DocketNumber: Docket No. 4986-79.
Filed Date: 3/3/1986
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
Petitioner-husband was travelling by airplane on a business trip, when suddenly he began to act in a bizarre and irrational manner; he also threatened two members of the flight crew and assaulted a passenger. After the airplane landed, petitioner-husband was arrested. Two weeks later, he was indicted. At trial, the court rendered an acquittal verdict by reason of temporary insanity. Petitioners paid $16,850 for legal fees in the criminal case and paid $3,800 to the assaulted passenger in settlement of a related civil claim.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
CHABOT,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated; the stipulation and the stipulated exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
When the petition was filed in the instant case, petitioners Sam Gilliam Jr. (hereinafter sometimes referred to as "Gilliam"), and Dorothy B. Gilliam, husband and wife, resided in Washington, D.C.
Gilliam was born in Tupelo, Mississippi, in 1933, and raised in Louisville, Kentucky. In 1961, he received a master of arts degree in painting from the University of Louisville.
Gilliam is, and was at all material periods, a noted artist. His works have been exhibited in numerous art galleries throughout the United States and Europe, including *527 the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the Karl Solway Gallery, Cincinnati, Ohio; the Phoenix Gallery, San Francisco, California; and the University of California, Irvine, California. His works have also been exhibited and sold at the Fendrick Gallery, Washington, D.C. In addition, Gilliam is, and was at all material periods, a teacher of art. On occasion, Gilliam lectured and taught art at various institutions.
Gilliam accepted an invitation to lecture and teach for a week at the Memphis Academy of Arts in Memphis, Tennessee. On Sunday, February 23, 1975, he flew to Memphis to fulfill this business obligation.
Gilliam had a history of hospitalizations for mental and emotional disturbances and continued to be under psychiatric care until the time of his trip to Memphis. In December 1963, Gilliam was hospitalized in Louisville; Gilliam had anxieties about his work as an artist. For periods of time in both 1965 and 1966, Gilliam suffered from depression and was unable to work. In 1970, Gilliam was again hospitalized. In 1973, while Gilliam was a visiting artist at a number of university campuses in California, *528 he found it necessary to consult an airport physician; however, when he returned to Washington, D.C., Gilliam did not require hospitalization.
Before his Memphis trip, Gilliam created a 225-foot painting for the Thirty-fourth Biennial Exhibition of American Painting at the Corcoran Gallery of Art (hereinafter sometimes referred to as "the Exhibition"). The Exhibition opened on Friday evening, February 21, 1975. In addition, Gilliam was in the process of preparing a giant mural for an outside wall of the Philadelphia Museum of Art for the 1975 Spring Festival in Philadelphia. The budget plans for this mural were due on Monday, February 24, 1975.
On the night before his Memphis trip, Gilliam felt anxious and unable to rest. On Sunday morning, Gilliam contacted Ranville Clark (hereinafter sometimes referred to as "Clark"), a doctor Gilliam had been consulting intermittently over the years, and asked Clark to prescribe some medication to relieve his anxiety. Clark arranged for Gilliam to pick up a prescription of the drug Dalmane on the way to the airport. Gilliam had taken medication frequently during the preceding 10 years. Clark had never before prescribed Dalmane for Gilliam. *529
On Sunday, February 23, 1975, Gilliam got the prescription and at about 3:25 p.m., he boarded American Airlines flight 395 at Washington National Airport, Washington, D.C., bound for Memphis. Gilliam occupied a window seat. He took the Dalmane for the first time shortly after boarding the airplane.
About one and one-half hours after the airplane departed Washington National Airport, Gilliam began to act in an irrational manner. He talked of bizarre events and had difficulty in speaking. According to some witnesses, he appeared to be airsick and held his head. Gilliam began to feel trapped, anxious, disoriented, and very agitated. Gilliam said that the plane was going to crash and that he wanted a life raft. Gilliam entered the aisle and, while going from one end of the airplane to the other, he tried to exit from three different doors. Then Gilliam struck Seiji Nakamura (hereinafter sometimes referred to as "Nakamura"), another passenger, several times with a telephone receiver. Nakamura was seated toward the rear of the airplane, near one of the exits. Gilliam also threatened the navigator and a stewardess, called for help, and cried. As a result of the attack, Nakamura *530 sustained a one-inch laceration above his left eyebrow which required four sutures. Nakamura also suffered ecchymosis of the left arm and pains in his left wrist. Nakamura was treated for these injuries at Methodist Hospital in Memphis.
On arriving in Memphis, Gilliam was arrested by Federal officials. On March 10, 1975, Gilliam was indicted. He was brought to trial in the United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee, Western Division, on one count of violation of
Petitioners paid $8,250 and $8,600 for legal fees in 1975 and 1976, respectively, in connection with both the criminal trial and Nakamura's civil claim. In 1975, petitioners also paid $3,800 to Nakamura in settlement of *531 the civil claim.
Petitioners claimed deductions for the amounts paid in 1975 and 1976 on the appropriate individual income tax returns. Respondent disallowed the amounts claimed in both years attributable to the incident on the airplane. supra, are not ordinary expenses of Gilliam's *532 trades or businesses.
OPINION
Petitioners contend that they are entitled to deduct the amounts paid in defense of the criminal prosecution and in settlement of the related civil claim under
Respondent maintains that
We agree with respondent that the expenses are not ordinary expenses of Gilliam's trade or business.
In the second place, these payments were not "ordinary" ones for the conduct of the kind of business in which, we assume Review of the many decided cases is of little aid since each turns on its special facts. But the principle is clear. And on application of that principle to these facts, it seems evident that the payments in question cannot be placed in the category of those items of expense which a conservator of an estate, a custodian of a portfolio, a supervisor of a group of investments, a manager of wide financial and business interests, or a substantial stockholder in a corporation engaged in conserving and enhancing his estate would ordinarily incur. We cannot assume that they are embraced within the normal overhead or operating costs of such activities. There is no evidence that stockholders or investors, in furtherance of enhancing and conserving their estates, ordinarily or frequently lend such assistance to employee stock purchase plans of their corporations. An in absence of such evidence there is no basis for an assumption, in experience or common knowledge, that these payments are to be placed in the same category as typically ordinary expenses of such activities, e.g., rental of safe deposit boxes, cost of investment counsel or of investment *537 services, salaries of secretaries and the like. Rather these payments seem to us to represent most extraordinary expenses for that type of activity. Therefore, the claim for deduction falls, as did the claim of an officer of a corporation who paid its debts to strengthen his own standing and credit.
Petitioners bear the burden of proving entitlement to a deduction under
We conclude that Gilliam's expenses are not ordinary expenses of his trades or businesses.
It is instructive to compare the instant case with
In It is true that the expenditure in the instant case did not further petitioner's business in any economic sense; nor is it, we hope, the type of expenditure that many businesses are called upon to pay. Nevertheless, neither factor lessens the direct relationship between the expenditure and the business. Automobile travel by petitioner was an integral part of this business.
In
Petitioners also rely on
In sum, Gilliam's expenses were of a kind similar to those of the taxpayers in
1. Of these amounts, self-employment taxes under chapter 2 are $200 for 1975 and $611 for 1976; the remaining amounts are chapter 1 income tax.
Unless indicated otherwise, all section and chapter references are to sections and chapters of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as in effect for the years in issue. ↩
2. The self-employment tax adjustments and medical expense adjustments are derivative and depend on the resolution of the issue for decision.↩
3. Although in both years respondent disallowed petitioners' expenditures arising out of the incident on the airplane and allowed the remainder of the claimed legal and professional fees deduction, the record fails to indicate why for 1976 respondent disallowed an additional $1,000 over the amount petitioners paid for Gilliam's legal representation. Since petitioners dispute only the disallowed deductions which relate to the incident on the airplane and both sides agree that petitioners paid $8,600 for legal fees in 1976, we deem petitioners to have conceded the additional $1,000 claimed as a legal and professional fees deduction for 1976.
4. At trial, petitioners asserted that the amounts paid were deductible under
5.
(a) In General.--There shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business * * * ↩
6. As to section 212, see n. 4,