DocketNumber: Docket No. 5040-76.
Filed Date: 5/16/1979
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
*336
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
DRENNEN,
Year | Deficiency |
1973 | $188 |
1974 | 400 |
The only issue presented to us for our resolution is whether respondent's calculation of petitioner's allowable travel expenses incurred while away from home during the taxable years at issue must be upheld. *338 They timely filed joint United States individual income tax returns, Forms 1040, for the taxable years 1973 and 1974 with the Director of the Southeast Region Service Center at Memphis, Tenn.
During the taxable years in issue, petitioner was employed as a long-distance truck driver by various companies. He was required by the nature of his employment to be away from home overnight.
Petitioner kept driver's daily log books for 10 months of 1973 and for the full year 1974. The log books constitute an accurate accounting of petitioner's time and place of travel. However, the log books contain no entries with respect to the time, place, number, or cost of meals or lodgings.
Petitioner kept no receipts of his meal and lodging expenses, nor did he keep a diary or any other record in which contemporaneous entries of meal and lodging expenses were recorded during the years 1973 and 1974.
Petitioner claimed an employee business expense deduction of $2,375 for travel expenses incurred by him during 1973. He calculated the amount of these expenses by estimating that he was away from home overnight for 250 days during the taxable year 1973. He arrived at this figure by counting any*339 day during which he was away from home for 6 hours or more as one full day. Petitioner also estimated that he spent $9 per day for meals while away from home. Thus, the $2,375 employee business expense deduction was computed by multiplying $9 by 250 days and then adding an additional $125 for estimated tips. *340 amounts expended by petitioner for meals while away from home. This amount is intended as a low minimal allowance for three meals, and is allowed to taxpayers who establish the time and place of their travel but fail to otherwise substantiate their meal expenses.
On the joint return for 1974 petitioner claimed an employee business expense deduction of $2,496 for travel expenses incurred by him during that year.
Using the same formula as for 1973, he estimated that he was away from home overnight for 208 days during the taxable year 1974. Petitioner also estimated that he spent $12 per day for meals and lodging while away from home overnight on business trips during the taxable year 1974. Petitioner arrived at a figure of $12 per day because, although he kept no receipts or contemporaneous records for his business expenses for 1974, he paid some motel bills in addition to the expenses incurred for meals. The $2,496 deduction*341 claimed by the petitioners on their 1974 return was computed by multiplying $12 by 208.
Because of a misunderstanding between petitioner and respondent, petitioner failed to provide the respondent with his log book or records showing the number of days that petitioner was away from home overnight and the amounts that he spent for meals and lodging while away from home during the taxable year 1974. Accordingly, respondent disallowed the entire $2,496 deduction claimed by petitioners on their 1974 income tax return. However, petitioner subsequently provided respondent with his driver's daily log books for 1974. Based upon an examination of the log book for 1974 and using the same formula as for 1973, respondent concluded that petitioner was away from home overnight on business trips a total of 136 days during 1974. Respondent then allowed $6.50 per day for meal expenses even though petitioner did not maintain records establishing his actual expenses. Accordingly, respondent concedes that petitioners are entitled to an employee business expense deduction of $884 for the taxable year 1974 based on an allowance of $6.50 per day for 136 days. *342 OPINION
However, even though the conditions of
(1) under*343
* * *
unless the taxpayer substantiates by adequate records or by sufficient evidence corroborating his own statement (A) the amount of such expense or other item, (B) the time and place of the travel * * *, [and] (C) the business purpose of the expense or other item * * *. The Secretary or his delegate may by regulations provide that some or all of the requirements of an expense which does not exceed an amount prescribed pursuant to such regulations.
The absence of any documentary evidence such as a diary or receipts or other corroborative evidence which substantiates petitioner's estimates of his expenses for meals and lodging on a daily basis leaves us with no choice but to accept respondent's allowance of $6.50 per day for meal expenses,
As noted above, petitioner counted as a day away from home any time his daily logs indicated him being on the road for 6 or more hours. Respondent's formula is more involved. For any period showing petitioner on the road for 16 hours or more, respondent included all of those hours, apparently on the ground that the sleep or rest prerequisite to deductibility of away-from-home expenses would be satisfied.
Petitioner's challenge is hamstrung by his lack of effort on his own behalf. The daily log books for the taxable years at issue have been submitted in evidence but petitioner has made no attempt to break down their contents into an easily manageable schedule which might support his calculation of the number of days he was away from home during the periods at issue. Although we do not agree with respondent's argument that we are required perforce to accept his formula because he has allowed expenses in an exercise of discretion, we do believe that his formula more accurately follows pertinent case law than that proposed by petitioner. The sleep or rest rule mentioned above requires as a precondition to categorization as away from home within the meaning of
Therefore, although respondent's formula perhaps may leave petitioner on the short side with*347 regard to his actual expenditures for meals for the number of days he actually was away from home within the meaning of
Because of respondent's concession for 1974,
1. Due to concessions made by respondent in the stipulation of facts, a computation under
2. Brenda K. Reynolds is a petitioner herein merely because she and her husband filed joint returns for the taxable years at issue. Consequently, William M. Reynolds will be referred to as the petitioner in this case.↩
3. Since petitioner used accommodations aboard the truck for rest periods, the only expenses that he incurred when he was away from home overnight during the taxable year 1973 were for meals, which expenses were not reimbursed by petitioner's employers.↩
4. Respondent did not allow any lodging expenses for 1974 because petitioner offered no evidence to prove that he incurred lodging expenses in 1974.↩
5. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect in the years in issue, unless otherwise indicated.↩
6. See