DocketNumber: Docket No. 15862-81.
Citation Numbers: 44 T.C.M. 1294, 1982 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 166, 1982 T.C. Memo. 573
Filed Date: 9/30/1982
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
PARKER,
On audit respondent increased petitioner's income by the amount of his gambling winnings, disallowed the $2,300 zero bracket amount, but allowed Schedule A itemized deductions of $10,118. The itemized deductions included gambling losses up to the amount of his gambling winnings ($9,238), taxes of $597, and net medical deductions (after the floor deductions) of $283. The taxes allowed included general sales taxes and gasoline taxes that were determined from the standard tax tables.
OPINION
Petitioner argues that gambling winnings are not "earnings," that he is being taxed on "non-existent income" as a result of rulings of the Internal Revenue Service, and that that makes him "one of the major 'UNincome taxpayers in America today'." Petitioner's confusing arguments generate more heat than light on the subject. The problem, however, seems to be that petitioner steadfastly rejects or ignores certain basic principles of the Federal income tax laws. Petitioner wishes to net*170 out his winnings and losses off his return, and on his tax return report in gross income only the amount of any net gambling winnings. He considers as "actual income" or "true income" only his W-2 wages and any net gambling winnings. Petitioner is in error.
Section 61(a) defines gross income as "all income from whatever source derived," and that normally includes gambling winnings. Section 61(a);
However, petitioner did not itemize deductions on the 1979 return he filed, but took advantage of the zero bracket amount of $2,300. What petitioner is trying to do is to net his gambling winnings and losses off the return so that he can get the full deduction for his gambling losses and at the same time get the benefit of the full amount of the zero bracket figure. *173 This he cannot do. This is exactly what other nonprofessional gamblers have tried to do -- to deduct their losses above the line and still claim the standard deduction (now zero bracket amount). See cases cited in Footnote 3. We have ruled against those taxpayers and we must rule against petitioner in this case. Petitioner's other arguments are merely word games or semantic flourishes about an "UNincome Tax" or a "nonincome tax" and what he regards as his "true and actual income." *174 The next issue is whether petitioner's underpayment of tax was due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations within the meaning of section 6653(a). Petitioner has the burden of proof to show that it was not, and he has not done so.
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the taxable year in issue, unless otherwise noted.↩
2. The petition asserts an overpayment of taxes for the year 1978 in the amount of $250, but the statutory notice of deficiency in this case pertains only to the year 1979. This Court can consider such facts with relation to other years as may be necessary correctly to redetermine the amount of the deficiency for the year 1979, but the Court has no jurisdiction to determine whether or not the tax for any other year has been overpaid or underpaid. Section 6214(b).↩
3. See also
4. See cases cited in footnote 3. Petitioner heatedly attacks unidentified Internal Revenue Service rulings as "arbitrary" and "absured" and questions the format of the Form 1040 itself, which he seems to regard as the source of his difficulties. However, it is really the basic provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, as enacted by the Congress and as construed by the courts, that petitioner challenges. As explained to petitioner at the trial, the sources of authoritative law in the tax field are the decided cases, the Internal Revenue Code itself and any pertinent regulations, not informal publications of the Internal Revenue Service and not the forms devised by the Service.
5. Using his 1978 return as an example, petitioner says that by reporting his gambling winnings in gross income and deducting the same amount of gambling losses on Schedule A, "my taxable income was $960.00 more then (sic) my actual income. It doesn't take a financial wizard to figure out that I paid taxes on non-exsistent (sic) income." Petitioner is confused and in error. The $960 he refers to is the difference between the $16,074 reported on line 34 of the Form 1040 and his wages of $15,114 [what he calls "actual income"] reported on line 8. However, the $16,074 on line 34 does not represent the amount of taxable income but merely tax table income for purposes of using the tax tables. The tax tables for 1978 already included the zero bracket amount for that year of $2,200, the personal exemption of $750, and the general tax credit that was in effect for that year. For that reason, itemized deductions on Schedule A were reduced on line 40 by the zero bracket amount and only the excess deductions were listed on line 33. However, the taxpayer got the benefit of the full amount of deductions, the personal exemption, and the general tax credit.↩