DocketNumber: No. 26652-06S
Judges: Laro
Filed Date: 9/4/2008
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
PURSUANT TO INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 7463(b), THIS OPINION MAY NOT BE TREATED AS PRECEDENT FOR ANY OTHER CASE.
LARO,
Petitioner petitioned the Court to redetermine respondent's determination of a $ 3,896 deficiency in petitioner's 2004 Federal income tax. The deficiency relates solely to the parties' dispute as to whether petitioner received $ 27,574 from his company, Enduroglas L.L.C. (Enduroglas), as compensation or as a partial repayment of a loan. We agree with respondent that petitioner received the $ 27,574 as compensation.
Some facts were stipulated. We incorporate by reference the parties' stipulation of facts and the exhibits submitted therewith. Petitioner resided in Michigan when the petition commencing *115 this proceeding was filed.
Petitioner filed a 2004 Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, that included a Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business. Petitioner reported on his Schedule C that he had a sole proprietorship that had received $ 27,573 of gross receipts during 2004 and had realized a net profit of the same amount. *116 tax as to the net profit of $ 27,574. When petitioner received the $ 27,574 from Enduroglas, Enduroglas owed petitioner a debt of a considerably greater amount. After receiving the notice of deficiency, petitioner was informed that it would have been most advantageous to him from a tax point of view to have characterized the $ 27,574 as a partial repayment of that debt instead of as a payment of compensation for services rendered to Enduroglas. Petitioner subsequently caused Enduroglas to issue to him a "CORRECTED" 2004 Form 1099-MISC stating that Enduroglas had not paid him any nonemployee compensation during 2004.
On March 24, 2007, petitioner mailed to respondent a Form 1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, which reduced petitioner's adjusted gross income by $ 27,574 and contained this explanation: "The 1099 the taxpayer received for $ 27,574.00 was incorrect and should have not been issued. A corrected one was sent in and the amount is $ 0". Similarly, the claim for relief in petitioner's amended petition states:
I received a 1099-MISC in 2004 for $ 27,573.67, received from Enduroglas LLC. The 1099-MISC was issued in error because Enduroglas LLC owed me nearly *117 $ 50,000 in loans that have not been repaid to date. The $ 27,573.67 should have been a repayment of loan instead of compensation. The 1099-MISC has since been corrected to $ 0.00. My 2004 1040 is being revised to reflect the corrected 1099-MISC.
The burden of proof is on petitioner to show that respondent's determinations set forth in the notice of deficiency are incorrect. See
The tax law concerning the characterization of a payment as compensation is clear and provides that whether amounts are paid as compensation depends on the intent of the payor at the time the payment was made. See, e.g.,
Given that the record supports the conclusion that the $ 27,574 payment made from Enduroglas to petitioner was intended at the time of payment to compensate petitioner for services performed, we hold as determined by respondent that petitioner is liable for the self-employment tax that applies to that payment. We have considered all arguments by petitioner for a contrary holding and have concluded that those arguments not discussed herein are irrelevant or without merit. Accordingly,
1. The gross receipts were actually $ 27,573.67. While petitioner apparently reported the $ 27,573 by rounding the actual amount down to the nearest dollar, we join respondent in rounding the actual amount to the nearest dollar; i.e., $ 27,574.↩