DocketNumber: Docket No. 6183-78
Judges: Bruce
Filed Date: 9/15/1980
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*64
Petitioner possesses a rare type of blood. Thus, her blood plasma is a rare commodity which is profitably processed and marketed by others who are willing to pay "donors" for the plasma. Petitioner has sold her blood plasma for a number of years, including 1976, as her primary source of funds. As a seller of blood plasma, petitioner devotes constant attention to her diet and made 95 "donations" in 1976 for which she was paid by the pint.
*1229 Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal income tax for the year 1976 of $ 577 as set forth in his statutory notice of deficiency dated April 17, 1978. The issues presented 1 for our decision all involve whether petitioner *1230 is entitled to business-expense deductions relative to her activity as a blood plasma donor in excess of those allowed by respondent. Petitioner claimed as business-expense deductions amounts allegedly spent for medical insurance premiums, special drugs, high protein diet foods, and transportation to and from the laboratory where petitioner donated her plasma. Petitioner also claimed as a business deduction a depletion allowance for certain minerals and antibodies in her blood.
*68 FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation and the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioner Margaret Cramer Green resided in Milton, Fla., when the petition herein was filed and when she filed her Federal income tax return for 1976 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Chamblee, Ga. In 1976, petitioner had income in the form of wages from Wiggins, Inc., and The Shirt Shop, both in Pensacola, Fla., in the amounts of $ 4,080.59 and $ 368.50, respectively. However, petitioner's primary source of income 2 was from her activity as a blood plasma donor to Serologicals, Inc., of Pensacola (hereinafter the lab), an activity she has been engaged in for approximately 7 years.
*69 By a process known as plasmapheresis, a pint of whole blood is removed from the arm of a blood plasma donor, such as petitioner. From this whole blood, the plasma is centrifugally removed and the remaining red cells are returned to the donor's body. The process is repeated. Generally, two bleeds produce one pint of plasma. Petitioner is paid for her donations by the pint.
Petitioner, who has that rare blood type known as AB negative, reported gross receipts of $ 7,170 from her donor activity in 1976. This amount consisted of $ 6,695 in donor "commissions" and $ 475 in travel allowances, paid at a rate of $ 5 *1231 per trip. Offsetting these gross receipts, petitioner claimed related business-expense deductions totaling $ 2,355 of which only the amount of $ 132 was allowed by respondent in his notice of deficiency as shown below:
Expenses | Claimed | Allowed |
Legal and professional fees | $ 20 | $ 20 |
Medical insurance | 150 | 0 |
Special drugs | 260 | 112 |
High protein diet foods | 780 | 0 |
Travel | 475 | 0 |
Depletion | 670 | 0 |
2,355 | 132 |
During 1976, petitioner paid $ 93.09 in premiums on hospitalization insurance policies. In support of the $ 260 deduction*70 claimed for special drugs, petitioner submitted receipts, canceled checks, and cash register tapes from two drug stores and a health food store, all totaling $ 285.90. Items totaling $ 13.79 are clearly dated 1977. Some of the receipts and the cash register tapes duplicate purchases evinced by canceled checks submitted by the petitioner. Items not duplicated or dated in 1977 total $ 206.60. Petitioner submitted no evidence to support her deduction for travel expenses for $ 475, the amount she received as travel reimbursement. However, it is clear that, at $ 5 per trip, petitioner made 95 trips between her home and the lab where she made her plasma donations, a distance of 20 miles, 40 miles round trip. Although sometimes petitioner performed a few personal tasks during her return trips from the lab, petitioner always traveled directly to the lab prior to her donation.
Petitioner's household during 1976 consisted of herself and three children aged approximately 14, 15, and 16 years. As proof of the total grocery bill for this household, petitioner has canceled checks totaling $ 2,705, an approximate monthly average of $ 225.41. Of this amount, petitioner's claimed deduction*71 for high protein diet foods was $ 780, or $ 65 per month.
To insure that the substance necessary for the production of typing serums is being obtained, the blood of each plasma donor is tested for the desired concentration of iron, protein, and antibodies. If a donor's blood has a low concentration of these items, the donor is not allowed to give plasma. Although the red cells of each bleeding are returned to the donor, the usable iron *1232 of those cells is lost in that bleeding and protein is taken from the blood in the form of the plasma itself. These items, as well as vitamins and minerals, must be replaced by diet. If a donor's blood has a low antibody concentration, the donor may receive a "stim shot" whereby this concentration is artifically increased by an injection of incompatible blood type. This process is accompanied by pain and discomfort and carries the risk of hepatitis and blood clotting. Eventually, a donor's blood plasma will lose its ability to regenerate and will not respond to a "stim shot." For this loss of blood content and ability to regenerate, petitioner claimed a 10-percent depletion deduction for 1976.
Respondent has disallowed those claimed*72 business-expense deductions as shown above as (1) not constituting ordinary and necessary expenses for the performance of a trade or business under section 162, 3 or (2) not substantiated as paid, and if paid, as paid for the deductible purpose designated.
OPINION
Generally stated, the question presented by this case is whether petitioner may offset her taxable income by the expenses she incurred in obtaining payment for her blood plasma "donations." The ability to offset income with expenses incurred either under section 162, in carrying on a trade or business, or under section 212, for the production of income, requires by definition the existence of related income. Both parties to this case base their respective arguments upon the implied assumptions that petitioner realized income upon receiving payment for her plasma and that this income should be characterized as ordinary. Although these assumptions*73 may seem obvious, since this case presents some novel legal questions, we feel compelled to lay a firmer foundation for our conclusions herein.
Clearly, petitioner realized income. Section 61 states that "gross income means all income from whatever source derived. 4*75 Such sweeping language must be broadly interpreted to fulfill *1233 the intent of Congress to implement a comprehensive income tax.
Next, we must determine the character of the income realized by petitioner for her plasma. This income was not capital gain. Capital gain involves the sale or exchange of a capital asset. Section 1222(1) and (3). If petitioner's activity is viewed as the sale of property held for sale to customers*76 in the ordinary course of business, petitioner's blood plasma, the property held for sale, *1234 is not a capital asset. Sec. 1221(1). On the other hand, if her activity is viewed as a service, her blood plasma is an integral part of that service and is not part of a sale or exchange. Cf.
Nevertheless, the identification of the activity as either the sale of a product or the performance of a service
The rarity of petitioner's blood made the processing and packaging of her blood plasma a profitable undertaking, just as it is profitable for other entrepreneurs to purchase hen's eggs, bee's honey, cow's milk, or sheep's wool for processing and distribution. Although we recognize the traditional sanctity of the human body, we can find no reason to legally distinguish the sale of these raw products of nature from the sale of petitioner's blood plasma. Even human hair, if of sufficient length and quality, may be sold for the production of hairpieces. The main thrust of the relationship between petitioner and the lab was the sale of a tangible raw material to be processed and eventually resold by the lab.
Finally, before we turn to the claimed deductions, themselves, we must determine whether petitioner's donor activity was a "trade or business" within the meaning of section 162. *78 Unfortunately, the only definition of "trade or business" or of what constitutes "carrying on any trade or business" provided by section 162 is that which has evolved under the prevailing case law interpreting that section. An explicit definition of the *1235 phrase is not contained in this case law or in the Internal Revenue Code.
Petitioner has been selling her blood plasma on a regular basis continually for over 7 years. This activity has required petitioner's daily attention to her special diet and her weekly or biweekly visits to*79 the extracting laboratory. Her efforts in maintaining her special diet and making the trips to the extracting laboratory were motivated by the prospect of receiving payment for each pint of acceptable plasma extracted. Thus, petitioner was actively engaged 6 in the continual and regular 7 process of producing and selling blood plasma to the lab for profit. 8 Further, petitioner held herself out as engaged in the sale 9 of blood plasma to the lab upon its acceptance.
*80 Upon the facts, we find that petitioner was in the trade or business of selling blood plasma. Therefore, to be allowable, the deductions claimed by petitioner must be substantiated as "ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on" her activity as a seller of blood plasma. Sec. 162.
First, petitioner claimed a business deduction for the full amount of health insurance premiums paid in 1975. Respondent treated the amount substantiated, $ 93.09, as a medical expense deduction, allowing half, the other half being offset by 3 percent of petitioner's adjusted gross income.
Petitioner also claimed business deductions for special high protein foods and "special drugs" or diet supplements. Respondent disallowed the entire deduction for food and all but $ 112 of the claimed deduction for "special drugs" as being nondeductible personal expenses. While the greater portion of*82 these claimed amounts were those normal expenses necessary for petitioner's personal physical benefit, and thus not deductible under section 262, part of these expenses were incurred by petitioner in her business as a seller of blood plasma. Petitioner went to additional expense, beyond that necessary for her personal needs, 12 to purchase high protein foods and diet supplements for maintaining the quality of her blood plasma. That additional expense is *1237 deductible under section 162 if properly substantiated. Respondent implies as much by allowing a portion of petitioner's claimed deduction for "special drugs."
*83 It is well settled that the notice of deficiency issued by the Commissioner is presumed correct and that the taxpayer has the burden of proof to show otherwise.
Given the evidence and testimony of petitioner detailing her purchases of various vitamin and mineral supplements, we conclude that respondent has already made a reasonable approximation of the deductible expense for "special drugs" in 1976. However, for high protein foods, we feel that some allowance should also be made. Since petitioner's household consisted of petitioner and three teenagers, we*84 conclude that petitioner's share of the 1976 household expense of $ 2,705 was one-fourth, or approximately $ 675. Further, since only the additional cost of the special food is deductible, we find in our best judgment that only one-third of petitioner's share of the household food expense, $ 225, is deductible under section 162.
Next, petitioner claimed a deduction for "travel" in the amount of reimbursement she received from the lab for 95 trips at $ 5 each, or $ 475. Petitioner concedes that the $ 475 was income to her for 1976, but contends that she was transporting her product of blood plasma to the lab for sale and should be allowed to deduct the same amount. Respondent disallowed the entire amount as personal commuting expenses. Once again, the unusual situation presented by the instant set of facts requires a close examination of the distinction between business expenses, which are deductible, and personal expenses, which are not. Commuting expenses are clearly personal expenses and not deductible.
*86 Finally, petitioner claimed a 10-percent depletion deduction for the loss of her blood's mineral content and the loss of her blood's ability to regenerate, which deduction was fully disallowed by respondent. We agree with respondent. Congress enacted sections 611-614 and their predecessors to promote exploration and development of geological mineral resources. See S. Rept. 617, 65th Cong., 3d Sess. (1918),
To reflect the foregoing,
1. The contested adjustment to petitioner's taxable income necessarily resulted in adjustments to petitioners self-employment tax and claimed sales tax deduction for 1976, as well as the treatment of medical insurance premiums as a medical-expense deduction, rather than a business-expense deduction, by the respondent in the notice of deficiency. Thus, our resolution of the contested adjustment will affect those other related adjustments directly.↩
2. Petitioner does not contend that the money she received was not income subject to Federal income taxation, nor does she contend that the income was capital gain on the sale of her plasma as a capital asset. Without making a formal decision at this time, for the purpose of stating the facts in this case we will refer to the funds received by petitioner for her plasma as ordinary income.↩
3. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
4. SEC. 61. GROSS INCOME DEFINED.
(a) General Definition. -- Except as otherwise provided in this subtitle, gross income means all income from whatever source derived, including (but not limited to) the following items: (1) Compensation for services including fees, commissions, and similar items; (2) Gross income derived from business; (3) Gains derived from dealings in property;↩
5. Of the various sections which specifically exclude items from gross income (see secs. 101-124), none apply to the instant case. Even though petitioner may have suffered pain and discomfort from the extraction process, sec. 104(a)(2) excluding "damages received (whether by suit or agreement) on account of personal injuries or sickness" does not apply. Sec. 104 applies to those payments resulting from tort claims. See, e.g.,
6. Cf.
7.
8. See, e.g.,
9. Cf.
10. Even premiums on disability policies are not deductible as business expenses unless provided payments specifically cover overhead expenses during the disability period. Otherwise, the payments are available for personal use.
11. See also
12. Respondent correctly observes that we have rejected the "but for" test as the sole determinant of deductibility under sec. 162.
13. See also respondent's position in
14. In 1976, petitioner made 95 trips to the lab, each a distance of 40 miles, a total of 3,800 miles. Given the reasonable allowance of 15 cents per business mile as set by respondent for 1976, the deduction allowable for petitioner's trips to the lab in 1976 would be $ 570. See
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