DocketNumber: Docket No. 10962-76
Citation Numbers: 74 T.C. 260, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 138, 74 T.C. No. 20
Judges: Sterrett,Chabot,Fay,Tannenwald,Featherston,Hall,Drennen,Goffe,Wiles,Wilbur,Nims
Filed Date: 5/13/1980
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*138
Based upon information furnished to an undercover agent by an informant and the agent's personal knowledge, respondent determined that petitioner purchased cocaine during 1974.
*261 *140 By letter dated September 17, 1976, respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's income taxes for the taxable year ended December 31, 1974, in the amount of $ 29,403.76. Respondent has also determined additions to tax pursuant to
*141 FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, are incorporated herein by this reference.
At the time Raul Llorente (petitioner) filed his petition herein he resided in Jamaica, N.Y. Petitioner did not file a Federal income tax return for calendar year 1974. Petitioner's wife, Cristina Llorente, filed a Federal income tax return for 1974 utilizing the filing status of married filing separately on which she reported gross income of $ 779. Two of petitioner's children, Carlos and Nestor, were students and lived with their parents during 1974. Petitioner's wife claimed Nestor as a dependent on her 1974 tax return.
Petitioner was born in Colombia, South America, and first came to the United States on February 2, 1965. Upon immigrating to the United States, petitioner brought with him $ 1,500 in *262 cash. In August 1972, petitioner had $ 11,000 in savings of which he used $ 10,000 for a downpayment on his personal residence.
Petitioner and his wife reported gross income in the amount of $ 13,020, of which $ 565 represented interest income, on their joint Federal income tax return*142 for calendar year 1973.
Petitioner's and his wife's cost of living for 1974 was between $ 900 and $ 1,000 per month. That amount included the one or two trips made by petitioner to Colombia at a cost of approximately $ 380 per trip. In January 1974, petitioner purchased the LaPaz Bar and Grill for $ 9,000 cash.
During 1974 and part of 1975, the New York City Police Department maintained an undercover investigation of illegal narcotics activity. As a result of that investigation, petitioner was arrested on March 8, 1975. At the time of his arrest, petitioner's bail was set at $ 1 million but was subsequently reduced to $ 300,000. Petitioner never raised the bail. On April 1, 1975, an indictment was filed in the Supreme Court of the State of New York against petitioner, accusing him of the crime of conspiracy in the first degree to commit the crimes of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree, criminal possession of a controlled substance in the third degree, and criminal sale of a controlled substance in the first degree for the period from February 1974 to March 8, 1975.
On May 24, 1977, petitioner entered a plea of guilty to the crime of attempted conspiracy*143 in the first degree to cover the indictment, and was sentenced on September 6, 1977, to time served, i.e., the time petitioner had spent in jail following his arrest on March 8, 1975, to his sentencing on September 6, 1977.
Hugo Sossa, Alvaro Doronzoro, and Louis Irving Taylor were patrons of petitioner's bar and grill and were known by him. During 1974, a police department undercover agent purchased cocaine and engaged in conversation and other transactions involving the purchase of cocaine with Louis Irving Taylor (Taylor) and Alvaro Doronzoro (Doronzoro) at petitioner's bar and grill. During one such transaction, the undercover agent was informed by Taylor that he would have to check to see if his shipment had arrived. Following that statement to the agent, Taylor left the table at which they were sitting and engaged in a conversation with petitioner. Upon returning, he informed the agent that his shipment had not arrived. On another occasion, the undercover agent entered petitioner's bar and grill to *263 purchase cocaine from Doronzoro. The agent heard Doronzoro inquire of petitioner whether Doronzoro's shipment of cocaine was available. Further, the agent heard petitioner*144 inform Doronzoro that the shipment had not arrived.
The undercover agent was informed by a confidential informant that petitioner, the informant, and Doronzoro had gone to Alfonso Velasco's house in Queens, N.Y., where there were 6 kilos of cocaine. According to the informant, at that time and location, petitioner examined the package because some of the merchandise had been delivered in a damp condition.
Upon completion of his investigation, the undercover agent advised respondent that petitioner had purchased 6 kilos of cocaine. He further advised respondent that the cost of a kilo of cocaine to petitioner was in the $ 9,000 to $ 14,000 range.
Based upon the information received from the undercover agent and a conversation with an assistant district attorney who worked on the criminal case, respondent determined that petitioner expended $ 54,000 for cocaine in 1974. In 1974, petitioner made payments with respect to a mortgage on his residence in the amount of $ 3,156. Petitioner, in the same year, received $ 5,300 as remuneration from Caveman Lounge, Inc. Petitioner was president of Caveman Lounge, Inc., and apparently the corporation was the legal owner of the LaPaz Bar and*145 Grill.
OPINION
Petitioner argues that respondent's determination that he purchased illegal drugs is arbitrary, that the information used by respondent in reconstructing his income was insufficient to establish the correctness of the deficiency, thereby shifting the burden of going forward with the evidence to respondent. Petitioner argues in the alternative that, if the burden of going forward with the evidence is not shifted, he has met his burden.
Respondent argues that the statutory notice of deficiency is entitled to the ordinary presumption of correctness. Further, he argues that petitioner's testimony, which was the only evidence presented to support petitioner's argument, lacks sufficient credibility to shift the burden of going forward.
A statutory notice ordinarily carries with it a presumption of correctness that, except where provided in the Internal Revenue Code or the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, places *264 the burden of proof and the burden of going forward with the evidence on the petitioner.
When petitioner asks the Court to find a statutory notice arbitrary, he is asking the Court to look behind the statutory notice. As a general rule, we will not honor such a request.
Petitioner argues that the instant case meets this exception and is therefore controlled by
Thus, we must bear in mind that the Supreme Court's reference to a "naked assessment" was in the context of illegally obtained evidence. Therefore, the discussion by the Ninth Circuit of the
While, as we will emphasize later, we find that the Llorente notice was supported by substantive evidence, we point out that a statutory notice may be based in *149 whole or in part upon inadmissible evidence.
Respondent used the expenditure method to determine that petitioner has expended $ 54,000 for 6 kilos of cocaine and $ 3,156 *267 on mortgage payments. To these figures, respondent added petitioner's compensation of $ 5,300 from Caveman Lounge, Inc. In effect, respondent has combined the commonly used receipts method with the expenditures method to determine petitioner's total gross income. The expenditures method is a permissible method for respondent to utilize to reconstruct a taxpayer's income.
Petitioner testified that he paid $ 9,000 for the bar in January 1974, and that his family's cost of living was $ 900 to $ 1,000 per month. Petitioner has stipulated that his wife's income for 1974 was only $ 779. Petitioner concedes income of only $ 5,300. Thus, *268 based on petitioner's own admissions and testimony, he and his*155 wife had expenditures of between $ 19,800 and $ 21,000, although they acknowledge income of only $ 6,079. Petitioner contends that the amounts expended in excess of this amount came from savings or from loans, and points to his interest income and interest paid as shown on his 1973 return in support of this position. Petitioner testified at trial that he had bank books which would prove the existence of the savings account, but failed to produce those records. The burden to produce such evidence rested on petitioner. To the extent petitioner had these records under his control yet failed to produce them, we must assume that if presented at trial the evidence would not have supported petitioner.
For the reasons previously expressed, we find that petitioner had unreported taxable income during 1974. It is obvious from the facts herein that the precise amount of unreported income cannot be determined with exactitude. However, this difficulty is not of respondent's or the Court's making. We calculate the unreported*156 income in the following manner: taking the lower estimate by petitioner of his cost of living, $ 10,800 for such expenses; purchase of the bar in January of 1974, $ 9,000; and bearing in mind that there were three possible purchasers present when the 6 kilos were examined and that some of the cocaine may have been damaged, and applying principles analogous to those expounded in
Petitioner contends that his*157 incarceration at the time his return was due is reasonable cause within the meaning of
The final issue presented is whether petitioner is entitled to claim two of his sons as dependents during 1974. Respondent contends that he was not given fair notice of this matter being in issue. Further, respondent argues that, since the issue was not pleaded in the petition, this Court should not consider it.
Petitioner did not raise the dependency issue in the stipulation or pursue it in his briefs. He first raised the issue at the trial and respondent*158 did not object. To the contrary, respondent implied at trial that petitioner could not have supported his wife and the two children on the income alleged by petitioner and his wife. We find that the issue of dependency of the two children was properly raised and that respondent was not placed at a disadvantage by petitioner's raising the issue at trial.
Petitioner testified that he was the sole support of his two children, Carlos and Nestor Llorente, for 1974. Petitioner's wife claimed dependency exemption deduction for their son, Nestor, on her 1974 return. The issue of which parent is entitled to the deduction when the parents are married but elect to file separate returns does not appear to have been previously raised in this Court. Cf.
Resolution of the issue is controlled by determining which parent in fact provided the child's support. The parties have stipulated that the wife's income for 1974 was less than $ 800, and we have found that petitioner's income was some $ 37,000. It is obvious from the stipulation that petitioner's wife could not have supported either of her two children. Petitioner*159 testified that both children were students who lived with petitioner and had no earned income during 1974.
Petitioner's testimony on this point was credible and he carried his burden of proof. Therefore, we find that petitioner is *270 entitled to claim Carlos and Nestor as his dependents on his 1974 return.
Fay,
In
A contributing problem stems from the assumption that the burden of producing evidence can somehow be disassociated from the burden of proof.
*164 *272 To superimpose on the rule of
I recognize that a petitioner trying to disprove unreported income has a difficult task. See
Tannenwald,
Initially, I note that we are not concerned herein with a suit for refund by a taxpayer or an action by the Government to collect on an assessment or an attempt by a taxpayer to enjoin the collection of an assessment. These situations pose questions regarding the burden of proof and the burden of going forward in a different context than that involved herein. I therefore consider that the decided cases in these arenas do not furnish us with definitive guidance insofar as the situation before us is concerned, especially since the opinions in such cases also reflect confusing and contradictory articulations. See, e.g.,
The instant case involves the proper application of the concepts of the so-called presumption of correctness of respondent's determination of deficiency, burden of proof, and burden of going forward with the evidence to proceedings in this Court based upon the filing by the taxpayer*168 of a petition for the redetermination in respect of a notice of deficiency.*274 "presumption of correctness" has curious roots. It first appeared in haec verba in
*169 One can only speculate as to what the Supreme Court had in mind when it used the phrase "presumption of correctness," particularly since it appears in the same sentence which imposes the burden of proof on the taxpayer. See
All of the decided cases are in agreement that the presumption of correctness of a notice of deficiency does not cause the notice to be evidence as such (see, e.g.,
It is black-letter law that deficiency determinations by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue carry with them a presumption of correctness. * * * The burden is on the taxpayer to show that the Commissioner is wrong. * * * Once the taxpayer shows that the deficiency assessment is wrong, the burden shifts back to the Commissioner to show the existence and amount of the deficiency. [Citations omitted.]
See also
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals states the rule where deductions are involved as follows (see
The presumption in favor of the Commissioner is a procedural device which requires the taxpayer to come forward with enough evidence to support a finding contrary to the Commissioner's*172 determination. * * *
The burden of proof is yet another hurdle. After satisfying the procedural burden of producing evidence to rebut the presumption in favor of the Commissioner, the taxpayer must still carry his ultimate burden of proof or persuasion. * * * [Citations omitted.]
Where an omission from gross income is involved, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals takes a somewhat different position (see
The general rule is that the burden of proof is on the Commissioner to establish that the taxpayer received income. However, the Commissioner's determination of a deficiency satisfies such burden since the determination made by the Commissioner is presumptively correct. The taxpayer then has the burden of overcoming this presumption by a preponderance of the evidence. * * * When the taxpayer has overcome the presumption by competent and relevant evidence, the presumption disappears and drops out of the case. * * *
* * * *
The burden of proof was not upon the taxpayer to show that he had no *276 income. The burden was upon the Commissioner*173 to establish that the taxpayer received the money as income. It appears to us that the Tax Court has confused the burden of establishing receipt of income with the burden of supporting allowable deductions from income. In the former case the burden is on the Commissioner, and in the latter case the burden is upon the taxpayer. * * *
[Citations omitted.]
See also
The First Circuit Court of Appeals, in a case which involved a suit by the Government on an assessment, sets forth succinctly its position where a proceeding in this Court is involved (
Whatever uncertainty may once have existed because of our use of the general phrase "burden of proof" was dispelled by our opinion in
My own view is that the foregoing articulation by the First Circuit Court of Appeals is clearly correct, although, as will subsequently appear (see pp. 278 - 279
I am not unaware of the fact that the instant case involves alleged unreported income from trafficking in narcotics and that the burden on the taxpayer to prove a negative may indeed be *278 heavy. But he is not entirely without means to elicit the underlying facts which respondent used to develop his notice of deficiency. Title VII of the*178 Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure is available to him for this purpose, although he must recognize that resort to discovery under that title has its limitations because of the rule that we generally do not look behind a deficiency notice. See
Similarly, the protective shield of a deficiency notice is not so absolute that we will not at the appropriate time permit evidence to be brought to our attention which could cause*180 us to conclude that the respondent's determination was arbitrary and excessive, *279 and that therefore the burden of proof should be placed upon respondent. Cf.
*181 What is the appropriate time and what are the limited circumstances can only be determined on a case-by-case basis. I note, however, that in the landmark case of
*182 Finally, I recognize that, where projections of income based only upon evidence of isolated transactions are involved, the potential for arbitrariness and capriciousness in respondent's deficiency notice is great. In fact, this was the situation in
Drennen,
A question arises in a case such as this whether, in determining *281 if respondent's notice of deficiency is arbitrary and excessive, we should look only at the evidence in respondent's possession at the time the notice is issued or at the evidence presented*185 at the trial as well. This is important because on this conclusion may ride the decision as to which party must go first with its evidence. However, I will not explore that question here because the evidence is before us and the conclusion can be drawn from all the evidence.
Based on its conclusion that respondent did not arbitrarily determine that petitioner was in the drug business, the majority allows the barrier of the presumption of correctness to be erected upon this conclusion. In doing so, it makes an effort to distinguish
The evidence relied on by the majority (petitioner's statement overheard by the undercover agent and the indictment) may suggest that petitioner had some peripheral association with the drug business, but from this, alone, it is unreasonable to conclude that petitioner either spent $ 54,000 to purchase drugs or had income in that amount. The overheard statement, while probably admissible, does not prove that petitioner either bought or sold drugs or received any income from that source; an indictment, alone, does not prove the charge contained therein. Respondent obviously relied on the testimony of the informer, who was not produced as a witness, to conclude that petitioner had $ 54,000 in income. If this is not arbitrary, I think justice demands that petitioner be given an opportunity to cross-examine the witness upon whose testimony respondent bases his determination. If, for reasons of his own, respondent chooses not to produce the witness, I believe respondent must either produce other evidence or forego the presumption of correctness. See
Nor do I believe that the attempted linking of petitioner with drug activities, in this fashion, distinguishes this case from
I can think of no better description of the circumstances in this case.
Respondent's*189 determination as to the amount of unreported income was entirely based on a statement by an unidentified informer to the effect that petitioner, with others, traveled to a house in which was stored 6 kilos of cocaine. From this, respondent concluded petitioner bought all 6 kilos and determined that he made an expenditure of $ 54,000 for this purchase which was charged to petitioner as taxable income. The missing link, one which I believe is fatal, is that the record is devoid of evidence indicating that petitioner made this purchase. (The fact that the unidentified informer did not tell the undercover agent that petitioner purchased any cocaine on this occasion would tend to belie the fact.) Indeed, the majority could not even *283 accept this contention as reasonable and decreased respondent's adjustment by 66 percent. By making such a large adjustment, I believe the majority concedes that respondent's determination was arbitrary and excessive. Under such circumstances, petitioner should be treated as having met his burden, respondent's determination should be stripped of any presumption of correctness, and the burden should be on respondent to support his determination*190 of deficiency.
I cannot say that respondent has carried that burden, as the only admissible evidence introduced was petitioner's plea of guilty to an
Additionally, although the evidence indicates expenditures, other than for purchase of cocaine, in excess of acknowledged*191 income in the approximate amount of $ 13,700, the record indicates petitioner reported $ 565 of interest income and claimed an interest deduction of $ 531 in the previous taxable year. Taken together, the principal amount to which this interest relates more than adequately accounts for the source of the funds. Though the majority discounts this evidence, citing
I believe the holding today is a significant retreat from our position in
1.
2. The above statement is not intended to imply a position with respect to the applicability of the exclusionary rule in tax cases in this Court. We have left that question open.
3. While hearsay evidence is inadmissible as substantive evidence, such evidence is hearsay only when offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted.
4. The above is not intended to imply an acceptance of the legal position stated by the Ninth Circuit in
5. The Court is not unsympathetic to petitioner's burden. "The law imposes much less of a burden upon a taxpayer who is called upon to prove a negative -- for example, that he did not receive the income which the Commissioner claims -- than it imposes on a taxpayer who is attempting to sustain a deduction on his return."
6. More often, the expenditures method has been applied to those situations where the items purchased by expenditures are shown to be in the possession of the petitioner. See
7. A petitioner's uncorroborated testimony may be sufficient to carry his burden in an unreported income case in which respondent has failed to produce any evidence to support the deficiency.
8. Petitioner had not reported his income of $ 5,300 from Caveman Lounge.↩
1. See
2. See J. McNaughton, "Burden of Production of Evidence: A Function of a Burden of Persuasion,"
3. Compare
"Petitioner, being the moving party, should provide sufficient evidence to make a prima facie case; otherwise his petition will fail from inertia. Unless the respondent has the burden of proof, I see little reason for him to move forward."↩
4. We are not here concerned with any of the well-defined exceptions to this general rule. E.g., sec. 534 (accumulated earnings tax); sec. 6902(a) (transferee liability); sec. 7454(a) (fraud);
1. Although
2. The location of the burden of proof has potentially differing consequences -- important at least in theory. Where the burden is on the Government, if the evidence before the court is in equilibrium, the Government will lose because of failure to carry
3. It has been stated that the reasons for imposing the burden of proof on the taxpayer "other than the normal evidentiary rule imposing proof obligations on the moving party" are "the relevant prior Supreme Court precedent indicative, if not determinative of the issue. * * * the presumption of administrative regularity; the likelihood that the taxpayer will have access to the relevant information; and the desirability of bolstering the record-keeping requirements of the Code." See
4. I say "usual" because I recognize that in several situations, notably in respect of the issue of fraud, the burden of proof is on the respondent. See sec. 7454;
5. See
6. Indeed, in many cases such as the one before us, the claimed amounts of omitted income are so large that one would have expected the respondent to assert an addition to tax for fraud, as to which he would have the burden of proof and, in the usual case, the burden of going forward first with his evidence at the trial. Under such circumstances, although the burden of proof as to the underlying deficiency would still be on the taxpayer (e.g.,
7. It should be noted that mere excessiveness never is sufficient, since this is the situation in many cases where the courts determine that the respondent is entitled to a deficiency in a lesser amount than that set forth in his deficiency notice.
8. Indeed, this is precisely what occurred in
9. I note that, as the majority points out, the respondent has broad authority to reconstruct income. Moreover, the projection method has passed muster on several occasions. See cases cited in
10. In the instant case, there was neither a projection nor reconstruction but an expenditure for the purchase of a specific quantity of drugs. It was petitioner's burden to convince us that he did not make such purchase.↩
11. I note that the Courts of Appeals in both
1. In
2. The majority appears to rely on the indictment, alone, rather than the plea. An indictment, alone, certainly does not prove that petitioner was either in the drug business or that he received income therefrom.↩
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