DocketNumber: Docket No. 27579-12.
Citation Numbers: 113 T.C.M. 1467, 2017 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 100, 2017 T.C. Memo. 103
Judges: LARO
Filed Date: 6/7/2017
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
Decision will be entered for respondent.
H operated bail bonding and towing businesses throughout tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010. In connection with his bail bonding business, H made payments into a surety's indemnity fund, deductions for which R denied for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010. R also changed Ps' accounting method, requiring the inclusion in income of the indemnity fund's balance as of January 1, 2008.
With respect to H's business activities, Ps also claimed deductions for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010, which R denied, for car and truck expenditures, office expenditures, insurance, subcontractors, cost of goods sold, depreciation, and supplies. R's further adjustments to Ps' tax items for the 2008, 2009, and 2010 tax years are not in dispute.
Held: R's adjustments are sustained because Ps have failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the determinations in the notice of deficiency are incorrect.
LARO,
Additions to tax | Penalties | ||
2008 | $79,913 | $11,986.95 | $15,982.60 |
2009 | 37,316 | 9,329.00 | 7,463.20 |
2010 | 66,567 | 16,641.75 | 13,313.40 |
Petitioners have conceded all adjustments, along with the general applicability of the additions to tax under
After petitioners' concessions, we decide these remaining issues:
(1) whether petitioners may deduct for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010 payments made to an indemnity fund maintained with respect to Joseph Wages' bail bonding*101 activity. We hold that they may not;
(2) whether respondent properly changed petitioners' accounting method with respect to Mr. Wages' indemnity fund related to his bail bonding activity, resulting in additional income for tax year 2008. We hold that he did;
(3) whether petitioners have substantiated their claimed deductions for car and truck expenditures, office expenditures, insurance, subcontractors, cost of goods sold, depreciation, and supplies for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010 with respect to Mr. Wages' bail bonding activity. We hold that they have not.
The parties submitted this case fully stipulated under
While the Court left the record in this case open for a month and a half after the parties' submission of their first stipulation*102 of facts, no supplemental stipulation of facts followed during that time (one was filed later solely to introduce evidence of the petition's timely mailing); nor has either party moved to enter any substantive evidence beyond the agreed-upon statements in the first stipulation of facts and the stipulation of settled issues. Accordingly, we must render our decision on the basis of the record before us, limited as it may be.
The record shows that during the years at issue Mr. Wages operated bail bonding and towing businesses, to which respondent's adjustments relate. As part of his bail bonding business, Mr. Wages made certain payments to an indemnity fund. Furthermore, he claims to have incurred various expenses (which petitioners sought to deduct on their Federal income tax returns, and which, to the extent they remain disputed, are enumerated below) in the course of his bail bonding and towing businesses.
Petitioners admit that they neglected to file timely their Federal income tax returns for the years in issue. Their 2008 return was due on October 15, 2009, but was filed on January 4, 2010. Their 2009 return was due on April 15, 2010, but was filed on*103 May 24, 2011. And their 2010 return was due on April 15, 2011, but was filed on October 19, 2011.
Petitioners' tax returns have not been entered into the record, nor have the parties stipulated the content thereof. Nonetheless, from the pleadings we gather that petitioners filed Schedules C, Profit or Loss From Business, on which they claimed deductions for the various expenses at issue here. Mr. Wages aggregated the income and expenses for his two businesses on a single Schedule C for each of the tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010. Petitioners attached a separate Schedule C for Jennifer Wages to their 2008 Federal income tax return, which they admit now to having been done in error.
Respondent on August 8, 2012, issued a notice of deficiency to petitioners with respect to their income tax liabilities for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010. As we noted above, petitioners have conceded some of respondent's adjustments; we concern ourselves with only those that remain disputed.
*108 Respondent determined that payments into an indemnity fund in connection with Mr. Wages' bail bonding business were not currently deductible. Thus respondent adjusted*104 "other income" upward on Mr. Wages's 2008 Schedule C by changing petitioners' accounting method and including in income the $69,963 balance of the indemnity fund as of January 1, 2008, thereby offsetting all previous deductions petitioners had claimed with respect to that indemnity fund. Furthermore, respondent adjusted upward: (1) "insurance" on Mr. Wages' 2008 Schedule C by $46,398; (2) "other expenses" on Mr. Wages' 2009 Schedule C by $33,445; and (3) "other expenses" on Mr. Wages' 2010 Schedule C by $27,912. The parties agree that the amounts at issue are accurate but dispute the legal question of whether petitioners are entitled to claim current deductions for amounts paid to the indemnity fund.
In addition to his denial of a deduction for the indemnity fund payments, respondent disallowed several of petitioners' claimed Schedule C expense deductions on the grounds that petitioners failed to establish that the amounts were ordinary and necessary business expenses, were expended for the purposes designated, and were substantiated as required by
Car/truck expenses | $24,589 | $17,669 | $8,794 |
Office expenses | 3,500 | -0- | -0- |
Insurance | -0- | 4,499 | 4,881 |
Contract labor | 121,500 | -0- | 148,64 |
COGS-- purchases | -0- | 63,687 | -0- |
Depreciation/179 | -0- | 7,572 | 18,171 |
Supplies | -0- | -0- | 19,924 |
Petitioners claim that, although they do not have all the underlying records with respect to these expenses, the stipulated documentation in this case is sufficient to support deductions for them.
The parties further agree that the adjustments in the notice of deficiency relating to self-employment tax, the deduction for self-employment tax, exemptions, and the net operating loss carryforward are automatic and subject to change based on the substantive adjustments in this case. The parties concur that the penalties under
The last day for petitioners to file a petition with the Court was November 6, 2012. The petition, signed by petitioners' counsel and dated November*106 6, 2012, was received and filed by the Court in the morning of November 13, 2012. The envelope in which the petition arrived bore "stamps.com" postage and a certified mail sticker with a tracking number. There was no postmark, however, and since the Court received the petition after the date prescribed for filing it, the Court sua sponte raised the question of its jurisdiction under
Notwithstanding initial difficulties in finding evidence of their timely mailing of the petition, petitioners eventually found a certified mail receipt and the corresponding return receipt, each bearing a tracking number corresponding to that on the envelope in which the petition was mailed. The certified mail receipt bore a U.S. Postal Service postmark dated November 6, 2012, which under
Generally, the Commissioner's determination of a taxpayer's liability for an income tax deficiency is presumed to be correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving the determination improper by a preponderance of the evidence.
Petitioners have asserted a number of facts in their brief. Petitioners' proposed findings of fact*108 explain the indemnity fund arrangement between Mr. Wages' bail bonding business and the surety for which it was acting as an agent. The proposed findings of fact further allege that an independent contractor appointed by petitioners as their agent with respect to the bail bonding business, who took over the daily operations of the business after Mr. Wages suffered a stroke, stole petitioners' records and established a competing bail bonding business. Petitioners state that they have initiated a lawsuit against the former contractor in the circuit court for Rankin County, Mississippi.
Respondent objects to most of petitioners' proposed findings of fact on two grounds: first, that petitioners failed to comply with
We agree with respondent. The record in this case, notwithstanding the Court's holding it open for a month and a half after the parties' submission of their first stipulation of facts, is barren. Whatever facts have been established*109 we recite in the "Background" section of this opinion. Petitioners' remaining proposed*113 findings of fact find no support in the record: There are no stipulations, exhibits, or any other sources corroborating them, outside unsworn statements made in petitioners' petition, pretrial memorandum, and brief. Thus, we must accept the limited record in this case as it stands and decide the disputed issues accordingly.
The parties agree that Mr. Wages made payments to an indemnity fund in the course of his bail bonding business. Respondent disallowed the current deduction thereof in the amounts of $46,398 for 2008, $33,445 for 2009, and $27,912 for 2010.
In support of his disallowance of petitioners' deductions, respondent cites
Petitioners rest their argument on a different theory. They contend that the indemnity fund is controlled by a third-party surety and Mr. Wages' bail bonding business has no right to funds within the indemnity account, except insofar as a liability for which the business must indemnify the surety is discharged. Petitioners maintain that because the business has no control over or access to the funds, nor an expectation of their reacquisition, the amounts remitted to the fund should be deductible when paid. Petitioners further argue that should Mr. Wages' bail bonding business reacquire any sums from the indemnity fund in the future, those amounts should be recaptured in that year's gross receipts under the tax benefit rule codified in
Respondent disagrees with petitioners' theory. First, he points out that petitioners' argument rests on allegations that are not part of the evidentiary record in the case and thus petitioners have not sustained their burden of proof. Second, respondent argues that the tax benefit rule requires the*111 inclusion in income only of a recovered amount for which the taxpayer had received a tax benefit in a prior year,
We agree with respondent that petitioners have failed to satisfy their burden of proof. As we observed above, the burden is on the taxpayer to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the notice of deficiency is incorrect.
In the notice of deficiency, respondent changed petitioners' accounting method to include in income the $69,963 balance of the indemnity fund as of January 1, 2008. This change offset previous deductions petitioners had claimed with respect to payments remitted to the indemnity fund.
Respondent points out that he has the authority under
Petitioners in their petition asserted that because respondent's audit and resultant notice of deficiency pertained only to tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010,*117 and the limitations periods for previous tax years had expired, the change in accounting method violated petitioners' procedural due process rights and was an attempt by respondent to circumvent the statute of limitations. However, petitioners failed to advance any argument on the accounting method change in their pretrial memorandum or their brief.
From petitioners' failure in their pretrial memorandum and brief to argue the accounting method change separately from respondent's disallowance of their claimed deductions for the indemnity fund remittances, we infer that they have abandoned their due process and statute of limitations theories. Since petitioners have abandoned their separate arguments on the change of accounting method, and since they have adduced no evidence with respect to it, we find that they have failed to carry their burden of proof with respect to this adjustment.
Respondent disallowed the deduction for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010 of certain expenses for car and truck, office, insurance, subcontractors, cost of goods*118 sold, depreciation, and supplies. The denied deductions totaled $149,589 for tax year 2008, $93,427 for tax year 2009, and $200,415 for tax year 2010.
Respondent argues that while
*119 For their part, petitioners assert that through no fault of theirs a third party took their records and that this entitles them to reconstruct their records to substantiate the deductions claimed. Petitioners point to
Respondent in his answering brief points out that the
We agree with respondent and find that petitioners have not substantiated their reported expenses. As we took pains to note above, the record in this case is sparse. Petitioners have presented nothing to the Court to establish either the fact of their payment of the expenses in question or the amounts thereof.
Petitioners urge us to apply the
Petitioners claim to have provided "voluminous reconstructed records" to respondent during examination. Yet none of these records have been provided to the Court. As respondent correctly noted, this Court does not look behind a notice of deficiency to examine the evidence used: Proceedings herein are de novo and based on the merits of the case and not on any previous record developed at the administrative level.
In the absence of any evidence before us, we cannot apply
In addition to deficiencies for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010, respondent determined an addition to tax under
Petitioners' claims that Mr. Wages suffered a stroke and his former associate purloined his records, if true, paint a tragic tale. Regrettably, there is no evidence in the record before us to substantiate either these claims or petitioners' claimed expense deductions. Nor is there sufficient evidence to justify petitioners' claimed deductions of indemnity fund contributions. Thus we must find that petitioners have failed to satisfy their burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the notice of deficiency is incorrect.
We have considered all of the parties' arguments, and to the extent not discussed above, conclude that those*120 arguments are irrelevant, moot, or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code applicable for the years in issue. Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
Cohan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 39 F.2d 540 ( 1930 )
James M. Rankin Shirley Rankin v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 138 F.3d 1286 ( 1998 )
Hillsboro National Bank v. Commissioner , 103 S. Ct. 1134 ( 1983 )
Indopco, Inc. v. Commissioner , 112 S. Ct. 1039 ( 1992 )
Green Gas Del. Statutory Trust v. Comm'r , 147 T.C. 1 ( 2016 )
W. Horace Williams, Sr., and Viola Bloch Williams v. United ... , 245 F.2d 559 ( 1957 )
Welch v. Helvering , 54 S. Ct. 8 ( 1933 )
Frank J. Hradesky v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 540 F.2d 821 ( 1976 )
Greenberg's Express, Inc. v. Commissioner , 62 T.C. 324 ( 1974 )