T.C. Memo. 2007-46
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
LARRY J. AND SHERILYN WADSWORTH, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 10823-05. Filed February 28, 2007.
Lillian S. Wyshak, for petitioners.
David R. Jojola and Valerie L. Makarewicz, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
VASQUEZ, Judge: This matter is before the Court on
petitioners’ amended motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction,
amended motion to strike, motion to shift the burden of proof,
and request that the Court take judicial notice of certain facts.
At the time they filed the petition, petitioners resided in
McKinleyville, California.
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Background
Petitioners jointly filed Federal income tax returns for
2001 and 2002. Petitioners attached a Schedule E, Supplemental
Income and Loss, to each return. On their Schedule E for 2001,
petitioners reported $534,424 of total income. The only item
reported on the Schedule E was nonpassive income from Gold Coast
Medical Services (Gold Coast), a partnership. On their Schedule
E for 2002, petitioners reported $345,546 of total income. As in
2001, the only item petitioners reported on their 2002 Schedule E
was nonpassive income from Gold Coast.
During February 2004 petitioners prepared and filed Forms
1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for 2001 and
2002. On the Form 1040X for 2001, petitioners reported a
$990,700 reduction in adjusted gross income, as well as
associated increases in exemptions and itemized deductions. On
the Form 1040X for 2002, petitioners reported a $165,116
reduction in adjusted gross income, as well as associated
increases in exemptions and itemized deductions. Petitioners
attached amended Schedules K-1, Partner’s Share of Income,
Credits, Deductions, etc., to their Forms 1040X for 2001 and
2002. The amended Schedules K-1 reveal that the sole cause for
the reduced income, increased exemptions, and increased itemized
deductions reported on petitioners’ 2001 and 2002 Forms 1040X was
a reduction in petitioner Larry J. Wadsworth’s (Mr. Wadsworth)
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net earnings from self-employment that were attributable to his
distributive share of the income or loss of Gold Coast.
In a notice of deficiency, respondent determined increases
in petitioners’ 2001 and 2002 income of $990,700 and $165,116,
respectively, as well as associated reductions in petitioners’
itemized deductions and exemptions. Respondent determined
deficiencies of $147,708 and $56,958 in petitioners’ 2001 and
2002 Federal income taxes, respectively. Respondent also
determined section 6662(a)1 penalties of $29,541.60 and
$11,125.60 for 2001 and 2002, respectively.
Respondent attached a Form 4549A, Income Tax Examination
Changes, to the notice of deficiency. On the Form 4549A,
respondent listed adjustments to itemized deductions, exemptions,
and “Sch E - Inc/Loss-Prtnrship/S Corps-Passve/Non-Passve” for
2001 and 2002. Respondent also attached a Form 886-A,
Explanations of Items, to the notice of deficiency. On the Form
886-A, under the table for “Sch E - Inc/Loss-Prtnrship/S Corps -
Passve/Non-Passve” adjustments for 2001 and 2002, respondent
entered “your distributive share of the partnership income or
loss [is adjusted] as shown in the attached computation.” In his
answer (discussed below), respondent asserts that the adjustments
in the notice of deficiency relate to respondent’s determination
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule references are to the Tax
Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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that petitioners’ amended income tax returns failed to properly
report Mr. Wadsworth’s alleged distributive share of the income
of Gold Coast.
On June 13, 2005, petitioners timely petitioned this Court
for a redetermination of the 2001 and 2002 deficiencies. In
their petition, petitioners argued that the notice of deficiency
was invalid because: (1) The notice of deficiency is vague and
incomprehensible; and (2) the adjustments at issue are subject to
the partnership-level proceedings of sections 6221 through 6233,
and respondent therefore lacks authority to assert a deficiency
against an individual partner before the issuance of a notice of
final partnership administrative adjustment (FPAA).
After receiving an extension of time to file, respondent
timely filed his answer to the petition on August 29, 2005.
Paragraph 8 of respondent’s answer consists of detailed
allegations regarding Gold Coast’s income for 2001 and 2002 and
Mr. Wadsworth’s involvement in Gold Coast. Respondent alleges,
inter alia, that Mr. Wadsworth was a 50-percent partner in Gold
Coast; that Gold Coast had only two partners, both of whom were
individuals; that Gold Coast operated a pharmacy that provided
medical products and services to eligible beneficiaries of the
California Medical Assistance Program; that the California
Department of Health Services (DHS) conducted an audit of Gold
Coast’s records for the period from January 1, 2001, through
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February 28, 2002; that DHS determined that Gold Coast had been
overpaid in the amounts of $1,981,400.90 and $330,233.09 for the
years 2001 and 2002, respectively; that Gold Coast did not
transfer money or other property to satisfy the asserted
liabilities; that Gold Coast disputed the asserted liabilities;
that Gold Coast filed amended income tax returns claiming a
return and allowance for the disputed liabilities asserted by
DHS; that petitioners filed amended income tax returns for 2001
and 2002 reporting Mr. Wadsworth’s share of the resulting Gold
Coast loss; that DHS’s original finding of overpayment was
reversed by an administrative law judge in 2004; that Gold Coast
is not entitled to claim as a deduction for 2001 and 2002 the
disputed liabilities asserted by DHS; and that petitioners must
therefore recognize Mr. Wadsworth’s distributive share of Gold
Coast income for 2001 and 2002.
After receiving an extension of time to file, petitioners
timely filed their reply on November 21, 2005. Petitioners filed
with their reply a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and
a motion to strike paragraph 8 from respondent’s answer.
Petitioners filed an amended motion to dismiss for lack of
jurisdiction (amended motion to dismiss) and an amended motion to
strike paragraph 8 from respondent’s answer (amended motion to
strike) on December 14, 2005. The amended motions contained
substantially the same arguments as the original motions.
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Pursuant to an order of the Court, respondent filed separate
objections to petitioners’ amended motion to dismiss and amended
motion to strike on December 19, 2005.
On February 27, 2006, the Court held a hearing on
petitioners’ amended motions. At the hearing, Floyd Freeman, the
revenue agent who examined petitioners’ 2001 and 2002 income tax
returns, testified. The Court also received into evidence
several exhibits containing material Mr. Freeman considered in
his examination of petitioners’ 2001 and 2002 returns.
Petitioners did not present evidence at the hearing.
On March 1, 2006, petitioners filed a memorandum in support
of their amended motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and a
motion to shift the burden of proof to respondent. Respondent
filed an objection to the motion to shift the burden of proof on
April 3, 2006.
Pursuant to an order of the Court, petitioners filed a brief
in support of their motions on June 23, 2006. With this brief,
petitioners filed a request that this Court take judicial notice
of the contents of Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income,
and its instructions. After receiving an extension of time,
respondent filed an answering brief on August 7, 2006.
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Discussion
I. Petitioners’ Amended Motion To Dismiss for Lack of
Jurisdiction
Petitioners raise several arguments in support of their
amended motion to dismiss.
Petitioners argue that because the sole explanation for the
adjustments in the notice of deficiency was an entry of “Sch E -
Inc/Loss-Prtnrship/S Corps-Passve/Non-Passve” on the Form 4549A,
the notice of deficiency was vague and incomprehensible and
therefore invalid.2 In support of that argument petitioners
rely, inter alia, on section 7522(a) and Scar v. Commissioner,
814 F.2d 1363 (9th Cir. 1987), revg. 81 T.C. 855 (1983).3
Petitioners argue that the notice of deficiency is invalid
because it fails to comply with section 7522(a). Section 7522(a)
provides, in relevant part, that “Any notice to which this
section applies shall describe the basis for, and identify the
amounts (if any) of, the tax due, interest, additional amounts,
additions to the tax, and assessable penalties included in such
notice.” However, section 7522(a) goes on to provide that “An
2
As discussed supra, respondent also described the
adjustments in the notice of deficiency in slightly more
expansive language on the Form 886-A attached to the notice of
deficiency.
3
In support of their motion to dismiss for lack of
jurisdiction petitioners also rely on Shea v. Commissioner, 112
T.C. 183 (1999). The portion of Shea cited relates to a motion
to shift the burden of proof, and is discussed below.
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inadequate description under the preceding sentence shall not
invalidate such notice.” We conclude that petitioners’ reliance
on section 7522(a) is misplaced.
In Scar v. Commissioner, supra, the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit (to which an appeal of this matter would
lie) held that the Commissioner must consider information
relating to a particular taxpayer before the Commissioner can be
said to have determined a deficiency with respect to that
taxpayer. In Scar, the taxpayers received a notice of deficiency
that disallowed a loss deduction from a partnership in which the
taxpayers owned no interest. The notice also revealed that the
Commissioner had computed the tax due using the highest marginal
tax rate without examining the return and without supplying any
basis for the applicability of that rate. The Court of Appeals
held that a notice of deficiency is invalid if it is clear from
the notice itself that the Commissioner had not reviewed the
taxpayers’ return or otherwise made a determination of a
deficiency with respect to the taxpayers’ liability for the
particular taxable year. Id. at 1370.
The Court of Appeals subsequently held that the rule
established in Scar applies only where the notice of deficiency
reveals on its face that the Commissioner failed to make a
determination. See Kantor v. Commissioner, 998 F.2d 1514, 1521-
1522 (9th Cir. 1993), affg. in part and revg. in part on another
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ground T.C. Memo. 1990-380; Clapp v. Commissioner, 875 F.2d 1396,
1402 (9th Cir. 1989).
Those circumstances are not present in this case. Unlike
the notice of deficiency in Scar, the notice of deficiency in
this matter clearly disallowed amounts claimed on petitioners’
2001 and 2002 amended returns: the notice disallowed the amounts
of $990,700 and $165,116 claimed as reductions to Mr. Wadsworth’s
distributive share of income from Gold Coast for 2001 and 2002,
respectively. Although the notice of deficiency does not
identify Gold Coast by name, it does determine deficiencies of
$147,708 and $56,958 for 2001 and 2002 respectively. Those
amounts are identical to the refunds claimed on petitioners’ 2001
and 2002 amended returns. The notice of deficiency in this
matter therefore did not reveal on its face that respondent
failed to make a determination with regard to petitioners’ 2001
and 2002 tax liabilities. Consequently, we reject petitioners’
argument that the notice of deficiency cannot serve as the basis
of our jurisdiction because it is not the product of an actual
determination of respondent.
Petitioners also argue that this Court lacks jurisdiction to
decide whether they received income from Gold Coast because Gold
Coast is subject to the unified partnership procedures of
sections 6221 through 6233. See Tax Equity and Fiscal
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Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), Pub. L. 97-248, sec. 402(a),
96 Stat. 648.
Under the TEFRA partnership procedures, the tax treatment of
items of income, loss, deductions, and credits is generally
determined in partnership-level proceedings rather than in
separate proceedings involving each partner. Sec. 6221; H. Conf.
Rept. 97-760, at 600 (1982), 1982-2 C.B. 600, 662.
Mr. Wadsworth’s distributive share of Gold Coast’s aggregate
income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit is a partnership item.
Sec. 6231(a)(3); sec. 301.6231(a)(3)-1(a)(1)(i), Proced. & Admin.
Regs. If TEFRA requires that a partnership item be determined at
the partnership-level, then the issuance of an FPAA is a
condition precedent to the exercise of this Court’s jurisdiction
over a partnership item, and we have no jurisdiction to
redetermine any portion of a deficiency attributable to a
“partnership item” in an individual proceeding. Sec. 6225(a);
Maxwell v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 783, 789 (1986). However, if
Gold Coast is excluded from TEFRA as a small partnership under
section 6231(a)(1)(B), as respondent contends, what might
otherwise be “partnership items” in a TEFRA proceeding may be
litigated in this individual deficiency proceeding.
As it applied in the years at issue, section 6231(a)(1)
provided, in pertinent part, as follows:
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(A) In general.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), the term “partnership” means any
partnership required to file a return under section
6031(a).
(B) Exception for small partnerships.--
(i) In general.--The term “partnership”
shall not include any partnership having 10 or
fewer partners each of whom is an individual
(other than a nonresident alien), a C corporation,
or an estate of a deceased partner. For purposes
of the preceding sentence, a husband and wife (and
their estates) shall be treated as 1 partner.
(ii) Election to have subchapter apply.--A
partnership (within the meaning of subparagraph
(A)) may for any taxable year elect to have clause
(i) not apply. Such election shall apply for such
taxable year and all subsequent taxable years
unless revoked with the consent of the Secretary.
Congress enacted the small partnership exception of section
6231(a)(1)(B) to ensure that only “simple” partnerships would be
excepted. See McKnight v. Commissioner, 99 T.C. 180, 185 (1992),
affd. 7 F.3d 447 (5th Cir. 1993); Hearings on H.R. 6300 Before
the House Comm. on Ways and Means, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 259-261
(1982) (describing “simple” partnerships as those whose partners
“treat themselves as co-ownerships rather than partnerships, and
each co-owner resolves his own tax responsibilities separately as
an individual with the IRS”).
For the years at issue, the temporary regulations issued
under section 6231 required that the election provided for in
section 6231(a)(1)(B)(ii) be made by attaching a statement to the
partnership return for the first taxable year for which the
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election was to be effective. Sec. 301.6231(a)(1)-1T(b)(2),
Temporary Proced. & Admin. Regs., 52 Fed. Reg. 6790 (Mar. 5,
1987). The statement was required to be identified as an
election under section 6231(a)(1)(B)(ii), to be signed by each
person who was a partner at any time during the taxable year to
which the return relates, and to be filed at the time and place
prescribed for filing the partnership return. Id.
With the assistance of a return preparer, Mr. Wadsworth
filed Forms 1065 for Gold Coast’s tax years 2001 and 2002. For
both years, question 4 of Schedule B, Other Information, read as
follows: “Is this partnership subject to the consolidated audit
procedures of sections 6221 through 6233? If ‘Yes,’ see
Designation of Tax Matters Partner below”. On both the 2001 and
2002 returns, “No” is marked in the “Yes/No” columns adjacent to
question 4 of Schedule B. Below question 4, in the section
entitled “Designation of Tax Matters Partner”, both the 2001 and
2002 forms list Mr. Wadsworth as the tax matters partner for the
tax years of the returns. No section 6231(a)(1)(B)(ii) election
statement was filed with either the 2001 or the 2002 partnership
return.
Petitioners implicitly concede that Gold Coast did not
elect, in conformity with the terms of the temporary regulations,
to be subject to the unified partnership procedures of TEFRA.
Instead, they argue, inter alia, that the small partnership
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exception of section 6231(a)(1)(B)(i) is a denial of their
constitutional right to due process and equal protection and is
therefore invalid; or that we should treat the listing of Mr.
Wadsworth as the tax matters partner on the 2001 and 2002 Forms
1065 as a “deemed” section 6231(a)(1)(B)(ii) election.
Petitioners’ due process arguments are unconvincing.
Petitioners appear to argue that the small partnership exception
of section 6231(a)(1)(B)(i) denies them procedural due process
because it relegates their claims to an individual proceeding
instead of a partnership-level proceeding. We fail to see how
giving petitioners a choice between two procedural frameworks
amounts to a denial of due process.
Nor can we understand how the small partnership exception
injures petitioners’ due process rights by making available
individual-level proceedings in addition to partnership-level
proceedings. The small partnership exception permits this Court
to review in a deficiency suit items that otherwise would be
subject to partnership-level proceedings. The small partnership
exception therefore offers partners of small partnerships
simplified and expedited access to judicial review. We cannot
fathom how such a result somehow amounts to a denial of due
process.
Similarly, we find petitioners’ equal protection arguments
unconvincing. “Legislatures have especially broad latitude in
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creating classifications and distinctions in tax statutes.”
Regan v. Taxation With Representation, 461 U.S. 540, 547 (1983).
In Durham v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2004-125, we rejected a
taxpayer’s argument that Congress unfairly discriminated between
similarly situated taxpayers by making the interest abatement
provisions of newly amended section 6404(e) effective only for
interest accruing with respect to deficiencies or payments for
tax years beginning after enactment of that section and not to
all instances of managerial errors committed after amendment of
section 6404(e). In Durham we stated:
judicial deference [to statutory classifications] flows
from a recognition that--as a practical matter--
Congress will often have to draw distinctions between
different taxpayers who seem in some ways to be in
similar positions. “No scheme of taxation, whether the
tax is imposed on property, income, or purchases of
goods and services, has yet been devised which is free
of all discriminatory impact.” As with laws granting
economic benefits, drawing distinctions “inevitably
requires that some persons who have an almost equally
strong claim to favored treatment be placed on
different sides of the [same] line . . . .” Yet courts
have repeatedly held that these distinctions do not
violate the Constitution’s guarantee of equal
protection. Instead they reflect Congress’s exercise
of its legitimate prerogative to enact laws with an eye
to their practical administration and cost to the fisc.
Id. (fn. refs. and citations omitted). The distinction between a
“partnership” and a “small partnership” for purposes of section
6231(a)(1)(B) does not impinge upon a fundamental right or use a
suspect classification and must therefore be upheld if it has any
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rational basis. See Hamilton v. Commissioner, 68 T.C. 603, 608
(1977).
One rational basis for the distinction between TEFRA
partnerships and small partnerships is the complexity of the
TEFRA procedures themselves. The TEFRA procedures, suited to
complex examinations and litigation of partnership items in the
case of large partnerships, may be unnecessarily burdensome--to
both the Commissioner and taxpayers--for the examination and
litigation of simple partnerships. We therefore reject
petitioners’ constitutional arguments.
Nor will we heed petitioners’ call to treat the listing of
Mr. Wadsworth as a tax matters partner on Gold Coast’s 2001 and
2002 partnership returns as a “deemed election” to be subject to
the unified partnership procedures of TEFRA. A taxpayer must
clearly notify the Commissioner of the taxpayer’s intent to make
an election. Kosonen v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2000-107
(citing Knight-Ridder Newspapers, Inc. v. United States, 743 F.2d
781, 795 (11th Cir. 1984)). To make an election, “the taxpayer
must exhibit in some manner * * * his unequivocal agreement to
accept both the benefits and burdens of the tax treatment
afforded” by the governing statute. Id. (quoting Young v.
Commissioner, 83 T.C. 831, 839 (1984), affd. 783 F.2d 1201 (5th
Cir. 1986)). “A taxpayer has not made an election if it is not
clear from the return that an election has been made.” Id.
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As discussed supra, Gold Coast’s partnership returns were
marked “No” in the columns next to the question “Is this
partnership subject to the consolidated audit procedures of
sections 6221 through 6233?”. No election statement was filed
with the partnership returns. Under such circumstances, it is
not clear from merely inserting Mr. Wadsworth’s name in the tax
matters partner box that Gold Coast was electing to be subject to
the TEFRA procedures. The Gold Coast returns--coupled with the
complete absence of any election statement--exhibit more of an
intent to fall outside the TEFRA procedures than an intent to
positively elect into them. Gold Coast therefore failed to elect
to be subject to TEFRA, and we will deny petitioners’ amended
motion to dismiss.
II. Petitioners’ Amended Motion To Strike
In support of their amended motion to strike, petitioners
argue that paragraph 8 of respondent’s answer is an impermissible
attempt to supply the information that was required in the notice
of deficiency.
Motions to strike are analyzed under Rule 52. Rule 52
provides that this Court, upon a timely motion of the parties or
on its own initiative, may strike from any pleading any
insufficient claim or defense or any redundant, immaterial,
impertinent, frivolous, or scandalous matter. Rule 52 was
derived from rule 12(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
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Estate of Jephson v. Commissioner, 81 T.C. 999, 1000 (1983);
Allen v. Commissioner, 71 T.C. 577, 579 (1979). Accordingly, the
principles enunciated by the Federal courts in the interpretation
and application of that rule are applicable here. Estate of
Jephson v. Commissioner, supra at 1000-1001; Allen v.
Commissioner, supra at 579.
In general, motions to strike pleadings have not been
favored by the Federal courts. Estate of Jephson v.
Commissioner, supra at 1001; Allen v. Commissioner, supra at 579.
A matter will not be stricken from a pleading unless it is clear
that it can have no possible bearing upon the subject matter of
the litigation. Estate of Jephson v. Commissioner, supra at
1001; Allen v. Commissioner, supra at 579.
“A motion to strike should be granted only when the
allegations have no possible relation to the
controversy. When the court is in doubt whether under
any contingency the matter may raise an issue, the
motion should be denied.” If the matter that is the
subject of the motion involves disputed and substantial
questions of law, the motion should be denied and the
allegations should be determined on the merits. In
addition, a motion to strike will usually not be
granted unless there is a showing of prejudice to the
moving party.
Estate of Jephson v. Commissioner, supra at 1001 (citations
omitted).
As discussed supra, paragraph 8 of respondent’s answer
contains factual allegations regarding Gold Coast’s business
operations, Mr. Wadsworth’s involvement in Gold Coast, and the
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audit of Gold Coast by DHS which led Gold Coast and petitioners
to file amended tax returns for 2001 and 2002. The allegations
in paragraph 8 clearly bear a relationship to the issues in this
case. The allegations in paragraph 8 are therefore best left to
a determination on the merits, and we will deny petitioners’
amended motion to strike. See Estate of Jephson v. Commissioner,
supra at 1003.
III. Petitioners’ Motion To Shift the Burden of Proof
Petitioners argue that if their motion to dismiss for lack
of jurisdiction is not granted, the burden of proof should be
shifted to respondent. As best we can tell, petitioners seem to
argue that the burden of proof should be shifted to respondent
with regard to all issues in dispute. In support of their
motion, petitioners rely on Weimerskirch v. Commissioner, 596
F.2d 358 (9th Cir. 1979), revg. 67 T.C. 672 (1977), and, as
mentioned supra, Shea v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. 183 (1999).4
Under Rule 142(a)(1), the burden of proof shall be upon the
petitioner, except as otherwise provided by statute or determined
by the Court; and except that, in respect of any new matter,
4
Petitioners also rely on Scar v. Commissioner, 814 F.2d
1363 (9th Cir. 1987), revg. 81 T.C. 855 (1983). As discussed
supra, the relevant portions of Scar relate to the issue of
jurisdiction and not to the burden of proof.
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increases in deficiency, and affirmative defenses, pleaded in the
answer, it shall be upon the respondent.5
In Weimerskirch v. Commissioner, supra at 362, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (to which an appeal of
this matter would lie) held that the Commissioner’s determination
of a deficiency which allegedly resulted from unreported income
could not be upheld in absence of any substantive evidence
linking the taxpayer to the alleged income-producing activity.
The rule in Weimerskirch does not apply to this case. We
have consistently held that the taxpayer bears the burden of
proof with regard to claimed losses or deductions. See Time Ins.
Co. v. Commissioner, 86 T.C. 298, 313-314 (1986); Chaum v.
Commissioner, 69 T.C. 156, 163-164 (1977). Even if the
deficiencies at issue were assumed to stem from allegedly
unreported income, this case would still not be analogous to
Weimerskirch. In Weimerskirch, the Commissioner failed to
introduce any evidence connecting the taxpayer with the activity
which allegedly produced the unreported income. In the matter
before us, petitioners’ indivdual income tax returns and Gold
Coast’s partnership returns all reveal a relationship between
petitioners and the income-producing activity at issue. We are
therefore not presented with a situation in which respondent
5
Petitioners do not allege, and we do not find, that sec.
7491(a) applies to this dispute.
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relies solely and entirely on the presumption of correctness that
normally attaches to a notice of deficiency.
Finally, respondent has not yet been given an opportunity to
present evidence supporting his determinations. Petitioners’
assertion that respondent is merely resting on the presumption of
correctness is therefore premature, and petitioners’ reliance on
Weimerskirch is misplaced.
Petitioners also rely on Shea v. Commissioner, supra, in
support of their motion to shift the burden of proof. In Shea,
the Commissioner issued a notice of deficiency in which he
changed a California-resident taxpayer’s filing status from
married filing jointly to married filing separately yet
determined an amount of unreported income without making any
adjustment for California’s community property law. Had that law
been considered, unless an exception under section 66(b) applied,
the taxpayer would have been required to report and be taxed on
only one-half of the taxpayer’s income from a business he
conducted while married. The notice of deficiency in Shea did
not refer to California community property law, any exceptions to
that law, or any facts that might support such exceptions.
Although the parties in Shea agreed that section 66(b)
authorizes the Commissioner to disallow the benefits of community
property law to a taxpayer under certain circumstances, the
taxpayer argued that because the Commissioner made no
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determination in the notice of deficiency with regard to
community property law or section 66(b), the Commissioner should
bear the burden of proof with regard to his reliance on section
66(b) because it was a “new matter” within the meaning of Rule
142(a). The Commissioner argued that invocation of section 66(b)
was necessarily implicit in the notice of deficiency.
In agreeing with the taxpayer, this Court noted that the
notice of deficiency at issue made “absolutely no mention of
community property law, section 66(b), or facts which would allow
respondent to invoke section 66(b).” Shea v. Commissioner, supra
at 191. This Court also noted that
Respondent failed to offer any evidence that
indicated that respondent considered the application of
community property law or section 66(b) in making his
determination. In short, it appears to us that
respondent gave no thought to community property law or
section 66(b) when the notice of deficiency was
prepared. Respondent’s apparent failure to even
consider community property law or section 66(b) in
making his deficiency determination supports our
conclusion that section 66(b) was not implicit in the
notice of deficiency. However, even if respondent’s
agents had considered such matters, it does not follow
that they were “necessarily implicit” in the notice of
deficiency. The objective language in the notice of
deficiency remains the controlling factor. * * * there
is nothing in the notice of deficiency that makes
section 66(b) “necessarily implicit”.
Id. at 192 (fn. refs. omitted).
The notice of deficiency petitioners received is not
analogous to the notice of deficiency in Shea. The notice of
deficiency in Shea made no reference to the alleged determination
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that would have increased the taxpayer’s liability; i.e., that
the Commissioner relied on section 66(b) to disregard the income
attribution consequences of California community property law.
Petitioners’ notice of deficiency clearly referenced a
determination regarding petitioners’ distributive share of income
and loss from involvement in a partnership. Gold Coast was the
only partnership reported on petitioners’ 2001 and 2002
individual income tax returns. The adjustments in the notice of
deficiency clearly stem from respondent’s determination that the
changes in petitioners’ amended 2001 and 2002 income tax returns
were improper. We therefore find petitioners’ reliance on Shea
misplaced and decline to shift the burden of proof to respondent.
IV. Petitioners’ Request for Judicial Notice
Petitioners request that we take judicial notice of the
contents of respondent’s Form 1065 and the instructions thereto.
Although it is not clear from petitioners’ request, we assume the
request relates to the forms and instructions for 2001 and 2002.
This Court routinely takes judicial notice of the contents
of the Commissioner’s official publications as published by the
U.S. Government Printing Office. See, e.g., Nicklaus v.
Commissioner, 117 T.C. 117, 118 n.2 (2001); Westcott v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2006-245; Boltinghouse v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 2003-134 n.2; Stafford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
1997-50, affd. 146 F.3d 868 (5th Cir. 1998). We will do so here.
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In reaching all of our holdings herein, we have considered
all of petitioners’ arguments in support of their motions, and to
the extent not mentioned above, we find them to be irrelevant or
without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order will
be issued.