LARO
MEMORANDUM OPINION
LARO, Judge: This case is before the Court pursuant to a petition filed by Madeline Davis Heller for a redetermination of respondent's determination of a deficiency of $ 3,698.80 in petitioner's 1989 Federal income tax. The sole issue for decision is whether $ 20,400 received by petitioner in 1989 from her former husband constitutes alimony or child support under section 71. *432 indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue. Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
Background
Pursuant to Rule 122(a), the parties submitted this case to the Court without trial; the record in this case consists of the pleadings and the facts recited in a joint stipulation with accompanying exhibits. These facts and exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. When she filed her petition, petitioner resided in Santa Monica, California.
Petitioner was divorced from Lawrence Heller (Heller) on December 17, 1987. Petitioner and Heller had two minor children who resided with petitioner during 1989. As required by the divorce instrument, Heller paid petitioner $ 32,400 in child and spousal support during 1989. Of that amount, the divorce instrument designated $ 20,400 as spousal support and $ 12,000 as child support. In the event * * * [petitioner] seeks a modification of child support prior to October 31, 1992, and an increase of child support is ordered by the Court, the Court shall reduce * * * [Heller's] spousal support by $ 1 for every one $ 1 of increased child support. [Emphasis added.]
Petitioner did not report any alimony on her 1989 Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return.
Discussion
Section 71(a) provides that there shall be included in gross income any amount received as alimony or as separate maintenance. There is a corresponding deduction allowed under section 215 for payments of alimony or separate maintenance made by an individual. Payments made for child support are neither includable under section 71 nor deductible under section 215.
Alimony does not include that part of a payment which is payable for child support. Sec. 71(c). Child support is that part of the payment which the terms of the divorce instrument fix as payable for the support of the children of the payor spouse. Sec. 71(c)(1). An amount is treated as fixed under section 71(c)(1) if it will be reduced on the happening of a contingency specified in the divorce instrument relating to a child or at a time which can clearly be associated with a contingency related to the child. Sec. 71(c)(2). Section 71(c)(2)(A) parenthetically gives examples of events which will be considered contingencies to which the subsection shall apply. The examples include: Attaining a specified age, marrying, dying, leaving school, or a similar contingency. The statutory list is not exhaustive. The regulations add the child's attaining a specified income level, leaving the spouse's household or gaining employment, and further suggest that any contingency relates to a child if it depends "on any event relating to that child". Sec. 1.71-1T(c) Q&A 17, Temporary Income Tax Regs., 49 Fed. Reg. 34456-34457 (Aug. 31, 1984).
Petitioner argues that the provision of the divorce instrument that allows for a modification of child support is a contingency related to a child. Therefore, section 71(c)(2)(A) reclassifies any spousal support that is payable under the divorce instrument as child support. Given that spousal support will be reduced dollar-for-dollar by any future court-ordered increase in child support, petitioner concludes that spousal support is contingent upon her children attaining a specified income level. See sec. 1.71-1T(c) Q&A 17, Temporary Income Tax Regs., 49 Fed. Reg. 34456-34457 (Aug. 31, 1984).
We disagree with petitioner. Section 71(c)(2) was enacted by the Congress in 1984 in response to the Supreme Court's opinion in Commissioner v. Lester, 366 U.S. 299 (1961). See generally Staff of Joint Comm. on Taxation, General Explanation of the Revenue Provisions of the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, at 713 (J. Comm. Print 1985). The Lester case involved a written agreement in which the taxpayer was required to make payments for spousal and child support. The agreement did not allocate the payments between alimony and child support. The Supreme Court held that an agreement directing a reduction by one-sixth of payments payable for the support of the taxpayer's children upon a child's marriage, emancipation, or death, did not adequately fix the payments as child support. Commissioner v. Lester, supra at 306.
In 1984, the Congress effectively overruled the decision in the Lester case by adding section 71(c)(2). While section 71(c)(2) makes it more difficult to disguise child support as alimony, section 71 still allows taxpayers some freedom in structuring their divorce instruments. As long as the definitional requirements of section 71(b)(1) are met, the parties allocation of amounts are generally respected. Section 71(c)(2) represents one exception to this rule.
The statutory list of contingencies contemplates situations which are similar to the Lester case; i.e., contingencies which call for the termination of a certain amount of support on account of an occurrence relating to the child. While the contingencies listed in the text of section 71 and the regulations thereunder are not exhaustive, any contingency relied upon to reject the expressed allocation in a divorce instrument should be similar to the items listed there. Sec. 71(c)(2)(A).
In the instant case, the parties to the divorce instrument specifically designated the amounts of spousal and child support. The payments of spousal support met all of the definitional requirements of section 71(b)(1). Therefore, in order to except these payments from the alimony definition in section 71(b)(1), petitioner must show that the spousal support provisions of the divorce instrument contain a contingency related to a child. The instrument allowed the parties to seek a modification of child support in the future. While any increase in child support would be offset by a corresponding decrease in spousal support, we do not believe that the ability to modify child support rises to the level of a contingency related to a child. Indeed, the regulations contemplate agreements in which the amount of child support can fluctuate. *440 above, find them to be without merit.
For the foregoing reasons,
Decision will be entered for respondent.