DocketNumber: Docket No. 14096-91
Filed Date: 7/5/1994
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*309 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
PARKER,
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year before the Court, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
After concessions, (2) Whether petitioner's wife, Lana Linetsky (Mrs. Linetsky), was "away from home" while she was working in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, during 1986. *310 FINDINGS OF FACT Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and the exhibits thereto are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioner resided in Solon, Ohio, at the time he filed his petition. Although a joint return was filed for 1986, respondent issued separate statutory notices of deficiency to petitioner and to Mrs. Linetsky. Neither respondent nor petitioner has been able to contact Mrs. Linetsky or locate a current address for her. *311 Petitioner and Mrs. Linetsky are Russian immigrants. Petitioner is an electrical engineer in the nuclear power plant field. He primarily works on the construction of nuclear power plants. From 1981 through August of 1985, petitioner was employed by the Bechtel Power Corporation and resided in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In August of 1985, petitioner moved to Champaign, Illinois, to take a position with Industrial Assistance Corp. Petitioner expected the job to be of a long duration (at least 10 to 15 years) since it involved the construction, start up, and maintenance of a new nuclear power plant (the Clinton Power Station). Consequently, in that same month of August of 1985, petitioner purchased a residence for himself and his wife in Champaign, Illinois (the Champaign house). Prior to January of 1986, petitioner's employment with Industrial Assistance Corp. was suddenly and unexpectedly terminated. On January 6, 1986, petitioner found employment through Consultants and Designers, Inc., an employment agency, to work with the Tennessee Valley Authority in the Knoxville, Tennessee, area. Consultants and Designers, Inc., is an employment agency that specializes in finding temporary*312 employment for engineers and technicians. The agency itself pays the salaries of these engineers and technicians and sends them to job assignments around the country. Consultants and Designers, Inc., represented to petitioner that this Knoxville job was a temporary one, lasting only 6 months. *313 Mrs. Linetsky was a full-time student during 1985 and was not employed outside of the home. She lived in the Champaign house after August of 1985. After she completed her college education, she was unable to find employment locally and finally accepted an out-of-state position to gain work experience. In February of 1986, Mrs. Linetsky took an employment position in accounting in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, which lasted until November or December of 1986. Her job terminated suddenly when her employer went into bankruptcy. During 1986, Mrs. Linetsky rented an apartment in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, and traveled occasionally to the Champaign house. Petitioner continued to own the Champaign house during 1986. He paid all property taxes, sewer bills, and utilities, and made necessary repairs to the home. He did not offer the house for rent because, during 1986, petitioner's stepsister, whom he supported, lived in the home while on vacations from school. Mrs. Linetsky also occasionally traveled to and stayed at the Champaign house. Petitioner also returned to the Champaign home almost every weekend when his sister or his wife was there. When his family was not at the Champaign*314 home, petitioner did not make any trips there. Petitioner estimated that he made some 30 trips to the Champaign house during 1986. It takes approximately 5 to 6 hours to travel by automobile from Knoxville, Tennessee, to Champaign, Illinois. Petitioner's 1985 employment with Industrial Assistance Corp. was, and remains, the only employment that he has had in the Champaign, Illinois, area. Nevertheless, petitioner diligently sought employment in that area throughout 1986 and 1987. Since the Clinton Power Station was at the beginning stages of construction, petitioner believed that there was still potential employment in the area and that a position for him would eventually become available with one of the contractors, subcontractors, or the utility company itself. He contacted the large companies that had ongoing contracts with the Clinton Power Station. He also reviewed various trade magazines for employment listings in Illinois. He never received any offer of work in the Champaign area. In late 1988 or early 1989, petitioner secured permanent employment in Ohio. Petitioner and Mrs. Linetsky were divorced in May of 1987, in Knox County, Tennessee. In early 1987, petitioner*315 filed for divorce in Knox County, Tennessee, on the grounds of irreconcilable differences. *316 Petitioner and his wife filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1986. On that 1986 joint return, petitioner claimed employee business expense deductions of $ 17,088 for vehicle expenses and $ 18,739 for his travel expenses, including his meals and lodging. The $ 17,088 for vehicle expenses included $ 6,449 for vehicle 1 (a small pick-up truck) and $ 10,639 for vehicle 2 (a Pontiac Firebird). Vehicle 1 traveled 34,000 miles in 1986, and vehicle 2 traveled 26,000 miles that year. An investment credit was claimed for each vehicle, $ 432 for vehicle 1 and $ 789 for vehicle 2, for a total of $ 1,221. Respondent disallowed those deductions and the investment credits in their entirety in the statutory notice of deficiency. OPINION The principal issues in this case are whether petitioner was "away from home" while he was working in the Knoxville, Tennessee, area, thereby entitling him to deduct certain expenses incurred while working there, and whether Mrs. Linetsky was "away from home" while she was working in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Normally, personal, living or family expenses are not deductible. Generally, for purposes of Whether employment is temporary or indefinite is a question of fact to be decided in light of the entire record. We have allowed deductions for "away from home" expenses in circumstances similar to those of petitioner. See *321 With respect to Mrs. Linetsky, we cannot arrive at the same holding. A husband and wife may have separate tax homes for purposes of The Court has found that petitioner was "away from home" in 1986. Respondent does not dispute the amount of petitioner's traveling expenses, including meals and lodging, that is deductible under
1. The parties have stipulated that petitioner is entitled to a dependency exemption for his stepsister in the taxable year 1986. Respondent concedes that, if this Court should hold that petitioner was "away from home" during the taxable year 1986, petitioner is entitled to the amounts for petitioner's meals, lodging, travel, and other expenses deducted on the 1986 return. Respondent also concedes that petitioner would be entitled to the investment credit claimed for his vehicle if he is found to have been away from home in 1986. There is no stipulation as to Mrs. Linetsky's expenses or investment credit, but apparently only her vehicle expenses and the investment credit for her vehicle were deducted on the return. As will be discussed later, there is a dispute as to which vehicle was used by her.↩
2. The divorce decree restored Mrs. Linetsky's maiden name, Lana Charitonova, but presumably her social security number would have remained the same.↩
3. Petitioner's employment contract with Consultants and Designers, Inc., did not contain a termination date and, to the best of his knowledge, such contracts never do. There was no commitment from either side in terms of duration of employment or specific assignments. The contractor at the job site would try to tell the employee the approximate duration of an assignment to the best of its knowledge, although the contractor could terminate or extend the employment at any time.↩
4. Respondent introduced the complaint and default judgment in the divorce to show that petitioner represented himself and his wife to be residents of Tennessee, not Illinois. That evidence does not indicate that petitioner made any legal assertions about his residence but merely indicated his mailing address. We do not think that petitioner consciously thought of the Federal tax law implications of telling his divorce attorney at the time of the divorce proceedings that he lived in Tennessee. Furthermore, whether petitioner was or was not a "resident" of Tennessee pursuant to Tennessee State law for purposes of obtaining a divorce is not conclusive as to the Federal tax law determination of petitioner's "tax home" for purposes of "away from home" deductions under
5. In
6. Vehicle 2, the Pontiac Firebird, was a new and more expensive vehicle, and the principal reason for the higher figures for that vehicle was the larger depreciation deduction and the larger investment credit based on that higher purchase price.↩
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