DocketNumber: Docket No. 44204
Citation Numbers: 24 T.C. 434, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165
Judges: Fossan
Filed Date: 6/21/1955
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*165
A wife who filed with her husband a joint return and joined in a petition asking redetermination of the deficiency in tax and fraud penalty as determined by respondent, is jointly and severally liable for the tax and penalty.
*434 OPINION.
Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of petitioners for the year 1948 in the amount of $ 4,251.62, to which he added an addition to the tax of $ 2,125.81 for fraud. Petitioners duly filed their petition, which was signed by both. Respondent filed his answer alleging fraud and petitioners duly filed their*166 reply. Respondent later filed an amended answer and petitioners duly filed their amended reply. The case came on for hearing on the circuit calendar at Denver, Colorado, on May 2, 1955.
At the hearing counsel for the petitioners appeared and submitted a stipulation agreeing that there was a deficiency in income tax for 1948 in the amount of $ 4,251.62 and a penalty of $ 2,125.81. This stipulation was signed by petitioner Arthur N. Dellit only. The whereabouts of petitioner Ursula Mae Dellit was stated to be unknown. Respondent filed a photostatic copy of petitioners' joint income tax return for 1948.
The parties, by counsel, submitted a single question for decision, i. e. -- is the petitioner Ursula Mae Dellit jointly and severally liable with her husband, Arthur N. Dellit, for the deficiency in tax and the fraud penalty for the year 1948?
The case falls under
Prior to the Revenue Act of 1938, * * * * (b) Husband and Wife. -- In the case of a husband and wife living together the income of each (even though one has no gross income) may be *435 included in a single return made by them jointly, in which case the tax shall be computed on the aggregate income, and the liability with respect to the tax shall be joint and several. * * *
See also
*169 In the instant case we have the situation in which a joint return was filed and where the husband and wife jointly filed their petition for redetermination. The husband has admitted liability for the tax and penalty and signed a stipulation to this effect. Under the law, the wife is jointly and severally liable for the tax and penalty. The burden of proof as to the tax liability rested on petitioners, and as to fraud, rested on respondent. The liability for the tax and penalty are admitted by petitioner Arthur N. Dellit and liability of the wife Ursula Mae Dellit for the tax and penalty is established by the pleadings and the evidence before us.
Pursuant to the stipulation and to the evidence before us,
1. "