DocketNumber: No. 11752-91
Judges: NIMS
Filed Date: 2/2/1999
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
*32 An appropriate order will be issued denying the Motion for Reconsideration.
*33 P filed a Motion for Reconsideration of our opinion in
HELD: Our opinion in
HELD, FURTHER, the issue of duress has previously been considered and rejected.
HELD, FURTHER, P's Motion for Reconsideration is denied.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
*34 NIMS, JUDGE: Margaret Ann Carpender (petitioner) moves the Court for reconsideration of its memorandum opinion at
In *35
In her motion to reconsider our decision in
Respondent argues that (1) our prior opinions have already addressed*36 the question and found that petitioner had actual knowledge of the Hitech checks, and (2) our prior opinions and the opinion of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit have addressed the question and found that petitioner did not show duress.
For the reasons stated below, we agree with respondent.
BACKGROUND
We adopt the findings of fact in our prior memorandum opinions,
David L. Wiksell (David) and petitioner were married in 1960, legally separated in 1988, and divorced in December 1992. Petitioner, formerly Margaret Ann Wiksell, is now known as Margaret Ann Carpender. During the years in issue, and throughout most of her marriage, petitioner maintained her own separate checking accounts.
Sometime in 1982 or 1983, David started Hitech Recovery Systems, Inc. (Hitech). David told petitioner that Hitech was to engage in the extraction of oil from old oil wells.
Sometime before the spring of 1984, David began working as a real estate investment adviser*37 for Comstock Financial Services, Inc. (Comstock Financial), an insurance agency owned and operated by Roy L. Comstock (Comstock). During the spring of 1984, David told petitioner that Comstock was investing in Hitech.
During 1984 and 1985, David maintained a business checking account under the name Hitech. Petitioner was not a signatory on this account. David periodically gave petitioner checks drawn on the Hitech account and made payable to "Margaret Wiksell", which she deposited into her two personal checking accounts. In 1984, petitioner was given 23 checks from Hitech totaling $ 54,500. In 1985, petitioner received 15 Hitech checks totaling $ 140,500 from Hitech.
In 1984 and 1985, petitioner wrote checks on her accounts totaling $ 78,781.38 and $ 149,444.32, respectively. Among other things, these checks were used for clothes; loans to a child; charitable and political contributions; entertainment and gifts; home furnishings; home repair and maintenance; credit card payments; mortgage payments; and numerous other miscellaneous expenses.
In January or February 1987, David was arrested and charged with fraud in connection with a scam perpetrated by Roy Comstock, Abraham Boldt, *38 and David, wherein it was alleged that at least $ 2 million, fraudulently obtained from unsuspecting investors in Comstock Financial, was diverted to Hitech. On January 13, 1988, David pleaded guilty to various counts of fraud involving the sale of unregistered securities in connection with his participation in the fraudulent investment scheme.
On their 1984 and 1985 returns, David and petitioner reported adjusted gross income of $ 10,525 and $ 4,298, respectively, of which approximately $ 9,801 in 1984 and $ 1,760 in 1985 represented petitioner's wages from part-time nursing. Petitioner signed the 1984 return on June 16, 1987, and the 1985 return on November 9, 1987.
At the time she signed the 1984 and 1985 returns, petitioner questioned David about why the returns contained no income reflecting the money that he had given her in those years. She stated that he gave her
such a bizarre explanation that I don't think I could even
repeat it, I mean what he told me. * * * It was something along
the fact that it had been investment -- that he had investments
in * * * [Hitechl that had been lost and this was return, or
something along those*39 lines. * * * it just didn't make sense to
me.
Petitioner suspected that David was lying, but she would not press him further on the matter. David had gotten violent when Margaret or others "probed" into his finances.
DISCUSSION
Reconsideration under
Reconsideration is not the appropriate forum for rehashing previously rejected arguments or tendering new legal theories to reach the end desired by the moving party.
However, the RRA 1998 was enacted on July 22, 1998, after the previous opinions in this case. Section 3201(g)(1) of the RRA 1998, 112 Stat. 740, provides that
(i) In General. -- An individual shall only be eligible to
elect the application of this subsection if --
(I) at the time such election is filed, such
individual is no longer married to, or is legally separated
from, the individual with whom such individual filed the
joint return to which the election relates * * *
Respondent concedes, and we agree, that petitioner*42 meets this requirement.
Section 6015(c)(3)(C) provides that
If the Secretary demonstrates that an individual making an
election under this subsection had ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE, at the time
such individual signed the return, of any item giving rise to a
deficiency (or portion thereof) which is not allocable to such
individual under subsection (d), such election shall not apply
to such deficiency (or portion). This subparagraph shall not
apply where the individual with actual knowledge establishes
that such individual signed the return under DURESS. [Emphasis
added.]
ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE
Petitioner asserts that we should consider whether for purposes of
Petitioner acknowledges that we found that she "was, however, precisely aware of the amounts derived from Hitech via David that actually passed through her hands."
In
We do not believe it necessary to repeat all of our
findings of fact to demonstrate our reasons for concluding that
* * * [petitioner] not only had reason to know, but actually had
knowledge, that the returns*44 contained substantial
understatements. * * * [Petitioner's] actual knowledge is
established by the simple fact that * * * [petitioner] admitted
that she asked David why there was no income on the returns
reflecting the money that had been coming to her through him
from Hitech, and which the family had been living on during the
years in issue. * * *
We subsequently stated:
[Petitioner] also had reason to know of the substantial
understatements. She was well aware of David's involvement in
Hitech, and during 1984 she received 23 Hitech checks from David
totaling $ 54,500, which she deposited into her separate checking
accounts. During 1985, she received 15 Hitech checks from David
totaling $ 140,500 which she deposited into her separate checking
accounts. Throughout these years * * * [petitioner] wrote large
checks on her individual account to charities, political
candidates, and for home improvements. She had to know that her
own meager earnings from nursing were vastly insufficient to
provide these funds. [Id.]
In *45
Petitioner was, however, precisely aware of the amounts
derived from Hitech via David that actually passed through her
hands. As we have found, in 1984, petitioner was given 23 checks
from Hitech, totaling $ 54,500. In 1985, petitioner received 15
Hitech checks totaling $ 140,500. During these same years
petitioner spent substantial amounts for clothing for herself
and her children, loans to a child, charitable and political
contributions, entertainment and gifts, home furnishings, home
repair and maintenance, credit card payments, mortgage payments,
and numerous other miscellaneous expenses.
In essence, petitioner argues that because we used similar facts to derive two different conclusions (i.e., "had reason to know" versus "precisely aware"), it follows that these facts could not have justified both conclusions. According to petitioner's reasoning, since we have already concluded that these facts are indications of "reason to know", they cannot form the basis for "actual knowledge" under
Petitioner's argument is illogical, and we find it unpersuasive. Our opinion in
Petitioner further argues that
We dismiss petitioner's argument because it ignores the language of our finding that petitioner was "precisely aware" of the Hitech checks she received from David. Our finding was based on petitioner's subjective awareness of the Hitech check deposits and her subjective awareness that she wrote checks in amounts far in excess of the modest income she earned as a part-time nurse in 1984 and 1985.
Based on the foregoing, we hold that our opinion in
DURESS
Petitioner argues that neither the Tax Court nor the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit could possibly have considered the significance of the term "duress" as contemplated by legislative mandate, as that concept had just been newly codified in
Neither the statute nor the legislative history indicates that Congress intended to define the term "duress". See
Petitioner has failed to identify a persuasive reason to grant her Motion for Reconsideration.
To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order will be issued denying the Motion for Reconsideration.
*. This opinion supplements our opinions in Wiksell v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1994-99, revd. and remanded 90 F.3d 1459 (9th Cir. 1996), and Wiksell v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1998-3.↩
Haft Trust v. Commissioner ( 1974 )
Margaret Wiksell v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1996 )
Cwt Farms, Inc. And Cwt International, Inc. v. Commissioner ... ( 1985 )
Joe Traum and Mae Traum v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1956 )
Robin Haft Trust v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1975 )