Judges: "Panuthos, Peter J."
Attorneys: Dawn Lea Black, Pro se. Erin R. Hines , for respondent.
Filed: Jun. 30, 2008
Latest Update: Dec. 05, 2020
Summary: T.C. Summary Opinion 2008-75 UNITED STATES TAX COURT DAWN LEA BLACK, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 10914-05S. Filed June 30, 2008. Dawn Lea Black, pro se. Erin R. Hines, for respondent. PANUTHOS, Chief Special Trial Judge: This case was heard pursuant to the provisions of section 7463 of the Internal Revenue Code in effect at the time the petition was filed.1 1 Special Trial Judge Carleton D. Powell, before whom this case was initially tried and to whom it
Summary: T.C. Summary Opinion 2008-75 UNITED STATES TAX COURT DAWN LEA BLACK, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 10914-05S. Filed June 30, 2008. Dawn Lea Black, pro se. Erin R. Hines, for respondent. PANUTHOS, Chief Special Trial Judge: This case was heard pursuant to the provisions of section 7463 of the Internal Revenue Code in effect at the time the petition was filed.1 1 Special Trial Judge Carleton D. Powell, before whom this case was initially tried and to whom it ..
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T.C. Summary Opinion 2008-75
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
DAWN LEA BLACK, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 10914-05S. Filed June 30, 2008.
Dawn Lea Black, pro se.
Erin R. Hines, for respondent.
PANUTHOS, Chief Special Trial Judge: This case was heard
pursuant to the provisions of section 7463 of the Internal
Revenue Code in effect at the time the petition was filed.1
1
Special Trial Judge Carleton D. Powell, before whom this
case was initially tried and to whom it was submitted, died Aug.
23, 2007. The Court notified the parties and proposed to assign
the case to another judicial officer for the purpose of preparing
the opinion and entering the decision based on the record of that
trial. Respondent consented to the reassignment. Petitioner
(continued...)
- 2 -
Pursuant to section 7463(b), the decision to be entered is not
reviewable by any other court, and this opinion shall not be
treated as precedent for any other case. Unless otherwise
indicated, subsequent section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code as amended and as in effect for the year in issue,
and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice
and Procedure.
Respondent determined a $14,145 deficiency in petitioner’s
1998 Federal income tax, a $3,536.25 failure to file addition to
tax, and a $2,829 accuracy-related penalty. After concessions2
the issues for decision are: (1) Whether certain payments made
to petitioner by Erdman Rentals, LLC in 1998, totaling $30,034,
are taxable; (2) whether petitioner is entitled to business
1
(...continued)
objected to the reassignment and moved to supplement the record.
A further trial was held on Feb. 26, 2008, at which time the
parties submitted a supplemental stipulation of facts with
attached exhibits. The Court heard additional testimony and
received additional documents.
2
At the initial trial respondent conceded that of the
$38,716 in nonemployee compensation reported as paid to
petitioner by Erdman Rentals, LLC, $8,682 represents
reimbursement of expenses. After this adjustment $30,034 of
nonemployee compensation remains, all of which respondent
contends is unreported income. Petitioner conceded that she
received but failed to report $1,540 in dividends in 1998 from
the Alaska Permanent Fund.
Petitioner failed to address respondent’s self-employment
tax determination with respect to income from Erdman Rentals,
LLC, other than to dispute that the amount she received is income
in the first instance.
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expense deductions in amounts greater than respondent allowed;
and (3) whether petitioner is liable for an addition to tax under
section 6651(a)(1) and an accuracy-related penalty under section
6662(a).
For convenience, after a brief factual overview, we have
combined the findings of fact, discussion of pertinent legal
issues, and our conclusions. The parties have stipulated some of
the facts, and we so find. We incorporate the stipulation of
facts, the supplemental stipulation of facts, and the attached
exhibits by this reference. Petitioner resided in Alaska when
she filed the petition.
In 1998 petitioner was a member of Erdman Rentals, LLC
(hereafter Erdman Rentals or the company), a residential real
estate rental company in Alaska. The other two members were
petitioner’s parents, Donald and Sophia Erdman. Petitioner
managed the rental properties for Erdman Rentals, and the company
reported on Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, that it paid
nonemployee compensation of $38,716 to petitioner in 1998.
Petitioner did not report this amount on her 1998 Federal income
tax return.
Petitioner also worked with a coauthor on a book about
Natalia Shelikhova (Mrs. Shelikhova) in 1998.3 She paid amounts
3
Although the book had not been published as of the date of
trial, petitioner asserted that she had arranged for it to be
(continued...)
- 4 -
for travel, for purchasing and framing original works of art, and
for copying documents and communicating with her coauthor.
Petitioner reported those expenditures on Schedule C, Profit or
Loss From Business. She did not report any business income or
receipts.
Petitioner prepared her 1998 Federal income tax return and
filed it on October 23, 2000. She reported her occupation as
“Writer/Manager”. Petitioner’s 1998 Form 1040, U.S. Individual
Income Tax Return, reports $10,717 on line 7 as wages, salaries,
tips, etc., and a business loss of $10,035 on line 12.4
Petitioner’s tax return as filed reported negative adjusted gross
income, no taxes withheld, and no taxes owed.
Respondent issued a notice of deficiency determining that
petitioner received, but failed to report, $38,716 in income from
Erdman Rentals and $1,540 in dividend income from the Alaska
Permanent Fund. See supra note 2. Respondent also disallowed
business expense deductions, as follows:
3
(...continued)
published by the University of Alaska Press, Rasmuson Library
Translation Series.
4
Only the $10,035 business loss is carried down as total
income on line 22 of petitioner’s 1998 Form 1040, U.S. Individual
Income Tax Return. The $10,717 reported on line 7 is ignored for
the remainder of the handwritten return. Respondent has not
asserted a deficiency related to this amount.
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Business Expense Claimed Allowed Disallowed
Travel expense $1,498 $755 $743
Meals and entertainment 502 63 439
expense
Legal/professional services 8,035 -0- 8,035
Total 10,035 818 9,217
There is no dispute that petitioner paid the claimed
amounts. However, respondent maintains that petitioner has not
proven that the disallowed deductions represent ordinary and
necessary expenses. In addition, respondent determined an
addition to tax for failure timely to file and an accuracy-
related penalty.
Petitioner asserts that her parents gave her a $20,000 gift,
that Erdman Rentals erroneously reported that it paid
compensation income to her, and that, even including the
unreported dividend income, her tax liability is zero because she
had no net income. She also asserts that her late filing was not
due to negligence.
We begin by noting that the Commissioner’s determinations
are presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of
proving that those determinations are erroneous. Rule 142(a);
Welch v. Helvering,
290 U.S. 111, 115 (1933). Moreover,
deductions are a matter of legislative grace, and the taxpayer
bears the burden of proving that she is entitled to any deduction
claimed. INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner,
503 U.S. 79, 84 (1992).
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Under section 7491(a)(1), if the taxpayer produces credible
evidence with respect to any factual issue relevant to
ascertaining the taxpayer’s liability, the burden of proof shifts
from the taxpayer to the Commissioner as to that factual issue.
Section 7491(a)(2) provides that the burden will shift only if
the taxpayer complies with substantiation requirements, maintains
sufficient records, and cooperates fully with the Commissioner’s
reasonable requests. Although petitioner introduced myriad
documents: (a) She did not maintain books and records of her
writing activity sufficient to document her expenses clearly; and
(b) the records she introduced regarding Erdman Rentals do not
clearly demonstrate which of the numerous payments petitioner
made to herself and to her creditors from Erdman Rentals
constitute alleged gifts from her parents, expense
reimbursements, or payments for her services. Petitioner did not
argue that section 7491 applies. Petitioner has not satisfied
the requirements of section 7491(a)(2), and we conclude that the
burden remains with petitioner.
1. Unreported Income
Petitioner conceded that she received the dividend income
and admits that she received the funds from Erdman Rentals.
However, she challenges respondent’s characterization of the
Erdman Rentals payments as income, asserting that she received
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gifts from her parents, paid through the company, and
reimbursement for expenses she incurred in managing the company.
Erdman Rentals reported paying nonemployee compensation of
$38,716 to petitioner. Petitioner asserts that a mistake by
Erdman Rentals’ accountants caused the company to file a Form
1099-MISC and to report those payments as compensation paid to
her.5
Although petitioner represents that she was an unpaid,
volunteer manager simply helping out in her parents’ business,
she was actively involved in running the business throughout
1998. For example, she had check writing privileges on the
Erdman Rentals checking account which she exercised extensively.
The record includes copies of myriad checks written by
petitioner, drawn against Erdman Rentals, and payable to
petitioner. The memo lines of these checks do not indicate the
purpose of each payment. Petitioner claims that all payments to
her were either gifts or expense reimbursements. Petitioner
introduced a document titled “Erdman Rentals Contract labor pay
for Dawn Lea Black 1998” that lists checks from Erdman Rentals to
petitioner in 1998, totaling $38,716.64, but it does not identify
5
There is no indication that petitioner ever caused the
company to issue a corrected Form 1099-MISC. We find this
noteworthy in light of petitioner’s position as manager of Erdman
Rentals.
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the purpose of any of the checks or indicate which of the
payments were gifts or which were expense reimbursements.
The record includes the Schedules K-1, Partner’s Share of
Income, Credits, Deductions, etc., for Erdman Rentals. These
documents support petitioner’s contention that she paid certain
expenses for Erdman Rentals and was reimbursed for many of those
expenditures; i.e., comparable amounts contributed by her and
distributed to her.6 However, these documents are not consistent
with petitioner’s assertion that her parents made gifts to her
via the company; excluding her apparent expense reimbursements,
the total amount Erdman Rentals distributed to all its members is
far less than the $20,000 petitioner claims she received as a
gift.
Petitioner failed to maintain adequate books and records.
The voluminous documents she introduced at trial were
inadequately organized and fail to reconstruct the transactions
between petitioner and Erdman Rentals to prove that respondent’s
determinations are erroneous. Petitioner has failed to prove
that any of the payments from Erdman Rentals was a gift from her
parents. She has also not proven that her expense reimbursements
6
The record includes numerous copies of checks written by
petitioner, drawn against a bank account in her name, and
purportedly used for Erdman Rentals’ expenses. The sum of these
checks is less than the amount respondent allowed as expense
reimbursement, see supra note 2, and also less than the amount
Erdman Rentals reported as distributed to petitioner in 1998.
- 9 -
were greater than respondent allowed. Considering respondent’s
concession, respondent’s determination as to unreported income is
sustained.
2. Business Expenses
Ordinarily, a taxpayer is permitted to deduct ordinary and
necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in
carrying on a trade or business. Sec. 162(a). An ordinary and
necessary expense is one that is appropriate and helpful to the
taxpayer’s business and that results from an activity that is
common and accepted practice. Boser v. Commissioner,
77 T.C.
1124, 1132 (1981), affd. without published opinion (9th Cir.,
Dec. 22, 1983). A taxpayer is required to maintain records
sufficient to establish the amount of her deductions. Sec. 6001;
sec. 1.6001-1(a), Income Tax Regs.
Section 162(a)(2) allows deductions for “traveling expenses
(including amounts expended for meals and lodging * * *) while
away from home in the pursuit of a trade or business”. However,
for trips undertaken for other than business purposes, “the
travel fares and expenses incident to travel are personal
expenses and the meals and lodging are living expenses.” Sec.
1.162-2(a), Income Tax Regs. A taxpayer may not deduct personal,
family, or living expenses. Sec. 262(a).
Section 274(d)(1) generally disallows any deduction under
section 162 for, among other things, “any traveling expense
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(including meals and lodging while away from home)”, unless the
taxpayer complies with stringent substantiation requirements as
to the amount, time and place, and business purpose of the
expense.7
A. Traveling Expenses
In 1998 petitioner and her coauthor were writing a book
about a Russian woman, Mrs. Shelikhova, who lived in the 18th
century. Mrs. Shelikhova took over her husband’s trading company
in Alaska when he died in 1795 and eventually ran the Russian-
American Company (established by the Russian Government to
continue exploiting Alaskan resources). Petitioner referred to
Mrs. Shelikhova as the first woman governor of Alaska.
Petitioner asserts that she has a history of paid writing
assignments, including writing for the Kodiak Fisherman
Newspaper. Respondent does not challenge petitioner’s reporting
that her writing activity constituted a trade or business in
1998. Petitioner did not maintain formal records or books of
account for her writing activity, though she did retain and
7
Sec. 274 supersedes the doctrine in Cohan v. Commissioner,
39 F.2d 540, 543-544 (2d Cir. 1930), which otherwise would permit
the Court to estimate a taxpayer’s expenditures, given a
reasonable evidentiary basis. See sec. 1.274-5T(a), Temporary
Income Tax Regs., 50 Fed. Reg. 46014 (Nov. 6, 1985); see also
Vanicek v. Commissioner,
85 T.C. 731, 743 (1985). Thus, strict
substantiation is required for travel expenditures, including
transportation, lodging, and meal expenses.
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introduce numerous receipts and credit card statements in an
attempt to document business expenses for her writing activity.
Petitioner worked with Alexander Petrov, Ph.D. (Dr. Petrov),
a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, as her coauthor. In
1998 petitioner traveled to Corvallis, Oregon, to meet with Dr.
Petrov and make a presentation about the book to the Humanities
Institute at the University of Oregon. (At that time Dr. Petrov
was a visiting professor at the University of Oregon.) She also
brought Dr. Petrov to Alaska, assertedly for research and further
collaboration on the book. Finally, petitioner flew to Paris and
traveled by train to Berlin, where she met with Dr. Petrov while
he was working in Germany. She asserts that the purpose of her
trip to Europe was to work with Dr. Petrov on translating
documents related to their book. In an e-mail to Dr. Petrov,
however, petitioner wrote that she was looking forward to her
vacation in Germany and to getting together with Dr. Petrov in
regard to the book project.
Petitioner incurred transportation, lodging, and meal
expenses for her trip to Oregon, Dr. Petrov’s trip to Alaska, and
petitioner’s trip to Europe. She did not maintain a
contemporaneous log chronicling these travel expenses.
Petitioner’s travel summary explains that the business purpose of
one trip she took to Anchorage with her father was “to accompany
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him to cataract surgery so his eyesight for our business would
improve.”8
Petitioner claimed $1,498 for travel expenses and $502 for
meals and entertainment expenses (50 percent of $1,004 reported
as expended on meals, see sec. 274(n)(1)(A)) on her 1998 Schedule
C. At trial she claimed $1,542.54 in expenses for her trip to
Oregon and $2,374.03 for her trip to Europe. Respondent allowed
deductions for some of the expenses of her trip to Oregon but
disallowed all of the deductions claimed for Dr. Petrov’s trip to
Alaska and for petitioner’s trip to Europe.
Respondent’s examining agent appears to have overlooked
$12.50 petitioner paid for fuel for the car she rented during her
Oregon trip (which rental expenses respondent otherwise allowed).
Petitioner is entitled to an additional deduction of $12.50 for
her trip to Oregon. Petitioner has not proven that she is
entitled to any further expenses for this trip.
Petitioner testified that she brought Dr. Petrov to Alaska.
The record does not clearly reflect the dates of this trip, the
expenses she incurred for this travel, or the primary purpose of
8
It is not clear whether petitioner claimed deductions for
expenses for any trip to Anchorage with her father on her Federal
income tax return for 1998. We note, however, that it is clear
that the purpose of such a trip was personal and that any related
travel expenses are not deductible. See Fred W. Amend Co. v.
Commissioner,
55 T.C. 320, 325-326 (1970), affd.
454 F.2d 399
(7th Cir. 1971).
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this trip.9 Petitioner has not met the strict substantiation
requirements of section 274(d) with respect to this travel, and
we conclude that she is not entitled to any deduction for this
travel.
Finally, petitioner traveled to Europe in December 1998,
flying to Paris, where she stayed for 2 days before taking a
train to Berlin to meet Dr. Petrov. During at least some of the
5 days spent in Berlin, petitioner and Dr. Petrov worked on the
book. Petitioner and Dr. Petrov then traveled to Paris, where
petitioner stayed for 3 additional days before returning to the
United States. Petitioner’s travel expenses for this trip are
deductible only if the trip is related primarily to her business.
See sec. 1.162-2(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. Petitioner referred to
this trip as her “vacation”. Further, the record is unclear as
to how much time she spent working on the book (of the 5 days in
Berlin or the 3 days petitioner and Dr. Petrov shared in Paris).
We conclude that petitioner has not proven that the trip was
primarily business and not personal. Thus, her travel expenses
are not deductible.
Nevertheless, expenses incurred while at a mixed business
and pleasure destination which are properly allocable to a
taxpayer’s business are deductible even though the traveling
9
No summary of Dr. Petrov’s trip to Alaska appears in the
record, and receipts for such trip are not readily identifiable.
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expenses to and from the destination are not deductible. Sec.
1.162-2(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. The taxpayer must still satisfy
the requirements of section 274(d) and identify the amount, time
and place, and the business purpose of the expenses. Petitioner
paid for meals for herself and Dr. Petrov, and she referred to
these meals as business meetings. Petitioner’s receipts and
summary identify the amounts, dates, and locations of the claimed
meal expenses, but the only evidence of a business purpose is her
vague and general testimony that she and Dr. Petrov worked on the
book in both cities. We are not convinced of the business
purpose of these meals or that petitioner and Dr. Petrov worked
on the book during the meals. Petitioner has not proven that her
trip to Europe or her meals with Dr. Petrov were ordinary and
necessary expenses, and we conclude that she may not deduct those
expenses.
With the exception of the additional allowance for the
Oregon trip discussed above, respondent’s determination as to
petitioner’s travel expenses is sustained.10
10
We note that the record does not clearly indicate
precisely which travel and meal expenses petitioner included in
the $2,000 of travel, meals, and entertainment expenses reported
on her 1998 Schedule C. At trial petitioner summarized roughly
$3,900 in expenses for her trips to Oregon and Europe, which
clearly exceeds the amounts she originally claimed. She did not,
however, argue that her return as filed claimed less than her
actual business travel expenses.
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B. Legal and Professional Expenses
At trial petitioner explained that the business expenses she
claimed as legal and professional services on Schedule C were
predominantly her costs for purchasing original artwork, with a
small amount representing expenditures for making copies for Dr.
Petrov and communicating with him by telephone and Internet.11
Petitioner purchased original artwork at a local gallery in
Kodiak, Alaska, in 1998. Petitioner asserts that she selected
artwork related to places where Mrs. Shelikhova lived in Alaska
(including petitioner’s hometown), to animals indigenous to
Alaska, and to Russia in general. Petitioner intended to
photograph those pieces of art and to use some of the photographs
in the book.12
Petitioner did not provide any evidence that she obtained
licenses from copyright holders in order to use any of this
artwork in her book or that she inquired into obtaining such
licenses. Merely buying original artwork, without obtaining an
explicit license to use the images, does not confer on a
11
Petitioner did not explain why she reported art,
communication, and photocopying expenses as legal and
professional services.
12
Although petitioner bought mostly paintings, she also
paid over $1,100 to purchase a set of Russian nesting dolls,
which she asserted “depict Russian singers of folktales, and show
a great deal about Russian thought, and life and whatnot.” She
testified that she intended to photograph the dolls and publish
the images in her book because they are “a very nice work of
art”.
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purchaser any legal right to copy or use images of that artwork.
Mirage Editions, Inc. v. Albuquerque A.R.T. Co.,
856 F.2d 1341,
1343 (9th Cir. 1988); see also the 1976 Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C.
sec. 106 (2000) (granting copyright holders the exclusive rights
to reproduce their works and to prepare derivative works).
We are not convinced that this artwork was principally
purchased for the book, and it does not appear that petitioner
obtained permission to photograph the art she purchased and to
use the images in her book. We find that the claimed expenses
are not ordinary or necessary and conclude that petitioner may
not deduct those expenditures.13
Petitioner also claimed as legal and professional expenses
her costs for communicating with Dr. Petrov and for making copies
for him. She introduced scant evidence of her telecommunication
expenses, which are governed by the strict substantiation
requirements of section 274(d), and even less evidence that such
expenses were business and not personal. While the record
13
Without licenses to copy the pieces and use the copies
in her book, the art purchase expenses are not ordinary business
expenses because they are not helpful or appropriate to
petitioner’s business. See Commissioner v. Tellier,
383 U.S.
687, 689 (1966). Buying such items without at least
investigating whether they could lawfully be used as petitioner
intended is not a reasonable, common, or accepted business
practice. See Boser v. Commissioner,
77 T.C. 1124, 1132-1133
(1981), affd. without published opinion (9th Cir., Dec. 22,
1983).
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includes some apparent copying expenses, the connection between
petitioner’s writing activity and such expenditures is not clear.
Petitioner is not entitled to deduct her expenditures for
artwork, telecommunications, or copying. Respondent’s
determination as to legal and professional expenses is sustained.
3. Addition to Tax and Penalty
By virtue of section 7491(c), the Commissioner has the
burden of production with respect to the accuracy-related
penalty. To meet this burden, he must produce sufficient
evidence indicating that it is appropriate to impose the penalty.
See Higbee v. Commissioner,
116 T.C. 438, 446 (2001). Once the
Commissioner meets this burden of production, a taxpayer must
come forward with persuasive evidence that the Commissioner’s
determination is incorrect. Rule 142(a); see Higbee v.
Commissioner, supra. As a defense to the penalty, the taxpayer
bears the burden of proving that she acted with reasonable cause
and in good faith. See sec. 6664(c)(1); see also Higbee v.
Commissioner, supra at 446-447; sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1), Income Tax
Regs.
Petitioner filed a self-prepared Federal income tax return
for tax year 1998 on October 23, 2000. Petitioner explained that
she filed “after the accountants were done filing everything, but
yeah, I was late filing. That I will admit.”
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Respondent determined an addition to tax under section
6651(a)(1) because petitioner failed to file her 1998 Federal
income tax return on time. Petitioner stated in her petition
that “My lateness was not due to negligence.” She did not,
however, assert that her late filing was due to reasonable cause
and not due to willful neglect. See sec. 6651(a)(1).
Respondent’s determination is sustained, and petitioner is liable
for the section 6651(a)(1) addition to tax.
Respondent also determined an accuracy-related penalty under
section 6662(a). Inter alia, section 6662 provides that a
penalty shall apply to any substantial understatement of income
tax, which is defined as an understatement exceeding the greater
of 10 percent of the tax required to be shown on the return or
$5,000. Sec. 6662(b)(2), (d)(1). The tax required to be shown
on petitioner’s return is over $14,000. Petitioner reported $0.
Her understatement is over $14,000, which is greater than $5,000
and greater than 10 percent of $14,000. Petitioner has not
demonstrated that she had reasonable cause for her understatement
or that she acted in good faith. See sec. 6664(c). Thus,
petitioner is liable for the section 6662(a) accuracy-related
penalty for a substantial understatement.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.