DocketNumber: Docket No. 7539-74.
Filed Date: 3/24/1976
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*311 Petitioners reported as income winnings on racetrack wagers in the amount of $15,909.60 and claimed offsetting losses in the same amount. Respondent disallowed all but $4,454 of the losses claimed. Amount of deductible losses redetermined.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
DRENNEN,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are accordingly so found.
Petitioners Salvadore S. and Justina Taormina are husband and wife who resided with their three children in Monaca, Pa., at the time they filed the petition herein. Petitioners reported their income and deductions according to the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting. Their joint individual income tax return for the taxable year 1971 was filed with the Philadelphia Service Center, Philadelphia, Pa.
During 1971, petitioner Salvadore S. Taormina (hereinafter referred to as petitioner or Salvadore) frequented racetracks where he engaged in regular wagering activities. Although he occasionally went to other tracks, petitioner attended primarily the Waterford Park racetrack in Chester, W. Va. Most of the betting tickets petitioner purchased were $2 perfecta or daily double tickets.
Petitioner was not a professional gambler; rather he was an addicted racehorse player. Both Salvadore and Justina reported income from wages in 1971. Petitioner*313 usually went to the racetracks at night three to five times a week when they were open.
On their income tax return for 1971, in addition to combined salary in the amount of $12,464 and a commission of $50, petitioners reported $15,909 in racetrack winnings which consisted of eitht separate big perfecta winnings on $2 wagers at Waterford Park. The dates and amounts of these winnings were as follows:
Date | Amount |
July 3, 1971 | $ 1,486.80 |
July 9, 1971 | 2,684.40 |
August 16, 1971 | 1,170.80 |
August 31, 1971 | 2,466.20 |
September 28, 1971 | 1,401.20 |
October 2, 1971 | 4,840.00 |
October 7, 1971 | 632.40 |
Unknown | 1,227.80 |
Total | $15,909.60 |
Petitioner signed certification forms for Waterford Park, Inc., acknowledging receipt of the above-indicated amounts. No wagering gains other than those for which petitioner signed were reported on petitioners' 1971 return. *314 losing tickets from Waterford Park racetrack for wagers placed in 1971, which tickets petitioners have in their possession. *315 In the statutory notice issued to petitioners, respondent determined that petitioners had $4,454 in gambling losses; accordingly, respondent disallowed the remaining $11,455 of the $15,909 claimed by petitioners.
OPINION
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect in the year in issue, unless otherwise specified.↩
2. Petitioner testified that he did win additional, unreported bets which amount to "very little."↩
3. The fact that petitioners posses losing tickets in the amount of $10,153 was stipulated by the parties although respondent does not stipulate that these losing tickets are in fact records of petitioner's wagering activities. None of the actual tickets, other than those dated August 27, 1971, were submitted in evidence; instead, we have schedules prepared by respondent from the tickets turned over by petitioners. The schedules reflect the following information printed on the tickets: date, amount of wager, race, combination, window and ticket number. Additionally, the schedules indicate that a small number of tickets were purchased at a racetrack other than Waterford Park. ↩
4. The schedules (footnote 3,
5. The schedules prepared by respondent contain an occasional notation that a particular ticket is dirty or torn. Since we have only a small sample of actual tickets (August 27th) to compare with the schedules in order to determine the standard applied in describing the tickets and the reliability thereof, we are reluctant to accord much weight to the descriptions appearing on schedules.↩
6. The record does not indicate how respondent arrived at $4,454 as the amount of wagering losses allowable. We credit respondent's agent, however, for the time and effort spent in sorting, listing, and trying to analyze the tickets Salvadore made available to him.↩
7. Such "suspect" tickets are those which, for example, do not form part of an apparent sequence, indicate a window different than the (windows) from which the other tickets for that race were purchased, and are designated on respondent's schedules as torn or dirty. ↩
8. Petitioner's testimony constituted something of a converse net worth approach in that he testified that he had no savings and had borrowed funds in respect of which he was delinquent on some payments. Petitioner's characterization of his financial status is supported by the 1971 income tax return which reports no interest income but does instead indicate four items of interest expense in the amount of $676. ↩
9. Petitioner had relatively few losing tickets for the period January to July 1971, although he testified he attended the racetracks about three times a week during this period.↩
10. See also
11. Compare also