DocketNumber: Docket No. 26341-86
Citation Numbers: 57 T.C.M. 1248, 1989 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 413, 1989 T.C. Memo. 415
Filed Date: 8/10/1989
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
WRIGHT,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and attached exhibits are incorporated by reference.
Petitioner resided in Bellevue, Washington, at the time the petition in this case was filed.
Petitioner was married in 1971. In October 1981, petitioner was in the process of obtaining a dissolution of the marriage. On October 2, 1981, petitioner attended a hearing before Stephen Gaddis (Commissioner Gaddis), a Court Commissioner for the Washington State King County Superior Court (the State Court). The hearing was for the purpose of setting the terms of a temporary support order in connection with petitioner's dissolution of marriage. At the hearing, Commissioner Gaddis was presented with opposing arguments by petitioner and his estranged wife, Elizabeth M. Johnson, concerning the amount of support petitioner was to pay pending final dissolution of the marriage.*415 Commissioner Gaddis orally decreed that petitioner was to pay Elizabeth M. Johnson:
the sum of $ 500.00 per month per child, for a total of $ 1,000.00 as child support, and $ 500.00 per month maintenance, the total of $ 1,500.00 being designated as undifferentiated maintenance and child support * * *.
On October 16, 1981, Elizabeth M. Johnson filed with the State Court a Motion For Reconsideration and Clarification. By such motion she sought, inter alia, an increase in the amount of temporary maintenance to be paid by petitioner. On October 28, 1981, Commissioner Gaddis effectively denied Elizabeth M. Johnson's motion by issuing a written Order Pendente Lite which contained language identical to the original oral decree quoted above.
Petitioner paid Elizabeth M. Johnson $ 18,000 during 1982 pursuant to the State Court's Order Pendente Lite. Petitioner deducted $ 1,500 per month, $ 18,000 for the year, as alimony on his 1982 tax return. In 1984, respondent audited petitioner's 1982 return and questioned the propriety of deducting the full $ 1,500 per month. Respondent informed petitioner that he would be willing to accept petitioner's position --
Of the $ 18,000 received from petitioner during 1982, Elizabeth M. Johnson reported only $ 6,000 as alimony income. The remaining $ 12,000 received was considered by her to be nontaxable child support. Accordingly, petitioner's only recourse was to establish that Commissioner Gaddis' intent was as petitioner asserted.
In an attempt to establish Commissioner Gaddis' intent, petitioner filed with the State Court a Motion for Clarification/Correction of the Order Pendente Lite (motion for Clarification/Correction). The clarification sought by such motion was:
whether or not the [state] court intended that the entire sum of $ 1,500.00 be treated as undifferentiated maintenance and therefore deductible, or * * * whether the precatory language relating to specific amounts was intended to limit the deductibility of the undifferentiated maintenance to the $ 500.00 ascribed to the wife.
Petitioner's motion to the State Court was heard*417 on February 22, 1985. Petitioner and Elizabeth M. Johnson, through counsel, presented evidence and argument to Commissioner Gaddis concerning the Motion for Clarification/Correction. Commissioner Gaddis granted petitioner's motion on June 24, 1985, by issuing an Order of Clarification Nunc Pro Tunc (Order Nunc Pro Tunc). Such order provided that the State Court's October 28, 1981 Order Pendente Lite was to be clarified and modified to read as follows:
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the Respondent/Husband, Alexander C. Johnson, be, and thereby is ordered to pay to the Petitioner/Wife, Elizabeth M. Johnson, the sum of $ 1,500.00 per month spousal maintenance, such sums to be included in the income of the Wife and deductible by the Husband * * *.
Pursuant to the terms of the Order Nunc Pro Tunc, it was to relate back to the original date of entry of the State Court's Order Pendente Lite, October 28, 1981.
Commissioner Gaddis granted petitioner's Motion for Clarification/Correction because the language in the State Court's Order Pendente Lite did not accurately reflect his intent. Commissioner Gaddis modified his Order Pendente Lite through his Order Nunc*418 Pro Tunc because the wording of the Order Pendente Lite was inaccurate. Commissioner Gaddis intended, by his Order Pendente Lite, to require petitioner to pay Elizabeth M. Johnson $ 1,500 per month undifferentiated spousal maintenance and child support, not that petitioner pay $ 1,000 per month child support and $ 500 per month spousal maintenance. Such order was an exception to Commissioner Gaddis' normal procedures in issuing Orders Pendente Lite. Commissioner Gaddis rarely chose to not designate as child support a portion of the family support payments he ordered.
OPINION
The issue for decision is whether under
Petitioner asserts that in determining whether any portion of his payments was specifically earmarked as child support, we should look to the State Court's Order Pendente Lite as retroactively modified by Commissioner Gaddis' Order Nunc Pro Tunc. That modified decree, petitioner contends, does not fix a portion of his payments as child support. Accordingly, petitioner asserts his payments are includable*420 in the gross income of Elizabeth M. Johnson under
Respondent argues that the Order Nunc Pro Tunc should not be given retroactive effect by this Court and that we should look only to the original Order Pendente Lite to determine whether any portion of the payments in question were fixed as child support. Respondent asserts that the Order Pendente Lite, unmodified by the Order Nunc Pro Tunc, clearly "earmarks" $ 1,000 per month as child support. Consequently, respondent asserts only $ 500 of the $ 1,500 paid by petitioner per month is includable in Elizabeth M. Johnson's gross income and deductible by petitioner.
We generally disregard for Federal income tax purposes State court adjudications retroactively designating divorce-related payments as alimony and not child support (or vice versa) if the order retroactively changes the rights of the parties or the legal status of the payments.
In the case at hand, the exception to the general rule applies. It is clear that the unamended Order Pendente Lite did not give effect to the intention of the State Court. The language of the Order Pendente Lite is internally inconsistent and contradictory. Further, Commissioner Gaddis provided credible testimony at trial that he intended, at the time of entry of the Order Pendente Lite, that the $ 1,500 a month payment required of petitioner be undifferentiated family support,*422 fully deductible by petitioner. Respondent does not argue that Commissioner Gaddis lacked authority to issue such order. Accordingly, we hold that petitioner is entitled to deduct $ 18,000 in 1982 as separate maintenance paid pursuant to
To reflect the foregoing,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect for the year at issue, unless otherwise indicated.↩