2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*97 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
LARO, JUDGE: Respondent determined the following deficiencies in and penalties on petitioners' Federal income taxes:
Year Deficiency
____ __________ ____________________
1993 $ 174,815 $ 131,111
1994 156,263 117,057
1995 179,928 134,945
After concessions, we must determine the following issues:
(1) Whether respondent's bank deposit analyses correctly determined petitioners' unreported gross receipts during 1993, 1994, and 1995 in the amounts of $ 721,408, 1 $ 735,207, and $ 542,641, respectively. We hold that they did.
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*98 (2) Whether petitioners are liable for penalties on their 1993, 1994, and 1995 tax for fraud pursuant to
Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue. Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Dollar amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts were stipulated. The stipulation of facts and the exhibits submitted therewith2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*99 are incorporated herein by reference. When the petition was filed, petitioners Chung Ui Kim (Chung Kim) and Ok Hui Kim (Ok Kim) resided in Hayward, California.
Petitioners were married in Korea during 1970 and immigrated to the United States in 1973. Petitioners have been U.S. residents from that date through the years at issue.
Chung Kim, a high school graduate, worked in Korea in the Korean movie industry and then as an artist in the United States. Ok Kim, also a high school graduate, worked as a dance instructor in Korea and then as a typist in the United States. In 1977, petitioners opened a retail store of approximately 800 square feet on O'Farrell Street in San Francisco, California.
In 1992, petitioners relocated their store to a 3,000- square-foot retail space on Geary Boulevard in San Francisco. During the years at issue, petitioners operated their store as a sole proprietorship named Top Blue Jeans/TBJ Collection (TBJ) and sold merchandise at retail including clothing, cosmetics, jewelry, leather goods, and other items of personal property.
Petitioners filed joint 1993, 1994, and 1995 Federal income tax returns (Form 1040). The only source of taxable income reported on2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*100 those returns was gross receipts from TBJ of $ 698,632, $ 846,030, and $ 1,032,759, respectively. Petitioners initially reported costs of goods sold for the respective years of $ 506,960, $ 625,553, and $ 765,298. The parties stipulated that petitioners' costs of goods sold were $ 859,563, $ 973,460, and $ 866,771, respectively.
Petitioners maintained two banking accounts: A personal account in their joint names and a business banking account in the name of TBJ Collections and Chung Kim, both with the CaliforniaKorea Bank. The net deposits into these two accounts for 1993, 1994, and 1995 were $ 1,490,039, $ 1,481,237, and $ 1,575,400, respectively. 3
OPINION
ISSUE 1. UNREPORTED INCOME
When respondent audited petitioners' 1993, 1994, and 1995 income tax returns in 1996, petitioners failed to provide any accounting records from which a determination could be made of TBJ's gross receipts.2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*101 Respondent therefore performed a bank deposits analysis, under which he determined that petitioners had made deposits in excess of the reported gross receipts as follows:
Year Amount
____ ______
1993 $ 791,408 n
1 Respondent concedes that this amount should be decreased to
$ 721,408.
In cases where taxpayers have not maintained business records or where their business records are inadequate, the Courts have authorized the Commissioner to use the bank deposits method to compute income. See
Petitioners admit that the amounts determined to be unreported income in the notice of deficiency were deposited into their banking accounts. However, petitioners contend that these excess deposits represent inheritance and loan proceeds received from various relatives which were deposited into the TBJ bank account. Petitioners assert that they needed these funds to cover expenses associated with the relocation of their store to a larger retail space in 1992.
Petitioners assert that they received nontaxable funds from the following sources and in the following years:
1993 U.S. Dollars Korean Won Equivalent
____ ____________ _____________________
Bok Rye Kim $ 440,324 350 million n
1994 U.S. Dollars Korean Won Equivalent
____ ____________ _____________________
Bok Rye Kim $ 491,672 400 million
Sul Ja Kim 100,000
Mr. 2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*103 Moon 20,000
Il Sup Cha 184,377 150 million
________
Total: 796,049
a. NONTESTIFYING LENDERS
Of these seven individuals, only Bok Rye Kim testified at trial. Petitioners did not explain the absence of the other six, all of whom were relatives of petitioners. 4We cannot assume that the testimony of absent witnesses would have been favorable to petitioners. Indeed, we infer that it would have been unfavorable. See
Petitioners claim to have received loans from the six nontestifying relatives of an aggregate $ 808,000. The only evidence of these loans was documents signed by petitioner Chung Kim purporting to be promissory notes. These "notes" had no stated interest or repayment date, were not notarized, and were not signed by the purported lenders. They evidence neither genuine indebtedness nor actual receipt of any loan proceeds by petitioners.
Petitioners presented no evidence as to the source of the funds for such loans, or as to when, or by what means, the funds were transferred. Petitioners also did not explain why they never made any interest or principal payments on the loans. Absent any testimony by the named individuals, or any supporting documentary evidence, petitioners have failed2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*105 to prove the existence of any of the $ 808,000 in loans alleged to have been made by the non-testifying lenders.
b. BOK RYE KIM'S TESTIMONY
Bok Rye Kim (Bok Kim), who is Chung Kim's niece, testified that she transferred an inheritance of 350 million won (approximately $ 440,000) to petitioners in incremental amounts between the end of 1992 and the end of 1993. She testified further that she lent petitioners 400 million won (approximately $ 492,000) which she transferred to them incrementally between early 1993 and 1994.
Bok Kim testified that she had received an 800 million won inheritance from her father in 1976. She said that her father had designated 350 million won of this inheritance to be delivered to petitioners' son when he grew up. She claims that she held on to these funds for 16 years until petitioners asked that the money be transferred to them in 1992.
Bok Kim admitted that she did not have any written records that could demonstrate that she ever had possession of the inheritance money that she allegedly transferred to petitioners. She explained that she never put the funds into a Korean financial institution but rather used the funds to make private loans and real2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*106 estate investments. She claimed that as the private loans were repaid, she kept the money in a "secret place" at her house. She testified that she received interest on the private loans, but she said that she neither transferred such earned interest to Chung Kim's son nor reported the interest to tax authorities. She had no explanation for the lack of documentary evidence of the alleged real estate investments.
Bok Kim could not recall the dates or total number of occasions when she transferred either the 350 million won inheritance or the 400 million won loan. Neither petitioners nor Bok Kim had any records showing that she made any transfers of the money to Chung Kim during 1993 and 1994. Petitioners and Bok Kim explained that there were no records of the transfers because they had engaged in an elaborate scheme to transfer the funds without the knowledge of the Korean and U.S. customs and tax authorities. 5 Bok Kim testified that she repeatedly delivered small amounts of Korean currency to Sung Bae Kim, an airline employee whom she identified as Ok Kim's younger brother. 6 According to Bok Kim, the airline employee would arrange for the conversion of the won to U.S. currency2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*107 and for Korean tourists, unknown to either Bok Kim or petitioners, to deliver the funds to petitioner Chung Kim at his store. 7 Bok Kim could not recall the precise amounts of money she transferred on each occasion but believed the amounts to be in the range of 5 to 7 million Korean won (approximately 5,000 to 9,000 U.S. dollars). 8
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*108 We find that Bok Kim's testimony lacks credibility, is inconsistent with the record in this case, and does not credibly establish a nontaxable source for the unexplained deposits. Under the circumstances, we are not required to, and we do not, rely on Bok Kim's testimony to support petitioners' position herein. See
Furthermore, petitioners have failed to introduce any evidence whatsoever relating to the existence of any nontaxable sources for the $ 542,641 in unexplained funds deposited into their banking accounts in 1995. Petitioners make no claim that they held on to loan and inheritance proceeds received in 1993 and 1994 before depositing them in 1995. 9 Additionally, given the cost of goods sold as stipulated in this case, petitioners would have had to have been selling their inventory at below cost in 1993 and 1994 if TBJ's gross receipts were as reported. Yet Chung Kim testified that he marked up the merchandise by almost 25 percent.
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*109 Petitioners offer no credible evidence that any of the unexplained deposits represent loan and inheritance proceeds. Hence, petitioners have not disproved that the excess deposits originate from a taxable source as respondent determined. Accordingly, respondent's determinations, after concessions, are sustained.
ISSUE 2: FRAUD PENALTY
Respondent has determined that petitioners are liable for fraud penalties under
Respondent must prove fraud by clear and convincing evidence. See
a. UNDERPAYMENT OF TAX
Respondent can satisfy his burden of proving the first prong of the fraud test; i.e., an underpayment, when the allegations of fraud are intertwined with unreported and reconstructed income in one of two ways. Respondent may prove an underpayment by proving a likely source of the unreported income. See
We find that respondent has proven by clear and convincing evidence a likely source of the underreported deposits; i.e., that they are income from TBJ's sales. We also find that respondent has disproven, by clear and convincing evidence, the nontaxable source alleged by petitioners. Petitioners' explanation of loans and inheritances from their relatives is implausible and incredible. The first prong is satisfied.
b. FRAUDULENT INTENT
Respondent2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*111 must prove that some portion of the underpayment was due to fraud. See
Fraud is an intentional wrongdoing designed to evade a tax believed to be owing. See
Over the years, the courts have identified a number of objective indicators or "badges" of fraud. See
Although no single factor is necessarily sufficient to establish fraud, the combination of a number of factors constitutes persuasive evidence. See
Petitioners' income was consistently underreported, and in the aggregate petitioners failed to report over $ 2 million of TBJ's sales from 1993 through 1995. This is a substantial sum, especially in light of the fact that petitioners reported adjusted gross income for those 3 years in the amounts of only $ 22,022, $ 38,357 and $ 46,388. Additionally, petitioners were unable or unwilling to produce daily sales records for their accountant, the IRS, or the Court. Neither petitioners' accountant nor anyone else ever audited petitioners' business, and their accountant never reviewed any of TBJ's daily cash register tapes. 10
Moreover, petitioners' explanations of having received substantial cash inheritances and loans from U.S. and Korean relatives are highly implausible and wholly lacking in credibility. Petitioners testified that they did not fraudulently conceal TBJ's2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*114 sales proceeds from U.S. tax authorities but instead colluded with their Korean relatives to conceal the conversion and transfer of nearly 2 million dollars worth of Korean currency from U.S. and Korean customs agents. Yet petitioners could produce no single piece of documentary evidence that their Korean relatives ever possessed these funds or made any such conversions or transfers. Such testimony is indicative of fraud on the part of petitioners.
Based on our review of the record, we conclude that respondent has met his burden of proving fraud for each of the relevant years. Petitioners' clear pattern of underreporting taxable income for 3 years, coupled with the lack of recordkeeping and attempts to conceal a substantial amount of cash transactions, leads to a particularly strong inference of fraud. See
Respondent has proven by clear and convincing evidence an underpayment of tax for 1993, 1994, and 1995 and that some portion of the underpayment was attributable to fraud. Petitioners, on the other hand, have failed to show that any portion of their underpayment was not due to fraud. Accordingly, we sustain respondent's determination2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 97">*115 that petitioners are liable for the penalty for fraud under
To reflect the foregoing and concessions,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
1. Respondent determined that petitioners had $ 791,408 of unreported gross receipts for 1993 but subsequently conceded that $ 70,000 was from a nontaxable source.↩
2. Respondent also determined, and we agree, that for the years in issue, certain computational adjustments should be made, which would: (1) Reduce petitioners' itemized deductions, (2) increase petitioners' self-employment tax liability, and (3) reduce petitioners' claimed exemptions. These are mathematical adjustments that the parties can make in their Rule 155 computation.↩
3. The net figures account for amounts attributable to transfers, sales taxes, returned checks, and paid item reversals.↩
1. Petitioners claim that several of the loans were paid in
Korean currency and later converted to U.S. dollars before being
deposited into the TBJ account. In these instances, the U.S. dollar
amounts represent the agreed conversion value.↩
4. At least two of these purported lenders, Ki Soon Yun and Mr. Moon, resided in San Francisco.↩
5. Chung Kim testified that he did not request a bank wire transfer because it is "illegal" to take out more than $ 10,000 from Korea. He also stated that he wanted to avoid any "tax consequences" such a transfer would entail for either him or his niece.↩
6. Chung Kim identified Sung Bae Kim as his wife's nephew, not her brother. Sung Bae Kim did not testify.↩
7. Neither Bok Kim nor petitioner identified the names of any of the individuals who allegedly delivered the funds to Mr. Kim.↩
8. Despite allegedly transferring nearly all of her father's substantial estate with no true expectation of repayment, Bok Kim also testified that she had come to Court to help her uncle "because it's not like I had done much for him before."↩
9. Chung Kim testified that he never left the loan and inheritance proceeds in his safe but rather deposited the funds within 3 days of delivery. Additionally, TBJ's balance sheet for Dec. 31, 1994, reflects cash on hand and in the bank of only $ 9,663.↩
10. Petitioners' accountant testified that Chung Kim reported TBJ's cash receipts to him orally.↩