DocketNumber: No. 13667-01; No. 13668-01; No. 13669-01; No. 13670-01; No. 13671-01
Judges: "Gale, Joseph H."
Filed Date: 6/1/2004
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*132 Decision was entered for Petitioners in part.
THE CONNELL BUSINESS COMPANY, ET AL., MEMORANDUM OPINION GALE, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' Federal income taxes and accuracy-related penalties for the tax years 1995, 1996, and 1997 as follows: The Connell Business Co. docket No. 13667-01 Accuracy-related penalties Year Deficiency 1996 31,946 6,389.20 1997 14,394 2,878.80 The Connell Family Trust docket No. 13668-01 Accuracy-related penalties Year Deficiency 1996 32,764 6,552.80 1997 25,738 5,147.60 The Connell Vehicle Co. docket No. 13669-01 Year Deficiency 1995 $ 136 1996 136 The Connell Vehicle Co. #101 docket No. 13670-01 Accuracy-related penalties Year Deficiency 1996 1,338 267.60 1997 962 192.40 Thomas E. and Sara Anne Connell: docket No. 13671-01 Accuracy-related penalties Year Deficiency 1996 56,956.65 11,391.33 1997 24,371.16 4,874.23 Unless otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect during the taxable years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. After concessions, the issues remaining for decision are: (1) Whether the notice of deficiency issued to petitioners Thomas E. and Sara Anne Connell was timely as to the 1995 and 1996 tax years; and (2) whether respondent is estopped from asserting deficiencies for the 1995, 1996, and 1997 tax years against petitioners Thomas E. and Sara Anne Connell because he prematurely assessed the deficiencies and later abated some, but not*135 all, of the assessments. *136 For the reasons stated below, we hold that the notice of deficiency was timely as to the 1995 and 1996 tax years because it was issued within the 6-year period of limitations provided in Background The parties submitted these cases fully stipulated, pursuant to Petitioners are Thomas E. and Sara Anne Connell (petitioners) and four trusts, The Connell Business Co., The Connell Family Trust, The Connell Vehicle Co., and The Connell Vehicle Co. #101 (collectively, petitioner trusts). At the time they filed their petitions, petitioners resided in Dayton, Ohio, and the petitioner trusts' addresses were in Dayton, Ohio. Petitioners and the petitioner trusts filed their Federal income tax returns for 1995, 1996, and 1997 on April 15, 1996 and 1997 and August 15, 1998, respectively. Except for*137 the 1997 return filed by The Connell Vehicle Co. #101, which identified The Connell Family Trust as the beneficiary, the returns filed by The Connell Vehicle Co. and The Connell Vehicle Co. #101 identified The Connell Business Co. as the trusts' beneficiary. The returns filed by The Connell Business Co. identified The Connell Family Trust as the beneficiary. The 1995 and 1996 returns filed by The Connell Family Trust identified petitioners and The Connell Charitable Trust as beneficiaries. The Connell Family Trust return for 1996 reported distributions of $ 6,068 to each of the petitioners. Petitioners' individual returns made no reference to the petitioner trusts or in any way indicated that petitioners were associated with, beneficiaries of, or recipients of income from, the petitioner trusts. With regard to the $ 6,068 of income reported as allocated to each of petitioners in the 1996 return for The Connell Family Trust, petitioners' 1996 return listed that income in Schedules C, Profit or Loss From Business, (one for each petitioner) as "Gross receipts or sales". The Schedules C contain no information that would suggest that The Connell Family Trust was the source of that income. *138 Petitioners reported $ 6,709.91 and $ 20,289.03 of gross income in their 1995 and 1996 returns, respectively. At some point before April 15, 1998, petitioners were referred by respondent's Examination Division to respondent's Criminal Investigation Division for a potential criminal fraud action with respect to their use of the petitioner trusts in 1994, 1995, and 1996. Respondent issued notices of deficiency to petitioners and the petitioner trusts for 1995, 1996, and 1997 on August 2, 2001. The notices were issued more than 3, but fewer than 6, years after the*139 1995 and 1996 returns were filed. Petitioners concede that the notice issued to them was timely with respect to their 1997 return. Petitioners and the petitioner trusts timely mailed their petitions for the 1995, 1996, and 1997 tax years to the Tax Court on October 31, 2001. During the fall/winter of 2001-2002, the Court experienced significant delays in the receipt of mail because of anthrax contamination in the U.S. Postal Service, *140 The parties have stipulated that the petitioner trusts are to be disregarded for Federal income tax purposes and that the income reported on the petitioner trusts' returns is income of petitioners and should have been reported on their individual returns. *141 Discussion 1. Period of Limitations Under Petitioners argue that respondent is barred from assessing deficiencies for 1995 and 1996 because the notice of deficiency was mailed more than 3 years from the dates the returns for those years were filed. See For the reasons explained below, we conclude that petitioners failed adequately to disclose the gross income omitted from their 1995 and 1996 returns, and that respondent has carried his burden of showing that he is entitled to the 6-year period of limitations set forth in In Relying on In Reuter, the taxpayers failed to report in their individual return income attributable to them from an S corporation. The individual return contained no indication that the taxpayers were shareholders of an S corporation or that they derived any nonsalary income from such a corporation. *146 In rejecting this argument and the taxpayer's reading of Benderoff, we noted that in cases where we have looked beyond a taxpayer's individual return for purposes of determining the adequacy of disclosure, "without exception, the taxpayer's individual income tax return * * * contained some reference to a separate document from which the omission from income could be ascertained." Because petitioners' 1995 and 1996 returns made no reference to the petitioner trusts or the trusts' returns, we hold, consistent with 2. Estoppel, Admission, and Res*149 Judicata Theories Petitioners argue that respondent should be estopped from asserting deficiencies with respect to 1995, 1996, and 1997 because he prematurely assessed deficiencies for these years and then abated most, but not all, *150 abatement of the deficiencies at issue gives rise to equitable estoppel is factually and legally baseless. Petitioners have shown no detrimental reliance, and, in any event, "the abatement of an assessment is not a binding action that can estop the Commissioner from reassessing a deficiency." Finally, petitioners' res judicata and collateral estoppel claims are utterly frivolous. These doctrines bar parties that have previously litigated a matter from relitigating the same matter. See, e.g., To reflect the foregoing, Decisions will be entered for petitioners in docket Nos. 13667-01, 13668-01, 13669-01, and 13670-01. Decision will be entered under
1. Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: The Connell Family Trust, docket No. 13668-01; The Connell Vehicle Co., docket No. 13669-01; The Connell Vehicle Co. #101, docket No. 13670-01; Thomas E. and Sara Anne Connell, docket No. 13671-01.↩
2. Petitioners also contend that respondent has the burden of proof with respect to all issues in these cases. Respondent concedes that he has the burden of proof on whether the 6-year period of limitations under
3. Although the fraud referral report prepared by the Examination Division is undated, it is stated therein that the "earliest statute expiration date" for the years under review is Apr. 15, 1998, indicating that the referral was being made before that date.↩
4. See, e.g.,
5. While all of the assessments of the deficiencies against petitioners for 1995, 1996, and 1997 were abated, respondent failed to abate $ 1.09 of the assessment with respect to The Connell Business Co. for 1997.↩
6. As a result, respondent has conceded the deficiencies determined with respect to the petitioner trusts.↩
7. The parties have stipulated that petitioners earned or received, but did not report on their individual returns, income totaling $ 61,272 and $ 84,723 in 1995 and 1996, respectively. However, in handwritten amendments to the stipulations, respondent appears to concede that the foregoing figures should be offset by the business income of $ 5,000 and $ 12,136 that petitioners reported on Schedules C in their 1995 and 1996 returns, respectively. In finding the figures listed in the text, we have resolved this ambiguity in petitioners' favor. In any event, these discrepancies have no impact on the issues remaining for resolution.↩
8. Although petitioners at various points claim that the income they concede should have been reported on their 1995 and 1996 returns was in fact reported on the returns of the petitioner trusts, the parties' stipulations do not establish this fact. Nonetheless, in light of our conclusion, infra, that any reporting of the income in the returns of the petitioner trusts may not be considered for purposes of
9. The taxpayers disclosed that they received wages from the S corporation, but they did not indicate that it was an S corporation or that they were the shareholders thereof.↩
10. Petitioners also argue that disclosure must have been adequate because respondent was in fact sufficiently aware of petitioners' use of trusts in 1995 and 1996 to make a criminal referral before expiration of the 3-year period of limitations for those years. The test, however, is not whether petitioners' returns were capable of arousing suspicion; the test is whether the disclosure in the returns was adequate to apprise respondent of the nature and amount of the omitted income.↩
11. Respondent concedes, and petitioners have not disputed, these figures, which include amounts reported on certain partnership returns as well as amounts reported as tax-exempt interest. As it would not affect the result in these cases, we assume (without deciding) that tax-exempt interest may constitute "gross income stated in the return" for purposes of
12. Petitioners seek to make something of the fact that respondent failed to abate $ 1.09 of the assessment against The Connell Business Co. for 1997. However, respondent has conceded all deficiencies determined with respect to the petitioner trusts, including that determined for The Connell Business Co. in 1997.↩
13. The single case cited by petitioners,
Seltzer v. Commissioner ( 1953 )
Quick Trust v. Commissioner ( 1970 )
v-c-benderoff-and-katherine-benderoff-v-united-states-of-america-james ( 1968 )
Colony, Inc. v. Commissioner ( 1958 )
Walter D. Taylor and Carolyn H. Taylor v. United States ( 1969 )
Hunt v. United States ( 2000 )
service-bolt-nut-co-profit-sharing-trust-service-bolt-nut-of-akron ( 1983 )
george-edward-quicks-trust-ua-2333-41-mercantile-trust-company-national ( 1971 )