DocketNumber: Docket No. 330-74
Citation Numbers: 34 T.C.M. 461, 1975 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 282, 1975 T.C. Memo. 91
Filed Date: 4/2/1975
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
FAY,
The only issue for decision is whether the petitioner is entitled to claim dependency exemptions for his four children in the actual but not legal custody of his former wife.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Certain facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly. The stipulation of facts and the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioner, H. Ernest Dumke, Jr., (Herman) maintained his residence in Dallas, Texas, at the time the petition was filed in this case. He filed an individual Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1972 with the district director of internal revenue at Dallas, Texas.
Herman was formerly the husband of Sandra Louise Henson (Sandra). Four children were born of their marriage, namely, William, Bruce, David and Tammy. The marriage was dissolved on May 9, 1969, by a judgment of divorce entered by the Domestic Relations Court of Tarrant County, Texas.
The judgment of divorce provided,
Thereafter, until July 24, 1971, all four children lived with and were in the care and custody of Herman. On the noted date Sandra, exercising her visitation rights, picked up the four children and disappeared. To date petitioner remains unaware of their whereabouts; he has not seen nor communicated with his former wife or children since the disappearance. Further, Herman has not expended any sums for support on behalf of the children during their absence from his home. Petitioner has, however, received indirect assurances of their continued well being living with their mother.
On his 1972 Federal income tax return petitioner claimed the four children as dependents. Respondent, in his statutory notice of deficiency dated December 27, 1973, disallowed the deductions attributable to the children being claimed as dependents.
OPINION
Pertinent to a determination here are the provisions of sections 152(e)(1) and (e)(2). *286 of the support of their child the dependency deduction for such child will be allowed to the parent having custody, unless section 152(e)(2) is applicable. This section permits the parent not having custody to claim the dependency deduction if:
SEC. 152. DEPENDENT DEFINED.
(e) Support Test in Case of Child of Divorced Parents Et Cetera.--
(2) Special rule.--The child of parents described in paragraph (1) shall be treated as having received over half of his support during the calendar year from the parent not having custody if--
(A)(i) the decree of divorce or of separate maintenance, or a written agreement between the parents applicable to the taxable year beginning in such calendar year, provides that the parent not having custody shall be entitled to any deduction allowable under section 151 for such child, and
(ii) such parent not having custody provides at least $600 for the support of such child during the calendar year, or
(B)(i) the parent not having custody provides $1,200 or more for the support of such child (or if there is more than one such child, $1,200 or more for all of such children) for the calendar year, and
(ii) the parent having custody of such child*287 does not clearly establish that he provided more for the support of such child during the calendar year than the parent not having custody.
For purposes of this paragraph, amounts expended for the support of a child or children shall be treated as received from the parent not having custody to the extent that such parent provided amounts for such support.
We initially dispose of any suggestion that section 152(e)(2) has application to this matter. If Herman is assumed, arguendo, to have had custody of the children during 1972 then said provisions, by its terms, do not apply. If petitioner is designated the non-custodial parent then neither section 152(e)(2)(A) nor (e)(2)(B) will apply as Herman did not expend any funds during 1972 for the support of his children. *288 For petitioner to prevail in this matter we must conclude that custody as used in section 152(e)(1) refers to a strict legal custody rather than actual care and control of the dependent children. This we cannot do; we believe Congress to have intended the latter. See H. Rept. No. 102, 90th Cong., 1st Sess. (1967),
1. Petitioner was granted visitation privileges.↩
2. All section references are to the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 in effect during the taxable years in issue.↩
3. Petitioner, in his "Memorandum of Authorities" to this Court, appears to be making a discovery motion to determine what funds, if any, his former wife has spent in support of their children. The only application of this knowledge that we can perceive, in relation to the present matter, would be for the purposes of section 152(e)(2)(B)(ii); as petitioner has not initially established compliance with section 152(e)(2)(B)(i) the information is irrelevent to the dependency question. Accordingly, if petitioner's "Memorandum of Authorities" contains such a motion, it is denied.↩