DocketNumber: Docket No. 2001-11
Judges: CHIECHI
Filed Date: 7/15/2013
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
An order granting respondent's motion as supplemented and decision for respondent will be entered.
CHIECHI, The record for purposes of respondent's motion establishes, the parties agree with, and/or the parties do not dispute the following factual background. Petitioners *174 resided in Florida at the time they filed the petition. On September 12, 1990, the Circuit Court in and for the County of Santa Rosa, Florida (Santa Rosa Circuit Court), issued a final judgment titled "FINAL JUDGMENT FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE" (dissolution judgment) with respect to the petition for dissolution of marriage that John David Nye (Mr. Nye), a petitioner herein, had filed in that court. In the dissolution judgment, the Santa Rosa Circuit Court ordered and adjudged, inter alia, that the marriage between Mr. Nye and Alice C. Nye was dissolved. The dissolution judgment also ordered and adjudged "That the parties [Mr. Nye and Alice C. Nye] have freely and voluntarily entered into a Separation and Property Settlement Agreement dated August 23, *168 1990, the original being attached hereto, incorporated herein, and the parties shall comply with its terms." The "Separation and Property Settlement Agreement dated August 23, 1990" (property settlement agreement) that the Santa Rosa Circuit Court incorporated into its dissolution judgment, the terms of which that court required Mr. Nye and Alice C. Nye to follow, provided in pertinent part: *177 10. 11. 12. Around the end of 2006, Alice C. Nye filed with the Santa Rosa Circuit Court a document titled "SUPPLEMENTAL PETITION FOR MODIFICATION" (petition for modification of dissolution judgment). *170 On December 7, 2007, while Alice C. Nye's petition for modification of dissolution judgment was pending in the Santa Rosa Circuit Court (dissolution judgment modification case), she and Mr. Nye signed a document titled "Mediation Settlement Agreement" (mediation agreement). In that agreement, *178 Alice C. Nye and Mr. Nye agreed to the following settlement of that dissolution judgment modification case pending in the Santa Rosa Circuit Court: The undersigned parties hereby agree to fully settle this case as follows: FH [Mr. Nye] to pay FW [Alice C. Nye] $350,000 before March 6, 2008, (and fully & promptly pay all alimony until FW receives the $350,000) and FW to quit claim 2809 Whisper Pine Dr., Gulf Breeze, to FH. After payment, no further alimony, insurance & other obligations shall be due from FH to FW. Each party to pay own attorneys fees and costs. November & December alimony payments past due shall be paid no later than December 11, 2007. By letter dated December 12, 2007 (Ms. Anderson's December 12, 2007 letter), Kathleen E. Anderson (Ms. Anderson), the attorney who was representing Alice C. Nye in the dissolution judgment modification case, notified James L. Chase (Mr. Chase), who was representing Mr. Nye in that case, *171 dissolution judgment until Mr. Nye made on or before March 6, 2008, a payment *179 of $350,000 to Alice C. Nye to which he had agreed in the mediation agreement. Ms. Anderson's December 12, 2007 letter stated: We received a telephone call from your office inquiring as to the proposed Final Judgment of Modification. Pursuant to my previous correspondence to you, I will not file this document until your client has paid mine. If your client pays mine prior to the "drop dead date" as set forth in the Agreement, then upon receipt of the funds due and owing to my client, I will forward the proposed Final Judgment of Modification to the Court. I enclose herewith a proposed Final Judgment of Modification for your review and initialing; however, again, I will not forward this document along to the Court until my client has been paid. Similarly, and as previously stated in my correspondence to you, my client will not execute the Quit Claim Deed of the property to your client until she has received the funds due and owing to her as set forth in the Mediated Settlement Agreement. I am sure you understand my rationale for this. On January 28, 2008, Mr. Nye made a payment of $350,000 ($350,000 payment) to *180 Alice C. Nye to which he had agreed in the mediation agreement. Thereafter, on February 4, 2008, the Santa Rosa Circuit Court issued a final judgment titled "Final Judgment of Modification" (modification judgment) in the dissolution judgment modification case. In the modification judgment, that court incorporated by reference into that judgment and approved the mediation agreement between Mr. Nye and Alice C. Nye. The modification judgment ordered and adjudged: "The parties' Mediation Settlement Agreement entered *172 into and executed by the respective parties on December 7, 2007, is hereby adopted by the Court and the parties are ordered to comply with the terms and conditions set forth in the attached Mediation and Settlement Agreement." Petitioners filed a Federal income tax (tax) return for their taxable year 2008 (2008 return). In that return, they claimed an alimony deduction under The issue presented in respondent's motion is whether petitioners are entitled to deduct as alimony under (b) Alimony or Separate Maintenance Payments Defined.—For purposes of this section— (1) In general.—The term "alimony or separate maintenance payment" means any payment in cash if— (A) such payment is received by (or on behalf of) a spouse *184 under a divorce or separation instrument, (B) the divorce or separation instrument does not designate such payment as a payment which is not includible in gross income under this section and not allowable as a deduction under section 215, (C) in the case of an individual legally separated from his spouse under a decree of divorce or of separate maintenance, the payee spouse and the payor spouse are not members of the same household at the time such payment is made, and (D) there is no liability to make any such payment for any period after the death of the payee spouse and there is no liability to make any payment (in cash or property) as a substitute for such payments after the death of the payee spouse. (b) Alimony or Separate Maintenance Payments Defined.—For purposes of this section— * * * * (2) Divorce or separation instrument.—The term "divorce or separation instrument" means— (A) a decree of divorce or separate maintenance or a written instrument incident to such a decree, (B) a written separation agreement, *185 or (C) a decree (not described in subparagraph (A)) requiring a spouse to make payments for the support or maintenance of the other spouse. The parties agree that the payment at issue must meet all four requirements in *177 It is respondent's position that the payment at issue satisfies neither The parties agree that on December 7, 2007, the effective date of the mediation agreement between Mr. *186 Nye and Alice C. Nye, that agreement became binding on Mr. Nye and Alice C. Nye, and Mr. Nye became obligated pursuant thereto to make the $350,000 payment to Alice C. Nye on or before March 6, 2008. The requirement in The Court turns first to the terms of the mediation agreement. That agreement is silent as to whether Mr. Nye's obligation in that agreement to make *178 the $350,000 payment to Alice C. Nye would have terminated if she (or he) had died after December 7, 2007, the effective date of that agreement, and before the Santa Rosa Circuit Court had decided what, if any, action to take with respect to Alice C. Nye's petition for modification of dissolution judgment that was pending *187 in that court. Because the mediation agreement is silent, the Court turns for guidance to the law of the State of Florida (Florida law). The Court finds In contrast to the instant case, however, in The Florida district court of appeals framed *190 the issue presented to it on appeal in The Florida district court of appeals observed that if the Florida circuit court had approved the Van Boven settlement agreement and had entered a judgment modifying the Van Boven divorce decree by incorporating that agreement into that decree before the former wife had died, the Florida district court of appeals would have had "no difficulty in concluding that the modification of the final decree * * * [by the Florida circuit court] *191 fixed appellant's [former husband's] obligation for the entire lump sum as of the time of the modification, even though * * * [the former wife's] death should occur thereafter". Under Florida contract law, when one of the parties to a contract dies, that party's rights and obligations under the contract generally survive that party's death and become binding on, and enforceable by, the personal representative of that party's estate. The Court concludes that under Florida contract law Mr. Nye's obligation under the mediation agreement to make the $350,000 payment to Alice C. Nye *183 would not have terminated if she (or he) had died after December 7, 2007, the effective date of that agreement, and before the Santa Rosa Circuit Court had decided what, if any, action to take with respect to Alice C. Nye's petition for modification of dissolution judgment pending in that court. *193 The Court further concludes that the payment at issue does not satisfy the requirement in The Court has considered all of the contentions and arguments of the parties that are not discussed herein, and we find them to be without merit, irrelevant, and/or moot. *194 *195 *184 To reflect the foregoing,
1. Respondent filed a motion for summary judgment (respondent's motion). Petitioners filed a response to respondent's motion (petitioners' response), and respondent filed a reply to petitioners' response (respondent's reply). The Court did not find respondent's motion, petitioners' response, and respondent's reply to be helpful in resolving the issue presented in respondent's motion. As a result, the Court ordered the parties to supplement their respective filings. Respondent filed a supplement to respondent's motion, and petitioners filed a supplement to petitioners' response. Unfortunately, the Court did not find those respective supplements to be helpful.↩
2. The parties herein are in agreement that Mr. Nye and Alice C. Nye agreed as part of their property settlement agreement that at the earlier of Mr. Nye's death or the death of both of his parents Mr. Nye would transfer to Alice C. Nye title to certain real property titled in his name, subject to any existing mortgage (Mr. Nye's real property). They also agree that at the time of the divorce judgment Mr. Nye's parents were residing in that real property. In addition, the parties agree that the estimated value of Mr. Nye's real property was $60,000, although they disagree as to when that property was so valued. The parties also disagree about whether the mortgage loan to which Mr. Nye's real property was subject at the time it was so valued was $45,000 or $46,000. Those disagreements are not material to our determination of whether to grant respondent's motion.
3. Mr. Nye also filed a petition with the Santa Rosa Circuit Court. The record does not establish what Mr. Nye sought in that petition.↩
4. Mr. Chase also is attorney of record for petitioners in the instant case.↩
5. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year at issue. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
6. The $3,750 of the $350,000 payment that respondent allowed as an alimony deduction in the notice is equal to the sum of the respective amounts for permanent alimony ($3,600) and for medical insurance ($150) that Mr. Nye was required to pay each month under the property settlement agreement that was incorporated into the dissolution judgment. The $3,750 that respondent allowed as an alimony deduction in the notice is not at issue in this case.↩
7. Respondent made certain other determinations in the notice, the resolution of the propriety of which depends on our resolution of the issue under
8. In fact, petitioners alleged in the petition that "[t]he only issue is the deductibility of the $350,000 as alimony."↩
9.
10. Consistent with
11. The Court's research did not lead the Court to any opinion of the Florida Supreme Court, the highest court in Florida, that had, like
12. In the instant case, both the former husband and the former wife filed a petition.↩
13. The lump sum of money that the former husband agreed in the Van Boven settlement agreement to pay to the former wife was payable in installments.
14.
15. The Florida district court of appeals stated several times that it was not addressing the issue of the contractual liability of the former husband under the Van Boven settlement agreement.
16. The Court shall address respondent's argument in respondent's motion that petitioners are deemed to have conceded respondent's determination in the notice that they are liable for their taxable year 2008 for the accuracy-related penalty under
Assuming arguendo that the Court had not concluded that petitioners are deemed to have conceded respondent's determination to impose the accuracy-related penalty on them, the only argument that petitioners advance in their response to respondent's motion as to why they are not liable for that penalty is that "based on the facts, it is Petitioners' position that the proposed deficiency determination is incorrect and therefore there is no basis for a proposed assessment of a negligence penalty." The Court has sustained respondent's determination to disallow the payment at issue as an alimony deduction, and petitioners have not suggested that there is any other reason the Court should not sustain the determination under