DocketNumber: Docket No. 15959-14.
Judges: ASHFORD
Filed Date: 11/15/2017
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
Decision will be entered for respondent in the reduced amount of $3,203.
ASHFORD,
During 2011 petitioner also received income from various other sources, including distributions from an individual retirement account, pensions, dividends, *225 and capital gains. He received but did not report on his 2011 original return $18,336 in taxable dividends and capital gains. On this return petitioner reported an overpayment of $10,618, which included $4,781 applied from his 2010 Federal income tax return and an $8,500 payment made with a request for extension of time to file his 2011 Federal income tax return. Petitioner also indicated that he wanted this overpayment applied for the 2012 taxable year.
On the basis of the omitted capital gains and dividend income that had been reported to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) by the payors, the IRS sent petitioner a notice of deficiency on April 14, 2014. The notice determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal income tax of $4,243 but did not2017 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227">*229 determine any penalties. In his petition filed with the Court on July 9, 2014, petitioner did not dispute the unreported income but stated that his liability was overpaid and that he had employed an enrolled agent to prepare an amended return for 2011. Petitioner indicated that he was "contesting any interest or penalties resulting from" the omission of income on his 2011 original return.
On September 24, 2015, petitioner mailed to respondent two Forms 1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, and two Forms 1040 "as amended" for 2011. Petitioner's first Form 1040X and Form 1040 "as amended" (first amended return) reported $14,513 of capital gains and $3,749 of ordinary *226 dividends omitted from his 2011 original return, reported tax owed of $3,203, and claimed an overpayment of $7,414 to be applied for the 2012 taxable year. His first amended return was signed on May 15, 2014, by the enrolled agent petitioner referenced in his petition and on September 23, 2015, by petitioner. Respondent accepted and properly processed this return.
Petitioner's second Form 1040X and Form 1040 "as amended" (second amended return) removed "$891 for life insurance policy" from the income reported2017 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227">*230 on his 2011 original return and his first amended return and reported an overpayment of $7,664 to be applied for the 2012 taxable year. His second amended return was signed on July 15, 2015, by the enrolled agent petitioner referenced in his petition and on September 23, 2015, by petitioner. Respondent did not process this return.
Both issues in this case arise because petitioner changed his Federal income tax reporting positions after the IRS sent him the notice of deficiency. On his 2011 original return, he (1) reported the income shown on the 2011 Form W-2 Delta issued to him, including $891 of imputed income relating to a life insurance policy, and (2) indicated that he wanted a $10,618 overpayment applied against his liability for 2012. In the first and second amended returns petitioner submitted in *227 2015 he continued to ask that the reported overpayment be applied for 2012, first reducing the amount by tax due on the 2011 income items omitted from his 2011 original return and then excluding the $891 item reported as income on his 2011 original return and his first amended return.
Petitioner did not report on his 2011 original return $18,336 of capital gains and dividend2017 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227">*231 income that, according to his first amended return, increased his liability for 2011 by $3,203, the amount that respondent now agrees is the correct deficiency. On his first amended return petitioner again directed that an overpayment be applied against his 2012 liability but reduced the amount claimed by his newly reported tax liability for 2011. His first amended return was submitted on September 24, 2015, over two years and five months after his 2012 Federal income tax return was due. Petitioner contends that because he consistently overpaid his tax liability and directed that an overpayment be applied for subsequent years, the IRS always had more than enough to cover his liabilities so that he should not be liable for interest on the deficiency for 2011.
The record does not explain the circumstances under which Delta included imputed income in the 2011 Form W-2 issued to petitioner, but we infer from petitioner's testimony that it related to a life insurance policy provided to him *228 pursuant to a union contract covering employees, including former employees such as petitioner.2017 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227">*232 determine whether the payment of premiums by Delta should have been included in petitioner's taxable income.
Second, each tax year stands alone, so that acceptance of a position by the IRS for one year (and it is not clear from the correspondence on which petitioner2017 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227">*233 relies whether the IRS accepted his theory for 2010) is not controlling in a later year.
Third, the IRS is not required to accept and process petitioner's second amended return on which he deleted the imputed income item and claimed a larger overpayment.
That third principle also requires us to reject petitioner's belated attempts to apply portions of the 2011 overpayment retroactively for that year instead of against his liability for 2012. Petitioner does not deny that he claimed the benefit of the 2011 overpayment on his 2012 return, which he admits filing late because he understood that there was no penalty in a refund situation. In the ordinary course of events his account record, which is not in evidence, would reflect his election on his 2011 original return to apply the overpayment against his 2012 liability. That payment2017 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227">*234 would be applied at the time his 2012 return was due.
*231 Petitioner argues that there was no deficiency at any time because he always overpaid and had overpayments applied for the following year. However, a deficiency is defined, in relevant part, as "the amount by which the tax imposed * * * exceeds * * * the amount shown as the tax by the taxpayer upon his return".
Respondent argues and the Court agrees that there is no applicable exception here to the general rule that the Court lacks jurisdiction to determine interest in a deficiency case.
In the absence of a record of payments and assessments on petitioner's account, the wisdom of this rule is apparent. Petitioner has submitted a memorandum in which he argues about the proper treatment of overpayments in *232 calculating interest, but those arguments must be saved for a later day in the appropriate proceeding.
To reflect the foregoing and respondent's concession,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue. Some amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.↩
2. Petitioner described the policy as one "which a former employer bought for a group of former employees."↩
3.
Terry v. Commissioner ( 1988 )
Schuster v. Commissioner ( 1985 )
Fred M. Waring and Virginia Waring v. Commissioner of ... ( 1969 )
Dixon v. United States ( 1965 )
Estate of Hall v. Commissioner ( 1989 )
Savage v. Commissioner ( 1999 )