Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
IRWIN, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's income tax for the calendar year 19631969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*164 in the amount of $459.14.
The sole issue for our decision is whether expenses incurred by petitioner for lodging, meals and laundry during the taxable year 1963 should be allowed as a deduction under
Findings of Fact
Some of the facts have been stipulated by the parties and are incorporated herein, along with an exhibit attached thereto, by this reference.
Cleo D. Barr and Eloise Barr are husband and wife and were residents of Newark, Tex., at the time the petition herein was filed. Cleo D. Barr, by order dated April 7, 1969, is the sole petitioner in this action. Reference, therefore, to the petitioner will at all times hereafter refer solely to the petitioner, Cleo D. Barr. Petitioner and his wife filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1963 with the district director of internal revenue at Dallas, Tex.
At all times herein relevant, petitioner and his wife maintained a residence in Newark, Tex. Petitioner was a sheet metal worker and from1969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*165 sometime in 1958 until March 1969 he was employed by the Universal Sheet Metal Company of Fort Worth, Tex. 721
In June 1962 the Universal Sheet Metal Company obtained a contract from the United States Government to remodel a Veteran's Administration hospital located in Des Moines, Iowa. Petitioner was a sheet metal foreman on the project. At its inception, it was expected that the project would be completed in approximately 18 months. However, except for several brief returns to Texas, petitioner remained on the project until December 1964 - a period of about 2 1/2 years. Petitioner was forced to leave the job at that time because of injuries he sustained in an automobile accident. Petitioner's brief visits to Texas were motivated by personal reasons and/or work delays at the construction site. During these returns to Texas, petitioner would, on occasion, discuss various aspects of the Iowa project with his employer and work on other projects.
While working on the Iowa project, petitioner received an expense allowance of $42 per week or $2,184 a year from his employer.
During the taxable year 1963, petitioner incurred the following expenses while working on the Iowa project: 1969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*166
Lodging | $ 936.00 |
Meals | 1,076.75 |
Laundry | 223.60 |
Total | $ 2,236.35 |
Opinion
Generally, under section 262, a taxpayer's personal living or family expenses are not deductible unless expressly permitted by some other section of the Code.
Respondent's revenue rulings also make it clear that reasonable expenditures for laundry will also be allowed as a deduction under
1969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*167 Petitioner contends that the traveling expenses which he incurred during the taxable year 1963 are deductible under
The resolution of this question is purely factual. See, e.g.,
Though the legislative history regarding
Once this question is asked, the following language from Kroll sets forth the principles to be followed in arriving at an answer:
When * * * a taxpayer moves to a new permanent post of employment, it is generally reasonable to expect him to move his residence as well, and if he does not do so, and thereby incurs living expenses at his new post of employment while maintaining his old residence, the duplication * * * does not arise from business needs, but from personal considerations. If, however, the taxpayer's stay at the new post of business is to be temporary - "the sort of employment in which termination within a short period could be foreseen" (
With this legal backdrop in mind, we can now decide whether the expenditures incurred by petitioner during the taxable year 1963 come within the three requirements of
As to the requirement that the expenses sought to be deducted be both reasonable and necessary, respondent has not seen fit to contest the deduction on this ground and we need not decide this question. However, we do note that while on the job, petitioner received a weekly expense allowance of $42, or $2,184 for the year. The $2,236.35 amount taken by petitioner as a
Having resolved the above question, we now address ourselves to the question of whether the expenditures incurred by petitioner were (a) experienced by him while away from home and (b) in pursuit of his trade or business. Though this issue contemplates1969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*171 two separate questions, we believe that the considerations underlying each question are such that the resolution of one will necessarily yield a solution to the other. We, therefore, deem it appropriate to approach the two questions interdependently.
The problem of defining what
Where a taxpayer's work assignment at a new post of duty takes on the character of indefiniteness, the new post of duty is treated as his "tax home" and lodging and/or travel expenses which he incurs while working at this new tax home will not qualify as deductions under the "away from home" provisions of
As indicated earlier, the rationale behind this dichotomy is integrally connected with the "while in pursuit of business" 723 requirement of
Our task, therefore, is to determine whether the1969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*173 petitioner's tour of duty at the Iowa construction project was temporary. Ofttimes this presents a very difficult question. Nevertheless, we have carefully studied the record of this case and all the evidence presented and it is our conclusion that petitioner's work assignment in Iowa was not temporary.
Both petitioner and his employer expected that the Iowa project would last for about one and one-half years. As it turned out, petitioner remained on the job for approximately two and one-half years. Therefore, even if we were to minimize the evidentiary weight accorded to petitioner's expectations, the eventual length of his tour of duty weighs heavily against any suggestion that the Iowa project was temporary in nature. Cf.
The nature of petitioner's Iowa work assignment cannot be accorded "temporary" status merely because1969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*174 the circumstances which caused petitioner to be away from his Texas residence for a nontemporary and indeterminate period of time were totally beyond his control. In this connection, see
In Whitaker, the petitioner was assigned by his employer to Thule, Greenland, for the greater part of the taxable year in question. During this time he was not permitted to take his family with him to Greenland. In Jones, the taxpayer accepted indefinite employment at Oak Ridge, Tenn. No housing was there available for his family who, because of this situation, was forced to remain in Bakewell, Tenn. - 75 miles away from the taxpayer's new place of work. In both cases the taxpayers sought deductions for duplications in food and lodging expenses and in both cases we denied such deductions, stating in
The fact that housing conditions in Oak Ridge were such that it was difficult or impossible to bring his wife there with him is not of any help to petitioner in this case. * * *
As a practical matter, the circumstances which necessitated that the petitioner herein be removed1969 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 163">*175 from his residence in Texas thereby causing him to incur duplicate living expenses in Iowa were no different than the circumstances which caused the petitioners in the above-cited cases to involuntarily incur duplicate living expenses while separated from their respective families. This being so, we see no reason for permitting petitioner in this case the same type of deduction denied to the petitioners in Jones and Whitaker.
In any event, we believe that the year and one-half time period which petitioner expected to spend at the Iowa project was of itself sufficient to characterize the duration of the work assignment as substantial and nontemporary. Cf.
Decision will be entered for the respondent. 724
1. Although admitted to the Court for the purposes of this case only upon condition that he forthwith file an application for admission to the bar of this Court, petitioner's counsel has failed to file such application. He is not, for that reason, herein designated as attorney for petitioner.↩
2. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, unless otherwise designated.↩
3.
A taxpayer may deduct, as a part of traveling expenses under
4. See
Indeed under the rule of Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Flowers the expense, in order to be deductible, must be "required by the exigencies" of the employer's business, not those of the calling of the employee. "The job, not the taxpayer's pattern of living, must require the travel." * * *↩
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