Decision will be entered for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
DAWSON,
OPINION OF THE SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE
POWELL,
The issues are (1) whether petitioners are entitled to a deduction for contributions made to Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA's), and (2) whether petitioners are entitled to an overpayment of income taxes paid on separation benefits received from the U.S. Army (Army).
Petitioners timely filed 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 466">*467 a petition with this Court disputing the disallowance of the IRA deduction and claiming an overpayment in the amount of $ 17,103. The alleged overpayment results from the inclusion of $ 70,070.60 in income that petitioners contend is exempt from taxation under section 104(a)(4).
The facts concerning the $ 70,070.60 have their genesis in the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the winding down of the Cold War. In 1980, Ronald A. Weigelt (petitioner) joined the Army and, after completing Officer's Candidate School, was commissioned an officer in the U.S. Army Reserves. Petitioner had planned to make the Army a career. In 1990, the Army began a reduction in force because of the changes in the international situation. On September 30, 1992, petitioner was honorably discharged from the Army and received a special separation benefit (SSB payment) in the amount of $ 70,070.60.
Prior to his discharge, petitioner applied to the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) for a disability pension. On January 11, 1994, the DVA notified petitioner by letter that he was entitled to monthly disability compensation benefits commencing November 1, 1992, December 1, 1992, and January 1, 1993, in the respective 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 466">*468 amounts of $ 83, $ 85, and $ 87. The letter, however, also informed him that You have received a Special Separation Benefit (SSB) payment of $ 70,070.60 from the Army. We must withhold benefit payments until we recover that full amount. We will then automatically begin monthly payments.
On their 1992 joint Federal income tax return, petitioners reported the $ 70,070.60 SSB payment. Petitioners also claimed a $ 4,000 deduction for two $ 2,000 IRA contributions. Upon examination, respondent determined that petitioners had unreported income from wages and interest in the respective amounts of $ 153 and $ 83, and that the deduction claimed for the IRA contributions was not allowable. While the 1992 return was being examined, petitioners filed an amended 1992 return omitting the SSB payment from income. The amended return was treated as a claim for refund and was denied by respondent. Petitioners do not dispute the adjustments to the wage and interest income. They do, however, contest the disallowance of the IRA contributions deduction and contend that the SSB payment is nontaxable, and, accordingly, they are entitled to a overpayment. The parties agree that, if the SSB payment is nontaxable, 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 466">*469 petitioners' adjusted gross income is $ 46,277. 2
The issues raised both depend on the taxability of the SSB payment. With regard to the IRA issue, under section 219(a) an individual is allowed a deduction for qualified retirement contributions. Section 219(g)(1), however, limits the deduction where an individual or the individual's spouse is an "active participant" for any part of the taxable year of certain pension plans. An active participant includes a participant in "a plan established for its employees by the United States". Sec. 219(g)(5)(A)(iii). Petitioner was an "active participant" during 1992. In the case of married individuals filing a joint return, the deduction when one individual is an "active participant" is reduced using a ratio determined by dividing the amount of the taxpayers' adjusted gross income in excess of $ 40,000 by $ 10,000. Sec. 219(g)(2) and (3). This results in the total disallowance of the IRA deduction for filers of joint returns where the total adjusted gross income exceeds $ 50,000. 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 466">*470
The SSB payment was made under
Section 61(a) provides that gross income means "all income from whatever source derived". Unless Congress specifically exempts certain income from inclusion, the broad language of section 61(a) requires its inclusion.
Section 104(a)(4) excludes from income "amounts received as a pension * * * for personal injuries or sickness resulting from active service in the armed forces". The parties agree that with respect to the disability compensation received from the DVA, those payments would be exempt under section 104(a)(4). The SSB payment, however, was not made for personal injury or sickness. The payment was made under
A member [of the armed forces] who has received separation pay under this section * * * based on service in the armed forces shall not be deprived, by reason of his receipt of such separation pay * * * of any disability compensation to which he is entitled 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 466">*472 under the laws administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs, but there shall be deducted from that disability compensation an amount equal to the total amount of separation pay * * * received. [
Petitioner does not dispute that normally the SSB payment would be includable in gross income. See
This same issue was before the Court in The legislative history reveals the congressional awareness of the plight of servicemen who have been involuntarily released from active duty, and, who * * * are immediately entitled to both a lump-sum readjustment payment and disability compensation. * * * Congress provided that these veterans would receive readjustment pay and that upon subsequent confirmation of entitlement to disability compensation, the readjustment pay in essence would be repaid to the Government by a deduction from the disability compensation * * * * * * * Congress could have enacted a law which would have allowed the immediate exclusion of readjustment payments from taxation * * *. However, Congress did not choose to have the lump-sum readjustment payments treated in this manner. Congress deliberately determined that a veteran covered by
The repealed
Because the $ 70,070.60 SSB payment was properly included in petitioners' 1992 income, petitioners' adjusted gross income exceeds $ 50,000. Accordingly, the $ 4,000 deduction for the IRA contributions is not allowable under section 219(g).
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Adjusted gross income as reported ($ 112,111) plus adjustments to income ($ 236) plus disallowed IRA contributions deduction ($ 4,000) minus the SSB payment ($ 70,070).↩
3. Contrary to petitioners' argument,