DocketNumber: Docket No. 16554-08S.
Filed Date: 10/25/2010
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
PURSUANT TO
Decision will be entered for petitioner.
KROUPA,
Respondent determined an $8,250 deficiency in petitioner's Federal income tax for 2005. The sole issue for decision is whether the $30,000 petitioner received from her ex-husband is alimony and therefore includable in gross income.Background This case was submitted fully stipulated pursuant to Rule 122, and the facts are so found. The stipulation of facts and the accompanying exhibits *178 are incorporated by this reference. Petitioner resided in Holly Hill, Florida at the time she filed the petition. Petitioner and her ex-husband divorced after an 11-year marriage and signed a marital settlement agreement (the marital settlement) in August 1998. Petitioner was college educated, and her ex-husband was an educated businessman who earned $350,000 annually from several business interests he owned. They intended the marital settlement to fully settle their rights and obligations relative to one another and with respect to their son, WAC, who was ten at the time.*179 payments of rehabilitative alimony to petitioner for eight years and one month pursuant to the terms of the marital settlement. He agreed to pay $2,250 per month during 2005. He also agreed to maintain a life insurance policy, designating petitioner as beneficiary, with a death benefit sufficient to cover the total amount of rehabilitative alimony due to petitioner.*180 the $30,000 from her ex-husband in 2005 as prescribed in the marital settlement. Petitioner and her ex-husband were not members of the same household during 2005. Petitioner did not report any alimony income on her Federal income tax return for 2005. Her ex-husband, however, claimed alimony deductions for the $30,000 he paid to petitioner in 2005. Respondent issued the deficiency notice to petitioner determining that petitioner failed to report the alimony she received in 2005. Respondent already resolved this issue in petitioner's favor for the 2002 taxable year but raised it again for 2005. Petitioner timely filed a petition. We must decide whether the $30,000 petitioner received in 2005 is alimony and therefore includable in her gross income. Petitioner claims it is a property settlement or a lump-sum payment, not alimony, and therefore not taxable to her. Respondent argues that the $30,000 is includable as alimony. We begin with the burden of proof. Where, as here, the key facts are fully stipulated and we are faced with a question of law, our holding does not depend on the burden of proof we impose or the standard of review we apply. Instead, we must reject erroneous views *181 of the law. See We now review the Federal income tax law regarding alimony.*182 Property settlements incident to a divorce generally are not taxable and do not give rise to income. Sec. 1041; The language of the marital settlement does not specifically provide that petitioner's ex-husband would be obligated to make payments after petitioner died. The Court must look to State law, in the absence of specific agreement language, to determine whether petitioner's estate would have a right to payments of rehabilitative alimony. See Florida family law provides that the characterization of alimony and other payments is determined by their function, not their title. Respondent argues that the $30,000 paid in 2005 was rehabilitative in nature, as it was intended to pay for petitioner's PhD program and other rehabilitation. Respondent concludes, therefore, that this amount would not have been payable to petitioner's estate had she died during 2005 because the rehabilitative purpose of the funds would have lapsed. We disagree. Florida law provides that the rehabilitative intent of the funds is not dispositive. The marital settlement obligations due to petitioner as rehabilitative *184 alimony were fixed and certain in the number of payments and the amount of each payment. They were not subject to modification and termination by their terms. This certainty was further clarified with language specifying that rehabilitative alimony could not be modified or terminated regardless of whether circumstances changed. These payments met the requirements for lump-sum alimony in Florida and therefore would remain payable to petitioner's estate if she were to die. See We find further support for our holding by looking to language in the marital settlement.*186 Nothing in the marital settlement indicated that the rehabilitative alimony payments would terminate on petitioner's death. Indeed, the marital settlement language emphasized that the obligation could not be modified or terminated under any circumstances. This language is in stark contrast to the language requiring child support payments and specifying that the child support obligation would end upon the death of the noncustodial parent. The ex-husband's obligation to pay rehabilitative alimony was not contingent on any factor or event, *185 such as petitioner's attending school. Indeed, petitioner is the irrevocable beneficiary of her ex-husband's life insurance policy, required by the marital settlement to ensure payment of the total sum of the rehabilitative alimony. Petitioner and her ex-husband also bound their successors, heirs and assigns to the terms of the marital settlement. We have no reason to conclude that rehabilitative alimony payments, as described in the marital settlement, would terminate upon petitioner's death. See We note that respondent is not bound by his previous resolution of this issue in petitioner's favor for the 2002 taxable year. See We have considered all arguments made in reaching our decision and, to the extent not mentioned, we conclude that they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit. To reflect the foregoing,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. Petitioner's marital settlement agreement labels the payments as rehabilitative alimony. Accordingly, we will refer to them as such.↩
3. The Court uses the initials of minor children. See Rule 27(a)(3).↩
4. The marital settlement quantifies the total rehabilitative alimony payments as $306,000, failing to account for an additional $2,250 mandated payment.↩
5. Property interests of divorcing parties are determined by State law, yet Federal law governs the Federal income tax treatment of that property.
6. When State family law is ambiguous regarding termination of payments upon payee's death, a Federal court will base its decision on the divorce instrument's language, rather than engage in complex State law inquiries.
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