1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*60
Petitioner derived his income exclusively from personal racetrack winnings and gambling.
65 T.C. 1">*1 Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' Federal income tax for the taxable year 1971 in the amount of $ 584.17. The sole issue for determination is whether the gambling activities of petitioner Alfred A. Gentile during the taxable year 1971 constituted the carrying on of a trade or business within the meaning of section 1402 1 so as to subject the income derived therefrom to inclusion as net earnings1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*62 from self-employment for purposes of the self-employment tax under
FINDINGS OF FACT
The stipulation of facts filed by the parties, together with the exhibits attached thereto, is incorporated herein by reference.
Alfred A. Gentile and Carole J. Gentile are husband and wife and resided in Liverpool, N. Y., at the time they filed their petition herein. For the taxable year 1971, they filed a joint income tax return with the Internal Revenue Service Center at Andover, Mass. Carole J. Gentile is a party to this proceeding solely 65 T.C. 1">*2 because she signed the joint return. Any reference herein to "petitioner" shall refer to Alfred A. Gentile.
Petitioner reported $ 9,100 gross income for the taxable year 1971 which amount was attributed in its entirety to gambling winnings. 2 During 1971 petitioner engaged in and derived income from the following gambling activities: racetrack betting, private wagering1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*63 on various sports events, and card and dice games. Racetrack winnings accounted for the major portion of petitioner's income for the year in question. Petitioner frequented Vernon Downs and Finger Lakes racetracks in his home State from one to four times a week during the racing season and generally placed bets on two or three races per visit. His racetrack winnings represent a series of small returns rather than a few large payoffs. Petitioner was earnest about his racetrack betting and a considerable portion of his time not spent at the track was spent studying newspapers, daily racing forms, and the like.
The balance of petitioner's income for 1971 derives from his other gambling activities, private wagers on televised sports events, and card and dice games in which petitioner participated. 3
1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*64 During the taxable year in issue, petitioner did not operate a gambling establishment, solicit or book wagers for other persons, maintain an office or telephone listing, advertise, file an assumed name certificate in the county clerk's office, act in a representative capacity for other persons in respect of any gambling activity, or give gambling advice for which he was compensated or for which he expected or requested compensation. His activity was confined to putting his own money "on the table."
In 1971, petitioner was not a novice in the art of gambling; his Federal income tax returns for the 3 years preceding the year in question indicate that he gambled with regularity and success. Petitioner reported income for the years 1968-71 as follows:
Source | 1968 | 1969 | 1970 | 1971 |
Betting winnings | $ 8,658 | $ 6,031 | $ 9,870 | $ 9,100 |
Short-term capital gain | 702 | |||
Wages/salary | 3,700 | |||
Totals | 9,360 | 9,731 | 9,870 | 9,100 |
65 T.C. 1">*3 Petitioner has a record of arrests and convictions for gambling-related offenses, some of which include the active promotion of gambling and the contriving of a lottery. 4
1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*65 ULTIMATE FINDING OF FACT
Petitioner's gambling winnings were not derived from the carrying on of any trade or business.
OPINION
The sole issue presented for decision is whether petitioner's gambling activities constituted a trade or business so as to subject income derived therefrom to inclusion as self-employment income for purposes of the self-employment tax imposed by
The Self-Employment Contributions Act of 1954,
65 T.C. 1">*4 Whether a particular taxpayer's activities amount to the carrying on of a trade or business is essentially a factual determination.
Respondent urges an expansive reading of the term "trade or business" and turns first for support to
1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*68 As further support for his position, respondent cites several cases in which he contends that a trade or business was found to exist where there was no showing of an offering of goods or services to others. Thus, in
1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*69 Petitioner relies on the oft-cited definition of carrying on a trade or business as that which "involves holding one's self out to others as engaged in the selling of goods or services."
Upon stepping up to the betting window, petitioner was not holding himself out as offering any goods or services to anyone. Petitioner's use of his own resources to wager and his dedicated studies of the activities on which he wagered are akin to the management and investment of one's own estate and the study of market reports in order to do so more knowledgeably. This latter passive activity is clearly not within the bounds of a trade or business. See
Accordingly, we hold that petitioner's wagering activities were not the carrying on of any trade or business and that his wagering winnings were not subject to the self-employment tax. 1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 60">*72 10
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise stated.↩
2. Respondent does not dispute the fact that this gross income figure represents net gambling winnings for 1971.↩
3. No evidence has been introduced to show any quantitative apportionment of income between racetrack winnings and other gambling winnings.↩
4. The parties have stipulated that the petitioner's criminal record with respect to gambling-related offenses is as follows:
Federal charge: Arrested on Jan. 10, 1964, and charged with three counts of failing to pay occupational tax and wagering excise taxes. Disposition: Guilty plea to one count on Nov. 9, 1964, remaining counts dismissed. Sentence: $ 1,500 fine.
State charges: Arrested on Dec. 17, 1961, and charged with contriving a lottery. Disposition: Conviction. Sentence: 6 months (suspended) and $ 100 fine.
Arrested on Dec. 11, 1967, and charged with promoting gambling, second degree; arrested on Dec. 15, 1967, and charged with possession of a gambling device. Disposition: Conviction. Sentence: $ 500 fine.
Arrested on Oct. 7, 1969, and charged with two counts of promoting gambling, second degree and two counts of conspiracy, fourth degree. Disposition: Guilty plea to one count of conspiracy, other counts dismissed. Sentence: $ 100.↩
5. We note that the Supreme Court also observed that "'Business' is a very comprehensive term and embraces everything about which
6. Petitioner concedes the regularity and continuity of his gambling pursuits and respondent assumed that he gambled for gain. It is not altogether clear, however, that this petitioner's expectation of gain amounts to a profit motive. Profit motive is not measured objectively by the reasonableness of the taxpayer's expectation of profit, but rather by whether the taxpayer embarked upon his course of conduct with the good-faith purpose of or in the good-faith belief of making a profit.
One habitual gambler-taxpayer, who had supplemented experience with an extensive 10-year study of the game of craps, was denied a sec. 212 deduction for travel and lodging expenses incurred in his 12 trips to Las Vegas in 1 taxable year on the ground that his gambling activities were not motivated by a bona fide profit-seeking purpose. The taxpayer's hope for gain was tempered with a realistic ackowledgment that few people win at the craps table, a lesson learned by the history of personal losses.
At least one commentator on gaming would distinguish between the validity of one's expectation of profit from casino-type games of pure chance, on the one hand, and the validity of one's expectation of profit from gambling activities such as horserace betting, which involve some element of skill, on the other hand. Oswald Jacoby on Gambling (1963).
Since petitioner's activities are found to fall short of a trade or business in other respects, we need not decide whether petitioner's expectation of gain was infused with sufficient skill to justify concluding that he had the requisite profit motive.↩
7. None of the actions which were instituted against petitioner (see n. 4
8. Compare
9. Respondent seeks to distinguish this ruling on the ground that the taxpayer entering the contests had other part-time employment. This distinction is without merit, since a finding that a taxpayer is engaged in one trade or business does not preclude a finding that he engaged in another trade or business as well.
10. In so holding, we are not unmindful of respondent's citation to the case of