1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*36 1. Determination of deficiency as to 1952
2. Addition to tax under
33 T.C. 298">*298 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' income tax and additions thereto, as follows:
Additions to tax, I.R.C. 1939 | |||
Year | Deficiency | Sec. 294(d)(1)(A) | Sec. 294(d)(2) |
1952 | $ 2,279.36 | None | $ 833.59 |
1954 | 949.66 | $ 1,184.92 | 710.96 |
The principal questions are:
1. Was there an "accord and satisfaction" between petitioners and respondent with respect to petitioners' income tax liability for 1952 so as to preclude respondent from assessing additional taxes for that year?
2. Are petitioners relieved of liability for addition to tax under
FINDINGS OF FACT.
Petitioners, husband and wife residing in Belmont, Massachusetts, filed joint income tax returns for the1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*37 calendar years 1952 and 1954 with the district director of internal revenue for the district of Massachusetts. Earle C. Parks, hereinafter referred to as petitioner, is a practicing attorney at law and is a member of the bars of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States District Court for Massachusetts, the United States Supreme Court, and the Tax Court of the United States.
Petitioners filed their 1952 return on or about March 16, 1953, reporting a tax of $ 14,705.88 and a "balance of tax due" in the amount of $ 11,613.88 after withholding and payments on their 1952 Declaration of Estimated Tax. Petitioners did not then pay the balance due. At that time they also owed back taxes for the years 1950 and 1951 which, pursuant to an arrangement made at some undisclosed time, they were paying at the rate of $ 1,000 a month. By March 1954, $ 10,000 of petitioners' 1952 taxes as reported on the 1952 return remained unpaid, and a lien had been placed upon real estate owned by petitioner to insure payment of such tax.
33 T.C. 298">*299 In March 1954, petitioner was called to a conference at the Boston office of the district director. Present at this conference were petitioner, his 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*38 law partner, Frank C. Hession, and two revenue agents attached to the district director's office. Petitioner was informed of the lien that had been placed upon his property and was requested to make payment of the balance due on his 1952 return. As a result of this conference and an examination of petitioner's books and records incident thereto, it was agreed that the lien would be lifted if petitioner raised the requisite $ 10,000 by placing a mortgage on his home. Shortly thereafter, at a second conference, petitioner paid the amount due with a check representing the proceeds of a mortgage placed on his home, and the lien was discharged. Present at this second conference were petitioner, the assistant district director, Charles J. King, and two revenue agents, one of whom had attended the earlier conference. After presentation of the check for 1952, petitioner agreed to make further payments of $ 1,000 per month, such payments to be applied first against petitioner's tax liability for 1953, and then against his liability for 1954. Although some discussion was had with respect to petitioner's possible liability for "penalties" for 1954, neither King, nor any other internal revenue1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*39 official present at the conference, represented to petitioner that only one "penalty" would be assessed against him in the event he failed to file a declaration of estimated tax for 1954. Petitioners failed to file a declaration of estimated tax for 1954.
Sometime after the second conference, "in either the fall of 1954 or the spring of 1955," a revenue agent named James Hooley examined petitioner's books and records for 1952, 1953, and 1954. This examination covered a period of 10 months during which time Hooley spent 2 or 3 days per month in petitioners' office. Petitioner did not hear from Hooley again after the expiration of the 10-month period. A month or two after Hooley's departure, petitioner's books for 1952, 1953, and 1954 were examined again by a revenue agent named Martin Berg. Berg visited petitioner's office every day for a period of 3 weeks. Petitioner told both Hooley and Berg that he objected to their examinations with respect to 1952 on the ground that that year had been "settled" or "closed."
Form 872, attached to petitioners' 1952 return and entitled "Consent Fixing Period of Limitation Upon Assessment of Income and Profits Tax" was executed by petitioners1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*40 on January 24, 1956, and by the Commissioner on February 16, 1956; it extended to June 30, 1957, the period for assessing additional income tax for the taxable year 1952. On July 6, 1956, petitioner received respondent's letter of intent to determine deficiencies for 1952, 1953, and 1954, and petitioner 33 T.C. 298">*300 filed a protest thereto on July 31, 1956. The protest stated in part as follows:
1952 -- this return was priorly audited and finally settled and a tax lien removed. Taxpayers claim no further adjustment is due, nor any penalty chargeable.
1954 -- taxpayers object to penalties imposed, especially under
The deficiency notice involved in this case was mailed to petitioner on March 4, 1957.
OPINION.
1. Petitioners do not challenge the correctness of the Commissioner's determination as to 1952. Instead, they argue that there has been an "accord and satisfaction," a compromise or settlement for 1952, between them and the then collector of internal revenue for the Boston district; and that the Commissioner is therefore precluded from determining1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*41 any deficiency as to 1952.
(a) In the first place, it is highly dubious whether this issue is properly pleaded. Rule 7(
These requirements are not idle technicalities. It is important to the orderly conduct of a lawsuit that both the Court and the opposing party be properly informed by the pleadings as to precisely what issues are presented for decision.
Petitioner's paragraph 4, to the extent that it relates to the year 1952, consists of two sentences which are set forth in full in the margin. 1 The first sentence deals with the basic deficiency and nothing therein, or1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*42 in the schedules referred to, in any way is concerned 33 T.C. 298">*301 with the defense of "accord and satisfaction." The second sentence deals only with the so-called "penalty," and nothing set forth therein could possibly be described as a "clear and concise" assignment of error based on "accord and satisfaction." To be sure, the second sentence does undertake to say that the "penalty" was in error "for the reasons set forth hereafter," 2 and there is some language in paragraph 5, which, in the light of the contention made by petitioner for the first time at the hearing, could possibly be construed to relate to "accord and satisfaction." But, at best from petitioner's point of view, (1) paragraph 4 itself is faulty under our rules, (2) it deals in this regard only with the "penalty" and not with the basic tax, and (3) even if paragraph 5 may be engrafted upon paragraph 4 -- a situation not contemplated by our rules, since we look to paragraph 4 for assignments of error and to paragraph 5 for allegations of fact backing up such assignments -- the allegations in paragraph 5 are not of such character as to present clearly an accord and satisfaction issue without further elaboration. However, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*43 it is not necessary to decide this issue merely upon the pleadings, for it is clear in any event that the point is without merit.
1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36">*44 (b) On the merits of this issue, petitioner has failed to establish any "accord and satisfaction," compromise or settlement for 1952 which would preclude respondent from assessing additional taxes with respect to that year. As was stated in
2. As to the year 1954, petitioners do not contest the basic deficiency of $ 949.66, but they do argue that the addition to tax under
1. "4. The determination of tax set forth in the notice of deficiency for the year 1952 is based in the main upon the disallowance of certain cash expenditures for alleged depreciable furniture, fixtures and office equipment, and certain other minor adjustments upon audit, all as more fully set forth in Exhibit B, Schedules 1 and 1-A attached hereto. The penalty of $ 833.59 for substantial under-estimation of the estimated tax for the year 1952 under
2. The reference to