Filed: Jun. 10, 2019
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2019-69 UNITED STATES TAX COURT MIKEL A. BROWN, SR., AND DEBRA A. BROWN, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 26090-13. Filed June 10, 2019. Mikel A. Brown, Sr., and Debra A. Brown, pro sese. Maria Cerina De Ramos, for respondent. MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION HOLMES, Judge: We can take judicial notice, because there can be no dispute, that western New York has made outstanding contributions to American -2- [*2] cuisine: scrumptious beef o
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2019-69 UNITED STATES TAX COURT MIKEL A. BROWN, SR., AND DEBRA A. BROWN, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 26090-13. Filed June 10, 2019. Mikel A. Brown, Sr., and Debra A. Brown, pro sese. Maria Cerina De Ramos, for respondent. MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION HOLMES, Judge: We can take judicial notice, because there can be no dispute, that western New York has made outstanding contributions to American -2- [*2] cuisine: scrumptious beef on..
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T.C. Memo. 2019-69
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
MIKEL A. BROWN, SR., AND DEBRA A. BROWN, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 26090-13. Filed June 10, 2019.
Mikel A. Brown, Sr., and Debra A. Brown, pro sese.
Maria Cerina De Ramos, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
HOLMES, Judge: We can take judicial notice, because there can be no
dispute, that western New York has made outstanding contributions to American
-2-
[*2] cuisine: scrumptious beef on weck,1 delicious Buffalo-style pizza,2 sweet
sponge candy,3 and the incomparable spaghetti parm.4 But this case wafted to our
Court from the perfumed aroma of the deep fryers of a restaurant in Alamogordo,
New Mexico.
The couple in charge of those fryers was Cynthia and Brian Harris. They
are natives of Buffalo and missionaries to the Southwest of the Nickel City’s most
famous local food--the Buffalo wing. In 2008 they opened their restaurant named
A Taste of Buffalo with the help of another couple, Mikel and Debra Brown. The
local population, however, seemed to prefer food called “Tex-Mex” and
1
A tasty roast-beef sandwich on a special roll. See Larry Olmsted, Buffalo,
N.Y.’s Famous Beef on Weck Sandwich, USA Today (Oct. 5, 2017),
https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/columnist/greatamericanbites/2017/10/05/
beef-weck-sandwich-buffalo-new-york/731420001/.
2
Not too thin, and not too thick. See Arthur Bovino, Is America’s Pizza
Capital Buffalo, New York?, The Daily Beast (Aug. 13, 2018),
https://www.thedailybeast.com/is-americas-pizza-capital-buffalo-new-york.
3
Light-as-air chocolate on the outside with a crispy, crunchy “sponge” of
delicate caramelized sugar on the inside. See Aaron Besecker, Buffalo’s Day to
Celebrate Sponge Candy, Gusto (Nov. 17, 2016),
https://buffalonews.com/2016/09/21/buffalos-day-celebrate-sponge-candy/.
4
A bowl of spaghetti covered in melted mozzarella cheese and accompanied
by a side of marinara sauce. Topped off with grated cheese by request. (No
citation necessary.)
-3-
[*3] something called “Bar-B-Q”. The Harrises’ wings fell on rocky ground; the
restaurant closed.
The Commissioner says that the Browns did not materially participate in the
restaurant’s business and so are not entitled to deduct their share of the
restaurant’s losses and other expenses. His audit also discovered what he claims is
a significant amount of unreported income.
FINDINGS OF FACT
A. Christian Joy Center
A major part of the Browns’ tax troubles stems from the breadth of their
work: A Taste of Buffalo was not their major activity in the tax years at issue
here--2007-09. Their focus was on Christian ministry, and Reverend Mikel Brown
is the founder and longtime pastor of an independent church named the Christian
Joy Center (CJC); his wife Debra is its administrator. Reverend Brown is well-
credentialed, with a doctorate in biblical studies and a degree in social psychology.
Before pursuing his vocation as a clergyman, he served six years in the military
and founded an insurance agency.
The CJC is headquartered in El Paso, Texas with satellite locations in
Alamogordo and Phoenix. These churches are far from each other, and Reverend
-4-
[*4] Brown had to travel from El Paso to southern New Mexico and Arizona to
oversee the CJC’s network of pastors and elders.
It’s not precisely correct to say that a minister is an entrepreneur, but
Reverend Brown’s charismatic presence as a motivational speaker tapped markets
outside of the CJC. This led to his hosting and participating in public-speaking
engagements both locally and across the nation, which he did through his sole
proprietorship, Power Communications Network (PCN). This in turn led him to
become his own impresario, at least for his local appearances, as he scheduled and
paid for venues, hired caterers, and handled all advertising and participant
registration. In addition to running a thriving network of churches and a public-
speaking and event-management business, he founded and ran a training operation
called Dream Makers 99.5
Mrs. Brown is at least as busy as her husband. She earned a degree in
nursing and worked as a military nurse before beginning her career at the CJC. At
the CJC she serves as the church administrator, as well as the administrator of the
CJC Academy--the church’s nursery, preschool, and elementary-school program.
As the Academy’s administrator, she develops and oversees the curriculum, hires
5
Started in 1999, Dream Makers 99 is an entrepreneurship center that puts
on seminars and continuing education at an annual event for business owners
interested in improving their business productivity.
-5-
[*5] all teachers and staff, pays the bills, and manages the Academy’s daily
operations. These responsibilities generally required her to be at the Academy
eight hours a day, Monday through Friday, for all the years at issue. She
nevertheless found time to drive the Reverend to his speaking engagements and to
make the six-hour roundtrip trek between the CJC’s El Paso and Alamogordo
locations whenever he had back-to-back services. Mrs. Brown also accompanied
him to the CJC’s other locations from time to time.
1. Parsonage Allowance
The Browns received what they claim is a parsonage allowance from the
CJC for each of the years at issue. According to Reverend Brown, the CJC’s
church board determines and approves this allowance annually, and in 2007 it was
made in the form of two payments of $1,750 deposited into the Browns’ personal
checking account each month. For 2008 and 2009 the total parsonage payments
are unclear: There’s a trail of consistently uniform payments in 2008, but then it
becomes harder and harder to follow in later months. The CJC also paid the
Browns’ utility bills and, more irregularly, other seemingly personal expenses.
2. Love Offerings From Congregants
Like many churches, the CJC uses an envelope system to collect and
properly record offerings from its members. The CJC has a single envelope form
-6-
[*6] for this purpose, with blank lines for congregants to fill in their contact
information, if they choose, and spaces for different contribution categories next to
which they can list a dollar amount. These categories include “tithe”, “offering”,
“building fund”, and “special gift.”6 Contributions designated for the first three
categories are always recorded in the CJC’s books as contributions to the church.
A special gift designated for Reverend Brown (or anyone else) is noted on the
envelope. If one of these special gifts was by check or credit card, it would first
go into the CJC’s account, and the bookkeeper would later make a check out to the
Browns. Not all contributions made to Reverend Brown were made through the
envelope system, and therefore not all were recorded by the CJC.7
6
As the CJC uses the terms: a “tithe” means “a tenth of a member’s
income” as instructed by the Bible; an “offering” is “whatever [an] individual
would like to give to the church;” the “building fund” is for donations in support
of church construction and maintenance; and “special gifts” are offerings made
with a “special intention,” such as “for [the] healing of a family member,” or to a
specific person on the church’s staff.
7
The CJC’s bookkeeper wasn’t exactly clear on what happens with checks.
At one point she made it seem that all checks from congregants designated as
special gifts are put into the system along with credit-card payments, and
Reverend Brown would get a check from the CJC for the total amount. But she
also testified that only the checks made out to the CJC, but identified as gifts for
Reverend Brown would go through this process. The record includes a large
number of checks from the CJC members made out to Reverend Brown directly
that he or Mrs. Brown deposited directly into their personal bank account. We
think it more likely than not that only credit-card donations and special-gift checks
(continued...)
-7-
[*7] The Browns do not tell members of the congregation that these payments
designated as special gifts are tax-deductible.
B. A Taste of Buffalo
The Harrises are members of the CJC and became friends of Reverend and
Mrs. Brown. By the time they met the Browns, the Harrises had already opened
and closed their first restaurant, but were eager to get back into the business. The
Harrises gradually concluded, after some discussion with the Browns, that they
would have more success if they combined efforts and went into business together.
The Harrises had the restaurant equipment and the experience; the Browns had
capital from their successful ventures, and Reverend Brown in particular had a
good deal of practical business knowledge. Both couples thought these diverse
resources would combine well and might lead to success the second time around.
One partnership agreement and a good deal of planning later, A Taste of Buffalo,
LLC (ATOB), opened its doors in March 2008. The couples agreed to own ATOB
as equal partners and to make Mr. Harris the manager. ATOB was to be a counter-
service restaurant, so the Harrises and the Browns limited their staff to about “six
7
(...continued)
from congregants that were made out to the CJC were entered into the CJC’s
system this way. We find that checks made out to Reverend Brown were given to
him directly, even if first collected by the CJC during a church service.
-8-
[*8] or seven” at any given time to work the cash register and the food counter.
All of ATOB’s employees were hired by and reported to the Harrises.
The Browns were not just investors, however. They were especially active
during the startup of the business: They traveled to Alamogordo to meet with
realtors and contractors to scout different locations and look at equipment, helped
pick the sauces that are an essential part of the Buffalo wing experience, and chose
the restaurant’s furnishings. As the opening approached, the Browns helped
install some of the fixtures and create a menu. But the Harrises also participated
in the hunt for the right location and managed ATOB’s day-to-day operations once
it opened. ATOB was closed on Sundays, but the Harrises spent around 12 hours
at the restaurant all other days of the week. The Browns, in contrast, were there
only two or three times a week to bring needed supplies from El Paso, plan and
draft advertising, and generally help with “[j]ust whatever needed to get done.”
Reverend Brown also handled ATOB’s finances--he was the partner in charge of
ordering and tracking supplies, and he wrote checks as bills came due and payroll
needed to be made. Beyond this the Harrises looked to the Browns for moral
support and help with “certain little things” to “[s]tay[] in it.” Mr. Harris
estimated that Reverend and Mrs. Brown spent an average of 50 hours each week,
onsite and offsite, on ATOB during the years at issue although he never actually
-9-
[*9] kept track. The Browns were more precise, and claimed to have spent a more
plausible 714 hours at ATOB in 2007, though all the while Reverend Brown
continued to run the CJC, Dream Makers 99, and PCN.
Even though all the witnesses agreed that ATOB “had very good food,”
Alamogordo’s appetite for Buffalo wings was smaller than they had expected. By
the end of 2009 ATOB still hadn’t earned a profit, and it sputtered to a stop in
March 2010. The Browns stood to lose the most from ATOB’s failure, since--
short of the Harrises’ covering some grocery bills here and there--they had been
the only source of the restaurant’s capital. And the Browns deducted nonpassive
losses of around $30,000 for both 2007 and 2008. The Harrises and the Browns
were not done with the restaurant business, though. Within a year of ATOB’s
closing, they gave in to local tastes and opened Chi-Town Barbecue in Fort Bliss,
Texas. This cuisine proved more popular, and the restaurant was running
smoothly as of the time of trial.
- 10 -
[*10] C. Schedule C Expenses
The Browns claimed large deductions for car expenses on their 2007-09
Schedules C, Profit or Loss From Business,8 but the Commissioner thought they’d
overserved themselves and disallowed chunks of these deductions. Here’s a table:
Schedule C lease and
Year vehicle expenses at issue Allowed Contested
2007 $18,000 $14,659 $3,341
2008 27,250 23,163 4,087
2009 18,8011 16,545 2,256
1
This is the amount listed by the Commissioner in the notice of deficiency.
For some reason, in both the Commissioner’s answering brief and the Browns’
reply brief, this number was changed to $52,891. We aren’t sure where this
number came from, but the parties agree that only $2,256 of the Browns’ 2009 car
expenses is contested.
The Browns introduced two car leases into the record--one that ran from
2003 to 2007, and another from 2007 to mid-2011. The monthly payments on the
two leases show yearly totals of about $15,000 for 2007--a year that saw a three-
month gap in leasing expenses--and about $22,000 for both 2008 and 2009. The
Browns did not produce any other record of their car-related expenses. Reverend
8
The Browns reported their vehicle expenses differently each year. For
2007, they listed them as “[r]ent or lease” of “[v]ehicles, machinery, and
equipment;” for 2008, as “[c]ar and truck expenses;” and for 2009, as “[o]ther
expenses.”
- 11 -
[*11] Brown did refer to a mileage log in his testimony, but did not introduce it at
trial. The Browns admitted that they used the leased cars for both personal and
business purposes.
D. Return Preparers, Audit, and Trial
The Browns hired two different preparers for their 2007-09 returns. Their
longtime tax preparer, Gerald Blaes, drafted both their personal and ATOB’s
partnership returns for tax year 2007. Mr. Blaes is not a licensed accountant, but
he has a degree in accounting and had prepared returns since “the late ‘80s, early
‘90s.” Mr. Blaes was an engaging and credible witness. We believed him when
he said his client policy was simple: “If you lie to me and I find out about it, you
can find somebody else to do your taxes.” We believed Mr. Blaes when he said
that Reverend Brown never asked him to “fudge the reports” and that, to his
knowledge, Reverend Brown never lied to him. We also believed him when he
said that he didn’t feel fully comfortable preparing ATOB’s partnership return
because of his lack of experience with such returns, and that he asked Reverend
Brown to have it reviewed by a CPA before filing. We do find that Mr. Blaes
asked for and received some information that he used to prepare the returns. But
he neither asked for nor knew anything about the extent of the Browns’
participation in ATOB. He also did not ask, and was not told, about the
- 12 -
[*12] congregants’ gifts made to Reverend Brown; the Browns simply gave him a
Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, created by the CJC’s bookkeeper,
which Mr. Blaes used to prepare the return.
It’s unclear whether the Browns followed Mr. Blaes’ advice to have
ATOB’s 2007 return reviewed by a CPA more familiar with partnership taxation
before they filed it. But tax year 2007 was the last tax year Mr. Blaes prepared
returns before he retired from the business. The Browns turned to Teresa Self to
prepare their 2008 and 2009 tax returns. Ms. Self is a CPA, and had done some
accounting for the CJC. She, however, usually asked her clients only for a
summary of expenses and totals since “you trust [that] the client[s]” have the
records to support their positions if they say they do. She’d occasionally ask a
client to confirm a number if “something was out of whack,” and then they’d
“discuss whether it would go on the return or not.” And she followed her usual
method when she prepared the Browns’ returns. She neither saw nor asked for
logs of hours the Browns spent working for ATOB or for any other documentation
to support the Browns’ deductions. She too said she was unaware that the Browns
received money from parishioners and therefore did not advise them as to the
taxability of such amounts. And Ms. Self also did not have much experience with
preparing partnership returns, filling out “[m]aybe two or three * * * a year.”
- 13 -
[*13] Though the Browns claim that partnership returns for ATOB were prepared
and filed, the Commissioner has no record of them for any of the years at issue.
The Browns’ audit began with their 2007 tax year, and Revenue Agent (RA)
Kevin Freitas suspected during its course that the Browns had not kept adequate
records of their income. He therefore decided to analyze their bank deposits. He
started with 2007, a year when the Browns had a checking account at Wells Fargo
and Reverend Brown had an account at Inter National Bank. RA Freitas added the
total deposits made into these two accounts and then subtracted what the Browns
reported as income on their return. These deposits almost all came from the CJC
and Reverend Brown’s speaking engagements. Because the deposits far exceeded
their reported income for the year, he asked the Browns to identify as many of the
deposits as they could so that he could exclude any nontaxable items (e.g.,
insurance proceeds, refinanced loans, gifts). After making some adjustments, he
arrived at a total of more than $150,000 in underreported gross income for the
year. This prompted him to do a similar analysis of the Browns’ 2008 and 2009
deposits, and he concluded that the Browns had underreported income by more
than $200,000 for tax year 2008, and by nearly $120,000 for tax year 2009. For
these two years, however, RA Freitas did not sit down with the Browns to go over
each deposit.
- 14 -
[*14] After the audit, the Commissioner issued a notice of deficiency for all three
tax years in which he made several adjustments and said the Browns were liable
for penalties under section 6662(a).9 The Browns disagreed and timely petitioned
our Court. We tried the case in El Paso.10
We must decide whether:
• the Browns underreported their Schedule C gross receipts and,
more specifically, whether they can exclude any of this income
as parsonage allowances or gifts for tax years 2007-09;
• their Schedules E, Supplemental Income and Loss, losses from
ATOB are subject to the passive-loss limitation rules for tax
years 2007 and 2008;11
• they are entitled to disallowed deductions for Schedule C car
expenses for tax years 2007-09; and
9
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the
years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
Procedure.
10
The Browns lived in Texas at all relevant times, which means this case is
presumptively appealable to the Fifth Circuit. See sec. 7482(b)(1)(A).
11
ATOB’s status in 2009 is obscure. It hadn’t closed yet, but the Browns
claimed no losses from ATOB on their 2009 income tax return, which likely led
the Commissioner not to audit ATOB’s distributive shares of expenses that year.
And just as for the 2007 and 2008 tax years, the Commissioner has no record of a
2009 partnership return’s being filed for ATOB.
- 15 -
[*15] • they are liable for accuracy-related penalties for all years at
issue.12
OPINION
I. Underreported Income
This isn’t the first case where a pastor did not report as taxable income some
of the money received from his congregation. See, e.g., Felton v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 2018-168. As we explained there, the relationship between a pastor
and his congregation is not typically viewed as commercial, which makes the line
between gifts and compensation blurrier than in less sacred places. But we begin
with a more detailed review of how the Commissioner determined that the Browns
came up short on their reported income.
A. Bank-Deposits Analysis
When a taxpayer does not keep adequate records of his income, the
Commissioner may reconstruct it, see secs. 6001, 446(b), and may analyze the
taxpayer’s bank deposits to do so, see Parks v. Commissioner,
94 T.C. 654, 658
(1990). A bank-deposits analysis assumes that all money deposited in a taxpayer’s
12
We don’t need to decide whether the burden of proof shifted to the
Commissioner because we were able to decide each issue by a preponderance of
evidence. See Knudsen v. Commissioner,
131 T.C. 185, 188-89 (2008) (citing
Blodgett v. Commissioner,
394 F.3d 1030, 1039 (8th Cir. 2005), aff’g T.C. Memo.
2003-212).
- 16 -
[*16] bank account during a given period is taxable income, and unexplained
deposits are considered prima facie evidence of income. See Tokarski v.
Commissioner,
87 T.C. 74, 77 (1986); see also Price v. United States,
335 F.2d
671, 677 (5th Cir. 1964). Taxpayers then have the burden to show that such
deposits shouldn’t be taxed because they were inheritances, loan proceeds,
transfers from another personal account, or other nontaxable transfers. See
Price,
335 F.2d at 677. The Commissioner has to subtract reported income and income
from nontaxable sources that he knows about.
Id. If taxpayers believe the
Commissioner’s method of computation is unfair or inaccurate, however, they
have the burden to show that unfairness or inaccuracy.
Id.
The Browns first claim that RA Freitas failed to conduct a full investigation
for the 2007 tax year, but they raise no issue with any particular part of his
analysis. For their 2008 and 2009 tax years, the Browns likewise claim that RA
Freitas “did not properly employ the bank deposit method” and “merely
subtracted” the Browns’ reported income from their total bank deposits. They
assert that this means they have “demonstrat[ed] that Respondent[]’s
determination is erroneous” and therefore the burden of proof shifts back to the
Commissioner to show that his analysis was correct. The Commissioner
disagrees.
- 17 -
[*17] We find nothing wrong with the way RA Freitas did his analysis of the
Browns’ 2007 tax year. He reviewed all the deposits with the Browns, and
removed (or subtracted as nontaxable) a good many of them. It is true that he did
not do an item-by-item review of his analysis with the Browns of their 2008 and
2009 tax years, but there’s nothing that requires him to do so. The Browns were
free to point out at trial all the deposits in those years that they believed were
nontaxable. They did claim that they refinanced their home in “2007 or ‘[0]6” and
transferred pieces of the lump sum that they received into their personal checking
account from time to time. They also claim that USAA gave them $25,000, or
“somewhere about that,” in insurance proceeds for water damage to their home.
But they failed to back up these claims with any paperwork that showed a
refinancing or insurance claim. And this failure, when we combine it with a lack
of specificity as to dates and amounts, leads us to find that it is more likely than
not that none of the large deposits for any of the years at issue were nontaxable
loan or insurance proceeds. They question RA Freitas’s analysis, but without
specific evidence that he included specific deposits that he shouldn’t have, their
questions are fruitless.
We did look at the record ourselves, and did find a handful of small deposits
that we think are more likely than not nontaxable--a $100 payment from
- 18 -
[*18] Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., on January 10, 2008, that seems to be a
small loan; a March 10, 2008, payment of $180 from Wells Fargo Home Mortgage
“for payment of escrow to mortgagor” that seems to be a refund of overpayment;
and two insurance payments from Chubb Lloyds Insurance Company of Texas
totaling $1,490 on July 23 and September 8, 2009. With these small exceptions,
we find it more likely than not that RA Freitas’s analyses for all three years were
correct.
B. Parsonage Allowances and Gifts
This conclusion, however, is only as to the total of potentially taxable
amounts. The Browns’ major argument is that many of those deposits are
nontaxable either as parsonage allowances or as gifts.
We look at each possibility in turn.
1. Parsonage Allowances
Section 107(2)13 says that a minister does not have to include in gross
income “the rental allowance paid to him as part of his compensation, to the extent
used by him to rent or provide a home.” This exclusion is limited to the amount
used “to rent or provide a home” and may “not exceed the fair rental value of the
13
The Seventh Circuit very recently upheld the constitutionality of section
107(2) in Gaylor v. Mnuchin,
919 F.3d 420, 437 (7th Cir. 2019).
- 19 -
[*19] home.”
Id. This means the exclusion does not apply to money used for
food, domestic help, or expenses of a business or investment property. See sec.
1.107-1(c), Income Tax Regs.
The parties’ first disagreement is whether the Browns even raised this issue
for us to decide. This is important, because RA Freitas counted the Browns’
alleged parsonage allowances as taxable deposits in his analyses. The
Commissioner admits that he did not specifically disallow any parsonage
allowance in the notice of deficiency, but argues that the Browns “failed to raise
this point in their opening brief.”
We disagree, and find that the Browns kept this issue alive. The
Commissioner’s admission that he did not subtract any parsonage allowance from
gross deposits in his computation of the Browns’ unreported income is an implicit
assertion that, if there was any allowance, the Commissioner wants to tax it. In
their petition, the Browns specifically alleged that some of the deposits were
parsonage allowances. They also discussed the issue of parsonage allowances in
their pretrial memorandum. And they testified about it at trial without objection.
The Commissioner points to Lunsford v. Commissioner,
117 T.C. 183, 187
(2001), and Nicklaus v. Commissioner,
117 T.C. 117, 120 n.4 (2001), as precedent
in his favor. In Lunsford,
117 T.C. 187, the taxpayer raised only one issue and
- 20 -
[*20] then failed to file a posttrial brief. We could have just held that a failure to
file a posttrial brief put the taxpayer in default, but we hedged a bit and bolstered
our conclusion of waiver by noting that “[i]n the instant case, we think it is at least
as clear that petitioners have abandoned any arguments that were not raised in
their pleadings and trial memorandum.”
Id. In Nicklaus, 117 T.C. 120, the
taxpayers did file a posttrial brief, but said in it that they wanted to fight about one
and “only” one issue. That affirmative statement was enough for us to treat the
taxpayers as abandoning other issues.
Id. at 120 n.4. We see no waiver of the
issue as we did in Nicklaus, and the Browns did raise the issue in their pleadings
and in their testimony at trial. We therefore find that their failure to argue the
parsonage allowance issue in their opening brief does not mean they abandoned it.
The real problem for the Browns is not this procedural quibble, but the
law’s requirement that a parsonage allowance be “designated”. Sec. 1.107-1(b),
Income Tax Regs. This means that the allowance must be specified in amount at
some point before a minister receives it--a minister can’t just dip into church funds
to pay his housing expenses as they arise. And a payment that isn’t designated
isn’t excludable from income. See id.; see also Boyer v. Commissioner,
69 T.C.
521, 534 (1977). Tax law has no rubric for designating an allowance--it can be a
sum of money written into an employment contract, a line item in a church’s
- 21 -
[*21] budget, a notation in the minutes of the church’s board, or any other
document that proves official action was taken. Sec. 1.107-1(b), Income Tax
Regs. It doesn’t even need to be in writing. See Libman v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 1982-377,
44 T.C.M. 370, 372 (1982). But to qualify as a
designation, it must clearly identify the payment of a rental allowance as distinct
from a salary or other compensation. Kizer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-
584,
1992 WL 238781, at *2-*3.
That’s a problem for the Browns. They introduced a log of the checks
written by the CJC for their parsonage allowance in 2007, and the log shows that
they received a check for $1,750 twice a month for the entire year. Accompanying
the log were images of the checks, each one bearing “For: Comp and Parsonage”
on its memo line. The Browns, however, did not introduce such a log for 2008 or
2009. At the beginning of 2008 there are around six checks from the CJC for
$1,750 with “Comp and Parsonage” written on the memo line, but the designation
of subsequent payments is unclear. There’s a “parsonage” check written by the
CJC at the very end of March 2008 for $8,000--an amount well beyond the typical
payments--and one final check for $1,750 in April 2008. This is the last check
that specifies on the memo line that it was for “parsonage”. And while we have
found other bimonthly checks for the Browns in their bank statements for both
- 22 -
[*22] years, there’s nothing that would let us find it more likely than not that they
were payments for a parsonage allowance.
This makes the question of whether the CJC properly designated these
payments difficult and proof that the Browns actually spent the money on housing
even harder to find. Reverend Brown testified that the CJC’s church board
approved his parsonage allowance at the start of each calendar year based on loan
documentation that he provided. We could find no specific resolution that granted
Reverend Brown a parsonage allowance, but at least for 2007 we find that the
CJC’s practice of regular payment of a regular amount, as supported by Reverend
Brown’s testimony, is sufficient evidence of official action and payment
“distinguished from salary or other remuneration” for 2007. See sec. 1.107-1(b),
Income Tax Regs. We cannot make a similar finding for 2008 and 2009, as the
payments became irregular and unsupported by any check register or notation in
the CJC’s records.
But even given the regularity of the 2007 payments, the Browns have failed
to show that they used their parsonage allowance for housing alone and that the
allowance did not exceed the sum of their mortgage payments and utilities. See
sec. 107(2); Rasmussen v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1994-311,
1994 WL
317491, at *3-*4. Reverend Brown actually testified that the CJC pays his
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[*23] personal utility bills directly, leading us to wonder whether the CJC also
pays the Browns’ mortgage directly in addition to the $1,750 check (and increased
amounts thereafter) that the Browns received twice a month. Beyond Reverend
Brown’s testimonial estimates of his phone and utility bills, there is nothing in the
record about the Browns’ actual housing expenses, and therefore we can’t be sure
that he and his wife weren’t spending their allowance on food, vacations, or even
the cash needs of his unrelated businesses. This goes for what we know were the
2007 parsonage allowance payments and what we can only guess were the 2008
and 2009 payments.
We therefore find in favor of the Commissioner on this issue and will not
subtract these payments from his estimate of the Browns’ taxable income as
computed in the bank-deposits analyses.
2. Gifts From the Congregation
By far the greatest amounts of the deficiencies at stake here relate not to the
parsonage allowances but to the amounts of unreported “gifts” that Reverend
Brown received from members of the CJC congregation.
Let us start with the basics. Section 61(a)(1) says that gross income
includes “[c]ompensation for services, including fees, commissions, fringe
benefits, and similar items.” See also Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co., 348
- 24 -
[*24] U.S. 426, 431 (1955) (broadly construing gross income as “undeniable
accessions to wealth, clearly realized, and over which the taxpayers have complete
dominion”). That’s quite the spread, but Congress enacted section 102 to leave
gifts off the table. Section 102(a) excludes from gross income “the value of
property acquired by gift,” but section 102(c)(1) eliminates this exclusion for “any
amount transferred by or for an employer to, or for the benefit of, an employee.”
What is a gift? According to the Supreme Court, “[a] gift in the statutory
sense * * * proceeds from a ‘detached and disinterested generosity,’ * * * ‘out of
affection, respect, admiration, charity or like impulses.’” Commissioner v.
Duberstein,
363 U.S. 278, 285 (1960) (first quoting Commissioner v. LoBue,
351
U.S. 243, 246 (1956); and then quoting Robertson v. United States,
343 U.S. 711,
714 (1952)). Recognizing that this definition may not be easy for a trial court to
apply, the Court held that the most critical consideration is the transferor’s
intention at the time the payment was made.
Id. at 285-86. But the Court warned
that the transferor’s characterization of his intention “is not determinative”--
instead, “there must be an objective inquiry as to whether what is called a gift
amounts to it in reality.”
Id. at 286.
The Supreme Court’s test does not draw a bright line, but caselaw helps us
to apply our “experience with the mainsprings of human conduct to the totality of
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[*25] the facts.”
Id. at 289. In a criminal case, the Fifth Circuit held that the
following jury instruction accurately stated the law:
The federal income tax is levied on income received by
ministers. When an individual provides ministerial services as his
trade or business, controls the money he receives in that business, and
receives no separate salary, the income of that business is taxable to
the minister. Voluntary contributions, when received by the minister,
are income to him. Payments made to a minister as compensation for
his services also constitute income to him. If money is given to a
minister for religious purposes, any money used instead for the
personal benefit of the minister becomes taxable income to him.
United States v. Terrell,
754 F.2d 1139, 1148-49 (5th Cir. 1985).
We recognize that Terrell was a criminal case where the minister reported
no salary at all, which is not the situation here. We also recognize the difficulty in
determining the intent of a great number of congregants, especially when we don’t
know the identities of many and were unable to hear from most of them directly.
See Felton v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2018-168, at *18. This forces us to
focus on the objective evidence that Terrell, Felton, and other cases have found
important:
• whether the donations are objectively provided in exchange for
services;
• whether the cleric (or other church authorities) requested the
personal donations;
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[*26] • whether the donations were part of a routinized, highly
structured program, and given by individual church members or
the congregation as a whole; and
• whether the cleric receives a separate salary from the church
and the amount of that salary in comparison to the personal
donations.
Felton, at *26.
Donations in Exchange for Services. According to the Fifth Circuit, a
contribution is a gift only if it is “not intended as a return of value or made
because of any intent to repay another what is his due, but bestowed only because
of personal affection or regard or pity, or from general motives of philanthropy or
charity.” Schall v. Commissioner,
174 F.2d 893, 894 (5th Cir. 1949) (emphasis
added) (quoting Bass v. Hawley,
62 F.2d 721, 723 (5th Cir. 1933)) (honorarium
gift because no future services promised or provided), rev’g
11 T.C. 111 (1948).
Courts are unlikely, however, to find contributions to be gifts when the
congregation makes such contributions in order to keep its “successful minister” at
a “relatively low salary.” Goodwin v. United States,
67 F.3d 149, 152 (8th Cir.
1995); see Banks v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1991-641,
62 T.C.M.
1611, 1614 (1991) (finding congregants’ special donations weren’t gifts since they
were given out of a desire to reward the pastor for her services and a hope that
she’d continue as their pastor). See generally Wallace v. Commissioner, 219 F.2d
- 27 -
[*27] 855, 857 (5th Cir. 1955) (“If services have been performed by the recipients,
it may well be said the presumption is that the payment is for the services and not
a gift”).
The Browns claim that the gifts they received were not for services rendered
or for future services hoped for. But we find no difference in the objective
markers of the donors’ intentions here from those in other cases where members of
a congregation give money to their current pastor. Talisha Bennett, the CJC’s
bookkeeper during all the years at issue, described the church’s envelope system
and told us that the special gift line on the envelopes “are just if someone decides
they want to just give a gift to Dr. Brown for whatever reason.” (Emphasis
added). She continued on to specify that “[s]ome people would like to give for
whatever they’re sowing towards,” such as “for the healing of a family member”
or some other special intention. The memo lines of the many, many checks in the
record from congregants (all hearsay, of course, but unobjected to) include a great
number of phrases such as “love seed,” “first fruits,” and “pastor’s offering.”
Some are more learned, including a cite to chapter 4 of St. Paul’s letter to the
Philippians,14 and obviously heartfelt--“faith walker,” “thank you for everything,”
14
“Not because I desire it a gift: but I desire a fruit that may abound to
your account. But I have all, and abound: I am full.” Phil. 4:17-18.
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[*28] and “the dream maker!” Above and beyond the contributions made in the
form of personal checks are the CJC’s checks, which aggregate the congregants’
contributions.
We do not doubt that the CJC faithful made these offerings to Reverend
Brown in some considerable part for the graces that they have received for their
faithfulness. In tax law such “intangible religious benefits” don’t count as items
of value received by a donor in exchange for his donations. See sec.
170(f)(8)(B)(iii); Felton, at *29. But in the profane world of tax law, a payment
can still be for services rendered even if the payor does not receive an economic
benefit from it.
Duberstein, 363 U.S. at 285. As we said in Felton,
we * * * think that the exhortation by the Supreme Court in
Duberstein to focus on objective evidence of a donor’s intent means
we have to ask whether the donations are of the magnitude and type
that would make us doubt that what is called a gift amounts to one in
reality.
Felton, at *29 (citing
Duberstein, 363 U.S. at 286).
Reverend Brown may not have explicitly agreed to provide future services
in exchange for these contributions, but we find that they were made by
congregants who meant to keep Reverend Brown preaching where he is. He
provides the “fruit”, or “intangible religious benefits,” and the congregants’
“seeds”, or contributions, are in some secular sense in exchange for them.
- 29 -
[*29] This factor tilts towards income.
Donation Requests. A gift can be made only out of “personal affection or
regard or pity, or from general motives of philanthropy or charity.”
Schall, 174
F.2d at 894 (quoting
Hawley, 62 F.2d at 723). In Goodwin and Banks, the courts
held that evidence of regular requests for donations to a pastor supports a finding
that any donations made in response are income and not gifts.
Goodwin, 67 F.3d
at 150, 152-53 (associate pastor announced “special occasion” days where those
who wished to contribute a special occasion gift to the pastor could do so);
Banks,
62 T.C.M. at 1614 (the amount pledged by individual members was determined at
open meetings at the church). And in Felton, at *30-*31, we reasoned that the
church was not requesting donations because members had to specifically ask for a
special gift envelope--an envelope that was distinct from the ones used for
offerings and tithes.
Reverend Brown testified that he “do[esn’t] try to manipulate anybody,” or
“coerce anyone” into giving a gift, and that “it’s got to be solely on their heart
* * * not someone sort of guiding and steering them in that direction.” We
completely believe this testimony, but we do find there was an expectation at the
CJC that congregants should support a minister who “preach[es] it ,” “teach[es]
it,” “believe[s] it,” and “live[s] it.” We also note that the CJC had at least two
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[*30] major days for giving to Reverend Brown each year: the Reverend’s
birthday and another towards the end of November--“Bishop’s Day.”15 The
number of checks received on these days were a disproportionately large share of
all those given to Reverend Brown each year, leading us to find that these special
gift-giving days were broadcast to and well known by the congregants. That
makes this case similar to Banks and Goodwin, where the courts also found that
there were designated special giving days. What’s more, the CJC offered only one
kind of envelope for all types of contributions, and had a way for donors to specify
what type of contribution they wished to make.16 This single-envelope system,
coupled with at least two main days of giving, makes us find that the CJC created
an expectation to make contributions not present to the same degree in Felton.
This factor tilts towards income.
Routinized, Highly Structured Program. Even if congregants claim to have
made contributions “out of love, admiration, and respect, not out of a sense of
obligation or fear” that the pastor would leave, they are not gifts as a matter of tax
15
Other spikes in giving were on Father’s Day and at Christmastime.
16
As previously discussed, the envelope allowed congregants to split their
donations among four categories--“special gift,” “tithe,” “offering,” and “building
fund.” We think Reverend Brown benefited by having the “special gift”
designation on all envelopes. For example, someone wanting to donate $100 to
the church may decide to list a portion of it for the Reverend as a special gift.
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[*31] law if made and “gathered by congregation leaders in a routinized, highly
structured program,” and made on behalf of the whole congregation.
Goodwin, 67
F.3d at 152 (reviewing the contributions of a congregation that had a regular
procedure for making “special occasion gifts” on certain days of the year).
In slight contrast to the pattern of giving in Goodwin and Banks, the
donations from congregants here were made throughout the year as well as on
certain “special days” of each year. See Felton, at *31 (citing
Goodwin, 67 F.3d at
150, and
Banks, 62 T.C.M. at 1612). Reverend Brown, Mrs. Brown, and
Talisha Bennett all testified that congregants give gifts to the Reverend on any day
and at any time--not just on Sundays during church. For example, Reverend
Brown testified that congregants occasionally hand him gifts when he’s “walking
in the building” or just “out in a restaurant.” The dates of the checks in the record
do show giving throughout the year, but also show a high rate of giving on the
special giving days, including Bishop’s Day and the Reverend’s birthday. The
comparatively lower amount of and participation in year-round giving therefore
does not alter our view that the CJC encouraged giving on regularly scheduled
occasions.
There’s other evidence that the CJC had a routinized and highly structured
system. Its bookkeeping system smoothly aggregated contributions made to the
- 32 -
[*32] CJC but intended for Reverend Brown personally: The donations were
organized by form, with credit-card donations and checks written to the CJC for
the Reverend pooled, totaled, and distributed to him in a single check from the
CJC. All other donations made out to him directly were bundled and passed along
to him. Donations made through the envelope system are thus objectively
different and in much greater quantity than the occasional “twenty dollar gift
spontaneously given by a church member.” See
Goodwin, 67 F.3d at 152.
This factor tilts towards income.
Ratio of Church Salary to Personal Donations. Arriving at our final factor,
we have to compare, as best we can, Reverend Brown’s salary from the CJC itself
to the amounts of donations received from individual congregants:
2007 2008 2009
Reverend Brown’s
Schedule C--Minister
misc. income (salary) $105,000 $107,750 $120,000
Mrs. Brown’s CJC
salary 25,600 25,905 26,044
Total reported CJC
income 130,600 133,655 146,044
BDA: Underreported
CJC deposits,
including
parsonage payments 154,366 205,523 118,589
- 33 -
[*33] Contributions
received on Bishop’s
Day and birthday 13,650 26,136 27,390
Possible CJC
parsonage payments1 42,000 38,000 32,000
1
For 2008 and 2009, we let down our net into the sea of memo-less checks
to fish out those that could potentially be considered parsonage payments. The
totals listed for those years represent our best estimate.
The record is full of checks from congregants and the CJC giving thousands and
thousands of dollars in pastoral offerings each year, not to mention the other hefty
checks from the CJC for parsonage, “mortgage”, “vehicle”, “vacation expenses,”
and “medical” expenses, among other things. And this doesn’t even include the
thousands of dollars in cash deposits for which we cannot identify a source. We
have also found multiple checks from the CJC with “DM99” in the memo--that we
assume means Dream Makers 99--leaving us with the impression that the CJC was
also paying some of the Reverend’s motivational speaking expenses. We struggle
to see how such large sums of money can be gifts, especially given our findings on
the other three factors. In Felton, at *34, we found that “[w]hen comparatively so
much money flows to a person from people for whom he provides services (even
intangible ones), and to whom he expects to provide services in the future, we find
it to be income and not gifts.” It’s very much the same here, and so we find that
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[*34] the contributions from the CJC’s congregants are taxable income to the
Browns.
We can now turn to the deduction side of the case.
II. A Taste of Buffalo and Loss Limitations
Nobody doubts that the Browns lost money on their investment in ATOB.
Sections 162(a) and 212(1) generally allow taxpayers to deduct their business and
investment expenses, but section 469 limits those deductions when they arise from
“passive activities.” A “passive activity” is “any activity * * * which involves the
conduct of any trade or business, and * * * in which the taxpayer does not
materially participate.” Sec. 469(c)(1). When a married couple goes into a
business together, we look at their combined activity to decide whether it amounts
to material participation.
Id. subsec. (h)(5).
But what is “material participation?” The Code tells us that “material
participation” means being “involved in the operations of the activity” on a
regular, continuous, and substantial basis,
id. para. (1), and the regulations lay out
seven--and only seven--ways a taxpayer can prove that, see sec. 1.469-9(b)(5),
Income Tax Regs.; sec. 1.469-5T(a), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 53 Fed. Reg.
5725-26 (Feb. 25, 1988). The Browns claim they satisfy four of these seven ways:
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[*35] • “[t]he individual participates in the activity for more than 500
hours during such year;”
• “[t]he activity is a significant participation activity (within the
meaning of paragraph (c) of this section) for the taxable year,
and the individual’s aggregate participation in all significant
participation activities during such year exceeds 500 hours;”
• “[t]he individual participates in the activity for more than 100
hours during the taxable year, and such individual’s
participation in the activity for the taxable year is not less than
the participation in the activity of any other individual
(including individuals who are not owners of interests in the
activity) for such year;” or
• “[b]ased on all of the facts and circumstances (taking into
account the rules in paragraph (b) of this section), the
individual participates in the activity on a regular, continuous,
and substantial basis during such year.”
Sec. 1.469-5T(a)(1), (3), (4), (7), Temporary Income Tax
Regs., supra.
The Commissioner thinks the Browns have met none of these tests. The
difficulty the Browns face here is that most of these tests are quantitative--they
demand proof of the number of hours that a person spends on an activity. The
Browns run into their first problem with their production of two different logs for
2007: the first was provided to RA Freitas during the audit and shows that they
spent a total of 502 hours participating in ATOB; the second was produced after
the audit and shows 714 hours. Logs that conflict undermine each other’s
- 36 -
[*36] credibility. But two is better than none, and for year 2008 the Browns
produced no participation logs at all.
The regulations help us gauge the credibility of the Browns’ logs and any
other evidence they offered to prove their material participation. The regulations
say that “[c]ontemporaneous daily time reports, logs, or similar documents are not
required if the extent of such participation may be established by other reasonable
means.”
Id. para. (f)(4), 53 Fed. Reg. 5727. And “[r]easonable means * * * may
include but are not limited to the identification of services performed over a period
of time and the approximate number of hours spent performing such services
* * * based on appointment books, calendars, or narrative summaries.”
Id.
We’ve held time and time again, however, that a retrospective “ballpark
guesstimate” isn’t good enough, see, e.g., Moss v. Commissioner,
135 T.C. 365,
369 (2010), and “we don’t have to accept unverified, undocumented testimony
about how a taxpayer spent her time,” Estate of Ramirez v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2018-196, at *17; see also Robison v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2018-
88, at *26 (citing Estate of Stangeland v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2010-185,
Shaw v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-35, and Scheiner v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 1996-554). This is a problem for the Browns, because they offered no
documentary evidence to prove their time spent on ATOB in 2008 and because
- 37 -
[*37] what they did offer for 2007 lacks credibility. Still, with these general
thoughts in mind, let us look at each test.
A. Participation in Activity Exceeds 500 Hours
This test is easy to understand, but less easy to meet. The Browns would
have to establish that together they spent more than 500 hours on ATOB. See sec.
1.469-5T(a)(1), Temporary Income Tax
Regs., supra. Their best evidence for
2007 is the logs they’ve provided; and for 2008, all we have is testimony. In
addition to their conflicting total hours, the Commissioner correctly points out that
they list only the hours spent on ATOB and fail to list the services performed
during those hours. Without more specifics, these logs are “ballpark
guesstimates” that we won’t accept.
This by itself might not be fatal if we had found the Harrises’ testimony on
the Browns’ work hours more corroborating. When asked whether she saw the
Browns again after ATOB opened its doors, Ms. Harris answered that they came
in at least three times a week. Mr. Harris said that, although he did not keep track
of the hours the Browns spent at ATOB, his best guess was that Reverend and
Mrs. Brown spent around 30 and 20 hours a week, respectively, on ATOB for a
combined total of 2,600 hours a year--an amount of time we find implausible
given the Browns’ full-time jobs at the CJC, and given everything else that the
- 38 -
[*38] Browns do. So while we think it’s clear that the Browns devoted a good
amount of time to ATOB, the evidence they’ve provided isn’t enough to satisfy
this strict hours-based test.
B. Participation Exceeds 100 Hours and Aggregate of All
“Significant-Participation” Activities Exceeds 500 Hours
This test requires us to define a “significant participation activity.” The
regulation defines it as an activity in which a taxpayer participates for more than
100 hours during the year, sec. 1.469-5T(c)(1)(i), (2), Temporary Income Tax
Regs., 53 Fed. Reg. 5726 (Feb. 25, 1988), but does not materially participate in,
id. subpara. (1)(ii). Taxpayers therefore meet this definition if they spend just
enough (over 100 hours) but not too much (less than 500 hours) time participating
in an activity. This test is a way to aggregate participation in activities that keep
taxpayers busy but not too busy.
For the Browns to meet this test, they’d have to exceed 100 hours
participating in ATOB and also prove that they spent over 500 hours participating
in all their significant-participation activities. See
id. para. (a)(4). Significant-
participation activities do not include those that exceed 500 hours of participation,
and the Browns’ work at the CJC exceeds this and so is out. This leaves us with
Reverend Brown’s motivational-speaking and other non-CJC activities. We know
- 39 -
[*39] Reverend Brown stayed fairly busy with these, but there’s nothing in the
record to establish the hours that the Browns spent on each one. The Browns
therefore fail this test.
C. Participation Exceeds 100 Hours and All Others’ Participation
For the Browns to establish material participation under this test, they’d
have to show that they spent more time working for ATOB than did Mr. and Mrs.
Harris. See
id. subpara. (3). There is no interpretation of the record that would
support such a finding. The Harrises oversaw the restaurant’s daily operations as
their only full-time jobs. They credibly testified that they spent around 12 hours a
day, 6 days a week at ATOB cooking, cleaning, hiring, and supervising staff. The
Browns could hardly spend more time on ATOB if they lived there, which would
be impossible given their careers at the CJC. They do not meet this test.
D. Regular, Continuous, and Substantial Participation
There is, however, one last test--whether, based on all the facts and
circumstances, the Browns participated in ATOB on a “regular, continuous, and
substantial basis” during each year at issue. See
id. subpara. (7). They would still
have to show participation exceeding 100 hours,
id. para. (b)(2)(iii), and they can’t
include any “services performed in the management of” ATOB,
id. subdiv. (ii).
Keeping in mind that the Browns get to pool their participation, see sec. 469(h)(5),
- 40 -
[*40] we find based on their testimony, and that of the Harrises, that they exceed
the 100-hour threshold.
We also find that, even given their occasional share of management-related
participation, the Browns have met what this test requires. It is obvious to us that
the Harrises managed ATOB--they ran the restaurant’s day-to-day operations. See
Wade v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2014-169, at *7-*8 (describing management
duties as running “day-to-day operations”). This means that the Browns’
participation included only a de minimis amount of management. But the Browns
focused on the important chores of handling the finances, product development,
and customer retention. See Montgomery v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-
151, at *9-*11 (handling all office functions, managing payroll, preparing official
documents, and attending business meetings is regular, continuous, and substantial
participation).
It seems to us that the record as a whole tells a story of two couples who
decided to open a restaurant, with one pair able to man the post and provide the
hands-on experience, and the other able to provide the business know-how and
funds. Just because the Browns weren’t running the day-to-day operations doesn’t
mean they weren’t playing a major role in ATOB’s operation. They spent a lot of
time working together on ATOB’s menus, advertising, decor, and whatever else
- 41 -
[*41] needed to be done. On top of this, Reverend Brown handled most of the
finances and wrote most of the checks for supplies and vendors, rent, and utilities.
The Harrises gave him the daily receipts and cash, and he would do the books. He
also did the payroll for ATOB. We don’t believe any testimony that the Browns
spent many, many hundreds or even thousands of hours doing this, but we do find
it more likely than not that they spent more than 100 hours combined on these
chores and were integral to ATOB’s operation. This lets us find that the Browns
materially participated in ATOB for both 2007 and 2008.17
III. Schedule C Substantiation
The Commissioner allowed the Browns to deduct most of their claimed car
expenses for each year at issue. The Commissioner says they shouldn’t get
anything more because they failed to meet the strict substantiation requirements of
17
We also note that neither party, at any point in the proceedings, raised any
problem with the Browns’ deducting expenses for a restaurant that hadn’t opened
yet. Section 195 generally requires that a taxpayer either capitalize or amortize the
start-up expenses of a business. ATOB was formed in August 2007 and didn’t
open its doors until March 2008, but the Commissioner did not disallow the
Browns’ claimed 2007 expenses on this ground. This means the Browns weren’t
put on notice that they might have been able to capitalize and recognize their 2007
expenses in a later year. See sec. 195(b); sec. 1.195-1(b), Income Tax Regs.
We’ll therefore referee the fight as the parties chose to fight it. See Mich. Mobile
Home & Recreational Vehicle Inst. v. Commissioner,
66 T.C. 770, 780 n.7 (1976);
see also Probandt v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2016-135, at *19 n.16
(discussing prejudice to parties when issue is raised after evidentiary record is
closed and requires new evidence to resolve).
- 42 -
[*42] section 274, especially in light of their honest admission that they drove the
cars for both business and personal use. The Browns disagree and say that they
never admitted to personal use of their vehicles, and that they would’ve provided
the RA Freitas with mileage logs during their audit had he asked for them.
Taxpayers have the burden to establish their entitlement to deductions under
section 162, and must keep good records to do so. Secs. 162(a), 6001; Higbee v.
Commissioner,
116 T.C. 438, 440 (2001). They must be able to prove (1) the
existence of the expense, (2) that the expense was incurred during the taxable year
for which it was deducted, (3) that the expense was incurred while carrying on a
trade or business, and (4) that the expense was ordinary and necessary. Sec.
162(a); sec. 1.162-1(a), Income Tax Regs. The failure to maintain and produce
records that support his position counts heavily against a taxpayer’s attempted
proof. Rogers v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2014-141, at *17.
Taxpayers must comply with heightened substantiation requirements for
expenses associated with the purchase and use of a car because the Code generally
doesn’t allow people to deduct their personal expenses, and cars are easily used
for a mix of business and personal purposes. See secs. 274(d)(4),
280F(d)(4)(A)(i). These heightened requirements include proof of the amount of
the expense, the time of use of the property, and the business purpose of the use.
- 43 -
[*43] Sec. 1.274-5T(b)(6), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 50 Fed. Reg. 46016
(Nov. 6, 1985). This almost always means a taxpayer has to keep an account
book, diary, log, statement of expense, or other similar documentary evidence with
contemporaneous entries as he makes each expenditure. See
id. para. (c)(2), 50
Fed. Reg. 46017. Taxpayers also can’t estimate section 274 expenses--they must
prove each expense. Schladweiler v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2000-351,
2000
WL 1690282, at *2, aff’d, 28 F. App’x 602 (8th Cir. 2002).
On their Schedules C for Reverend Brown’s ministry, the Browns claimed
an $18,000 deduction for “[r]ent or lease” of “[v]ehicles, machinery, and
equipment,” for 2007; a $27,250 deduction for “[c]ar and truck expenses,” for
2008; and an $18,801 deduction for “other expenses” for 2009. These claimed
deductions relate only to lease payments and other car expenses.
We agree with the Commissioner’s disallowance of part of these expenses.
The only evidence the Browns provided us is their testimony and two Mercedes-
Benz car leases, but neither is sufficient under section 274(d). The Commissioner
seems to have been more lenient, because the expenses that he allowed during
audit appear to have been the approximate amounts that the Browns could prove
they spent on lease payments--at least for 2007 and 2008--without the additional
proof that section 274 requires. Due to the Browns’ failure to establish the place
- 44 -
[*44] and time, amount, and purpose of their car expenses, we disallow any
additional amounts not already conceded.
IV. Section 6662(a) Accuracy-Related Penalties
The only remaining question is whether the Browns are liable for an
accuracy-related penalty for each year at issue. The Commissioner argues that
they are because their underpayments of tax were attributable to their “negligence
or disregard of the rules and regulations” and also to substantial understatements
of income tax.
Section 6662(a) imposes a 20% penalty when there is “[a]ny substantial
understatement of income tax,”
id. subsec. (b)(2), which exists if the tax
understatement exceeds the greater of $5,000 or “10 percent of the tax required to
be show on the return,”
id. subsec. (d)(1)(A). The Commissioner meets his burden
of production for these penalties because the Browns’ understatements for 2007,
2008, and 2009 exceed both $5,000 and 10% of the tax required to be shown on
their returns.18
18
We already granted the Commissioner’s motion to reopen the record and
admitted his penalty-approval form. The Commissioner therefore meets the
supervisory-approval portion of his burden of production. See sec. 6751(b)(1);
Graev v. Commissioner,
149 T.C. 485, 492-94 n.14 (2017) (citing Chai v.
Commissioner,
851 F.3d 190, 221 (2d Cir. 2017), aff’g in part, rev’g in part T.C.
Memo. 2015-42), supplementing and overruling in part
147 T.C. 460 (2016).
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[*45] The burden then shifts to the Browns to try to avoid the penalties by
showing that they acted with reasonable cause and in good faith. See sec.
6664(c)(1); sec. 1.6664-4(a), Income Tax Regs. They argue that they relied in
good faith on their two tax preparers, Mr. Blaes and Ms. Self. To succeed in this
argument, they’ll have to establish that:
• their return preparers were competent professionals who had
sufficient expertise to justify reliance;
• they provided necessary and accurate information to their
return preparers; and
• they actually relied in good faith on their return preparers’
judgment.
See Neonatology Assocs., P.A. v. Commissioner,
115 T.C. 43, 99 (2000), aff’d,
299 F.3d 221 (3d Cir. 2002). Advice from a professional must not be based on
unreasonable factual or legal assumptions, and the professional may not
unreasonably rely on a taxpayer’s own representations, statements, findings, or
agreements. Sec. 1.6664-4(c)(1)(ii), Income Tax Regs. We’ll take each preparer
in turn.
Mr. Blaes. Mr. Blaes was the Browns’ longtime tax preparer, and prepared
the Browns’ 2007 income and ATOB’s partnership tax returns. Such a long
professional relationship lets us find that the Browns had developed a high level of
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[*46] trust in Mr. Blaes. But that is not the same as reasonable reliance. Mr.
Blaes, while holding a degree in accounting, was not a CPA, and was not fully
comfortable with the partnership return. He told them that he was pretty
unfamiliar with partnership returns, having prepared only a few over the course of
his career, and strongly suggested that they take ATOB’s 2007 partnership return
to a CPA for further review before filing. From what we can tell, the Browns
chose not to do so. An additional problem is that the Browns didn’t tell Mr. Blaes
about the “gifts” from members of the CJC congregation. That means that Mr.
Blaes did not even have a chance to give them advice on the biggest part of their
contested income. As a result, we find that the Browns have failed to establish
that they acted with reasonable cause and in good faith for 2007.
Ms. Self. The Browns’ case for relying on Ms. Self’s advice and preparation
of their 2008 and 2009 tax returns is stronger. Ms. Self was, unlike Mr. Blaes, a
CPA and attended continuing-education courses. And while she didn’t have a
great deal of experience with partnership returns, she neither put the Browns on
notice that she wasn’t fully comfortable in what she was doing nor advised them to
seek further review by someone else. She must have felt confident enough with
her capabilities as she filed the Browns’ returns for 2008 and 2009. We think this
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[*47] justified the Browns’ confidence that Ms. Self got it right. We therefore find
that Ms. Self had sufficient apparent expertise to justify reliance.
The problem is that Ms. Self testified that she was unaware of the Browns’
“gifts” from congregants at the CJC. Unlike Mr. Blaes, however, Ms. Self had
done some accounting for the CJC before she started to prepare the Browns’
returns. The Browns knew this, and so we think it more likely than not that they
reasonably believed she was aware of the CJC’s contribution and collection
system, and that Reverend Brown himself was collecting substantial sums in
“gifts” and a purported parsonage allowance. We also believe her testimony that
she would collect their tax documents and occasionally reach out to them if she
thought something didn’t look right. This makes it more plausible that the Browns
reasonably relied on her to report their income and deductions correctly--or at least
ask some followup questions if she had concerns. We don’t think Reverend
Brown denied her any information that she asked for, and we find nothing in his or
Mrs. Brown’s education or experience that would have reasonably caused them
not to rely on the accuracy of her preparation of their returns. We therefore find
that the Browns relied in good faith on professional advice for 2008 and 2009.
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[*48] This is a split result, so
Decision will be entered under
Rule 155.