DocketNumber: Docket 24166-12
Judges: Kerrigan, Vasquez, Thornton, Colvin, Gale, Goeke, Paris, Lauber, Nega, Holmes, Buch, Halpern, Foley, Gustafson, Morrison
Filed Date: 9/23/2014
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Decision will be entered for respondent.
While P worked for the Federal Government, he participated in the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS). After P retired, he received a letter explaining that he could elect to increase his CSRS retirement annuity by remitting a fixed sum. P remitted the funds to CSRS. Because P did not have sufficient funds in his bank account, he borrowed a portion of the fixed sum. P paid off the loan and replenished his bank account by making withdrawals from his traditional individual retirement account (IRA).
P did not report any of the amounts he withdrew from his IRA as taxable income. P contends that he engaged in a tax-free rollover.
R contends that rollover contributions cannot be made to CSRS.
*224 KERRIGAN,
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
The sole issue for consideration is whether a tax-free rollover occurred when petitioner withdrew funds from his traditional individual retirement account (IRA) to cover a deposit of the same amount to the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS).
Some facts have been stipulated and are so found. Petitioner resided in Florida when he filed the petition.
Petitioner was an employee of the Social Security Administration in 2009 and retired before April 13, 2010. He was eligible to participate in*42 Federal Government retirement plans offered through the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), and he participated in CSRS during his years of Government service.
After petitioner retired, OPM mailed him a letter on April 13, 2010, explaining that he could elect to increase his CSRS retirement annuity by remitting $17,832 with respect to creditable Government service for a period during which no retirement contributions had been withheld from his salary. The letter required that petitioner remit the funds within 15 days of the date of the letter. The letter was silent as to whether the remittance could be made through a tax-free rollover contribution.
Petitioner elected to remit to CSRS the $17,832 to increase his retirement annuity. Because petitioner did not have sufficient funds to make the entire payment directly from his bank account, he borrowed a portion of the $17,832 from a friend. On April 27, 2010, petitioner mailed a check to OPM for $17,832.
During 2010 petitioner maintained a traditional IRA with Fidelity Investments (Fidelity). Petitioner made two separate requests to withdraw funds from his Fidelity IRA, one in April 2010 and another in May 2010. Petitioner's monthly Fidelity*43 investment report for April 2010 shows that he requested a $5,000 distribution, of which $4,500 was sent to him on April 15, 2010, and $500 was withheld to satisfy Federal income tax liability in connection with the distribution. Petitioner's Fidelity investment report for May 2010 shows that he requested a $12,832 distribution, which was sent entirely to him on May 3, 2010; no Federal tax was withheld. Petitioner used the funds he received from Fidelity to reimburse his friend and to replenish his bank account.
Fidelity issued petitioner a Form 1099-R, Distributions From Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc., in which it reported $17,832 in distributions and listed the entire $17,832 as taxable *226 income. On his Form 1040A, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for tax year 2010 petitioner reported receipt of the $17,832 in distributions from his Fidelity IRA on line 11a, IRA Distributions. He did not report any of the $17,832 as taxable income as a result of those distributions on line 11b, Taxable Amount.
On July 2, 2012, respondent issued petitioner a notice of deficiency which determined a deficiency of $4,590 and treated the $17,832*44 withdrawal from the IRA as taxable income.
Generally, the Commissioner's determinations in a notice of deficiency are presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving those determinations are erroneous.
CSRS is a statutorily created retirement plan designed to provide retirement benefits in the form of annuities and lump-sum benefits to Federal civil service employees.
To assure that income will be taxed only once, the Internal Revenue Code deems an annuity, such as one for a CSRS participant, to have two components: one taxable, one not.
Petitioner contends that all distributions from CSRS are taxable and that unless the distributions from his IRA are excluded from income, he will be subject to double taxation. Petitioner will not be subject to double taxation, however, because under
CSRS provisions include that "[e]ach employee or Member credited with civilian service after July 31, 1920, for which*46 retirement deductions or deposits have not been made, may deposit with interest an amount equal to * * * [certain statutorily defined] percentages of his basic pay received for that service".
In general, any amount paid or distributed out of an individual retirement plan is included in the gross income of the payee or distributee as provided in
Even though there is no specific provision in the Internal Revenue Code concerning whether a qualified trust must accept a rollover that is an indirect transfer from an IRA in order to constitute an eligible retirement plan for purposes of
The instant case does not involve a defined contribution plan; rather, it involves a defined benefit plan. However, for the reasons explained below, we conclude and hold that because CSRS did not accept petitioner's remittance as a rollover, he must include his withdrawals in his taxable income for 2010.
The letter that OPM sent to petitioner after he retired explained how he could make a deposit to make up for years for which no retirement contributions were withheld from his pay. The letter requested that a check be sent to OPM for these contributions; it is silent on whether the deposit can be made as a rollover. Title
Amounts deposited under
The instant case involves an indirect transfer. Because it was not a direct transfer, CSRS was likely not aware that petitioner was attempting to make a tax-free rollover contribution, and there is nothing in the record to suggest that petitioner informed CSRS of his attempt to make a rollover. Unless it explicitly accepted rollovers, a qualified plan such as CSRS would not be aware of the proper tax treatment of the payment upon distribution.
Even if CSRS accepted rollovers,
Any contention we have not addressed is irrelevant, moot, or meritless.
To reflect the foregoing,
Reviewed by the Court.
THORNTON, COLVIN, GALE, GOEKE, PARIS, LAUBER, and NEGA,
VASQUEZ,
I agree with the facts as laid out by the opinion of the Court. OPM gave petitioner an opportunity to make a payment to CSRS in order to increase his annuity, as provided by
As the opinion of the Court recognizes, CSRS is a qualified trust.
"A trustee * * * has broad powers that are only 'limited by statute or the terms of the trust'".
The same analysis holds true here. As the administrator of CSRS, OPM may choose whether to accept rollover contributions to CSRS. No statute or regulation restricts OPM's authority to do so. OPM chose not to accept rollovers. Therefore, *232 petitioner's payment to CSRS was not a rollover contribution.
In his dissent, Judge Buch raises the issue of the plain language of There is, of course, no more persuasive evidence of the purpose of a statute than the words by which the legislature undertook to give expression to its wishes. Often these words are sufficient in and of themselves to determine the purpose of the legislation.*54 * * * Frequently, however, even when the plain meaning did not produce absurd results but merely an unreasonable one 'plainly at variance with the policy of the legislation as a whole' this Court has followed that purpose, rather than the literal words. * * *
Under Judge Buch's reading of the statute, neither CSRS nor any other qualified plan or trust has the discretion to choose whether to accept rollover contributions. I do not believe that such an approach is reasonable or in keeping with Congress' intent.
LAUBER,
HALPERN,
*233 A deficiency determination may be sustained upon any legal ground that supports it, even though the grounds relied upon by the Commissioner may have been different or unsound. It is the Court's right and obligation to decide the case upon what it considers to be the correct application of the law, based upon the record presented, whether the parties have properly pleaded the controlling issues or not. * * * [I]f the Court feels that a full and fair opportunity to present the facts has been given, and the Court feels that no further briefing on the law is necessary,*56 the Court can go forward and decide the case on the record presented.
We have sufficient facts to permit us to determine that the second distribution fails under the statutory definition of a rollover because it could not be rolled over before it was received, and I believe that we are obligated to so conclude.
HOLMES and BUCH,
BUCH,
This may or may not be a good or wise rule, but that should be irrelevant. It is not our role to act as rulemaker. Indeed, on the same day the Court Conference considered this opinion, the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit made this very point: "The Tax Court is in the business of interpreting and applying the internal revenue laws,
Indeed, over the years circuit after circuit has had occasion to remind us of this point.
And the Supreme Court has reminded us.
We have acknowledged this point, as well.
*236 So with that, I would look to the law as written and apply it to the material facts, which are fairly straightforward. Mr. Bohner worked for the Social Security Administration and participated in the CSRS during his years of service. After Mr. Bohner retired, he*60 received a letter from OPM explaining that he could increase his CSRS retirement annuity by remitting $17,832 to make up for years when he did not have retirement contributions withheld. The letter required the amount to be paid within 15 days. The letter was silent as to whether that payment could be made through an indirect rollover.*61 valid rollovers. Paragraph (1) [providing that distributions are taxable] does not apply to any amount paid or distributed out of an individual retirement account or individual retirement annuity to the individual for whose benefit the account or annuity is maintained if-- * * * * (ii) the entire amount received (including money and any other property) is paid into an eligible retirement plan for the benefit of such individual not later than the 60th day after the date on which the payment *237 or distribution is received, except that the maximum amount which may be paid into such plan may not exceed the portion of the amount received which is includible in gross income (determined without regard to this paragraph).
CSRS is an "eligible retirement plan". Through a series of cross-references, a qualified trust is an eligible retirement plan.
So we must see whether either of the two distributions qualifies as a rollover. The opinion of the Court denies rollover treatment for both distributions in one fell swoop.
Like the facts, the law is fairly straightforward. The requirements for a distribution to be treated as a rollover are found in
The opinion of the Court makes it abundantly clear that there is no rule that overrides the rollover treatment allowed under
In looking to analogous provisions to assist in interpreting
The strongest statutory authority the opinion of the Court can muster is the statement "The statutory provisions governing CSRS do not include a provision allowing pretax employee contributions."
The provisions governing the tax treatment of CSRS distributions and rollovers into the CSRS are (unsurprisingly) found in title 26, the Internal Revenue Code.
The opinion of the Court seems intent on solving a problem that does not exist. The statutory scheme places no weight on whether CSRS has a practice of accepting rollover contributions. Indeed, the statute places no weight on a plan's preferences regarding accepting rollovers when determining the taxability of a rollover distribution. The Internal Revenue Code, however, would tax that rollover when it comes out of CSRS. If CSRS does not properly account for that (a fact that is not in the record), then that is a problem for those who administer CSRS to resolve, not the Court.
The concurring opinion cites
On the basis of the foregoing, the first distribution fulfills the necessary requirements for a rollover contribution. As for the second of the two Fidelity distributions, that distribution may fail to qualify as a rollover for reasons not addressed here.
*240 Because Mr. Bohner complied with all the necessary steps*67 to make a rollover contribution as to the first distribution, I dissent.
HALPERN, FOLEY, HOLMES, GUSTAFSON, and MORRISON,
1. The Commissioner has taken the position in published guidance that CSRS is a qualified trust under
2. Respondent also contends that petitioner's deposit to CSRS is not a rollover because the funds paid to CSRS were not a distribution from an IRA. We have held that the phrase "if the entire amount is contributed into an eligible retirement plan" is not to be read so narrowly as to require the taxpayer to roll over the exact same money that he or she received in the distribution from the IRA.
1. Such a statement would not affect the outcome the opinion of the Court reaches, and whether any such statement would affect the outcome under the analysis in this dissent is not an issue before us.↩
2.
3. Both the opinion of the Court and respondent cite a regulation for the proposition that eligible retirement plans are not required to accept rollovers.
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