Judges: "Halpern, James S."
Attorneys: Peter U. Boehme and Mary M. Boehme, pro sese. Ronald T. Jordan, for respondent.
Filed: Mar. 20, 2003
Latest Update: Nov. 21, 2020
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2003-81 UNITED STATES TAX COURT PETER U. AND MARY M. BOEHME, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 6668-00. Filed March 20, 2003. M (who together with her husband, P, filed joint returns for the audit years) assigned her right to receive certain future annual lottery payments in exchange for a lump-sum payment to her by W of $400,000. M used $250,000 of the $400,000 to repay loans to M, which had been secured by the future annual lottery payments. Of t
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2003-81 UNITED STATES TAX COURT PETER U. AND MARY M. BOEHME, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 6668-00. Filed March 20, 2003. M (who together with her husband, P, filed joint returns for the audit years) assigned her right to receive certain future annual lottery payments in exchange for a lump-sum payment to her by W of $400,000. M used $250,000 of the $400,000 to repay loans to M, which had been secured by the future annual lottery payments. Of th..
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T.C. Memo. 2003-81
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
PETER U. AND MARY M. BOEHME, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 6668-00. Filed March 20, 2003.
M (who together with her husband, P, filed joint
returns for the audit years) assigned her right to
receive certain future annual lottery payments in
exchange for a lump-sum payment to her by W of
$400,000. M used $250,000 of the $400,000 to repay
loans to M, which had been secured by the future annual
lottery payments. Of the $250,000, $186,000
represented repayment of the outstanding principal
amount of the loans and the $64,000 balance qualified
as the payment of interest.
1. Held: M’s right to receive certain future
annual lottery payments does not constitute a capital
asset. Davis v. Commissioner,
119 T.C. 1 (2002)
followed.
2. Held, further, the $400,000 that M received
from W is ordinary income.
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3. Held, further, the $64,000 interest payment
constituted the payment of nondeductible “personal
interest” under sec. 163(h), I.R.C.
Peter U. Boehme and Mary M. Boehme, pro sese.
Ronald T. Jordan, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
HALPERN, Judge: By notice of deficiency dated March 31,
2000, respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ Federal
income tax for 1995 and 1996 (the audit years) in the amounts of
$2,985 and $140,857, respectively. After concessions, the issues
remaining for decision are (1) whether $400,000 received by
petitioner Mary M. Boehme in 1996 in exchange for her right to
receive certain future annual lottery payments is ordinary income
or capital gain, and (2) whether petitioners are entitled to
deduct, for 1996, $64,000 paid by Mary in connection with the
repayment of loans to her secured by her lottery winnings.
Petitioners raised the latter issue during a hearing in lieu of
trial (the hearing) without objection by respondent.1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years at issue, and
1
Certain adjustments to petitioners’ dependency
exemptions and schedule A itemized deductions for 1996 are
derivative of the adjustments at issue and will be resolved by
our resolution of those adjustments.
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all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
Procedure.
Background
This case was submitted fully stipulated under Rule 122.
The facts stipulated by the parties are so found. The
stipulation of facts (including facts stipulated at the hearing),
with accompanying exhibits, are incorporated herein by this
reference.
Hereinafter, petitioners (husband and wife) will be referred
to individually as Peter and Mary. At the time the petition was
filed, petitioners resided in Mooresville, Indiana.
The following is a summary of the facts necessary for our
discussion.
In 1991, while petitioners were residing in Colorado, Mary
won $1.5 million from the Colorado State Lottery, which was to be
paid over a 25-year period in annual payments commencing October
10, 1991, and ending October 10, 2015. In order to make the 25
lottery payments, the Colorado State Lottery purchased an annuity
and named Mary as the beneficiary.
On July 19, 1995, September 30, 1995, November 3, 1995, and
March 7, 1996, Mary received four separate loans (the loans) from
Metwest Services of Spokane, Washington (Metwest). As collateral
for the loans, Mary pledged 12 future lottery payments (the 12
future lottery payments), which were due to be paid to her on
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October 10, 1996, through October 10, 2007, in the following
amounts, before applicable tax withholdings:
Payment Date Gross Amount
Oct. 10, 1996 $44,968
Oct. 10, 1997 46,631
Oct. 10, 1998 48,356
Oct. 10, 1999 50,145
Oct. 10, 2000 52,000
Oct. 10, 2001 53,924
Oct. 10, 2002 55,919
Oct. 10, 2003 57,988
Oct. 10, 2004 60,133
Oct. 10, 2005 62,357
Oct. 10, 2006 64,664
Oct. 10, 2007 67,056
Total 664,141
On April 30, 1996, Mary and Woodbridge Financial Corp.
(Woodbridge) executed a “Lottery Prize Assignment Agreement” (the
assignment agreement) pursuant to which Mary assigned to
Woodbridge her rights to receive the 12 future lottery payments,
before applicable tax withholdings, in exchange for a lump-sum
payment of $400,000 payable within 5 days after the Colorado
State Lottery and the annuity company funding the lottery
payments had given their approval of the assignment.
On May 6, 1996, Mary and Woodbridge executed an addendum to
the assignment agreement (the addendum) pursuant to which the
parties agreed that Mary would use up to $250,000 of the $400,000
to be received pursuant to the assignment agreement to repay the
balance due on the loans (anticipated not to exceed $250,000 by
Mary and Woodbridge), and that Woodbridge would pay directly to
Mary any outstanding balance in excess of $250,000. The parties
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intended that Mary retain at least $150,000 after repayment of
the outstanding balance of the loans. In August 1996, $250,000
was paid in satisfaction of the balance due on the loans, and
$150,000 was received and retained by Mary.
On Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, of their 1996
return, petitioners reported a $264,000 long-term capital loss
arising out of the foregoing transactions. That loss was derived
by treating $400,000 as the sales price or amount realized by
virtue of Mary’s assignment of the 12 future lottery payments to
Woodbridge and treating the gross amount of the assigned payments
($664,000) as Mary’s basis in such payments. Petitioners then
claimed a capital loss deduction of $3,000 in computing their
total income for 1996. Respondent’s notice of deficiency issued
on March 31, 2000, disallowed the $3,000 deduction and determined
that the transaction with Woodbridge resulted in $400,000 of
ordinary income to petitioners. During the hearing, petitioners
conceded that the entire $400,000 is includable in income, but
they maintain that it should be treated as capital gain.2
2
Although the matter is not specifically addressed by the
parties, they appear to agree that the issue is whether to
characterize the $400,000 as ordinary income or as long-term
capital gain. Petitioners originally reported the transaction as
generating long-term capital loss, and respondent has not raised
an issue as to petitioners’ holding period for the assigned right
to the 12 future lottery payments. We, therefore, assume that
respondent agrees that such right, which arose in 1991, had been
held for more than 1 year at the time of its sale to Woodbridge
in 1996; and that, assuming such right constitutes a capital
(continued...)
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The principal amount of the loans, for which the 12 future
lottery payments served as collateral, was $186,000, $100,000 of
which was used to construct or improve petitioners’ personal
residence. There is no evidence in the record as to petitioners’
use of the other $86,000. Petitioners’ residence did not serve
as additional collateral or security for the loans, and that
property was not mortgaged in connection with the loans. The
$250,000 loan discharge payment consisted of $186,000 in
repayment of the loans and $64,000 of interest or of a
combination of interest plus penalties for early repayment.3
Petitioners seek to deduct the $64,000 payment, which, if
allowable, would partially offset the inclusion of the $400,000
paid by Woodbridge as consideration for the 12 future lottery
payments in gross income.
2
(...continued)
asset, its transfer would give rise to long-term capital gain.
See sec. 1222(3).
3
During the hearing, Peter acknowledged that some portion
of the $64,000 additional payment constituted a penalty for
prepayment of the loans. In his brief, respondent characterizes
the entire $64,000 as accrued interest. The distinction is of no
consequence because loan prepayment penalties are generally
treated as interest for Federal income tax purposes. See 12701
Shaker Blvd. Co. v. Commissioner,
36 T.C. 255, 257-259 (1961),
affd.
312 F.2d 749 (6th Cir. 1963) (loan prepayment penalty
deductible as interest in the year of payment); see also Lewis v.
Commissioner,
65 T.C. 625, 630 (1975); Gen. Am. Life Ins. Co. v.
Commissioner,
25 T.C. 1265, 1268 (1956); Rev. Rul. 57-198, 1957-1
C.B. 94. Therefore, we shall treat the issue as solely involving
the deductibility of a $64,000 interest payment.
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Discussion
I. The Capital Gain Issue
The issue in dispute is whether the $400,000 that Mary
received in exchange for her assignment of the 12 future lottery
payments to Woodbridge is ordinary income or long-term capital
gain. Resolution of that issue depends upon whether Mary’s right
to receive the 12 future lottery payments constitutes a capital
asset within the meaning of section 1221.
The question of whether the right to receive future lottery
payments, which represent a portion of the total anticipated
payout, constitutes a capital asset does not present an issue of
first impression. In Davis v. Commissioner,
119 T.C. 1 (2002),
we held that the right to receive such payments does not
constitute a capital asset within the meaning of section 1221.4
In that case, we provided a thorough analysis of the caselaw
which led us to that result. No purpose would be served by
repeating the legal analysis in Davis, and we refer to that
analysis in support of our holding herein that (1) petitioners’
4
In Davis v. Commissioner,
119 T.C. 1 (2002), the
taxpayers assigned a portion of each of 11 future annual lottery
payments out of a total of 14 such payments that they were
entitled to receive. Id. at p.3. In this case, Mary assigned
all of the 12 future lottery payments, which also represented a
portion of the total future payments that she was entitled to
receive. We do not view that distinction as material, and we
view the lottery payment right assigned in Davis as, in
substance, identical to the lottery payment right assigned in
this case for purposes of deciding whether such right constitutes
a capital asset.
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right to receive the 12 future lottery payments does not
constitute a capital asset within the meaning of section 1221,
and (2) the $400,000 received by petitioners from Woodbridge in
exchange for that right constitutes ordinary income. Accord
United States v. Maginnis, 89 AFTR 2d 2002-3028, 2002-2 USTC par.
50,494 (D. Or. 2002).
II. Deductibility of the $64,000 Interest Payment
A. Introduction
During the hearing, Peter agreed that $100,000 of the
proceeds of the loans was used to construct or improve
petitioners’ personal residence, such residence was not used as
collateral for the loans, and no mortgage was placed on the
property in connection with the loans. In light of those
stipulated facts, respondent argues that, with respect to
individuals, section 163(h)(1) denies any deduction for “personal
interest”, and that there is no evidence to indicate that
petitioners’ interest payments fall within any of the exceptions
to the definition of “personal interest” set forth in section
163(h)(2).5
5
Sec. 163(h)(2) defines “personal interest”, in pertinent
part, as follows:
(2) Personal interest.--For purposes of this
subsection, the term “personal interest” means any
interest allowable as a deduction under this chapter
other than--
(continued...)
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B. Applicability of Section 163(h)(2)(D)
In particular, respondent argues that petitioners’ interest
payments fail to satisfy the requirements for the exception
provided in section 163(h)(2)(D) for “qualified residence
interest”. That is because, although petitioners’ principal
residence meets the definition of a “qualified residence” (see
sec. 163(h)(4)(A)(i)(I)), and although the loans constituted
“acquisition indebtedness” (which, pursuant to section
163(h)(3)(B)(i)(I), includes indebtedness “incurred in * * *
constructing, or substantially improving any qualified
residence”), repayment of the loans was not secured by such
residence as required by section 163(h)(3)(B)(i)(II).
We agree with respondent that, based upon the stipulated
facts, the $64,000 interest payment does not constitute
“qualified residence interest” within the meaning of section
163(h)(2)(D) and (3).
5
(...continued)
(A) interest paid or accrued on indebtedness
properly allocable to a trade or business (other
than the trade or business of performing services
as an employee),
(B) any investment interest (within the
meaning of subsection (d)),
* * * * * * *
(D) any qualified residence interest (within
the meaning of paragraph (3)),
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C. Applicability of Section 163(h)(2)(A)
Petitioners argue for the first time on brief that the
$64,000 interest payment is deductible under section 163(h)(2)(A)
as “interest paid or accrued on indebtedness properly allocable
to a trade or business”. We assume that that argument represents
an attempt by petitioners to link the loans to Mary’s business
use of petitioners’ personal residence. The Schedule Cs included
in petitioners’ returns for the audit years indicate that Mary
was engaged in a business (conducted on a cash basis) referred
to variously as “model train painting” (1995) or “professional
custom painting” (1996). The Form 8829, Expenses for Business
Use of Your Home, for 1995 states that 37.96 percent of
petitioners’ residence was used regularly and exclusively for
business. For 1996, such business use percentage is stated to be
15.4 percent.
As a general rule, this Court will not consider issues
raised by a party for the first time on brief when to do so will
prevent the opposing party from presenting evidence or arguments
that might have been offered had the issue been timely raised.
Graham v. Commissioner,
79 T.C. 415, 423 (1982). In this case,
respondent notified the Court of his intention not to file a
reply brief for the reason that his opening brief “adequately
disposes of the relevant factual and legal aspects of this case.”
Respondent has thereby failed to object to petitioners’ argument
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on the basis of timeliness. Therefore, we shall consider
petitioners’ argument on the merits.
On the basis of the record before us, we decline to hold
that any portion of the $64,000 interest payment is deductible
pursuant to section 163(h)(2)(A). In order to fall within that
provision, an interest payment must qualify as “[i]nterest
expense allocated to a trade or business expenditure”. Sec.
1.163-8T(a)(4)(i)(A), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 52 Fed. Reg.
24999 (July 2, 1987). A “trade or business expenditure” is one
that has been incurred “in connection with the conduct of * * *
[a] trade or business”. Sec. 1.163-8T(b)(7), Temporary Income
Tax Regs., 52 Fed. Reg. 24999 (July 2, 1987). There is nothing
in the record to indicate that any portion of the loans was used
to modify or improve that portion of petitioners’ residence
devoted to the conduct of Mary’s business. In fact, the Forms
8829 attached to the returns for the audit years indicate that
none of the proceeds of the loans was used for such purpose.6
Therefore, we find that no portion of the $64,000 interest
6
The Form 8829 for 1995 states that, out of a total area
of 3,240 square feet, 1,230 square feet were used “regularly and
exclusively” for business. According to the Form 8829 filed for
1996, the comparable figures are 4,090 square feet (total area)
and 630 square feet (business use area). Thus, while total area
increased between 1995 and 1996, presumably as a result of the
improvement paid for by a portion of the proceeds of the loans,
the amount devoted to business use decreased by almost 50 percent
during that same period.
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payment is excepted from the definition of nondeductible
“personal interest” pursuant to section 163(h)(2)(A).
D. Applicability of Section 163(h)(2)(B)
Petitioners’ Exhibit 13, placed in evidence during the
hearing, consists of a copy of the instructions for preparing
I.R.S. Form 4952, Investment Interest Expense Deduction (the Form
4952 instructions). At the hearing, Peter noted that the Form
4952 instructions state that property held for investment
includes property that produces income from annuities. Although
petitioners have failed to elaborate further, either at the
hearing or in their brief, we interpret Peter’s introduction of
the Form 4952 instructions as an attempt to argue that at least a
portion of the $64,000 interest payment is deductible as
“investment interest” pursuant to section 163(h)(2)(B), and, more
specifically, that such interest was “paid * * * on indebtedness
properly allocable to property held for investment” (i.e., the
annuity purchased by the Colorado State Lottery to fund the
lottery payments to Mary). Sec. 163(d)(3)(A).
Assuming that we have accurately described petitioners’
argument, we find it to be without merit. The annuity allegedly
“held for investment” was held by the Colorado State Lottery, not
by Mary who incurred the interest expense. More significantly,
petitioners explicitly stipulated that the loans, to the extent
of $100,000, were used to purchase or improve petitioners’
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principal residence, which does not qualify as “property held for
investment”. See sec. 163(d)(5)(A). (As noted previously, there
is no evidence in the record as to petitioners’ use of the
$86,000 balance of the loans.) Thus, the $64,000 interest
payment is not allocable to an “investment expenditure”, which is
defined, in pertinent part, as “an expenditure * * * properly
chargeable to capital account with respect to property held for
investment”. See sec. 1.163-8T(a)(4)(C), (b)(3), Temporary
Income Tax Regs., 52 Fed. Reg. 24999 (July 2, 1987). As a
result, no portion of the $64,000 interest payment qualifies as
“investment interest” within the meaning of section 163(h)(2)(B).
E. Conclusion
The $64,000 interest payment constituted the payment of
nondeductible “personal interest” under section 163(h).
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.