DocketNumber: No. 9931-97
Judges: "Wells, Thomas B."
Filed Date: 5/5/1999
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
*189 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
WELLS, JUDGE: Respondent determined deficiencies in and penalties on petitioner's Federal income taxes as follows:
Penalty
Year Deficiency
____ __________ ____________
1993 $ 7,665 $ 1,533
1994 11,207 2,241
_____________________________________________________________________
Unless otherwise indicated all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect*190 for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
In the instant case, the issues we must decide are: (1) Whether amounts paid to petitioner, or on her behalf, by her former husband, Peter S. Hopkinson, and excluded by petitioner from her gross income on her income tax returns for the years in issue are includable in her gross income as alimony; and (2) whether petitioner is liable for the accuracy-related penalty pursuant to
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts and certain exhibits have been stipulated for trial pursuant to Rule 91. The parties' stipulations of fact are incorporated by reference and are found as facts in the instant case.
At the time she filed the petition in the instant case, petitioner resided in Alpharetta, Georgia.
On October 31, 1992, in anticipation of divorce, petitioner and her former husband entered into a settlement agreement (settlement agreement). The relevant parts of the settlement agreement provide:
4.
ALIMONY
4.01. ALIMONY.
(a) AMOUNT. Husband shall pay to Wife as alimony for*191 her
support and maintenance the sum of Five Thousand Dollars
($ 5,000.00) per month commencing on December 15, 1992. This
amount shall be paid through and including December 15, 1994, at
which time it shall be reduced to the sum of Four Thousand
Dollars ($ 4,000.00) per month through and including December 14,
2002.
* * * * * * *
(c) Duration. Alimony payments shall cease in the event of
Wife's death, Husband's death or Wife's remarriage.
(d) Tax Treatment of Alimony Payments. Said payments shall
be deductible by Husband on any federal or state tax return
commencing in the year 1992, and continuing each year that
alimony is paid, pursuant to Internal Revenue Code Regulations
and Wife agrees and acknowledges she shall include this sum as
income on any federal or state income tax return that she
executes. Both parties further agree from this time forward not
to assert a position in the preparation and filing of their tax
returns, whether singly or jointly with another, inconsistent
with the terms and provisions of this paragraph.
*192 * * * * * * *
5.
WIFE'S EDUCATION EXPENSES
5.01. WIFE'S EDUCATION EXPENSES. Husband shall pay to Wife all
expenses for Wife to complete a four (4) year college degree, to
include only the actual tuition, books, laboratory fees and
matriculation fees, activity fees, and other fees charged by the
institution selected by Wife, which is presently Oglethorpe
University of Georgia in Atlanta. He shall pay these expenses
directly to the institution or other institution she may
transfer or attend, if possible, not later than five (5) days
after being presented by Wife with evidence of the amount due
and grades from the prior semester. If certain expenses cannot
be paid directly to the institution, and Wife pays them, then
Husband shall be responsible for reimbursement of any expenses
paid by Wife within ten (10) days after Wife has presented him
with a canceled check or receipt evidencing her payment. Such
obligation shall not exceed the sum of Forty Four Thousand Eight
Hundred Dollars ($ 44,800.00). Husband's obligation shall not be
terminated*193 in the event Wife chooses to attend college on a part
time basis, but will terminate after the summer quarter of 1999.
Husband's obligation shall also continue only so long as Wife
maintains an average of "C" or better, as defined by the
institution which she attends. The Husband shall pay the Wife
$ 3000.00 toward the current semester's costs contemporaneous
with the execution of this Agreement.
* * * * * * *
11.
ATTORNEYS' FEES
11.01. ATTORNEYS' FEES. Husband shall pay to Wife Twenty Four
Thousand dollars ($ 24,000.00) as attorneys fees, which is
calculated in Wife's alimony payment of Five Thousand
($ 5,000.00) per month for two (2) years. In addition, Husband
shall pay to the Wife's attorneys the sum of $ 5,000.00 as non-
alimony at the time this Agreement is executed, plus $ 3,500.00
as additional alimony on or before December 31, 1992, from any
bonus he may receive. Each party shall be responsible thereafter
for payment of his or her own attorneys' fees.
On November 4, 1992, the Superior Court of DeKalb*194 County, Georgia, entered petitioner's Final Judgment and Decree of Divorce (divorce decree) which incorporated the settlement agreement.
During 1993, the following amounts were received from or paid on petitioner's behalf by her former husband: (1) $ 12,000 ($ 1,000 per month for 12 months), as reimbursement for attorney's fees; (2) $ 5,201.81, to reimburse her for tuition and college expenses she paid personally; and (3) $ 3,520, paid as tuition to Oglethorpe University.
During 1994, the following amounts were received or paid on petitioner's behalf by her former husband: (1) $ 12,000 ($ 1,000 per month for 12 months), as reimbursement for attorney's fees; (2) $ 3,015.91, to reimburse her for tuition and college expenses which she paid personally; and (3) $ 8,678.50, paid as tuition to Oglethorpe University.
The payments described above were received directly by petitioner, or paid on her behalf, in cash or by check and were paid pursuant to the divorce decree and settlement agreement.
During the years in issue, petitioner did not live in the same household as her former husband and did not file a joint income tax return with her former husband.
On November 14, 1994, petitioner filed*195 a Form 1040 for taxable year 1993. For the 1994 taxable year, petitioner timely filed a Form 1040.
On February 20, 1997, respondent issued two notices of deficiency determining unreported income in the amounts of $ 28,383 for taxable year 1993 and $ 45,786 for taxable year 1994. By stipulation, respondent conceded a portion of the deficiency as determined in the statutory notice of deficiency.
The amount unreported income remaining in dispute for 1993 is $ 20,721.81, which includes $ 12,000 paid by petitioner's former husband as attorney's fees pursuant to paragraphs 4.01 and 11.01 of the settlement agreement and $ 8,721.81 paid by petitioner's former husband as tuition pursuant to paragraph 5.01 of the settlement agreement. The $ 8,721.81 tuition payment includes $ 3,520 paid as tuition directly to Oglethorpe University on behalf of petitioner and $ 5,201.81 paid to petitioner to reimburse her for tuition and college expenses she paid personally.
The amount of unreported income remaining in dispute for taxable year 1994 is $ 23,691.41, which includes $ 12,000 paid by petitioner's former husband as attorney's fees pursuant to paragraphs 4.01 and 11.01 of the settlement agreement and*196 $ 11,694.41 paid as tuition pursuant to paragraph 5.01 of the settlement agreement. The $ 11,694.41 tuition payment includes $ 8,678.50 paid as tuition directly to Oglethorpe University on behalf of petitioner and $ 3,015.91 paid to petitioner to reimburse her for tuition and college expenses she paid personally.
Respondent further determined that petitioner was liable, pursuant to
OPINION
(a) General Rule. -- Gross income includes amounts
received as alimony or separate maintenance payments.
(b) Alimony or Separate Maintenance Payments
Defined. -- For purposes of this section --
(1) In general. -- The term "alimony or
separate maintenance payments" means any
payment in cash if --
*197 (A) such payment is received
by (or on behalf of) a spouse under
a divorce or separation instrument,
(B) the divorce or separation
instrument does not designate such
payment as a payment which is not
includible in gross income under
this section and not allowable as a
deduction under section 215,
(C) in the case of an
individual legally separated from
his spouse under a decree of
divorce or of separate maintenance,
the payee spouse and the payor
spouse are not members of the same
household at the time such payment
is made, and
(D) there is no liability to
make any such payment for any
period after the death of the payee
spouse and there is no liability to
make any payment (in cash or
property) as a substitute for such
payments after the death of the
payee spouse.
* * * * * *198 * *
(e) Exception for Joint Returns. -- This section and
section 215 shall not apply if the spouses make a joint
return with each other.
The educational expenses paid by petitioner's former husband to petitioner and to Oglethorpe University (tuition payments) satisfy all of the requirements of
Similarly, the amounts paid to petitioner as reimbursement for attorney's fees (attorney's fees payments) satisfy the requirements of
Petitioner argues that she properly excluded the payments in issue from her gross income because they were intended by the parties to be a property settlement and not alimony. Prior to 1985, payments were characterized as alimony or as property settlement by considering all of the surrounding facts and circumstances. See
The committee believes that the present law
definition of alimony is not sufficiently objective.
* * * The committee believes that a uniform Federal
standard should be set forth to determine*201 what
constitutes alimony for Federal tax purposes. This
will make it easier for the Internal Revenue Service,
the parties to a divorce, and the courts to apply the
rules to the facts in any particular case and should
lead to less litigation. The committee bill attempts
to define alimony in a way that would conform to
general notions of what type of payments constitute
alimony as distinguished from property settlements
* * *.
The settlement agreement in the instant case was entered into after December 31, 1984. Consequently, the appropriate inquiry is not whether the payments made pursuant to the settlement agreement were alimony or property settlement based on all the facts and circumstances. Rather, if the payments fulfill the requirements of
Petitioner further argues that the requirements of
The settlement agreement in the instant case does not state the amount or the exact number of tuition payments that petitioner's former husband is required to make. The settlement agreement merely provides that the tuition payments cannot exceed $ 44,800. Moreover, petitioner's former husband's obligation to pay petitioner's tuition is subject to the condition*203 that petitioner remain in school and maintain a "C" average. Accordingly, the tuition payments are not lump-sum alimony and Georgia law would not impose an obligation on petitioner's former husband to continue making such payments after petitioner's death. The tuition payments, therefore, satisfy all of the requirements of
Similarly, the payment of attorney's fees pursuant to paragraph 11.01 of the settlement agreement is not payment of lump- sum alimony. Although the settlement agreement specifies the amounts of the payments and their duration, paragraph 4.01(c) of the settlement agreement, when read in conjunction with paragraph 11.01, provides that the attorney's fees payments, because they are subsumed within the alimony payments, are subject to the condition that they terminate upon petitioner's death, petitioner's former husband's death, or on petitioner's remarriage. Accordingly, the attorney's fees payments are not lump-sum alimony, and Georgia law would not impose an obligation on petitioner's former husband to continue making such payments after petitioner's death. The attorney's fees payments, therefore, satisfy*204 all of the requirements of
Finally, petitioner argues that this Court should reform the settlement agreement so that the payments in issue would not be includable in petitioner's gross income. The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, which is the court to which an appeal in the instant case would lie, has adopted the following rule (articulated by the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in
a party can challenge the tax consequences of his
agreement as construed by the Commissioner only by
adducing proof which in an action between the parties
to the agreement would be admissible to alter that
construction or to show its unenforceability because of
mistake, undue influence, fraud, duress, etc. * * *
See
This Court does not follow the Danielson rule, but instead allows a party to collaterally attack the terms of an agreement upon the showing of "strong proof." See
Petitioner is essentially asking this Court to rewrite the settlement*206 agreement in order to meet the requirements of
In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that petitioner was liable for an accuracy-related penalty in the amounts of $ 1,533 for 1993 and $ 2,241 for 1994. On brief, respondent concedes that petitioner is not liable for the portion of the accuracy-related penalty that relates to the tuition payments, made by her former husband, during the years in issue. Respondent, however, contends that petitioner is liable for an accuracy-related penalty, with respect to the deficiency from the attorney's fees payments which she excluded from income during the years in issue.
The accuracy-related penalty does not apply to any portion of an underpayment with respect to which it is shown that there was a reasonable cause and that the taxpayer acted in good faith. See
Based on the facts and circumstances of the instant case, we conclude that petitioner had *209 an honest misunderstanding of the law and acted in good faith when she excluded the attorney's fees payments from her gross income. We have considered the parties' remaining arguments and find them without merit, irrelevant, or unnecessary to reach.
To reflect the foregoing, and respondent's concessions,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.