DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 37, 38.
Filed Date: 5/31/1944
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
*224
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
HILL, Judge: This is a consolidated proceeding involving income tax deficiencies for the years 1939 and 1940 in the respective amounts of $113.24 and $164.49. The sole question in controversy is whether Maurice Victor Barnhill, whom we shall call "petitioner," is entitled to deduct traveling expenses, including the amount spent for meals and lodging, while away from his Rocky Mount, N.C. residence. Another adjustment to petitioner's 1939 income has been settled while other adjustments in 1940 income are conceded. The tax returns for the years in question were filed with the collector for the district of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Findings of Fact
Petitioner is an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina and has been such since*225 his appointment in July, 1937. In 1938 he was elected to this office for a term of eight years commencing January 1, 1939. The duties as judge require his presence in Raleigh, North Carolina, the State Capitol, where the Court sits. Two terms of court are held each year, one beginning on the first Monday in February and the other on the first Monday in September.
Prior to July, 1937 petitioner was a Superior Court judge and resided in Rocky Mount, N.C., where he owned a home. He continued to maintain and keep open this home in 1939 and 1940. It was continuously occupied by some member of his family. There is an unwritten law in North Carolina that there shall be a geographical distribution of Supreme Court Justices and each has always maintained his legal residence in the section of the State from whence he came.
When in Raleigh, during the years in question, petitioner stayed at the Sir Walter Hotel where he engaged a room by the year at a rate of $65 per month. It was more economical to engage a room on this basis than by the day or week. During term petitioner drove back to Rocky Mount, a distance of sixty miles, almost every week. After term petitioner returned to Rocky Mount*226 but drove to Raleigh two or three times each month to care for matters connected with his judicial duties. He made 46 round trips between the two cities in 1939 and 44 in 1940. Computed at the rate of 5 cents per mile, his transportation costs were $276 and $264 for the two years, respectively. Petitioner estimated his meals while in Raleigh to have cost $557.50 in 1939 and $516 in 1940. No account was kept of actual expenditures either for meals or transportation costs.
During the taxable years petitioner owned three farms, two of which were located near Rocky Mount. One of these was rented on shares and, although petitioner had an overseer, he attempted to give his farm frequent personal attention. The other farms and one house, purchased in October 1939 and held for rental, were let for cash rent. Petitioner devoted very little time to the management of these properties. Petitioner reported as net income from all his real properties the sum of $405.00 in 1939 and $344.77 in 1940. The latter figure reflected a mathematical error and should have been $544.77. In other years petitioner's income from these sources was substantially greater.
Petitioner also was a director and stockholder*227 in the Simmons & Harris Real Estate and Insurance Company of Rocky Mount. He received no director's fee. The dividends on his stock amounted to $214.40 and $283 in the two years, respectively. It was not necessary for petitioner to attend to his duties as director of Simmons & Harris upon each of his trips back to Rocky Mount.
Prior to 1939 the salary of an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina was $7,500 and each member of the Court was allowed $500 for travel expenses. In 1939 the North Carolina legislature passed a bill which provided, in part, as follows:
"In lieu of and in commutation for expenses incident to attendance upon the Court an amount equal to that allowed to each Judge of the Superior Court, payable in equal monthly installments as part of his compensation. Effective July 1, 1939." The amount allowed Superior Court Judges was $1,550 per year. The $7,500 salary was continued.
In 1939 petitioner reported as salary from the State $7,500 plus $1,025 expense allowance. From this sum he deducted "hotel, board and traveling expenses of $1,500." Respondent has disallowed the deduction. In 1940 petitioner reported as salary from the State $7,500 with the*228 notation, "State pays official expenses." Respondent increased petitioner's salary by the additional $1,550 received from the State and held no expense deduction allowable.
Petitioner's sole business in 1939 and 1940 was that of an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina. His place of business was in Raleigh.
Opinion
The only question here presented is whether petitioner, an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, is entitled to deduct the amounts expended for board and lodging at Raleigh, the seat of the State government, and his expenses in going to and from Raleigh and the city of his legal residence. Petitioner asserts that such expenditures are deductible under
Similar questions have been resolved in many prior decisions, sometimes in favor of the taxpayer and sometimes against him. Determinative factors are the locale of the business in which the taxpayer is engaged, the permanency of his employment*229 in that particular business, and the existence or non-existence of other business occupations requiring the presence of the taxpayer at more than one spot. Under
Petitioner seeks to draw an analogy between the present facts and those which impelled decisions favorable to the taxpayers in the
Furthermore, the facts fail to prove that petitioner was engaged in any business save that as a judge and we have so found. Admittedly, he was a director of a Rocky Mount real estate and insurance concern. However, his duties as *232 such do not appear to have been large and, in any event, he expected and received no compensation for what services he did perform. Clearly there was no profit motive here. The dividends, of course, were receivable by reason of his ownership of stock and constituted income from an investment, not from business. The same must be said of the income from the rental of petitioner's real property. While one of the farms was rented on shares, this is a common arrangement in the letting of farm properties and does not thereby place the landlord in the business of farming. The two other farms and the house were let for cash rent and required no more than casual attention from petitioner. The relatively minor amount of income from, time spent upon and properties involved preclude a finding that petitioner was engaged in the investment business.
Since petitioner's permanent business was that of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina and since this business was conducted entirely at Raleigh, it follows that Raleigh must be regarded as petitioner's "home", as that term is used in