T.C. Memo. 2001-142
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
HOLLAND E. BYNAM, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 8397-00. Filed June 15, 2001.
Holland E. Bynam, pro se.
Susan M. Pinner, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
ARMEN, Special Trial Judge: Respondent determined a
deficiency in petitioner’s Federal income tax for the taxable
year 1998 in the amount of $5,394.1
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
the Internal Revenue Code in effect for 1998, the taxable year in
issue.
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The issue for decision is whether a portion of the
compensation received by petitioner in his capacity as a Junior
Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (JROTC) instructor from a local
school district is excludable from gross income.2 We hold that
no portion of such compensation is excludable.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Most of the facts have been stipulated, and they are so
found. Petitioner resided in Houston, Texas, at the time that
his petition was filed with the Court.
Petitioner’s Career
After graduating from college, petitioner entered military
service in 1957 as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army. Twenty-six
years later, in 1983, petitioner retired from active duty as a
colonel, having attained that rank in 1979.
Upon retirement from active duty, petitioner became entitled
to receive retired pay from the Army. However, as a retired
military officer, petitioner was no longer entitled to receive
(and never in fact received) any military allowances, such as a
basic allowance for quarters, a basic allowance for subsistence,
or a variable housing allowance.
In August 1987, petitioner was hired by the Houston
Independent School District (HISD) as a JROTC instructor. Since
2
An adjustment to petitioner’s itemized deductions is a
mechanical matter, the resolution of which depends on our
disposition of the disputed issue. See sec. 67(a).
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that time, petitioner has remained continuously employed by HISD
in the JROTC program. At the time of trial, petitioner was
deputy director of the JROTC program for 25 high schools within
the HISD system.
Petitioner’s employment by HISD as a JROTC instructor (and
subsequently as a JROTC administrator) did not affect either
petitioner’s right to receive retired pay from the Army nor the
amount of such pay.
The JROTC Program
The JROTC program is authorized by 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031
(1994). Its purpose is “to instill in students in United States
secondary educational institutions the values of citizenship,
service to the United States, and personal responsibility and a
sense of accomplishment.” 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031(a)(2). Retired
officers may serve as instructors and administrators, consistent
with the following provisions of 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031(d):
(d) Instead of, or in addition to, detailing officers
and noncommissioned officers on active duty * * *, the
Secretary of the military department concerned may
authorize qualified institutions to employ, as
administrators and instructors in the program, retired
officers * * * whose qualifications are approved by the
Secretary and the institution concerned and who request
such employment, subject to the following:
(1) A retired member so employed is entitled to receive
the member's retired or retainer pay without reduction
by reason of any additional amount paid to the member
by the institution concerned. In the case of payment
of any such additional amount by the institution
concerned, the Secretary of the military department
concerned shall pay to that institution the amount
equal to one-half of the amount paid to the retired
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member by the institution for any period, up to a
maximum of one-half of the difference between the
member's retired or retainer pay for that period and
the active duty pay and the allowances which the member
would have received for that period if on active duty.
Notwithstanding the limitation in the preceding
sentence, the Secretary concerned may pay to the
institution more than one-half of the additional amount
paid to the retired member by the institution if (as
determined by the Secretary) the institution is in an
educationally and economically deprived area and the
Secretary determines that such action is in the
national interest. Payments by the Secretary concerned
under this paragraph shall be made from funds
appropriated for that purpose.
(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, such a
retired member is not, while so employed, considered to
be on active duty or inactive duty training for any
purpose.
In implementing the statute, the Department of Defense (DOD)
has issued directives specifying the manner in which retired
officers who serve as JROTC instructors are to be compensated by
the employing school district. In this regard, paragraph 1.3 of
Enclosure 2 of DOD Instruction Number 1205.13 (Dec. 26, 1995)3
provides that secondary schools participating in the JROTC
program will pay retired officers in accordance with the
following procedures:
The [secondary educational] institution is the
employing agency and shall pay the full amount due the
JROTC instructor. The JROTC instructor shall receive
retired or retainer pay from the U.S. Government.
The amount due from the institution is the amount
equal to the difference between retired or retainer pay
3
The parties stipulated to the applicability of this
directive to the year in issue.
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and the active duty pay and allowances that the JROTC
instructor would receive if ordered to active duty.
The institution shall be reimbursed for JROTC
instructor salaries at the rate of one-half the
difference of instructor retirement or retainer pay and
active duty pay and allowances. For calculating JROTC
instructor pay, “active duty pay and allowances” shall
be limited to basic pay, basic allowance for quarters,
allowance for variable housing (VHA), * * * and basic
allowance for subsistence. The level of active duty
pay and allowances, less retired or retainer pay, is
the minimum salary the institution shall pay JROTC
instructors. That should not be considered an attempt
to cap or limit the amount of pay that may be agreed
between the individual JROTC instructor and the
employer.
The institution may pay more than the amount equal
to the difference between retired or retainer pay and
individual active duty pay and allowance rate, but
shall do so without additional entitlement for
reimbursement from the Federal Government. * * *
Minimum JROTC Pay and Reimbursement to HISD
As illustrative of the foregoing provisions, the minimum
JROTC instructor pay that petitioner was entitled to receive from
HISD for the month of April 1998 was $3,929.44, and the amount of
reimbursement that HISD was entitled to receive from the Federal
Government for that same month was $1,964.72, determined as
follows:
Minimum JROTC instructor pay
Basic pay (active duty colonel) $6,461.70
Plus: Active duty allowances
Basic allowance for quarters (BAQ) 939.60
Basic allowance for subsistence (BAS) 155.70
Variable housing allowance (VHA) 327.44
Total active duty pay (colonel) 7,884.44
Less: retired pay rec’d. by petitioner -3,955.00
Minimum JROTC instructor pay 3,929.44
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Reimbursement
Minimum JROTC instructor pay $3,929.44
Less: Reimbursement percentage (50%) -1,964.72
Reimbursement 1,964.72
Petitioner’s Income and Tax Return
Petitioner received retired pay in 1998 from the Army in the
amount of $46,320. This amount was paid to petitioner in respect
of his 26 years of active duty service in the Armed Forces.
Petitioner reported this amount in full as a pension or annuity
on line 16b of his 1998 income tax return.
Petitioner received compensation in 1998 from HISD in the
amount of $50,997. This amount was paid to petitioner for
services rendered in the JROTC program. Petitioner reported
$33,923 of this amount as compensation on line 7 of his 1998
income tax return and excluded the balance, or $17,073.4
Petitioner attached a statement to his return stating that the
excluded amount represents “qualified military benefits” that are
“not taxable and should be excluded from gross income.”
Petitioner computed the excluded amount as follows:
Basic Allowance for Quarters (BAQ): $939.60/month x 12 months = $11,275
Basic Allowance for Subsistence (BAS): $155.70/month x 12 months = 1,869
Variable Housing Allowance (VHA): $327.44/month x 12 months = 3,929
Total Allowances 17,073
4
There is a $1 error; petitioner meant to enter $33,924 on
line 7 of his tax return.
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Respondent’s Determination
In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that no
portion of the JROTC pay that petitioner received from HISD is
excludable from income. Accordingly, respondent increased
petitioner’s taxable income by the amount petitioner excluded.
OPINION
We begin our discussion with section 61(a). That section
defines gross income as “all income from whatever source derived,
including (but not limited to) * * * (1) Compensation for
services, including fees, commissions, fringe benefits, and
similar items”. Military pay received by members of the Armed
Forces is also within the scope of section 61(a). See sec. 1.61-
2(a)(1), Income Tax Regs.
Congress may, if it chooses, specifically exempt certain
items from gross income. See Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co.,
348 U.S. 426, 430 (1955). Thus, for example, certain military
compensation, such as compensation received by members of the
Armed Forces serving in combat zones, is excluded from gross
income. See sec. 112. Moreover, military subsistence, uniform
allowances, and other amounts received as commutation of quarters
are excludable from gross income. See sec. 1.61-2(b), Income Tax
Regs.
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The issue before us is whether the pay that petitioner
received as a JROTC instructor included (or should be deemed to
include) nontaxable military allowances, or whether such pay (in
its entirety) was nothing other than an amount received as
compensation for services rendered.
Petitioner contends that a portion ($17,073) of his JROTC
pay represents “qualified military benefits” that are excludable
from gross income pursuant to 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031(d) and section
134 of the Internal Revenue Code. We disagree.
Petitioner relies heavily on the statute and the DOD
directive providing that the total compensation received by a
retiree-instructor is equal to the difference between retired pay
and active duty pay plus “allowances” that the retiree-instructor
would receive if ordered to active duty. In this regard,
petitioner proposes that the statute and the DOD directive
establish “equitable parity” in the compensation of retired and
active duty instructors. Petitioner then argues for an exclusion
from income equal to the sum of the allowances received by active
duty members of the same rank; otherwise, in petitioner’s view,
the disposable income that he would receive as a JROTC instructor
would be less than that of an active duty officer performing
identical services. However, petitioner’s contention is flawed
in several fundamental respects.
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Initially, we note that petitioner, in his capacity as a
JROTC instructor, is not, while so employed, considered to be on
active duty for any purpose. See 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031(d)(2). We
addressed this matter in Lyle v. Commissioner, 76 T.C. 668
(1981), affd. without published opinion 673 F.2d 1326 (5th Cir.
1982), and in Tucker v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1999-373. The
fact that Congress never intended to afford similar treatment to
active duty officers and retired officers serving as JROTC
instructors is evident because:
The legislative history [of 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031] does
not suggest that Congress intended to establish
“parity” between active duty and retired officers
serving as Junior ROTC instructors; instead, retired
officers were to be utilized in order to permit
expansion of the Junior ROTC program at lesser cost and
with fewer drains on active duty military strength than
would be required if the program were staffed by active
duty personnel. * * * Thus, it appears that the
“additional amount” paid to retired officers [by the
employing school] was not intended to provide either
basic pay or allowances to reimburse retired officers
serving as Junior ROTC instructors for their costs for
meals and quarters. Instead, the “additional amount”
was designed as an incentive payment to induce retired
personnel to accept employment as Junior ROTC
instructors so that the Government could realize
economies in staffing the Junior ROTC program. * * *
[Lyle v. Commissioner, supra at 676.]
Petitioner also contends that a portion of his pay as a
JROTC instructor is excludable from gross income because the
source of such pay is the Federal Government and the employing
school is not given discretion with respect to compensation
scales.
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Although it is true that the Federal Government reimburses
school districts for one-half the “additional amount” paid to
retired officers, see 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031(d)(1), the ultimate
burden of disbursing funds and establishing compensation scales
lies with the employing school, see Lyle v. Commissioner, supra
at 674; Tucker v. Commissioner, supra. In this regard, the
employing institution is responsible for issuing compensation
checks and Forms W-2 to all of its employees. Petitioner’s
understanding of the degree of control that the employing school
exercises is illustrated by the following passage from the trial
transcript:
The civilian folk who are really the employing --
they’re designated as the employing agency for good
reasons. They’ve got to keep the records, they’ve got
to turn in the W-2 materials, they can fire you.
* * * * * * *
The principal can recommend retention or recommend
that you lose your credentials for being able to teach,
or in the case of a serious violation * * * they can
recommend immediate dismissal * * *
Clearly, the Federal Government does not assume any kind of
employer status. Therefore, it is inconceivable that any portion
of the compensation that petitioner received as a JROTC
instructor could be classified as a subsistence, quarters, or
variable housing allowance from the Armed Forces. See Lyle v.
Commissioner, supra at 674.
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Further, the statutory provision, in conjunction with the
implementing directives issued by DOD, simply establishes a
formula for computing the minimum “additional amount” of
compensation retired instructors are entitled to receive from the
employing school and the maximum portion of such additional
amount that will be reimbursed by the Federal Government. See
id. at 675. Moreover, the “additional amount” is not in the form
of basic pay or an allowance afforded to active duty officers.
Id. at 676. Rather, the “additional amount” is tantamount to an
inducement offered to persuade retired personnel to accept
employment as JROTC instructors. Id.
The active duty pay is merely a guideline in determining the
level at which JROTC instructors are to be compensated.
Consequently, each school district is given discretion to
compensate their JROTC instructors in amounts greater than the
statutory “additional amount”, subject to the condition that
there will be no additional reimbursement from the Federal
Government. Thus, the only limitation imposed on school
districts is that instructors must, at a minimum, be paid the
“additional amount” set out in the statute. Id. at 674.
In view of the foregoing, we hold that no portion of the
JROTC pay that petitioner received from HISD is excludable from
gross income pursuant to 10 U.S.C. sec. 2031(d).
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Petitioner also relies on section 134 to support his
argument that a portion of his compensation from HISD is
excludable from gross income.
Section 134(a) provides that “Gross income shall not include
any qualified military benefit.” The term “qualified military
benefit” is defined by section 134(b)(1) as:
any allowance or in-kind benefit * * * which–-
(A) is received by any member or former member of
the uniformed services of the United States * * * by
reason of such member’s status or service as a member
of such uniformed services, and
(B) was excludable from gross income on September
9, 1986, under any provision of law, regulation, or
administrative practice which was in effect on such
date (other than a provision of this title). [Emphasis
added.]
Petitioner focuses narrowly on the phrase “member or former
member” in section 134(b) to support his contention that he falls
within the exclusionary rule of section 134(a). Petitioner
reasons that the “member or former member” language was inserted
to apply to “some category of [authorized] personnel other than
active members * * * [and] there would be no other reason for
these particular benefits being mentioned if not for the tax
treatment of JROTC instructors”. We disagree.
Petitioner did not receive any “qualified military benefit”
within the meaning of section 134(b)(1). First, petitioner’s
JROTC pay did not constitute an allowance or in-kind benefit.
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Indeed, as petitioner acknowledged at trial, “I don’t get paid
allowances.” Further, petitioner received nothing from the
Federal Government, other than the retired pay to which he was
entitled regardless of whether he participated in the JROTC
program. Second, petitioner’s JROTC pay was not received “by
reason of [petitioner’s] * * * status or service as a member of
such uniformed services”. Rather, as this Court has previously
held, the pay received by a retired officer as an instructor in
the JROTC program is not received by reason of the officer’s
status as a “member or former member” of the uniformed services,
but rather is received as compensation for services rendered to
the employing school district. See Tucker v. Commissioner, supra
(citing Lyle v. Commissioner, supra at 675-676).
In view of the foregoing, we hold that no portion of
petitioner’s compensation from HISD is a “qualified military
benefit” within the meaning of section 134(a). Petitioner’s
reliance on the “member or former member” language in section
134(b) is misplaced.
Conclusion
No portion of the compensation received by petitioner in his
capacity as a JROTC instructor from HISD is excludable from gross
income. Respondent’s determination is therefore sustained.
We have considered all of the other arguments made by
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petitioner, and, to the extent that we have not specifically
discussed them above, we find those arguments to be without
merit.
In order to give effect to our disposition of the disputed
issue,
Decision will be entered
for respondent.