DocketNumber: Docket No. 7614-70 SC.
Filed Date: 3/6/1972
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
INGOLIA, Commissioner: Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' Federal income tax for 1967 in the amount of $1,170. Concessions having been made, the only issue remaining is whether certain expenditures made by the petitioners are1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 194">*195 deductible business expenses under section 162 1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 194">*196 guests and were identified as follows: Accountants Attorneys Mr. & Mrs. J. Bloom Mr. & Mrs. G. Borden Mr. & Mrs. I. Hoch- berg Mr. & Mrs. W. Sparago Mr. & Mrs. B. Sparago Builder Partners Mr. & Mrs. R. Small Mr. & Mrs. M. Rosen-- baum Mr. & Mrs. I. Rosen- baum Mr. & Mrs. S. Rosen- baum Employees Mr. & Mrs. L. Schwartz Buyer - electrical Mr. & Mrs. J. Keller, Sr. General superintendent Mr. & Mrs. F. Katz Superintendent - Newyork area Mr. & Mrs. M. Jacobs Manager - Reading,pa. Mr. & Mrs. W. Sanders Manager - Hoboken, N.J. Mr. & Mrs. B. Solomon Buyer - houseware Mr. & Mrs. A. Weinberg Buyer - cameras, gifts Mr. & Mrs. D. Bailey Buyer - appliances Mr. & Mrs. E. Thomson Store supervisor - appliances Mr. & Mrs. G. Lenowitz Office manager Mr. & Mrs. R. Hawthorne Buyer - childrens wear Mr. & Mrs. A. Mittelman Merchandise manager - soft goods Mr. & Mrs. H. Shields Buyer - sportswear Mr. & Mrs. E. Metzger Merchandise manager - toys, hardware, etc. Mr. & Mrs. H. Kay Buyer - automotive Mr. & Mrs. L. Goldschmidt Buyer - domestics, sporting goods Mr. & Mrs. A. Lobelson Accounts payable supervisor Mr. & Mrs. J. Monte Advertising manager Mr. & Mrs. W. Marx Variety stores supervisor Landlords Mr. & Mrs. J. Grossman Stores at Elmira, Utica, Camden, Dover, Mr. & Mrs. L. Grossman Corning, Auburn,canandaigua, Martins- burg, Ashtabula Mr. & Mrs. B. Baker Mr. & Mrs. D. Handler Suppliers Mr. & Mrs. D. Kanfer A. Cohen & Son Mr. & Mrs. H. Noble Lincoln Office Company Mr. & Mrs. L. Simms Atlas Movers Mr. & Mrs. N. Weiner Toddler Clothes Mr. & Mrs. M. Somberg Allied Cloth Mr. & Mrs. A. Katz Kason Hardware Co.
1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 194">*197 On his 1967 Federal income tax return, the petitioner claimed 76/193 or $2,050 of the Bar Mitzvah expense as a deduction, which the respondent disallowed. At trial, the petitioner argued that 38/193 or $653 should be allowed as a business expense. He testified that:
(1) He and his partners entered into a "memorandum agreement" prior to 1967 that "such expenses as cab fares and home entertainment and other uses of personal facilities, periodicals, telephones, gifts, luncheons, dinners, and other disbursements will be paid for by the individual partner as his part of a contribution to the success of the partnership" because to do it any other way would interfere with the bookkeeping.
(2) Rather than have company Christmas parties and the like to build up employee moral, the company consistently followed the practice of inviting employees to family celebrations and gatherings such as weddings, anniversary parties, and funerals.
(3) The company did approximately 42 million dollars worth of business in 1967 and took no deductions for Christmas party expenses, picnics, golf outings, "or anything that would be deductible under the Regulation 1.274-8."
Opinion
Section 162 provides1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 194">*198 that there shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business. The requirements that the expense must be both ordinary and necessary must be strictly complied with,
In the instant case, we believe the petitioner has failed to sustain his burden. Certainly, standing alone a Bar Mitzvah party is personal in nature and has no business connotation whatsoever. There are no facts in the record which would indicate1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 194">*199 that the party involved in this case was primarily motivated by anything other than a personal reason. We do not doubt that the petitioner and his partners may have followed the practice of inviting their employees to social functions hoping to bolster morale, but this fact would hardly be determinative of deductibility under section 162. There were 193 people at the party, a large majority of whom were relatives and friends. The 19 employees who did attend with their wives were basically supervisory personnel and a small percentage of the 80 employees who worked in the New York office. It would seem the morale of those not attending would be adversely affected rather than fortified in light of these facts.
With respect to petitioner's allegations that he and his partners agreed to pay for the entertainment expenses out of their own funds and that the partnership did not deduct any amounts for these types of expenditures, the facts presented are too incomplete to allow any definitive determination regarding these averments. However, even without delving into the propriety of the agreement insofar as it assigns partnership expenses to individuals, it seems clear that the agreement1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 194">*200 specifically does not affect the deductibility of the expenses claimed. The question involved is not who made the expenditures but why they were made. As to the allegation that deductions of this nature were not claimed by the partnership, without the partnership return and an analysis of its income and expenses, no valid conclusions can be drawn. In any event, it appears the allegation is based on equitable rather than legal considerations and therefore is not of any real significance to the outcome of this case.
Finally, regarding petitioner's argument that the regulations under section 274 operate to allow the deduction claimed, we do not agree. The purpose of section 274 is not to enlarge on allowances made for expenses by any other section of the Internal Revenue Code, but rather to disallow expenses which may initially be allowable under some other section of the Code. See H. Rept. No. 1447, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 19 (1962); S. Rept. No. 1881, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 27 (1962). Here, the initial section involved is section 162. Since we do not believe the expenses claimed are allowable under section 162, section 274 has no real application. Indeed, even if it were applicable, 1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 194">*201 we could not agree with petitioner's argument that under section 274 the expenses would be allowed to him. It would not be allowable under the basic provisions of section 274(a), because the petitioner has not established that the item was "directly related" to or associated with the active conduct of his trade or business. Also, it would not be allowable under the exceptions to the basic provisions as set forth in
In our view this case falls under the ambit of our holdings in Footnotes