DocketNumber: Docket No. 6323-76.
Citation Numbers: 39 T.C.M. 268, 1979 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 125, 1979 T.C. Memo. 405
Filed Date: 9/25/1979
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
TANNENWALD,
Petitioners appeared at the call of the calendar at which this case was calendared for trial and the Court conducted a pretrial conference, the substance of which is set forth in the record herein. When the case was called for trial, they did not appear. They did, however, communicate with the Court by telephone and requested that the Court state on*127 the record, on their behalf (which it did), that they objected to respondent's determination solely on legal grounds and that, if the Court should decide the legal issues raised in their petition and brief in favor of respondent, they conceded that the amount of the deficiency as determined by respondent and the factual basis on which it rests are correct. We have considered all the objections raised by petitioners and we find them to be without merit.
First, petitioners argue that petitioner David L. Allinson (hereinafter Reverend Allinson) was not self-employed but, rather, received the amount which respondent has determined is subject to the self-employment tax from his employment as an ordained minister by the Maranatha Baptist Church.
Petitioners further object that the amount in question was received as reimbursement for pastoral expenses, was not properly reportable as income, and should, therefore, not be subject to self-employment tax. Even if such reimbursed expenses are considered as a rental allowance *129 Petitioners' next contention is that Reverend Allinson is opposed to the self-employment tax and the Social Security system on religious grounds and that to compel his participation in that system by subjecting him to the self-employment tax is a violation of the
This Court has previously considered and rejected the argument that the self-employment tax conflicts with the free exercise or
This contention simply has no basis in fact. It is true, as petitioners assert, that prior to 1968
Finally, petitioners are not entitled to a jury trial in this Court and the denial thereof does not violate the
1. Unless otherwise provided, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect in the taxable year at issue.↩
2. The fact that the amounts in question were received by Reverend Allinson as pastoral expenses, and, in particular, as a rental allowance, does not appear in the record. Prior to the date of trial, respondent prepared a proposed stipulation of facts, which petitioners did not sign, and, as stated above, petitioners did not appear at trial. The burden of introducing facts necessary to support their claims was, of course, on the petitioners.
3. Accord,
4. Reverend Allinson apparently graduated from Bob Jones University, Greenville, S.C., in June of 1963, with a bachelor's degree in Bible Studies, and was ordained into the ministry in 1964. See footnote 2,
5. Respondent's brief indicates that respondent determined that petitioner earned income of $400 or more, which was not reimbursement for expenses, from the exercise of the ministry in each of the taxable years 1968 and 1969 and that the due date of petitioners' tax returns for each year has been April 15 of the following year. See footnote 2,
6. In any case, the prohibition of
7. See
8. See