1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*130
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58 T.C. 224">*224 The respondent determined a deficiency in the Federal income tax of the petitioner and an addition to the tax as follows:
Addition to tax | Addition to tax | ||
Year | Deficiency | under sec. 6651(a) 1 | under sec. 6653(a) |
1965 | $ 10,650.40 | $ 518.34 | $ 532.52 |
At the trial, the petitioner and the respondent stipulated to the following disposition of certain issues:
58 T.C. 224">*225 (1) The petitioner is not entitled to any medical expense deduction.
(2) The petitioner is entitled to a deduction of $ 81 for general sales taxes.
(3) The petitioner is entitled to a deduction of $ 31.20 for State and local gasoline taxes.
(4) The petitioner is entitled to a deduction of $ 107.42 for interest expense, not including1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*133 mortgage interest.
Since the trial, the respondent has agreed that the petitioner is entitled to the $ 4,800 of exemptions for his wife and children and that no additions to the tax pursuant to section 6651(a) should be imposed.
Four issues remain for determination by the Court. Those issues are:
(1) Whether the petitioner must include as gross income amounts which he embezzled from his employer in 1965.
(2) Whether the petitioner is entitled to deductions for real estate tax and home mortgage interest payments made by a dependent.
(3) Whether the petitioner is entitled to a deduction against ordinary income for a carryover of a capital loss realized in a prior year.
(4) Whether any part of any underpayment of tax for the taxable year 1965 was due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Wilbur Buff (hereinafter referred to as the petitioner) is an individual who was a legal resident of Richmond Hill, New York, at the time of the filing of the petition herein. Petitioner filed his 1965 Federal income tax1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*134 return with the district director of internal revenue at Brooklyn, New York. At the time of the filing of his return, he was incarcerated at Rikers Island Penitentiary, New York, N.Y.
During the year 1965, the petitioner was married to but living apart from his wife, Hilda. Hilda Buff was not employed during that year, and she did not file a separate individual Federal income tax return.
At the beginning of 1965, the petitioner was employed as a bookkeeper by S&D Meats, Inc., Brooklyn, New York. From January 1, 1965, to June 7, 1965, the petitioner embezzled a total of $ 22,739.56 from S&D Meats, Inc. (hereinafter sometimes referred to as S&D). When the embezzlement was discovered in June 1965, the petitioner immediately admitted the embezzlement. He was presented with an affidavit of confession of judgment by his employer and on June 7, 1965, signed the affidavit "for a debt justly due to the plaintiff," S&D Meats, Inc., for the sum of $ 22,000 plus interest.
The petitioner also agreed to continue working for S&D and to pay $ 25 per week in partial repayment of the debt. During the period from 58 T.C. 224">*226 June 7, 1965, until July 7, 1965, the petitioner faithfully complied with1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*135 this agreement. During this same period, and as part of his agreement with S&D, the petitioner also borrowed $ 1,000 from the Lafayette Bank, Brooklyn, New York, and paid over the proceeds of that loan to S&D in partial repayment of the debt.
On or about July 7, 1965, petitioner's employer became dissatisfied with this arrangement. The petitioner was fired, and the affidavit of confession of judgment was filed with the Supreme Court, County of Queens. On July 19, 1965, judgment was entered against the petitioner for $ 22,000 plus interest and costs of $ 687.25. The judgment received by S&D against the petitioner is still outstanding.
In 1956, the petitioner purchased a house on Collier Avenue, Far Rockaway, New York, for $ 18,750. The petitioner made a downpayment of $ 6,000, and the remainder of the purchase price was financed through a mortgage that the petitioner renewed on two occasions. The house was acquired in the name of Hilda Buff. During the taxable year 1965, petitioner and Hilda Buff were estranged. Hilda Buff asserted ownership of the house; and, during 1965, she made payments of real property taxes of $ 592.76 and payments of interest of $ 642.80 on account of1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*136 the house.
In 1957, the petitioner formed a corporation, Biltmore Securities Corp. (hereinafter referred to as Biltmore), to engage in the securities business as a broker-dealer in securities. The petitioner was sole stockholder and president of Biltmore.
Biltmore had 400 shares of stock outstanding, in exchange for which the petitioner transferred $ 4,000 to the corporation. The petitioner obtained the $ 4,000 through a personal loan from the World National Bank, New York, N.Y., in the amount of $ 5,000. Of those funds, $ 1,000 was used in organizing the corporation. From time to time after the formation of Biltmore, the petitioner contributed additional capital to the corporation.
Biltmore was dissolved in 1960. It had no net assets or net worth upon dissolution, and the petitioner received nothing upon dissolution except an income tax refund of $ 2,852.93.
In his return for the taxable year 1960, the petitioner set forth a capital loss of $ 22,950 on the dissolution of Biltmore. In addition, the petitioner showed a capital loss of $ 1,822.28 carried over from a prior year. As a result of offsetting said loss against capital gains realized in 1960 and subsequent years, together1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*137 with the deduction of $ 1,000 against other income for the years 1960 to 1964, inclusive, petitioner's 58 T.C. 224">*227 return for the year 1965 set forth an unused capital loss of $ 18,425.13, on account of which petitioner claimed a deduction of $ 1,000. The computation of the amount of the unused capital loss and the deduction was made in the return as follows:
Capital loss carryforward for year 1961 as per schedule | |
filed | $ 24,547.16 |
Used thru 1964 | 6,122.03 |
Unused | 18,425.13 |
To 1965 to 1040 | 1,000.00 |
17,425.13 | |
Expired | 17,425.13 |
Balance carried forward | 0 |
The petitioner had a loss carryforward to the year 1965 in an amount of not less than $ 1,000 on account of the loss sustained on the dissolution of Biltmore in the taxable year 1960.
The petitioner did not report any part of the funds that he embezzled as income on his 1965 Federal income tax return.
ULTIMATE FINDINGS OF FACT
(1) No part of the funds originally embezzled by the petitioner in 1965 constituted income to the petitioner in that year.
(2) The petitioner was entitled to a deduction of $ 1,000 of the capital loss suffered on the dissolution of Biltmore as an offset against income for the taxable year 1965.
1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*138 (3) The petitioner is not entitled to deductions in 1965 for the property taxes on the real estate and interest payments on the mortgage on the house on Collier Avenue in Far Rockaway, New York.
(4) No part of any underpayment of any tax for the petitioner's taxable year 1965 was due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations.
OPINION
With respect to this issue, the facts are not in dispute. In 1965, the petitioner was employed by S&D Meats, Inc. In the period between January and June of that year, the petitioner "embezzled" some $ 22,000 of funds belonging to his employer. Early in June 1965, the petitioner's embezzlement was discovered. He readily admitted taking the money. Thereupon, at the request of his employer, the petitioner executed 58 T.C. 224">*228 a confession of judgment and affidavit "for a debt justly due to the plaintiff" for the sum of $ 22,000 plus interest. 2
1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*139 In addition to the confession of judgment, the petitioner obtained a loan in the amount of $ 1,000 from the Lafayette Bank, Brooklyn, New York, which he paid to his employer. At the same time, the employer retained the petitioner as an employee pursuant to an agreement whereby $ 25 per week of the total wages payable to the petitioner would be withheld in partial repayment of the petitioner's debt.
We thus have a simple situation where an embezzler is discovered and within the same taxable year the embezzler and his employer agree that the amount taken shall be treated as a judgment debt due from the embezzler. Whether it is a matter of self interest or otherwise, the employer initially deemed it to be to his advantage to disregard the criminality of the petitioner's act in consideration for the agreement by the petitioner to repay the debt.
The respondent argues that once there has been a misappropriation of funds by the employee -- the die is cast -- the embezzler realizes taxable income. The respondent contends that the only offset to the realization of such income is through the "deduction" allowed by the respondent under section 165(c)(2) on account of the repayment of the1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*140 amount embezzled. Thus, the respondent contends that the income of the embezzler is subject to diminution only by repayment of the amount embezzled, and he concludes that such diminution occurs only in the taxable year of such repayment.
The petitioner argues that in determining whether petitioner realized income as a result of taking funds which belonged to his employer, the transaction must be looked at as of the close of the taxable year. In that light, the petitioner cannot be said to have realized any gain. While he had taken and spent some $ 22,000 belonging to his employer, there was entered against him a judgment for an equivalent amount.
A money judgment may be enforced against any property which could be assigned or transferred, whether it consists of a present or future right or interest and whether or not it is vested, unless it is exempt from application to the satisfaction of the judgment.
The petitioner's1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*141 argument would clearly be correct if the Court in the instant case were faced with a situation where there had been a 58 T.C. 224">*229 receipt of income through error or mistake.
We think the $ 7500 receipt in 1940 was thereby placed outside the operation of the "claim of right" rule. * * * The usual case for application of the rule involves a taxpayer who has received funds during a taxable year,
In
The case of
We must determine if there is a difference with respect to an illegal taking which would call for the application of a different rule.
The treatment of embezzled funds as income to the embezzler is of relatively recent origin.
58 T.C. 224">*230 In
When a taxpayer acquires earnings, lawfully or unlawfully, without the consensual recognition, express or implied, of an obligation to repay and1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*145 without restriction as to their disposition, "he has received income which he is required to return, even though it may still be claimed that he is not entitled to retain the money, and even though he may still be adjudged liable to restore its equivalent."
Clearly, the opinion of the majority in the
Following the
In
We believe that the respondent's determination is correct. We interpret the
As pointed out by the petitioner, we have held in
In the case now before us, the petitioner went further than the taxpayer in the
The case of
In the instant case, as distinguished from the
It is well recognized that the parties to a transaction, dealing at arm's length, may alter, amend, or revoke the transaction so as to change its character for tax purposes if their action takes place within the same taxable year as the original transaction.
58 T.C. 224">*233 2.
In 1956, the petitioner and Hilda Buff, the petitioner's wife, purchased a house on Collier Avenue in Far Rockaway, New York. Title was taken in the name of Hilda Buff. In 1965, she made payments of interest on the mortgage in the total amount of $ 642.80 and paid real property taxes of $ 592.76.
The record fails to disclose any liability on the part of the petitioner for the payment of any interest or taxes on account of the house. Furthermore, Hilda Buff refused to pledge the house to secure the debt of the petitioner which is now before us; and, in substance, she has asserted ownership. In view of these considerations, we find and hold that the petitioner has failed to substantiate1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*153 the deductions which he claimed for taxes and mortgage interest, and we therefore sustain the respondent's disallowance of such deductions.
The petitioner formed Biltmore Securities Corp. in 1957, putting $ 4,000 of his own money into the stock. During the next few years, the petitioner contributed additional capital to the corporation. In 1960, Biltmore was dissolved and the petitioner received nothing in the dissolution except a $ 2,852.93 income tax refund.
Pursuant to section 331, the $ 2,852.93 received by the petitioner was treated as being in full payment for the petitioner's stock in Biltmore. Accordingly, the petitioner suffered a capital loss in 1960 on the liquidation of the corporation.
The respondent was fully apprised of the loss and made no effort, either in this proceeding or with respect to any prior years, to refute the claims of the petitioner. Instead, the respondent relied solely on the inability of the petitioner, at this late date, to substantiate the amount of the loss. Under the circumstances, we believe that the petitioner's testimony must be accepted to the extent of the amount claimed for the year 1965, and he is clearly1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*154 entitled to a $ 1,000 deduction from ordinary income in that year.
The respondent has asserted additions to tax under
With respect to all other adjustments which the respondent relies1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*155 upon to establish the underpayment of tax to which he now applies the
Dawson,
It is simply hokey to say that what happened here gave rise to a "debt" due from the petitioner to S & D Meats, Inc., and to draw an analogy to cases like
In any event, I think the rationale of the
Hoyt,
I would conclude that even if the parties in the year of embezzlement make an arrangement for repayment of the embezzled funds, this cannot have the effect of changing the original transaction into one in the nature of a loan; in the absence of a consensual recognition at the time of the taking, the acquisition of embezzled funds results in the receipt of taxable income by the embezzler. As indicated by the Supreme Court, this standard brings wrongful appropriations within the broad sweep of gross income; it excludes loans.
It is obvious from the facts before us here that there was no consensual recognition when petitioner embezzled funds from his employer in 1965. The petitioner's confession of a worthless1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*159 judgment thereafter in the year he was caught with his hand in the till did not, to any extent, constitute a repayment in that year; that the judgment was not worth the paper it was written on is clearly shown by the finding that it remains outstanding today, some 7 years later. It can no more be regarded as repayment in 1965 than a worthless promissory note given at that time. In so stating, I do not mean to imply that the 58 T.C. 224">*236 giving of a promissory note or other evidence of indebtedness by an otherwise solvent embezzler, would necessarily constitute payment sufficient to support a current deduction. That is a question which need not now be decided.
It seems to me that the majority's conclusion that the "consensual agreement" between the embezzler and his victimized employer in 1965, after his crime was detected, changed the nature of the embezzled funds from taxable income to nontaxable borrowed funds, equates such subsequent agreement with full repayment in that year. Thus, this taxpayer, who embezzled over $ 22,000 from his employer in 1965 and who had the full use, command, and benefit of those funds, escapes taxability without making restitution merely because he was1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*160 caught early in the same year and before the end thereof he acknowledged his obligation to make restitution. This seems contra, not only to the doctrine enunciated in the
In
In our view the 1962 agreement neither purported to nor could change the original legal character of Norman's earlier conduct from embezzlement to borrowing. * * *
In
We interpret the
We then stated that the acknowledgment by the embezzler of his legal obligation1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*162 to repay could not be considered a consensual agreement which would justify treating embezzled funds as in any way similar "to borrowed funds and hence excludable from gross income." We concluded (p. 499): "The only relief available to the embezzler is to deduct from income of any year any amount repaid in such year in restitution."
I think the majority here is rejecting those principles announced and applied only a few years ago by this Court in
It seems clear to me that the results reached in
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. as amended, unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. The affidavit was filed in the Supreme Court of the County of Queens; and, on July 19, 1965, judgment was entered against the petitioner for $ 22,000 plus interest and cost of $ 687.25.↩
3.
(a) Negligence or Intentional Disregard of Rules and Regulations With Respect to Income or Gift Taxes. -- If any part of any underpayment (as defined in subsection (c)(1)) of any tax imposed by subtitle A or by chapter 12 of subtitle B (relating to income taxes and gift taxes) is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations (but without intent to defraud), there shall be added to the tax an amount equal to 5 percent of the underpayment.↩