expenses were legitimate.
There is, however, no reasonable-cause *307 exception to the
A final word of caution. Thompson seems to welcome future opportunities to come to the Tax Court.*308 We can help
1. Prairie is an S corporation. If a business meets the requirements of
Unless otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
2.
3. Thompson didn't bother to file in 2005. But he did make estimated tax payments in 2006 that were credited toward his 2005 tax liability.↩
4. Branerton letters are the most common way for informal discovery to begin. In The discovery procedures should be used only after the parties have made reasonable informal efforts to obtain needed information voluntarily. * * * Essential to * * * [the stipulation] process is the voluntary exchange of necessary facts, documents, and other data between the parties as an aid to the more expeditious trial of cases as well as for settlement purposes. * * *
5. Thompson refers here to the principles established at the Nuremberg trials, which the United Nations affirmed and codified after World War II. See Affirmation of the Principles of International Law Recognized by the Charter of the Nürnberg Tribunal, G.A. Res. 95(I), U.N. Doc. A/236 (Dec. 11, 1946); Principles of International Law Recognized in the Charter of the Nürnberg Tribunal and in the Judgment of the Tribunal, U.N. Doc. A/CN.4/SER.A/1950/Add. 1 (1950) (Nuremberg Principles). The Nuremberg Principles provided that compliance with the law would be no excuse for those tried if the conduct would be complicit in, for example, a crime against humanity.
6. Thompson claimed that he sometimes suffered from long delays in receiving mail; but even if we take at face value his claim that he didn't get our order until April 20, that still gave him time to get at least some documents to the Commissioner before June.
7. When a taxpayer borrows money to buy into a partnership that actively conducts a trade or business, but in which the taxpayer himself doesn't materially participate, interest he pays on the loan is "investment interest." The term also includes the interest someone pays on a loan whose proceeds he uses to buy an asset that yields "portfolio income." See
8. The pretrial order says, "The Court
The Commissioner fears we are rewarding bad behavior. That is not our intent. We take into account that the documents' purpose was to substantiate the disputed expenses, which we find does not prejudice the Commissioner. Cf.
The Commissioner also renews his objections based on lack of foundation and hearsay. All the documents presented dealt with Thompson's condominium in Hawaii, his claimed capital-loss carryover, a loan he had taken out, or deductions relating to Prairie that Thompson claimed. Thompson provided ample testimony of these topics and so the documents don't lack foundational evidence. We do, however, sustain the Commissioner's hearsay objection as to the handwritten notes on the face of Exhibits 12, 18, 21, 22, and 23 as well as the computations printed on the last page of Exhibit 22.
9. Each year Thompson was limited in how much of the expense he could claim. That's because the expense can offset only net investment income.
10. Even if he had substantiated investment-interest expense from years before 2004, he'd have to show they were not absorbed in intervening years.
11. $4,399.13 + $7,500 + $4,326.40 + $4,422.41. Several documents not only showed the amount due, but also indicated Thompson was not behind on his payments, satisfying us that he paid these amounts.↩
12. The purpose is crucial because it determines whether the interest paid is deductible. When we know a taxpayer paid a
13. At trial he mentioned a heat pump manufacturer. Maybe this is ECONAR, maybe not: Thompson didn't say.↩
14. A passive activity is a trade or business in which the taxpayer doesn't materially participate.
Thompson described Prairie as having "10 rental homes," and the parties refer to Prairie's losses as "rental losses." Rental activities are passive unless a taxpayer meets certain requirements (such as spending more than 750 hours on the activity during the tax year).
15. Thompson also makes "fairness" arguments concerning the Prairie losses. First he argues that because he believes Milan Agency, Inc., and Prairie are grouped together under banking law, they should be grouped together for tax law (and thus, we suppose, gains and losses of the two should be netted). But grouping for tax law—at least for the purpose of applying the passive-activity loss rules—is defined under
He also suggests that because he believes, citing
16. "Petitioner is on a fact-finding journey through the Tax Court and any encouragement of delay, hindrance, or cost-increasing would be directed at