DocketNumber: Docket No. 22936-80
Judges: Tannenwald
Filed Date: 5/23/1985
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*74
*980 OPINION
This case is before us upon the reversal and remand of our decision (
Petitioner, stating that the instant case is before us "on its own merits," first urges that we follow our decision in
The
*83 Several cases have loosely used the term "professional gambler" to include persons who gamble on a regular, "full-time" basis. See, e.g.,
*85 The power of Congress to tax income is extremely broad, and has been held to include the power to tax gross receipts.
*985 Concededly, the application of the minimum tax to petitioner appears harsh, *87 but given the mandate of the Second Circuit and our inability to discern any constitutional infirmity, we have no choice but to hold that petitioner is subject to the alternative minimum tax. *88 to tax,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect during the taxable years at issue.↩
2. We also followed
3. We so conclude, not on the basis of respondent's argument that we are required to do so by
4. In his brief in the prior proceeding herein, petitioner raised additional constitutional arguments based upon alleged discrimination in light of the treatment accorded other gamblers. Because of our prior holding in petitioner's favor, we did not previously consider these arguments or the one advanced herein. Nor did petitioner ask the Second Circuit to consider these grounds as alternative arguments in support of his defense against respondent's appeal. Petitioner has now abandoned the arguments based upon alleged discrimination which, in any event, we believe were without merit (see
5. Although
6. See also
7. The precise scope of the decision in
8. The court later discussed "two very real distinctions between the activities of the professional and the casual gambler" --
"First, the casual gambler has no inevitable losses * * * representing the cost of goods raffled off in a lottery. Conceivably the casual gambler might never sustain a "loss" of any kind whatsoever.
"Moreover the casual gambler ordinarily does not view his transactions as a yearly operation. That is to say, even if he should sustain losses he views them as isolated incidents unrelated to his winnings, not intending to exploit the laws of probability in such a way as to emerge with a favorable balance over an extended period of operations. Since the casual gambler views his bets individually as isolated incidents, there seems no good reason why the taxing authority should not do likewise. The professional, by way of contrast, founds his business directly upon the operation of the laws of probability over an extended period of time. When the taxing authority chooses to view his business as a series of unrelated individual transactions it does violence to the truth and arbitrarily deprives him of the benefit of the laws of probability upon which his enterprise is necessarily founded and without which it cannot succeed over any substantial period. [
Petitioner, in his brief in the prior proceeding herein, asserted that he was a "system bettor." Although we doubt that the
9. Not having been a professional gambler, petitioner could not claim that his gambling losses were a cost of goods sold, and thus not a legitimately taxable component of gross income. See
10. We note that Congress, in a 1982 amendment to the minimum tax provisions, provided without comment that, in determining "alternative minimum taxable income," adjusted gross income is to be reduced by wagering losses allowable under sec. 165(d). Pub. L. 97-248, sec. 201(a), 96 Stat. 411 (1982); H. Rept. 97-760 (Conf.) (1982),
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