DocketNumber: No. 4667-03
Citation Numbers: 125 T.C. 271, 2005 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 31, 125 T.C. No. 13
Judges: "Kroupa, Diane L."
Filed Date: 11/22/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*31 Ps are Mr. Lofstrom (H) and Paula Lofstrom (W-2). H was
previously married to Dorothy Lofstrom (W-1). In satisfaction of
his alimony obligations to W-1, H transferred his $ 29,000
interest in a contract for deed to W-1, along with $ 4,000 in
cash. Ps deducted as alimony the value of the contract for deed.
In addition, Ps claimed to operate the first floor of their
residence as a bed and breakfast (B&B) and deducted related
expenses. H, a retired doctor, also claimed to be engaged in the
business of writing for profit and Ps deducted expenses
attributable to H's writing activities.
1. Held: A contract for deed is a third-party debt
instrument under
alimony the value of a contract for deed transferred to W-1
because it does not constitute a cash payment. Id.; see
2. Held, further, Ps may not deduct expenses for a
hotel or like establishment because they used the B&B for
personal purposes*32 for an indeterminate amount of time, and they
failed to substantiate the expenses.
(f)(1)(B), (g).
3. Held, further, Ps may not deduct writing
activity expenses where they failed to show that H was engaged
in the activity of writing for profit.
1.183-2(a), Income Tax Regs.
*272 OPINION
KROUPA, Judge: Respondent determined a $ 10,552 deficiency in petitioners' Federal income tax for 1997 and a $ 2,198 deficiency for 1998. After concessions, *33 that they may not deduct these expenses.
3. Whether petitioners may deduct $ 1,664 in 1997 and $ 8,413 in 1998 for expenses related to Mr. Lofstrom's writing activities. Because we find they failed to show that Mr. *273 Lofstrom engaged in the activity of writing for profit, we hold that they may not deduct these expenses.
Background
Petitioner Dr. Dennis Lofstrom (Mr. Lofstrom) leads a very active life. For most of his life, Mr. Lofstrom lived and worked in Minnesota, where he raised a family of 11 children with his wife, Dorothy Lofstrom (Dorothy). Mr. Lofstrom later divorced Dorothy and retired from his full-time medical practice. Mr. Lofstrom embarked at age 70 in 1995 upon a medical missionary trip to Antarctica with his second*35 wife, Paula Lofstrom (Paula). Petitioners embarked upon another medical missionary trip in 2002 to serve at a hospital in Tanzania, Africa, for 5 years.
This case concerns three varieties of deductions that petitioners claimed in 1997 and 1998. The first relates to alimony.
*274 Alimony Deduction
Mr. Lofstrom was ordered to pay Dorothy $ 1,500 per month in alimony (or support maintenance payments) pursuant to their divorce decree. Mr. Lofstrom stopped making payments sometime in 1995 and a year later asked a Minnesota county court to terminate his alimony obligations because his salary had been substantially diminished after retirement. The State court instead found Mr. Lofstrom in arrears to Dorothy for the time that he failed to pay alimony and reduced his arrearage to a judgment for $ 18,000. The State court did grant Mr. Lofstrom a reduction, however, in his monthly alimony payments from $ 1,500 to $ 1,000.
Shortly thereafter, Dorothy agreed to relinquish her past and future claims for alimony against Mr. Lofstrom in exchange for $ 4,000 cash and Mr. Lofstrom's interest in a contract for deed valued at $ 29,000. The contract for deed entitled Dorothy to principal and interest payments*36 until the principal was fully paid. *37 In Bed And Breakfast" and listed related gross receipts of $ 649 and expenses of $ 19,158. *275 In addition, petitioners deducted expenses for Mr. Lofstrom's writing activities in 1997 and 1998. Specifically, petitioners deducted $ 1,664 for travel expenses and writing supplies in 1997 and $ 8,413 in 1998.
Respondent mailed petitioners a deficiency notice on December 20, 2002, disallowing their $ 29,000 alimony deduction for 1997, B&B- related deductions for 1997, and writing activity deductions for 1997 and 1998. Petitioners timely filed a petition with the Court.
Discussion
We must decide whether Mr. Lofstrom's transfer of a contract for deed constitutes deductible alimony. We must also decide whether petitioners*38 may deduct B&B expenses and writing activity expenses. We first address who bears the burden of proof.
Petitioners bear the burden to prove that respondent's determination is wrong. See
Next, we address whether petitioners are entitled to deduct as alimony $ 29,000 for the value of a contract for deed that *276 Mr. Lofstrom transferred to Dorothy in 1997. Alimony (or separate maintenance) payments are deductible from income by the payor and includable in the income of the payee. Secs.
Among those requirements,
This is the first time that this Court is asked to address whether the transfer of a third-party debt instrument satisfies the requirements to qualify as alimony. Specifically, we address whether the "contract for deed" that Mr. Lofstrom transferred to Dorothy in part satisfaction of Mr. Lofstrom's accrued and future alimony obligations to Dorothy qualifies as alimony. *41 A contract for deed is a financing arrangement that allows a buyer (or vendee) to purchase property by borrowing the money for the purchase from the seller (or vendor).
*278 Petitioners admit that they used their dwelling unit, at least in part, as a personal residence. Unless*43 an exception applies, therefore, petitioners may not deduct expenses of their residence. Respondent argues, and we agree, that petitioners failed to substantiate and hence meet their burden to prove that they operated a portion of their residence as a business.
Deducting the business portion of a dwelling unit is restricted. For example, if personal use of the business portion of a dwelling unit exceeds the greater of 14 days or 10 percent of the number of days the unit is rented at fair rental value, no deduction is allowed.
Petitioners admit that Mr. Lofstrom's daughter (and her family) used the B&B rent-free for an indefinite period of time in 1997, which constitutes personal use by petitioners. See
*45 Further, petitioners did not substantiate the B&B expenses. They produced no books or records substantiating, among other things, the amount of rent collected, the number of days that guests stayed, or the rates that guests paid. We are left with little more than petitioners' Schedule C, on which they listed marginal gross income for the B&B and substantial expenses. A schedule of expenses is not sufficient to meet petitioners' burden, however. See
Finally, we must determine whether petitioners may deduct expenses in 1997 and 1998 related to Mr. Lofstrom's writing activities. The evidence includes manuscripts that Mr. Lofstrom allegedly drafted, including a science fiction novel called "Out of the Mando Galaxy by Nnak Kamon" and*46 a health and fitness book called "A Common Sense Approach to Weight Loss, Nutrition, Physical Fitness, and Exercise for the Non-Fanatic of All Ages." We accord little weight to these submissions, however, because respondent did not have the *279 opportunity to cross-examine Mr. Lofstrom at trial. Respondent argues nonetheless that, even considering these manuscripts, petitioners have not shown that Mr. Lofstrom engaged in his writing activities for profit. We agree.
Taxpayers may deduct ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business. See
We consider several factors *280 including the manner in which he carried on the activity, the time and effort he expended on the activity, the history of income or loss with respect to the activity, and the amount of any profits that he earned.
*49 Petitioners failed to identify the amount of time that Mr. Lofstrom spent writing during the years at issue or whether he had anything published.
*50 Conclusion
We sustain respondent's determinations in the deficiency notice for 1997 and 1998. In reaching our holding, we have considered all arguments made, and, to the extent not mentioned, we conclude that they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
*281 To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered for respondent.
1. Petitioners conceded several deductions, including auto expenses, legal expenses for Mr. Lofstrom's divorce, real estate appraisal expenses, closing costs, flood insurance recovery costs, tax return preparation fees, land abstract costs, utilities, travel expenses, and other expenses claimed on Schedule F, Profit or Loss From Farming,and Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business.↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.↩
3. The contract for deed was entered into between Mr. Lofstrom, as trustee of the Dennis Lofstrom Trust, and Mark Lofstrom, the son of Mr. Lofstrom and Dorothy. The contract for deed required a $ 1,408.34 payment upon execution, $ 4,200 or more annually at a rate of $ 350 monthly, and interest at a rate of 7.5 percent per year.↩
4. Of this amount, $ 12,622 is depreciation expenses, which petitioners concede.↩
5. Petitioners did not move to shift the burden of proof to respondent.
6. Other requirements are that the alimony must be received by a spouse under a divorce or separation instrument, the payments cannot be designated in the divorce or separation instrument as a payment for something other than alimony, the payee spouse and the payor spouse must not be members of the same household at the time of payment, and the payments must terminate at the death of the payee spouse. Sec.
7. The Minnesota legislature has sanctioned contracts for deed because they provide a useful alternative financing mechanism, which promotes the availability of credit and the transferability of property.
8. Further, once Mr. Lofstrom transferred the contract for deed to Dorothy, Mark Lofstrom's liability to make payments under the contract would not end at Dorothy's death. We note that alimony does not include a liability to make payments after the payee's death.
9. We find no merit in petitioners' arguments concerning the doctrines of "constructive receipt" or "origin of claim" to characterize the transfer of the contract for deed as alimony.↩
10. This general rule does not apply to those expenses that are deductible regardless of any connection with a trade or business, such as mortgage interest on the residence under
11. Petitioners vaguely assert that she stayed on a "single occasion."↩
12. Nor have petitioners carried their burden to prove that they rented the unit for at least 15 days in 1997. See
13. The Court generally considers nine nonexclusive factors for determining whether taxpayers engaged in an activity for profit.
14. Petitioners claimed, in their answers to interrogatories, that Mr. Lofstrom writes "many nights and weekends" and once had "100 copies" of something "distributed free of charge."↩
15. The only information petitioners offered to prove Mr. Lofstrom's profit motive was a day-of-trial deluge of miscellaneous handwritten notes, correspondence with publishers, a typewritten "novel," and hundreds of hand-written notes on health, fitness, and dieting. We accord little weight to these documents because Mr. Lofstrom did not testify.↩
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Hann v. Venetian Blind Corporation , 111 F.2d 455 ( 1940 )
Bomeisler v. M. Jacobson & Sons Trust , 118 F.2d 261 ( 1941 )
Daniel E. Hendricks Barbara E. Hendricks v. Commissioner of ... , 32 F.3d 94 ( 1994 )
Henry J. Langer and Patricia K. Langer v. Commissioner of ... , 989 F.2d 294 ( 1993 )
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Welch v. Helvering , 54 S. Ct. 8 ( 1933 )
Frank J. Hradesky v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 540 F.2d 821 ( 1976 )
Clement L. Hirsch v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 315 F.2d 731 ( 1963 )
independent-electric-supply-inc-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue , 781 F.2d 724 ( 1986 )
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Wichita Term. El. Co. v. Commissioner of Int. R. , 162 F.2d 513 ( 1947 )
E.A. Brannen and Frances K. Brannen v. Commissioner of ... , 722 F.2d 695 ( 1984 )