DocketNumber: No. 13713-06
Citation Numbers: 98 T.C.M. 269, 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 222, 2009 T.C. Memo. 220
Judges: "Gustafson, David"
Filed Date: 9/22/2009
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
Ps ran a horse-breeding and -boarding operation in which they kept and cared for as many as 60 horses on the same property as their personal residence. Ps had no full-time employees and did most of the work themselves, and they did not use the horses for personal pleasure. Ps intended to make a profit to supplement their income, but, over a number of years, they incurred a string of losses. The only substantial income Ps had from other sources was P-H's modest salary as a county employee, against which they applied the losses.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
GUSTAFSON, Addition to Tax Penalty TaxYear Deficiency 1997 $ 4,114 $ 1,028.00 $ 822.80 1998 5,861 1,383.50 1,172.20 1999 6,371 1,465.50 1,274.20 2000 6,446 1,440.50 1,289.20 2001 9,627 2,133.50 1,925.40 2002 7,598 1,614.75 1,519.60
The issue for decision is whether the *224 Helmicks' horse-breeding and -boarding operation (hereinafter, the horse activity) was an activity engaged in for profit pursuant to
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and supplemental stipulation of facts filed September 10, 2008, and the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. Trial of this case was held in Denver, Colorado, on September 10, 2008. Ms. Helmick and Mr. Helmick testified. Mr. Helmick, in particular, was a candid and credible witness. Ms. Helmick, though given to some overstatement (e.g., about the number of hours she worked and the quantum of records she maintained), was believable as to the gist of her testimony. *225 Respondent called no witnesses. At the time that they filed their petition, the Helmicks resided in Colorado.
In or around 1980, Ms. Helmick (then known as Marcia L. Trescott) and Richard E. Taylor acquired a roughly 1-1/2 to 2 acre parcel of real estate in a primarily residential neighborhood in Niwot, Colorado, a town in Boulder County about 9 miles from the city of Boulder, Colorado. She conducted a small horse activity on that property before her marriage to Mr. Helmick in the mid-1980s. After the Helmicks married, the property was transferred to Ms. Helmick and Mr. Helmick as tenants in common, and Mr. Helmick joined in the conduct of the horse *226 activity on that property. Beginning no later than July 1986 and continuing through all the tax years at issue, the Helmicks' primary residence was a house located on the same property on which they conducted their horse activity.
The Helmicks' horse activity principally involved the breeding and boarding of horses. The Helmicks' boarding activity consisted of keeping horses belonging to third parties on their property, and caring for and feeding those horses for a fee. The Helmicks' horse-breeding activities consisted of acquiring purebred Arabian stallions and mares for the purpose of breeding them with each other in order to produce and raise offspring for sale. These breeding activities began in earnest in 1984 when Ms. Helmick purchased SS Bay Moun, a 2-year-old Arabian purebred stallion, for $ 30,000. Although Ms. Helmick had physical custody of SS Bay Moun, the horse's previous owners refused to transfer clear title. As a result, Ms. Helmick could not register the horse or its offspring as purebred Arabians, and the Helmicks lost some sales. In response, the Helmicks filed a lawsuit in 1985, which remained pending for 9 years, to obtain clear title *227 to SS Bay Moun in order to register the horse and its offspring as purebred Arabians and thus to increase their value on the equine market. In 1994, at the conclusion of the litigation, the Helmicks acquired clear title to SS Bay Moun.
The Helmicks' horse activity began with a focus on breeding horses to create salable livestock, but that focus shifted to boarding horses when the Helmicks concluded that breeding was less profitable because of a perceived decline in sale prices for purebred Arabian horses in the 1980s and 1990s. The Helmicks also believed that boarding horses would become increasingly profitable for them because of their property's favorable zoning status, discussed below, which gave them a virtual monopoly on boarding horses in Niwot, Colorado.
From 1993 to 2002 Ms. Helmick typically spent her entire work week conducting the horse activity. Mr. Helmick, who worked full time as a land-use planner for Boulder and Larimer Counties, typically worked on the horse activity in early mornings and evenings, and on weekends. Conducting the horse activity involved, inter alia, buying and transporting hundreds of pounds of feed each week, mucking stalls, shoveling hay, caring for *228 sick horses, and guiding pregnant mares through the birthing process. In fact, the Helmicks frequently had to watch over their pregnant mares during the night as well as the day. On occasion during the foaling season -- which extended from January to April -- the Helmicks would have to take turns staying awake at night to ensure that one of them checked on the mares at least once each hour. The strenuous nature of the work took its toll on the Helmicks. Mr. Helmick suffered from a bad back, which sometimes left him bedridden, and Ms. Helmick tore her shoulder.
The Helmicks never hired full-time employees, but they would occasionally hire part-time assistants -- usually high school students -- to help them with the horse activity. Mr. Helmick had a daughter (who was not Ms. Helmick's daughter) who was born in 1981 and of whom he had joint custody. However, the daughter did not live with Mr. Helmick and seldom stayed with him during the weekends when he had visitation rights, because she did not enjoy cleaning stalls or doing other work in connection with the horses. We find that Mr. Helmick's daughter did not spend a material amount of time working with or riding the horses.
From 1993 to 2002 Ms. Helmick was not otherwise employed or involved in business ventures aside from the horse activity. Furthermore, Ms. Helmick does not allege, nor does the record show, that she was ever involved in any other business ventures. *230 it was "probably" profitable. Mr. Helmick ultimately closed Action Consulting because he preferred the "regular paycheck and benefits" from his work with county governments to the uncertain cashflow associated with private consulting. Mr. Helmick does not allege, nor does the record show, that he was ever involved in any other business ventures.
From 1997 to 2000 the number of horses (both owned and boarded) on the Helmicks' property in Niwot ranged from 40 to 60. At any given time during that period, the Helmicks owned between 40 and 70 percent of the horses on their property. Those horses were kept in a barn with 13 stalls inside and an outdoor arena for exercise. In or around 1994 the Helmicks made plans to improve their property by adding to their house and barn and constructing an indoor riding arena, and they took out a construction loan for that purpose. The Helmicks believed that these improvements and additions to their property would make their boarding activities -- to which their focus was shifting-more profitable by lowering labor costs (because it is easier to clean indoor facilities than outdoor facilities where horses exercise, *231 particularly during inclement weather) and by increasing the fees they could charge (because they could offer more amenities, like the indoor riding arena).
However, these improvements were delayed by an adverse determination by Boulder County, which held that the Helmicks were in violation of zoning law and would have to reduce the number of horses kept on their property. The Helmicks responded by engaging in a several-months-long campaign to challenge Boulder County's determination, which effort included soliciting clients and friends to testify on their behalf. Before 1997 they won the right to continue to have 40 horses on their property, which was then zoned as an equestrian center. However, the Helmicks were required to keep a minimum of 40 horses on their property to maintain its status as an equestrian center in their primarily residential neighborhood. If they kept fewer than 40 horses on the property, then the number of horses they were entitled to keep on their property would decrease correspondingly. Moreover, if the Helmicks completely failed to maintain their property's status as an equestrian center, then they would be permitted to keep only two horses. The zoning situation *232 thus imposed on them, in effect, a downward ratchet that required them to maintain the size of their herd or incrementally lose their right to run the horse activity.
The Helmicks began construction on the additions to their house and barn and on the indoor riding arena in 1997 after winning their zoning dispute with Boulder County. However, because of a dispute with the contractor whom the Helmicks hired to construct the indoor riding arena, the proposed construction of that arena ceased in the late 1990s after the foundation was built, and the arena was never finished. The Helmicks sued the contractor and ultimately settled the lawsuit in 2001 for $ 5,000.
The Helmicks were largely self-taught in the running of the horse activity, but by 1993, the Helmicks each had over 8 years of experience in breeding and boarding horses on their property. In addition, the record shows that Mr. Helmick was a member of the board of directors of various professional horse-breeding and -boarding associations -- including the Colorado Horsemen's Council, and the Boulder County Horsemen's Association -- at various times during 1993 to 2002.
The Helmicks were *233 classified as amateur owners in the equine industry, i.e., they were not professionally qualified or compensated as horse trainers, and any training they performed was incidental to their breeding and boarding operation. The Helmicks were not veterinarians. However, the Helmicks consulted numerous veterinarians with respect to their horse activity. In particular, the Helmicks occasionally employed a veterinarian to inspect their mares to determine the appropriate time to breed them in order to increase the likelihood of conceiving a mare instead of a stallion, because at the time, mares would fetch a higher price on the equine market. In the late 1980s the Helmicks discontinued the use of veterinarians for this purpose to save themselves and their clients the cost of veterinarian's fees. By that time Mr. Helmick had become proficient enough to inspect the mares himself and achieve a success rate of influencing the sex of the colt that was lower than the veterinarian's rate but still above the norm.
Ms. Helmick was responsible for the bookkeeping for the horse activity. She did not prepare any contemporaneous business plans or financial statements for the *234 horse activity. However, Mr. Helmick would give the receipts generated by the horse activity to Ms. Helmick, and after they had accumulated for some time, she would enter them into a Quicken or QuickBooks program on their computer. In response to pointed questions, Ms. Helmick's testimony was equivocal on whether she made her Quicken entries promptly or delayed doing so for months or years. We therefore find that Ms. Helmick delayed making her Quicken entries for months or years after she received the receipts from Mr. Helmick. The Helmicks used Quicken to generate summaries of their income and expenses for, inter alia, preparing their Forms 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, and dealing with IRS audits.
At trial the Helmicks did not present the receipts as evidence to corroborate their income or expenses for the tax years at issue. However, the Helmicks introduced evidence of their practice of saving their receipts and creating computer-generated records therefrom in the form of the Quicken summaries of their source and use of funds for all six of the tax years at issue, and we find their testimony, corroborated with those summaries, to be credible. However, they did not show *235 that they kept sufficiently current with their Quicken entries to enable them to determine at any given moment the amount of their current deficit.
The Helmicks' horse activity generated losses every year at least after Mr. Helmick became involved with the activity in late 1984 or 1985. On Schedules F, Profit or Loss From Farming, attached to their Forms 1040 for the six years at issue (19972002) and the five previous years (1992-96), the Helmicks deducted a string of losses from their horse activity, as listed below, totaling approximately $ 400,000 (and averaging about $ 36,000 per year).
However, for purposes of evaluating the Helmicks' profit motive for persisting in the horse activity, those losses may be somewhat misleading in two respects. First, the Schedule F expenses that gave rise to those reported losses included a portion of the mortgage interest expense and tax that the IRS's notice of deficiency allowed as additional itemized expenses. The Helmicks would have incurred these expenses, and could have deducted them, whether or not they had engaged in the horse activity. Second, the Schedule F expenses included depreciation on assets *236 that the Helmicks had previously purchased and which therefore did not represent current costs of running the activity. On the one hand, the prospect of claiming the tax benefit of such depreciation could be a tax-related, non-profitrelated motive for undertaking the activity. But on the other hand, a person who already owned the asset might well disregard depreciation in making a decision as to whether he could hope to turn a profit from the activity and as to how long he could afford to incur losses before turning the corner. In this case the evaluation of the Helmicks' profit motive should include a reckoning of the actual out-of-pocket, marginal loss generated by the horse activity that reduces the Schedule F losses by the depreciation, taxes, and interest. When that reduction is made, the marginal loss of the activity is shown to have been on average about $ 27,000 per year, i.e., more modest than the Schedules F would seem to indicate:
Schedule | Marginal | ||||
Year | FLoss | Depreciation | Interest | Taxes | Loss |
1992 | $ 57,034 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
1993 | 57,315 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
1994 | 28,544 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
1995 | 23,608 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
1996 | 9,561 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
1997 | 29,783 | $ 6,947 n.1 | -0- | -0- | $ 22,836 |
1998 | 34,847 | 6,947 | $ 6,091 | $ 612 | 21,197 |
1999 | 41,174 | 6,206 | 6,419 | 1,858 | 26,691 |
2000 | 32,584 | 4,894 | 2,501 | 588 | 24,601 |
2001 | 28,023 | 3,789 | 6,150 | 52 | 18,032 |
2002 | 57,896 | 6,402 | 2,094 | 11 | 49,389 |
Total | 400,369 | 162,746 | |||
*6*n.1 Because the 1997 Form 1040 is not in the record, we use | |||||
*6*the 1998 depreciation figure as an approximation. |
The Helmicks married in the mid-1980s and remained married through all of the tax years at issue. However, the Helmicks separated in 2003, and their divorce was accompanied by contentious litigation. In the course of that litigation, some of the Helmicks' assets were divided. On October 2, 2007, the divorce court ordered Ms. Helmick to vacate the house and property in Niwot, where she and Mr. Helmick had lived together and conducted the horse activity. Neither of the parties alleges, nor does the record show, the exact date on which the Helmicks concluded their horse activity. However, the record does show that the Helmicks' separation in 2003 and subsequent litigation precipitated the end of that activity.
At trial Ms. Helmick testified that the receipts that she and Mr. Helmick saved to substantiate their income and expenses from the horse activity should still be located in the house in Niwot. Ms. Helmick also testified that those receipts are inaccessible to her because she would be arrested if she returned to the house in violation of the divorce court's order. However, Mr. Helmick testified with equal conviction that he had been unable to find *238 the receipts after he "went through the house with a fine-toothed comb." Mr. Helmick also testified that he had "no knowledge of where * * * [the receipts] are" today, but he is certain that they must have existed "because * * * [the Helmicks] constructed the tax returns from those records." On the basis of the Helmicks' testimony, we find that the Helmicks unintentionally lost their receipts in the disruption of the horse activity that resulted from their divorce.
The Helmicks failed to timely file their Forms 1040 for tax years 1997 through 2002, because they believed there was no tax due for those years, as a result of the losses from their horse activity. However, the Helmicks did eventually file those forms late with the IRS over the course of 2003, reporting losses from the horse activity and claiming net operating loss carryovers generated by the horse activity in previous years. *240 On April 11, 2006, the IRS mailed the Helmicks a notice of deficiency for tax years 1997 through 2002, which disallowed the losses from their horse activity as so-called hobby losses from an activity not engaged in for profit pursuant to
OPINION
At issue is the Helmicks' *241 entitlement to deductions for tax years 1997 to 2002 arising from their horse activity during tax years 1993 to 2002. *242 A taxpayer who is carrying on a trade or business may deduct ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in connection with the operation of the business.
Generally, the Commissioner's determinations set forth in a notice of deficiency are presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of showing the determinations are in error.
B.
The stereotypical abusive scenario involving horse breeding is the wealthy businessman who runs a real business during the week -- with business records, income projections, accountability to banks and investors, and so on -- and owns a "gentleman's farm" as a weekend retreat where he keeps horses for the recreation of himself and his family and friends. He dabbles in breeding horses, with no expectation of ever making a profit, so that he can deduct the expenses of his horses and thereby have Uncle Sam subsidize the weekend farm. However, some horse-related operations are actually engaged in for profit. See, e.g.,
We now address these nine factors.
The fact that a taxpayer carries on the activity in a business-like manner and maintains complete and accurate books and records may indicate *246 a profit objective.
While the Helmicks had no written business plan for their horse activity, the evidence established that they did have a rudimentary plan, which was to weather their *247 current losses while maintaining the value of their herd and keeping at least 40 horses on their property in order to preserve that property's favorable zoning status as an equestrian center. See
Respondent *248 disputed the adequacy of the Helmicks' books and records for substantiation of their expenses under
As respondent correctly notes, the Helmicks did not present the receipts as evidence to corroborate their income or expenses for the tax years at issue. However, "[i]t is well established that the Tax Court may permit a taxpayer to substantiate deductions through secondary evidence where the underlying documents have been unintentionally lost or destroyed."
Notably, the Helmicks spent 9 years, from 1985 to 1994, suing for clear title to SS Bay Moun, the purebred Arabian stallion they purchased to jumpstart their horse-breeding activity. The Helmicks always had the possession and use of the horse, and they always enjoyed any pleasure that such possession and use might bring. However, without a clear title, neither the horse nor its offspring could be registered or sold as purebred Arabians. This caused the Helmicks to lose sales, because registered horses are more valuable on the equine market. Thus, *250 it necessarily follows that the lawsuit to register SS Bay Moun was motivated not by personal pleasure but by a desire to increase profits and weighs in favor of the Helmicks. See
We conclude that this factor -- the manner in which the activity is conducted -- is mixed: partly in respondent's favor, but overall in the Helmicks' favor, indicating that they had the requisite profit objective.
A taxpayer's expertise, research, and study of an activity, as well as his consultation with experts, may indicate a profit objective.
We conclude that this factor -- expertise -- is neutral for assessing whether the Helmicks had the requisite profit objective.
The fact that the taxpayer devotes much of his personal time and effort to carrying on an activity, particularly if the activity does not have substantial personal or recreational aspects, may indicate a profit objective.
We conclude that this factor -- time and effort -- is strongly in the *253 Helmicks' favor and indicates that they had the requisite profit objective.
A taxpayer's expectation that assets used in the activity may appreciate in value and generate an overall profit may indicate a profit objective.
If a natural disaster caused the death of 90 percent of a rancher's herd and resulted in a catastrophic loss that could never be recouped, but the *254 rancher thereafter expected to generate an overall prospective profit by breeding and selling the remaining 10 percent of his herd on a foregoing basis, then he could not be said to lack a profit objective after the disaster merely because he would never recoup the prior loss. Likewise, even assuming arguendo that the Helmicks could never recoup their losses from years prior to 1997, if they expected to generate an overall profit from 1997 onward, then they cannot be said to lack a profit objective with respect to those later years merely because they would never recoup their losses from years prior to 1997. Rather, the Helmicks meet their burden as to any year for which they show that they expected eventually to recoup losses sustained in the "intervening years" (to use the phrase from
The Helmicks' long-term goal was to profit from (i) creating a self-perpetuating herd of purebred Arabian horses that would *255 increase in value over time, and (ii) maintaining their property's favorable zoning status as an equestrian center in the middle of an otherwise residential neighborhood. In determining whether the possibility of an overall profit is present, we take into account the appreciation of both the herd and the zoning status, because they were both assets that were used in the horse activity. *256 years.
We conclude that this factor -- expectation that assets may appreciate -- is in the Helmicks' favor and indicates that they had the requisite profit objective.
Even if an activity is unprofitable, the fact that a taxpayer has previously converted similar activities from unprofitable to profitable enterprises may indicate a profit objective with respect to the current *257 activity.
We conclude that this factor -- success in similar or dissimilar activities -- is in respondent's favor.
An important consideration is the taxpayer's history of income or losses related to the activity.
We conclude that this factor -- history of income or loss -- is in respondent's favor.
The amount and frequency of occasional profits earned from the activity may indicate a profit objective.
We conclude that this factor -- occasional profits -- is in respondent's favor.
A lack of income from sources other than the activity in question may indicate a profit objective. In contrast, substantial income from sources other than the activity in question, particularly if offset by substantial tax benefits, may indicate the activity is not engaged in for profit.
We conclude that this factor -- financial status -- is in the Helmicks' favor and indicates that they had the requisite profit objective.
The absence of personal pleasure or recreation relating to the activity in question may indicate a profit objective.
Second, respondent supports his contention that the Helmicks took personal pleasure in their horse activity with snippets of their testimony that are not fair to their context. In particular, respondent notes that "Mr. Helmick liked 'rubbing the nose of a nice, warm, furry creature'." Mr. Helmick made that statement in the context of explaining his profit objective and the hard physical nature of keeping and caring for a herd of horses: the business was intended to ultimately supplement the income, not to dodge paying taxes. And, yes. I guess I enjoyed it at times. You know, rubbing the nose of a nice, warm, furry creature is good. The number of days I was laid up with a bad back or other things from moving all that feed are clearly probably not items of personal pleasure.
Ultimately, respondent contends that the Helmicks kept and cared for dozens of horses on their property -- without the help of any full-time employees -- solely for their personal pleasure. Respondent further contends that the Helmicks contested Boulder County's adverse determination that their horse activity violated zoning law only so that they could continue to enjoy taking care of those horses. If the Helmicks had paid a staff to handle the day-to-day chores of the horse activity, and they had merely visited the horses, it might be credible to assert that they enjoyed maintaining a large herd. However, we cannot find on the facts that the Helmicks derived so much pleasure from the company of purebred Arabian horses that they were willing to spend all of their free time and lose thousands of dollars every year to maintain *263 a herd on the same property as their personal residence. Even if the Helmicks had failed to maintain their property's zoning status as an equestrian center, they would still have been entitled to keep two horses on their property. If pleasure had been the goal, then keeping and caring for 2 horses -- rather than 40 -- would seem to have been preferable.
We conclude that this factor -- elements of personal pleasure -- is in the Helmicks' favor and indicates that they had the requisite profit objective.
We conclude that the Helmicks engaged in their horse activity during tax years 1993 to 2002 with the actual and honest objective of making a profit, and that
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all citations of sections refer to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C.), as amended, and all citations of Rules refer to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Respondent concedes that the $ 2,133.50 failure-to-file addition to tax under
3. For purposes of disputing Ms. Helmick's credibility, respondent asks the Court to take judicial notice of a document that she filed in bankruptcy court, in which she stated that, after the trial in this case, the Court "ruled from the bench * * * that the IRS was wrong to have attempted, at any time, to characterize the farm as a hobby"; but respondent points out that there is no such ruling in the trial transcript of this case. However, the Court did speak to the parties off the record, observing that the Helmicks' horse activity did not appear to be a mere "hobby", and that the disallowance of
4. Ms. Helmick alleged that she entered the business of horse breeding and boarding through her "business associations" with "rural equine residential real estate". However, she did not allege that she was involved in a real estate business, nor did she describe what that business might entail.↩
5. The Helmicks' Forms 1040 bear apparent discrepancies, but they seem to show that, as of the beginning of the year 1997, the Helmicks had accumulated net operating losses of $ 28,792, available to be carried forward and used as deductions. Schedule 1 to the notice of deficiency bears a similar figure of $ 29,762, and we assume this to be the correct figure. The schedules attached to the Helmicks' Forms 1040 for 1998 through 2002 seem to reflect that those forms include claimed deductions of net operating loss carryforwards; but in that respect they seem to be in error: If the Helmicks' Schedule F losses are allowed for the six years in issue, then for the five years 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, and 2002, their Forms 1040 reflected overall net losses after subtracting from their wage income and tax refund income (a) their Schedule F losses, (b) their itemized deductions, and (c) their exemptions. Those net losses so computed were $ 1,930 in 1998, $ 4,131 in 1999, $ 5,103 in 2000, and $ 11,375 in 2002. Using figures from Schedule 1 to the IRS's notice of deficiency, similar results are obtained by subtracting "Net Operating Loss Deduction" from "Taxable income as Shown in return as Filed". The return for 1997 is not in the record, but using the figures from Schedule 1 in the notice of deficiency, the net loss for 1997 was $ 15,275. Thus, the Helmicks did not need to deduct any NOL carryforwards in order to have zero taxable income in those five years. The one exception was 2001, in which they did apparently need an NOL deduction of $ 17,161 in order to have zero taxable income. The net losses from 1997 through 2000 total $ 26,439, and if carried forward they would be sufficient to offset the 2001 income. Thus,
6. Only tax years 1997 to 2002 are at issue. However, it is well settled that we may determine the correct amount of a net operating loss for a tax year not at issue (whether or not the assessment of a deficiency for that year is barred) as a preliminary step in determining the correct amount of a net operating loss carryover to a tax year at issue. See
7.
8. The regulations provide that "all the facts and circumstances" must be taken into account to determine the activity or activities of the taxpayer.
9. The notice of deficiency shows that, according to the IRS's computations, the Helmicks' highest taxable income was in 2002, in the amount of $ 49,733. Married individuals filing jointly with taxable income in that amount had a marginal tax rate of 28 percent in the years in issue. See
ABKCO Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner , 56 T.C. 1083 ( 1971 )
Lone Manor Farms, Inc. v. Commissioner , 61 T.C. 436 ( 1974 )
Herbert A. Dunn and Georgia E. Dunn v. Commissioner of ... , 615 F.2d 578 ( 1980 )
Abkco Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 482 F.2d 150 ( 1973 )
Malinowski v. Commissioner , 71 T.C. 1120 ( 1979 )
Keanini v. Commissioner , 94 T.C. 41 ( 1990 )
James P. Thomas and Mary Lou Thomas v. Commissioner of ... , 792 F.2d 1256 ( 1986 )
Osteen v. Comr. of IRS , 62 F.3d 356 ( 1995 )