Filed: Apr. 29, 2002
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 118 T.C. No. 21 UNITED STATES TAX COURT KEITH M. RUDMAN, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 3445-00. Filed April 29, 2002. Held: Earnings realized by petitioner, a member of the Chicago Board of Trade, from trading in commodities futures contracts are subject to self- employment tax. Harlan M. Ten Pas, for petitioner. David S. Weiner, for respondent. - 2 - OPINION SWIFT, Judge: For 1994, respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner’s Federal income tax an
Summary: 118 T.C. No. 21 UNITED STATES TAX COURT KEITH M. RUDMAN, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 3445-00. Filed April 29, 2002. Held: Earnings realized by petitioner, a member of the Chicago Board of Trade, from trading in commodities futures contracts are subject to self- employment tax. Harlan M. Ten Pas, for petitioner. David S. Weiner, for respondent. - 2 - OPINION SWIFT, Judge: For 1994, respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner’s Federal income tax and..
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118 T.C. No. 21
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
KEITH M. RUDMAN, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 3445-00. Filed April 29, 2002.
Held: Earnings realized by petitioner, a member
of the Chicago Board of Trade, from trading in
commodities futures contracts are subject to self-
employment tax.
Harlan M. Ten Pas, for petitioner.
David S. Weiner, for respondent.
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OPINION
SWIFT, Judge: For 1994, respondent determined a deficiency
in petitioner’s Federal income tax and an accuracy-related
penalty as follows:
Accuracy-Related Penalty
Year Deficiency Sec. 6662(a)
1994 $312,026 $57,203
Unless otherwise indicated, all 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.
After concessions, the remaining issue for decision is
whether petitioner, a commodities dealer, is subject to self-
employment tax on earnings from trading U.S. Treasury bond
commodities futures contracts.
Background
The facts of this case were submitted fully stipulated under
Rule 122, and are so found.
At the time the petition was filed, petitioner resided in
Winnetka, Illinois.
In years prior to 1994, petitioner was a member of the
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), and petitioner actively traded
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U.S. Treasury bond futures contracts for his own account on the
trading floor of the CBOT.
In 1994, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
initiated an investigation of petitioner regarding alleged
improper trading conduct, the specifics of which are not in the
record. Petitioner remained a member of the CBOT. Because of
the ongoing CFTC investigation, however, in 1994 while the
investigation was pending, petitioner chose to conduct his trades
through a floor broker rather than conduct his trades directly on
the trading floor of the CBOT.
In 1994, petitioner realized a total of $1,541,926 in net
gains relating to his trading in commodities futures contracts
through the broker, and petitioner paid more than $89,000 in
commissions to the floor broker.
On November 21, 1994, as a result of the settlement with the
CFTC of the above investigation, petitioner was allowed to trade
directly on the floor of the CBOT under the supervision of
another trader.
On his timely filed 1994 Federal income tax return,
petitioner treated the total $1,541,926 in net gains (that
petitioner realized in 1994 relating to his trading activity in
commodities futures contracts through the broker) as capital
gains and reported them on Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses,
of his income tax return. On his Schedule C, Profit or Loss from
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Business, of his income tax return, petitioner claimed $160,446
as ordinary and necessary business expenses relating to his
commodity trading activity, and petitioner indicated that he was
in the trade or business of a commodities dealer. The record
does not indicate that the $89,000 in commission expenses paid to
the floor broker was not included in the ordinary and necessary
expenses claimed on petitioner’s 1994 Federal income tax return.
In a notice of deficiency mailed to petitioner, respondent
determined that the earnings relating to petitioner’s trading in
futures contracts were subject to self-employment tax.
Discussion
Section 1401 imposes a tax on self-employment income from a
taxpayer’s trade or business. Generally, capital gains are
excluded from self-employment income. See sec. 1402(a)(3)(A).
In 1984, however, Congress enacted section 1402(i) which
provided that gains realized by commodities dealers in the
ordinary course of trading in futures contracts are subject to
self-employment tax. Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-
369, sec. 102(c), 98 Stat. 622.
Section 1402(i)(1) specifically states that
in determining the net earnings from self-
employment of any options dealer or
commodities dealer, there shall not be
excluded any gain or loss (in the normal
course of the taxpayer’s activity of dealing
in or trading section 1256 contracts) from
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section 1256 contracts or property related to
such contracts. [Emphasis added.]
A commodities dealer is defined in section 1402(i)(2)(B) as
“a person who is actively engaged in trading section 1256
contracts and is registered with a domestic board of trade which
is designated as a contract market by the Commodities Futures
Trading Commission.” The term “section 1256 contract” means any
regulated futures contract -- such as the U.S. Treasury bond
futures contracts in which petitioner traded. Sec. 1402(i)(2)(C).
Petitioner argues that his trading activity in 1994 through
a broker did not occur in the normal course of his commodities
trading activity and therefore that section 1402(i) does not
apply. Petitioner argues that his regular trading activity in
prior years (which involved petitioner’s personally making trades
on the floor of the CBOT) is distinguishable from the trades in
1994 which petitioner, because of the CFTC investigation,
conducted through a floor broker. Petitioner notes particularly
that he incurred $89,000 in broker’s fees relating to the latter
transactions.
Respondent contends that throughout 1994 petitioner was a
commodities dealer and that the $1,541,926 in earnings petitioner
realized from his commodities futures trades is subject to self-
employment tax.
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We conclude that petitioner’s earnings in 1994 from his
commodities trading transactions do not qualify for an exception
from self-employment tax. Petitioner has not established that
his trading activity in commodities futures contracts in 1994 was
outside the scope of his normal trading activity. Petitioner has
not established that the trades on his behalf in 1994 were less
frequent or regular than the trades in prior years. Other than
the use of a broker on the floor of the CBOT (in lieu of
petitioner himself being on the floor), the evidence in this case
does not establish any significant factual differences in
petitioner’s trading activity.
Petitioner remained a member of the CBOT. On his 1994
Federal income tax return, petitioner indicated that he was in
the trade or business of trading commodities futures contracts,
and he claimed his related expenses as ordinary and necessary
expenses of a trade or business.
We conclude that the use of a floor broker by petitioner
does not substantially alter the normal course of petitioner’s
commodities trading activity and that the earnings petitioner
realized therefrom in 1994 are subject to self-employment tax.
In Kovner v. Commissioner,
94 T.C. 893, 906 (1990), for
purposes of qualifying losses as ordinary losses under sec.
108(a) of the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-369, 98
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Stat. 630, we distinguished brokers and investors who were not
floor traders, floor brokers, or members of an exchange from
commodities dealers. Among other reasons, Kovner is
distinguishable from the instant case in that the parties herein
concede that petitioner was a commodities dealer and that
petitioner at all times remained a member of the CBOT and had the
ability to conduct trades on the floor of the CBOT.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.