DocketNumber: No. 20881-04
Citation Numbers: 92 T.C.M. 456, 2006 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260, 2006 T.C. Memo. 256
Judges: "Holmes, Mark V."
Filed Date: 11/28/2006
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
MEMORANDUM OPINION
HOLMES,
Background
The Holloways' claim to a tax credit is an indirect one. In 2002, Danny Holloway owned 100 percent of Holloway, Inc., an S Corporation. Holloway, Inc. was in turn a member of a limited liability company named Mopass V. In 2002, Mopass reported a "
The IRS first sent the Holloways a math error notice, claiming the Holloways miscalculated the amount of their
Instead of demanding an abatement and waiting for a notice of deficiency, the Holloways posted a cash bond and then submitted a written protest requesting a review of the math error notice. *263 in adopting his stepchildren--a use specifically disallowed by
*264 The parties stipulated nearly all the facts in the case, but there was a brief trial in Dallas (though the Holloways were residents of Oklahoma when they filed their petition). After the trial, the Holloways conceded that they were not entitled to the adoption credit.
The Commissioner initially challenged this Court's jurisdiction because the only issue remaining for us to decide is the amount of the Holloways' credit under
The heart of this case involves the effect of the alternative minimum tax on the Holloways' tax credit. And because the record is unclear on whether the Holloways are claiming a credit under
We begin with a brief summary of the alternative minimum tax and its relation to either kind of credit. As we explained in
The starting point in this complicated scheme is calculating a taxpayer's alternative minimum tax income. Alternative minimum tax income begins with regular income tax income, but adjusts it (usually upward) by recalculating or eliminating certain losses, exclusions, and deductions listed in
The next step is to calculate the "tentative minimum tax." This is done by taking the alternative minimum tax income and subtracting a defined exemption amount,
*266 Once the tentative minimum tax is calculated, the third step is to determine the adjusted regular tax
This adjusted regular tax is then compared to the tentative minimum tax. If the tentative minimum tax is larger, any excess over the adjusted regular tax is due as an additional tax for that year.
*267 To summarize,
o Start with a taxpayer's regular income tax income;
o Adjust it by recalculating or eliminating certain losses,
exclusions, or deductions;
o Reduce it by an exemption amount;
o Multiply that amount by the alternative minimum tax rate;
o Subtract available foreign tax credits.
Result: a taxpayer's tentative minimum tax. Then
o Calculate the regular tax liability;
o Add back in nonrefundable credits (other than foreign tax
credits and personal nonrefundable credits);
o Compare the resulting adjusted regular income tax to the
tentative minimum tax;
o If the tentative minimum tax is greater than the adjusted
regular income tax, then add the difference to the amount of
tax due for the year;
o If the adjusted regular income tax is greater than the
tentative minimum tax, then limit the amount of business tax
credits to the difference and allow any leftover credit to be
carried back one year or forward to later years.
As if this weren't complicated enough, there is also*268 something called the "minimum tax credit," which, despite its name, is not a credit against a taxpayer's alternative minimum tax but against his regular income tax. The minimum tax credit is essentially the unused portion of certain deductions, such as depreciation, as calculated under the alternative minimum tax, plus certain other unused credits as defined in the Code. See
The minimum tax credit and the alternative minimum tax limitation on business credits are both applicable to this case because, depending on which credit the Holloways are claiming, one or the other will apply. The
But whether their credit fed into the minimum tax credit or the general business tax credit part of the whole alternative minimum tax scheme, the Holloways would first have to calculate their tentative minimum tax and adjusted regular income tax for the 2002 tax year to determine how much credit is available to them. It was their failure to do this that caused the Commissioner's computers to spit out a math error notice -- and the Holloways do not contest the Commissioner's arithmetic. They concede that without a special rule that reduces their tentative minimum tax, the Commissioner is correct and they are limited in the amount of credit they can take. However, they point to three sections of the Code which they believe apply to their situation:
We therefore hold that the Commissioner was correct in allowing the Holloways to take only a portion of their credit, and so
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the 2002 tax year. The Code's sec. on tax credits and the alternative minimum tax are among the most often revised, and the "credit for producing fuel from a nonconventional source" was moved from
2. The enhanced oil recovery credit is allowed (in 2002 as today) by
3. The Commissioner sends a math error notice when he finds there was a "mathematical or clerical error" on a tax return. See
4. If a taxpayer disagrees with the Commissioner's proposed tax liability but wants to prevent interest from accruing, he may remit all or a portion of the proposed liability (plus interest due) as a deposit in the nature of a cash bond rather than a payment.
5. The exemption amount begins to phase out once the alternative minimum tax income reaches a certain threshold amount.
6. We will refer to the "regular tax" defined in
7. See
8. American Jobs Creation Act of 2004,