Filed: Apr. 08, 2019
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2019-30 UNITED STATES TAX COURT MICHAEL E. BROWN AND MIRIAM L. MERCADO-BROWN, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 21096-15. Filed April 8, 2019. PH is an independent contractor carrying on a "concierge CFO business". At times he has had as many as three clients simultaneously. In year 1, he entered into a three-year contract with Co. X and was required to work four days a week in Pennsauken, New Jersey. He returned to his home in Atlanta, Georgia, fo
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2019-30 UNITED STATES TAX COURT MICHAEL E. BROWN AND MIRIAM L. MERCADO-BROWN, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 21096-15. Filed April 8, 2019. PH is an independent contractor carrying on a "concierge CFO business". At times he has had as many as three clients simultaneously. In year 1, he entered into a three-year contract with Co. X and was required to work four days a week in Pennsauken, New Jersey. He returned to his home in Atlanta, Georgia, for..
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T.C. Memo. 2019-30
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
MICHAEL E. BROWN AND MIRIAM L. MERCADO-BROWN, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 21096-15. Filed April 8, 2019.
PH is an independent contractor carrying on a "concierge CFO
business". At times he has had as many as three clients
simultaneously. In year 1, he entered into a three-year contract with
Co. X and was required to work four days a week in Pennsauken,
New Jersey. He returned to his home in Atlanta, Georgia, for the rest
of the week. Co. X was the sole source of business income reported
by Ps for the period beginning when PH went to work for Co. X and
extending through year 2. R disallowed Ps' deductions of PH's
traveling expenses between Atlanta and Pennsauken for years 1 and
2.
Held: Ps have failed to prove that Pennsauken was not PH's
regular or principal place of business during the time he worked for
Co. X.
Held, further, Ps have provided us with no authority that we are
to look at PH's business history as a whole to determine whether he
had a regular or principal place of business.
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[*2] Held, further, Ps have failed to prove that PH's weekly trips
from Pennsauken to Atlanta were in the pursuit of a trade or business.
Held, further, I.R.C. sec. 162(a)(2) deductions for traveling
expenses denied.
Held, further, accuracy-related penalties sustained.
Frank G. Podesta, for petitioners.
James H. Brunson III, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
HALPERN, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners'
Federal income tax for their 2012 and 2013 taxable (calendar) years of $3,669 and
$17,905, respectively, and accuracy-related penalties for those years of $734 and
$3,581, respectively. We must decide whether petitioners are entitled to deduct
for those years (sometimes, examination years) expenses for travel, food, and
lodging under section 162(a) and whether they are liable for the accuracy-related
penalties.
Unless otherwise stated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended and in force for the examination years, and all Rule
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[*3] references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. All dollar
amounts have been rounded to the nearest dollar. Petitioners bear the burden of
proof. See Rule 142(a).1
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioners lived in Alpharetta, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta (without
distinction, Atlanta), when they filed the petition. The parties have stipulated
certain facts and the authenticity of certain documents. The facts stipulated are so
found, and documents stipulated are accepted as authentic.
Mr. Brown's Business
Mr. Brown has an undergraduate degree in accounting from La Salle
University. He also has a master's degree in finance. In 1989, he became a
certified public accountant. He provides finance-related services to clients and
views himself as operating a "concierge CFO [chief financial officer] business".
He has had clients for his CFO business since at least 1998. At times, he has had
as many as three clients simultaneously. His clients do not necessarily require him
to do his work for them on their business premises. If not on the client's business
1
Petitioners have not raised the applicability of sec. 7491(a), which shifts
the burden of proof to the Commissioner in certain situations. We conclude that
sec. 7491(a) does not apply here because petitioners have not produced any
evidence that they have satisfied the preconditions for its application.
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[*4] premises, he may work on the client's matters from home or, if he is on the
road, from his hotel room. During the examination years, he made a home with
his wife and children in Atlanta.
Tax Returns
Mr. Brown prepared petitioners' 2012 and 2013 Federal income tax returns
(Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return). Petitioners included with their
2012 Form 1040 three Schedules C, Profit or Loss From Business, each showing
Mr. Brown as proprietor of the business and each showing petitioners' home
address in Atlanta as the address of the business. The three schedules describe the
subject businesses as "Parkmobile USA, Inc." (Parkmobile), "American Furniture
Rental, Inc." (AFR), and "Project Next, Inc." (Project Next), respectively.2
Petitioners also included three Schedules C with their 2013 Form 1040, all, like
the 2012 Schedules C, showing Mr. Brown as the proprietor and petitioners' home
address as the businesses address. The three schedules were for Michael E.
Brown--Consulting, Project Next, and Miriam L. Mercado-Brown. On neither
2
While each of the three Schedules C describes the subject business as being
incorporated, the first two are describing the names of Mr. Brown's clients and are
not meant to communicate that his Schedule C business was incorporated. The
third Schedule C relates to his consulting business, which was not incorporated.
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[*5] their 2012 nor 2013 Form 1040 did petitioners claim any deduction for the
business use of any portion of their residence.
Parkmobile
Mr. Brown worked for Parkmobile from April 2011 through April 2012.
Parkmobile is in Atlanta. On the Parkmobile Schedule C, petitioners reported
substantial gross income from Parkmobile and a travel expense of $7, the
deduction of which was not disallowed by respondent.
Project Next
Mr. Brown described the nature of Project Next's business as providing
services to clients, viz, his "concierge CFO business". Petitioners reported no
gross income for Project Next for either 2012 or 2013 although for each year they
claimed deductions for various expenses, unchallenged by respondent, but no
traveling expense. For 2012, they claimed deductions for advertising, legal and
professional services, and office expenses of $748, $138, and $96, respectively,
and for 2013 they claimed deductions for legal and professional services and other
expenses, principally "Internet address renewal costs", of $138 and $972,
respectively.
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[*6] AFR
Mr. Brown began work for AFR in October 2012. His engagement by AFR
was governed by a "Consulting Agreement" (agreement). The agreement provides
that his engagement was to commence on October 2, 2012, and continue until
October 2, 2015, unless terminated earlier upon, among other happenings, either
party's giving five days written notice of termination to the other party. It requires
that Mr. Brown provide his services as an independent contractor and not as an
employee. It also provides that AFR is to pay Mr. Brown a consulting fee of
$12,500 a month for the first year of the three-year period of the agreement and an
increased monthly amount during each of the remaining years of the agreement.
AFR has offices in numerous locations, including Pennsauken, New Jersey
(apparently the company's headquarters), and Atlanta. The agreement provides
that AFR would reimburse Mr. Brown for certain of his business expenses, but it
specifically excludes reimbursing him for his expenses in traveling to and from
Pennsauken. Pursuant to a September 14, 2012, email from AFR's chief executive
officer to him, Mr. Brown was required to work a four-day (Monday through
Thursday) workweek in Pennsauken. On the 2012 AFR Schedule C, petitioners
reported compensation of $37,500 received by Mr. Brown from AFR and claimed
a deduction of $10,065 as a business expense for the cost of his weekly travel from
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[*7] Atlanta to Pennsauken. Petitioners reported compensation of $159,759
received by Mr. Brown from AFR on the 2013 Schedule C entitled "Michael E.
Brown--Consulting" and claimed a deduction of $52,617 as a business expense for
the cost of his weekly travel from Atlanta to Pennsauken. Mr. Brown worked for
AFR until at least August 4, 2014.
Miriam L. Mercado-Brown
Petitioners reported $25,000 of income and no expenses on the 2013
Miriam L. Mercado-Brown Schedule C. That income was Mr. Brown's income,
part of what he received from AFR, and not his wife's income.
Pango USA
Pango USA (Pango) is an Israeli technical company that Mr. Brown
testified he worked for from 2012 through 2014. He never visited Pango's U.S.
headquarters in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He could do Pango's work on his
computer, in Atlanta or wherever he was. Petitioners reported no income from
Pango on their 2012 or 2013 Form 1040.
Penalties
The accuracy-related penalties that respondent determined were $734 for
2012 and $3,581 for 2013. Those penalties were proposed by one of respondent's
tax compliance officers, Janice Moore, who examined petitioners' returns for the
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[*8] examination years. The penalties were approved in writing by her immediate
supervisor, Supervisory Tax Specialist Jennifer Earls, before respondent issued the
statutory notice of deficiency here in issue.
OPINION
I. Traveling Expenses
A. Introduction
Section 162 permits taxpayers to deduct all ordinary and necessary business
expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year and specifically includes
"traveling expenses (including amounts expended for meals and lodging other than
amounts which are lavish or extravagant under the circumstances) while away
from home in the pursuit of a trade or business". Sec. 162(a)(2).3
A taxpayer's "home", for purposes of section 162(a)(2), generally means the
vicinity of his principal place of employment rather than his personal residence.
Mitchell v. Commissioner,
74 T.C. 578, 581 (1980); Zbylut v. Commissioner, T.C.
3
Sec. 274(d) generally disallows any deduction under sec. 162 for, among
other things, "any traveling expense (including meals and lodging while away
from home)", unless the taxpayer complies with stringent substantiation
requirements as to the amount, time and place, and business purpose of the
expense. Sec. 274(d)(1). At trial, in response to the Court's question as to whether
there was any substantiation issue, counsel for respondent informed the Court that
there was none. We accept that and consider substantiation to not be an
impediment to petitioners' claims that they are entitled to deductions for traveling
expenses under sec. 162(a)(2).
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[*9] Memo. 2008-44,
2008 WL 539018, at *5. Accordingly, expenses incurred in
commuting from a taxpayer's personal residence to a taxpayer's business or place
of employment are generally nondeductible personal expenses. E.g., Zbylut v.
Commissioner,
2008 WL 539018, at *5; sec. 1.262-1(b)(5), Income Tax Regs.
Where a taxpayer does not have a permanent place of business, but
rather is employed temporarily by various employers at different
locations, we generally deem the situs of the taxpayer's permanent
residence to be his or her tax home, and the taxpayer's traveling
expenses from his residence to those temporary places of employment
may be deductible. * * *
Zbylut v. Commissioner,
2008 WL 539018, at *5; accord Barrett v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2017-195, at *10. However,
[w]hen a taxpayer accepts employment either permanently or for an
indefinite time away from the place of his usual abode, the taxpayer's
tax home will shift to the location of the taxpayer's new principal
place of business. Determining the principal place of business
includes review of the location where the taxpayer spends more of his
time, engages in greater business activity, and derives a greater
proportion of his income. * * *
Barrett v. Commissioner, at *10 (citations omitted).
B. Parties' Arguments
1. Petitioners' Argument
Relying principally on Zbylut, petitioners claim that because, during the
examination years, Mr. Brown had no principal place of business and worked at
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[*10] multiple locations, his tax home was his permanent residence in Atlanta. In
support of their claim that he had no principal place of business and worked at
multiple locations, they cite his testimony at trial that he worked for three
companies during 2012 and 2013, "one exclusively from Atlanta (Park Mobile),
another predominately from Atlanta (American Furniture Rental), and a third from
wherever he was at the time, which more often than not was Atlanta (Pango
USA)." They add: "He also testified that the vast majority of administrative and
marketing work was performed from Atlanta." They conclude: "Mr. Brown
worked more in Atlanta, Georgia than anywhere else, including * * *
[Pennsauken]." Alternatively, relying on Daly v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
2013-147, at *10, petitioners argue that, even if Mr. Brown spent a majority of his
time in Pennsauken, his tax home would be in Atlanta because he did not have a
regular or principal place of business. In Daly v. Commissioner, at *10 (citing
section 1.911-2(b), Income Tax Regs.), we said: "If an individual has no regular
or principal place of business because of the nature of the business, then the
individual's tax home is his or her place of abode in a real and substantial sense."
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[*11] 2. Respondent's Argument
Respondent argues that Mr. Brown's tax home became Pennsauken when he
executed the agreement and, therefore, petitioners cannot deduct his expenses of
commuting weekly from Atlanta to Pennsauken.
C. Analysis
1. Introduction
As we understand it, Mr. Brown is in essence a business consultant who,
over the years, has had numerous clients for his concierge CFO business. Often,
he has had more than one client at once. Many, if not most, of his clients did not
require him to be present on, or, indeed, spend much time at, their business
premises. Such is a wonder of the information age. But AFR was different. In
October 2012, he began work for AFR pursuant to the agreement, which, unless
earlier terminated, would run for three years. Also, AFR required that he work in
Pennsauken four days a week. He did not move his family to Pennsauken but
traveled between the two cities weekly. We must decide whether petitioners may
deduct the expenses of that travel, and that depends on where, during the times he
incurred those expenses, his tax home was.
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[*12] 2. Mr. Brown's Tax Home
a. Mr. Brown's Engagement by AFR Was Indefinite.
At trial, Mr. Brown suggested that, because, under the agreement, AFR
could terminate his engagement at will, his engagement by it was temporary
(implying that, because the engagement was temporary, Pennsauken never became
his tax home). And while petitioners do not pursue that argument on brief, the fact
that the agreement, although terminable by either party, was to last for three years
is indicative that Mr. Brown could not have expected his work for AFR in
Pennsauken to be temporary; i.e., he could not have expected it to be concluded
within a reasonably short period. See Giesbrecht v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
1995-118,
1995 WL 127903, at *4 (finding similar circumstances and concluding
that taxpayer's contract employment was indefinite, entitling him to no deduction
for traveling expenditures because contract-employment location became tax
home).
b. Mr. Brown Worked Every Week in Atlanta.
Petitioners also argue that Pennsauken never became Mr. Brown's tax home
because in 2013 (as in 2012) he did not work the full year in Pennsauken. It is
true that Mr. Brown did testify that in mid-2013 he negotiated with AFR's chief
executive officer a change in his arrangement that allowed him to work alternate
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[*13] two-week periods in Pennsauken and in AFR's Atlanta office. That
testimony, however, contradicted his testimony earlier in the case that "[w]hen I
first joined American Furniture Rental, Inc. [in October 2012], I was in a hotel
room for 17 months[,] every week." And while substantiation is not an issue in
this case, see supra note 3, we assume that petitioners have (or at least had)
adequate records and receipts documenting Mr. Brown's travel schedule that
would support his claim that beginning in the second half of 2013, he worked in
Pennsauken and in Atlanta on an alternating two-week schedule. Petitioners'
failure to produce evidence in their possession that, if true, would be favorable to
them gives rise to the presumption that, if produced, the evidence would be
unfavorable. That is especially true where the party failing to produce the
evidence has the burden of proof. Wichita Terminal Elevator Co. v.
Commissioner,
6 T.C. 1158, 1165 (1946), aff'd,
162 F.2d 513 (10th Cir. 1947).
Petitioners have failed to convince us that, beginning in mid-2013, Mr. Brown
worked alternating two-week periods in Atlanta and in Pennsauken. Accordingly,
they have failed to convince us that, in 2013 (vacation time aside), Mr. Brown
worked less than four days a week, every week, in Pennsauken.
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[*14] c. From October 2012 Through 2013 Pennsauken was Mr.
Brown's Regular or Principal Place of Business.
But Mr. Brown did return to Atlanta weekly. He was an independent
contractor and, apparently, not precluded by the agreement from soliciting or
working for other clients during his tenure with AFR. He testified that he did
marketing for his concierge CFO business using a computer application, and he
"[c]ould be anywhere" to do that task. He testified that he did administrative work
for his business in Atlanta, but he did not describe that work or say how long he
spent at the work. And although he claimed that, during the examination years, he
worked for Pango in Atlanta, he did not describe that work or the time he spent at
it. As noted, he reported no income from Pango for the examination years.
From October 2012 through 2013, AFR was the sole source of Mr. Brown's
business income. He spent the majority of his time (four days a week) in
Pennsauken, working for AFR. While he may have engaged in activities with
respect to his concierge CFO business while at home on long weekends in Atlanta,
he did not describe any client meetings in Atlanta or otherwise describe work
assignments or business-related tasks that necessitated his being in Atlanta to
accomplish them. Petitioners have not persuaded us that, from October 2012
through 2013, he worked for multiple clients at various locations. We find that,
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[*15] during the time he worked for AFR in 2012 and 2013, Pennsauken was his
regular or principal place of business. See Barrett v. Commissioner, at *10; see
also Green v. Commissioner,
35 T.C. 764 (1961) (holding taxpayers not entitled to
a deduction for travel expenses from home in Greenville, Ohio, to Dayton, Ohio,
from whence came all of husband's income), aff'd per curiam,
298 F.2d 890 (6th
Cir. 1962). But, relying on Daly v. Commissioner, at *10, petitioners do argue
that, because Mr. Brown "did not have a regular or principal place of business",
his tax home was in Atlanta.
d. We Do Not Take a Long-Term View.
Mr. Brown testified that he has had business clients since at least 1998.
And if, since then, he has had numerous clients, it may well be true that,
considering the intervening 15 years as a whole (1998 through 2013), he has had
no regular or principal place of business. But petitioners have provided us with no
authority that we are to take such an extended view to determine whether, during
the finite period of his business history here under consideration (from October
2012 through 2013), he had no regular or principal place of business. In Green v.
Commissioner,
35 T.C. 764, the taxpayer husband was self-employed as an
industrial and management consultant. The taxpayers' residence was in
Greenville, Ohio, and the husband had an office at the residence, where he did
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[*16] some client-related work. The husband had no income from any client in
Greenville, and, for the two years in issue, all of his income was from Dayton,
Ohio. The Court disallowed his traveling expenses between Greenville and
Dayton, saying that the work he did in Greenville could have been done in Dayton
and that the taxpayers chose to live in Greenville "for personal reasons".
Id. at
767. The Court added: "Their work in Dayton does not give rise to business
expenses under the circumstances * * * , even though * * * [taxpayer husband]
depended upon short-period employment."
Id. Judge Fisher, dissenting,
cautioned: "If a taxpayer's home automatically follows a temporary jobsite, no
working man could ever be away from home while he was working."
Id. at 768
(Fisher, J., dissenting). In affirming per curiam the Court of Appeals said: "The
evidence reveals that his business headquarters in Dayton was indefinite and
indeterminate. His situation is not within the concept of the allowable deductions
for traveling expense." Green v.
Commissioner, 298 F.2d at 891. We will follow
our report in Green, as affirmed by the Court of Appeals, in concluding that Mr.
Brown's tax home became Pennsauken when he went to work for AFR.
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[*17] 3. Travel From His Tax Home to His Family Home
However, Mr. Brown was away from his tax home in Pennsauken when,
weekly, he traveled to his family home in Atlanta to spend long weekends with his
wife and children. To deduct his traveling expenses from and to his tax home
(Pennsauken) under section 162(a)(2), petitioners would have to prove that Mr.
Brown traveled to Atlanta "in the pursuit of a trade or business". Petitioners
claimed no deduction for the business use of any portion of their residence. As
stated, Mr. Brown did testify that, while in Atlanta, he worked for Pango and
performed administrative activities for his business. His testimony, however, was
vague, and he failed to offer a convincing business reason why he could not
accomplish those tasks in Pennsauken. He failed to explain why, as with his use
of his computer for marketing activities, he could not use his computer and "be
anywhere" to work for Pango and perform administrative activities. In a nutshell,
petitioners have failed to prove that Mr. Brown's weekly travel from his tax home
in Pennsauken to Atlanta was "in the pursuit of a trade or business". See sec.
162(a)(2); Mazzotta v. Commissioner,
57 T.C. 427, 429 (1971) (holding taxpayer
could not deduct travel expenses from his place of major employment to his
residence, a place of minor employment, because "[t]he primary motivation for
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[*18] * * * [the taxpayer's] trips from his major place of employment to his
residence was personal"), aff'd,
467 F.2d 943 (2d Cir. 1972); Karp v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1976-325 ("[E]ven though a taxpayer performs some
business of a minor nature at his residence, he may not deduct the expense of
travel to this place of business if his travel to the place is principally motivated by
a desire to return to his residence, a purely personal motive, and only incidentally
by business reasons.").
4. Conclusion
Because petitioners have failed to show that Mr. Brown's tax home was in
Atlanta from October 2012 through 2013 or that, during the examination years, he
traveled from his tax home in Pennsauken to Atlanta in the pursuit of his business,
they have failed to show error in respondent's adjustments to their income
disallowing their reported traveling expenses for Mr. Brown's weekly travel
between Atlanta and Pennsauken. We sustain respondent's adjustments to that
effect.
II. Accuracy-Related Penalties
Section 6662(a) and (b)(1) provides for an accuracy-related penalty of 20%
of the portion of an underpayment of tax attributable to "[n]egligence or disregard
of rules or regulations." Negligence as used in section 6662(b)(1) is defined as
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[*19] any failure to make a reasonable attempt to comply with the Internal
Revenue Code and any failure to keep adequate books and records or to
substantiate items properly. Sec. 6662(c); sec. 1.6662-3(b)(1), Income Tax Regs.
Negligence has also been defined as the failure to exercise due care or the failure
to do what a reasonable person would do under the circumstances. See Allen v.
Commissioner,
92 T.C. 1, 12 (1989), aff'd,
925 F.2d 348 (9th Cir. 1991).
The Commissioner has the burden of production with respect to the
accuracy-related penalty. Sec. 7491(c). To meet this burden, the Commissioner
must produce sufficient evidence indicating that it is appropriate to impose the
penalty. See Higbee v. Commissioner,
116 T.C. 438, 446 (2001). The
Commissioner's burden of production under section 7491(c) includes establishing
compliance with the supervisory approval requirement of section 6751(b). Graev
v. Commissioner,
149 T.C. 485, 493 (2017), supplementing and overruling in part
147 T.C. 460 (2016). Once the Commissioner meets this burden of production,
the taxpayer must come forward with persuasive evidence that the Commissioner's
determination is incorrect. Rule 142(a); see Higbee v. Commissioner,
116 T.C.
447. The taxpayer may meet this burden by proving that he acted with reasonable
cause and in good faith with respect to the underpayment. See sec. 6664(c)(1); see
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[*20] also Higbee v. Commissioner,
116 T.C. 447; sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1), Income
Tax Regs.
Respondent satisfied his burden of production with regard to negligence by
establishing that petitioners had little if any grounds for claiming Atlanta as Mr.
Brown's tax home when they filed their 2012 and 2013 returns. Mr. Brown is a
certified public accountant with a master's degree in finance. He took it upon
himself to prepare the couple's tax returns. When he prepared those tax returns, he
of course knew that the agreement was for three years and that neither return
showed income earned after October 2012 from any client other than AFR. His
experience and training should have alerted him to the dubiousness of petitioners'
reporting position.
Respondent has also satisfied his burden of production with regard to the
supervisory approval requirement of section 6751(b). Respondent produced a
completed penalty approval form and declaration of his examiner that establish
timely supervisory approval.
Petitioners rely on the absence of any deficiencies as their defense to the
accuracy-related penalties. Because we have found deficiencies in tax, petitioners'
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[*21] defense fails. We, therefore, sustain respondent's imposition of the
accuracy-related penalties for the examination years.
Decision will be entered for
respondent.