T.C. Memo. 2008-207
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
RICHARD W. FIELDS, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
RICHARD W. FIELDS AND EKATERINA FIELDS, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket Nos. 22132-06, 4256-07. Filed August 28, 2008.
Michael D. Jones, for petitioners.
Edwina L. Jones, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
JACOBS, Judge: These consolidated cases were submitted
fully stipulated pursuant to Rule 122. All section references
are to the Internal Revenue Code as amended, and all Rule
references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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The issues for decision are: (1) Whether certain “Deferred
Payments” Richard Fields made in 2000, 2001, and 2003 to Karen
Fields, his former spouse, are deductible as alimony; and (2) if
not, whether Richard Fields and Ekaterina Fields (petitioners)
are liable for the accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a)
as a result of their claiming an alimony deduction for that
payment in 2003.
Background
The facts have been fully stipulated and are so found. The
stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated
herein by this reference. Petitioners resided in New York when
they filed the petitions herein.
Richard Fields filed his tax returns for 2000 and 2001 as a
married taxpayer filing separately. He and Ekaterina Fields
filed a joint tax return for 2003.
The deferred payments at issue herein arose as a consequence
of Richard Fields’s obligations to Karen Fields pursuant to a
Separation, Support and Property Settlement Agreement (agreement)
executed on October 7, 1999. Mr. Fields is an attorney; however,
both he and Karen Fields had the advice of independent counsel in
the negotiation and preparation of the agreement.
The agreement contains 19 headings and 42 numbered
paragraphs. Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the agreement appear under the
heading “Alimony”. Paragraph 3 contains mutual waivers of claims
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each party might have against the other for alimony or spousal
support except as specifically provided in paragraph 4.
Paragraph 4(a) provides:
So long as any portion of the Deferred Payments referred to
in Paragraph 15(b) remains unpaid, the Husband shall pay to
the Wife alimony at the rate of Seventy Five Thousand
Dollars ($75,000) per year, in equal monthly installments of
Six Thousand Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($6,250), until
December 31, 2001. * * * Commencing January 1, 2002, and on
the first day of each month thereafter until December 31,
2002, so long as any portion of the Deferred Payments
referred to in Paragraph 15(b) remains unpaid, the Husband
shall pay the Wife alimony at the rate of Fifty Thousand
Dollars ($50,000) per year, in twelve equal monthly
installments of Four Thousand One Hundred Sixty-Seven
Dollars ($4,167).
Paragraph 4(b)provides:
Alimony payments pursuant to this Paragraph 4 shall be
taxable to the Wife and deductible by the Husband, and shall
terminate forever on the first to occur of the death of
either Party or full satisfaction of the Note (as defined in
Paragraph 15(b) below); provided however, in the event the
Husband fails to pay timely any of the Deferred Payments (as
defined in Paragraph 15(b) below), the alimony payments to
the Wife shall increase by twenty percent (20%) if, after
expiration of the ten (10) day cure period, the Husband has
not become current on the Note. Alimony shall remain at the
increased level until the Husband becomes current on the
note.
Paragraph 4(c) of the agreement provides: “Payments made
pursuant to this paragraph shall not terminate in the event of
the Wife’s remarriage”, and paragraph 4(d) of the agreement
provides: “Except as provided in paragraph 4(a) and (b), alimony
is non-modifiable.”
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Paragraph 15 of the agreement appears under the heading
“Personalty”1 and provides, in pertinent part:
15. Lump Sum:
(a) At Closing, the Husband will pay the Wife Two
Million Dollars ($2,000,000) in immediately
available funds. * * *
(b) Thereafter, the Husband shall pay to the Wife the
following amounts in immediately available funds
(“Deferred Payments”):
- Two Hundred Seventy Five Thousand Dollars
($275,000) on or before December 31, 1999; and
- Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000) on or
before December 31, 2000; and
- Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000) on or
before December 31, 2001; and
- Five Hundred Twenty Five Thousand Dollars
($525,000) on or before December 31, 2002.
(c) The Deferred Payments shall be evidenced by a
Promissory Note (the “Note”), and delivered to the
Wife at Closing. The Deferred Payments shall be
secured by an Irrevocable Letter of Instruction
(the “Instruction Letter”) from the Husband to the
Firm [the law firm of which Mr. Fields was a
partner at that time], requiring the Firm in the
event of the Husband’s default in payment under
the Note, to pay directly to the Wife any funds or
1
The heading that precedes the heading “Personalty” in the
agreement is “Real Property”. Two paragraphs are set forth
thereunder (par. 7 and par. 8). Par. 7 provides for the release
by Karen Fields of any interest in Mr. Fields’s leasehold of a
residence in London. Par. 8 provides for the release by Karen
Fields of any interest in Mr. Fields’s residence in Washington,
D.C.
In addition to par. 15, various other paragraphs appear
under the “Personalty” heading, most of which have subheadings:
“Furniture, Home Furnishings, Fine Art and Other Tangible
Personal Property” (par. 9), “Automobiles” (par. 10), “Pets”
(par. 11), “Boat and Jet Skis” (par. 12), “Swidler Berlin Shereff
Friedman, LLP” (par. 13), “Retirement Assets” (par. 14), and par.
16 relating to mutual indemnifications from third-party claims.
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assets due the Husband including without
limitation salary, draws, bonuses, return of
capital or other forms of compensation otherwise
owed to the Husband by the [F]irm * * *.
(d) The Promissory Note shall not bear interest and
the Husband shall have the right to prepay it
without penalty. * * *
(e) All payments to the Wife under this paragraph are
tax free to her and are not modifiable. The
Husband expressly agrees that for the purpose of
incorporation into a court order, the obligations
set forth in Paragraph 15(b) above arise out of
and are in the nature of support obligations and
thus shall not be dischargeable in bankruptcy.
The Husband expressly agrees that he shall not
seek to discharge or release any of these
obligations in bankruptcy or any other similar
proceeding. The Husband further agrees that in
the event he files for bankruptcy and is relieved
of any of his obligations under Paragraph 15(b),
then the Wife shall have the right to petition a
court of competent jurisdiction to receive an
award of spousal support in an amount not to
exceed the amount of the discharged Deferred
Payments referred to in Paragraph 15(b).
(f) Except as provided in this agreement, upon
delivery of the Two Million Dollar ($2,000,000)
lump sum payment to the Wife at Closing, all
assets, accounts, and interests of the parties in
joint names or in the Husband’s Separate name or
in the Husband’s possession shall become the
Husband’s sole and separate property. In addition
to the assets and funds identified above as the
Wife’s sole and separate property, all assets,
accounts and interests in the Wife’s sole name
shall become her sole and separate property.
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Paragraph 25 provides:
25. The Parties intend, understand and agree that all
transfers of property and Deferred Payments pursuant to
Paragraph 15 above (excluding alimony payments) made to
the Wife pursuant to this Agreement are intended to be
tax-free to the Wife, pursuant to Section 1041 of the
Internal Revenue Code, or under any other sections of
the Internal Revenue Code which may pertain to said
transfers or payments; provided, however, that the Wife
shall be solely responsible for any taxes she may incur
if she subsequently sells, transfers, or otherwise
disposes of the property and payments she receives
pursuant to this Agreement.
Paragraph 19 of the agreement requires Mr. Fields to
maintain a decreasing term life insurance policy on his life
designating Karen Fields as the beneficiary and owner, with the
initial face amount of the policy being equal to the unpaid
balance of the deferred payments. That policy is required to
remain in effect until Mr. Fields satisfies the promissory note
that evidences his obligation pursuant to paragraph 15 of the
agreement, and the death benefits payable thereunder to be
“commensurate with the unpaid balance of the Deferred Payments.”
Some of the terms of the agreement were incorporated into
the Circuit Court of Fairfax County, Virginia’s divorce decree
dated November 5, 1999 (divorce decree). The exact language of
paragraph 3 of the agreement (relating to waivers of support
other than as provided in paragraph 4 of the agreement),
paragraph 4(a) of the agreement (relating to monthly installments
of alimony during 2001 and 2002), paragraph 4(b) of the agreement
(relating to the characterization of the payments from Richard
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Fields to Karen Fields as alimony for tax purposes), paragraph
4(c) of the agreement (relating to nontermination of the alimony
payments upon Karen Fields’s remarriage), and paragraph 4(d) of
the agreement (relating to nonmodification of the alimony
payments) was incorporated and reproduced in the divorce decree
as paragraph 17 thereof. Paragraph 17 of the divorce decree is
captioned “Support” and is the only provision in the divorce
decree pertaining to spousal support. The divorce decree
contains no reference to paragraph 15 of the agreement (other
than the reference to paragraph 15 found in paragraph 4 of the
agreement, which was incorporated and reproduced in the divorce
decree).
Mr. Fields timely filed his tax return for the year 2000
with the assistance of American Express Tax & Business Services
(American Express) of Rockville, Maryland, on October 15, 2001.2
The return reported total income of $1,848,795 and reflected,
among other items, a $76,250 claimed deduction for alimony. The
tax shown on the return was $693,313. On December 31, 2002, Mr.
Fields, with the assistance of American Express, prepared and
filed an amended return for 2000 in which he reduced by $500,000
the amount of adjusted gross income he had previously reported.
2
Mr. Fields’s tax years 1999 and 2002 are not at issue, and
the record does not reveal how he reported, for tax purposes, any
payments he made to Karen Fields during those years.
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The explanation for the change was: “The total alimony paid * *
* was understated by $500,000 on the original tax return.” The
revised tax, according to the amended return, was $489,373.
Mr. Fields timely filed his tax return for the year 2001
with the assistance of Coppergate Associates International of
London, England, on January 27, 2003 (pursuant to an extension of
time in which to file until January 30, 2003, inasmuch as
petitioner was living abroad). The return reported total income
of $2,133,971 and reflected, among other items, a $568,750
claimed deduction for alimony. The tax shown on the return was
$423,994.
Mr. Fields failed to make the final deferred payment of
$525,000 to Karen Fields by December 31, 2002, as contemplated in
the agreement. Instead, that payment was made in March 2003.
Contemporaneously with the March 2003 payment, Richard and Karen
Fields executed an “Agreement and Limited Mutual Release” in
which, among other things, Karen Fields released Richard Fields
from his obligations pursuant to “Paragraphs 15a-d (entitled Lump
Sum), and Paragraphs 3-4 (entitled Alimony)” of the agreement.
Mr. Fields and Ekaterina Fields timely filed their tax
return for the year 2003 with the assistance of Meridian
Services, Ltd., of Charleston, South Carolina, on October 15,
2004. The return reported total income of $924,867 and
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reflected, among other items, a $525,000 claimed deduction for
alimony. The tax shown on the return was $89,507.
After examining the 2000, 2001, and 2003 tax returns,
respondent determined deficiencies in tax of $203,940, $195,500,
and $170,797 respectively for those years. Respondent issued a
notice of deficiency to Mr. Fields for years 2000 and 2001 on
July 31, 2006, and a notice of deficiency to petitioners
for the year 2003 on January 4, 2007. The deficiencies
respondent determined were attributable entirely to disallowance
of $500,000 of the claimed deductions for alimony in 2000 and
2001 and the $525,000 claimed deduction for alimony in 2003
(i.e., deductions attributable to payments made pursuant to
paragraph 15(b) of the agreement). In addition, in his notice of
deficiency, respondent determined that for 2003 petitioners were
liable for a $34,159.40 penalty under section 6662(a).3
Respondent did not challenge the $76,250 alimony deduction
claimed in 2000 or the $68,750 alimony deduction claimed in 2001
(i.e., deductions attributable to payments made pursuant to
paragraph 4(a) of the agreement).
Petitioners timely petitioned this Court for a
redetermination of the deficiencies. Petitioners claim that all
amounts Mr. Fields paid to Karen Fields (and not just the amounts
3
On Jan. 16, 2007, respondent transmitted to petitioners an
examination report for 2003 which reduced the alternative minimum
tax and corresponding deficiency in tax for 2003 to $169,969 and
reduced the penalty for 2003 to $33,993.80.
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paid pursuant to paragraph 4(a) of the agreement) were deductible
as alimony under section 215, noting: (1) Paragraph 15 of the
agreement does not specifically state that those payments are not
allowable as deductions under section 215; and (2) Mr. Fields was
not obligated to make payments pursuant to paragraph 15(b) in the
event of Karen Fields’s death. Moreover, petitioners posit that
even though the first sentence of paragraph 15(e) states that
“All payments to the Wife under this paragraph are tax free to
her”, the deferred payments under paragraph 15(b) are in the
nature of spousal support and would be tax free only in the event
Mr. Fields filed for bankruptcy.
Petitioners did not address the issue of their liability for
the section 6662(a) penalty for 2003 in their petition, but both
they and respondent addressed that issue on brief.4
Discussion
As stated in Estate of Goldman v. Commissioner, 112 T.C.
317, 322 (1999), affd. without published opinion sub nom.
Schutter v. Commissioner, 242 F.3d 390 (10th Cir. 2000):
Generally, property settlements (or transfers of
property between spouses) incident to a divorce neither are
taxable events nor give rise to deductions or recognizable
income. See sec. 1041. On the other hand, amounts received
4
Petitioners claimed, for the first time on brief, that
interest on any underpayment should be suspended pursuant to sec.
6404(g). Petitioners do not assert, and the record does not
indicate, that the Secretary made a determination not to abate
such interest, which would be reviewable by this Court pursuant
to sec. 6404(h). Hence, we deem petitioners’ claim for the
suspension of interest to be premature.
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as alimony or separate maintenance payments are taxable to
the recipient (pursuant to sections 61(a)(8) and 71(a)) and
deductible by the payor (pursuant to section 215(a)) in the
year paid. For tax purposes, the phrase “alimony or
separate maintenance payments” is defined in section
71(b)(1) as any cash payments meeting the following four
criteria:
“(A) such payment is received by (or on behalf of) a
spouse under a divorce or separation instrument,
(B) the divorce or separation instrument does not
designate such payment as a payment which is not includible
in gross income under this section and not allowable as a
deduction under section 215,
(C) in the case of an individual legally separated from
his spouse under a decree of divorce or of separate
maintenance, the payee spouse and the payor spouse are not
members of the same household at the time such payment is
made, and
(D) there is no liability to make any such payment for
any period after the death of the payee spouse and there is
no liability to make any payment (in cash or property) as a
substitute for such payments after the death of the payee
spouse.”
The parties agree that Mr. Fields’s payments to Karen Fields
of $76,250 in 2000 and $68,750 in 2001 made pursuant to paragraph
4(a) of the agreement constitute deductible alimony. The parties
further agree that Mr. Fields’s payments to Karen Fields made
pursuant to paragraph 15 of the agreement satisfy the first and
third criteria of section 71(b)(1). They disagree as to whether
Mr. Fields’s payments to Karen Fields pursuant to paragraph 15 of
the agreement satisfy the second and fourth criteria of section
71(b)(1). For the reasons set forth below, we hold those
payments do not and thus sustain respondent’s determination that
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the payments Mr. Fields made to Karen Fields of $500,000 in 2000,
$500,000 in 2001, and $525,000 in 2003 are not alimony.
With respect to the second criterion of section 71(b)(1),
petitioners posit that in order for payments from one spouse to
the other to be disqualified as alimony payments made pursuant to
a separation agreement or divorce decree, the separation
agreement or divorce decree must specifically provide that the
payments are not includable in the recipient’s income and are not
deductible by the payor. Because the agreement does not contain
such a specific provision, petitioners maintain that Mr. Fields’s
payments to Karen Fields are not disqualified as deductible
alimony under section 71(b)(1)(B).
We have already stated, in Estate of Goldman v.
Commissioner, supra at 323, that the divorce or separation
instrument need not mimic the language of section 71(b)(1)(B).
Rather, we have stated that a nonalimony designation will be
found “if the substance of such a designation is reflected in the
instrument.” Id.
In our view, the payments to be made pursuant to paragraph
15(b) of the agreement were designed to accomplish a purpose
different from that of the payments made pursuant to paragraph 4.
We believe the payments made pursuant to paragraph 4 were
intended to be for the support of Karen Fields, whereas the
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payments made pursuant to paragraph 15 were intended to be a
property settlement. The basis of this belief is as follows.
Paragraph 15 of the agreement is concerned with the division
of property between Mr. Fields and Karen Fields. Tellingly,
paragraph 15 appears under the heading “Personalty”, whereas
paragraph 4 appears under the heading “Alimony”. And paragraph 4
is the only paragraph of the agreement referred to in the divorce
decree as requiring Mr. Fields to pay Karen Fields alimony.
Paragraph 15(e) of the agreement provides that payments
under paragraph 15 are to be tax free to the Wife (i.e., Karen
Fields), whereas paragraph 4(b) designates the payments under
paragraph 4 from the Husband (i.e., Mr. Fields) to the Wife as
alimony “taxable to the Wife and deductible by the Husband”. If
all the payments to be made under both paragraphs 4 and 15 were
intended to be alimony, we believe the agreement: (1) Would not
have denominated the payments differently by means of placement
in separate paragraphs and under different headings, and (2)
would not have contained contradictory instructions as to the
inclusion (or not) of the payments in Karen Fields’s income.
Moreover, the amounts payable pursuant to paragraph 15(b) of
the agreement are substantially larger than those required by
paragraph 4 of the agreement. The payments made pursuant to
paragraph 15(b) of the agreement, referred to as “Deferred
Payments”, are, in our opinion, a series of discrete amounts in
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the nature of installment payments, evidenced by a promissory
note and secured by an irrevocable letter of instruction to Mr.
Fields’s law firm. Tellingly, as further security Mr. Fields was
required to maintain a decreasing term life insurance policy on
his life of which Karen Fields was to be the beneficiary and
owner until the promissory note evidencing Mr. Fields’s
obligations under paragraph 15 was satisfied. Providing such
security is inconsistent with the provision in paragraph 4(b)
that such an obligation was to be extinguished upon Mr. Fields’s
death.
Petitioners point to some provisions of the agreement which
give rise to a colorable claim that the payments made pursuant to
paragraph 15 were deductible alimony. For example, paragraph 25,
in describing the agreed tax treatment of the payments under
paragraph 15 as tax free to Karen Fields, contains a
parenthetical reference to alimony payments. Paragraph 15(e)
first specifies that payments made under that paragraph are tax
free to Karen Fields but then characterizes the payments to be
made pursuant to paragraph 15(b) as support obligations “and thus
not dischargeable in bankruptcy”. It further provides that Karen
Fields “shall have the right to petition a court of competent
jurisdiction to receive an award of spousal support in an amount
not to exceed the amount of the discharged deferred payments
referred to in Paragraph 15(b).” Moreover, we are mindful that
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the agreement provides for an increase in the amount and duration
of alimony payments under paragraph 4(a) and 4(b) in the event
Mr. Fields does not timely make the payments required by
paragraph 15, suggesting a linkage or interchangeability between
the two types of payments.
Notwithstanding the aforesaid, we are persuaded that the
agreement, when read in its entirety from a “reasonable,
commonsense perspective,” reflects a clear and express intent of
the parties that the amounts which Mr. Fields was required to pay
pursuant to paragraph 15 of the agreement constitute a division
of marital assets, as opposed to spousal support, and are not to
be included in the gross income of Karen Fields nor allowed as
deductions to Mr. Fields. See Estate of Goldman v. Commissioner,
112 T.C. at 323. Consequently, the second criterion of section
71(b)(1), which the payments must satisfy if they are to qualify
as alimony, has not been met.
With respect to the fourth criterion of section 71(b)(1),
petitioners contend that the payments Mr. Fields was required to
make pursuant to paragraph 15 would not continue upon Karen
Fields’s death, and consequently the requirement of subparagraph
(D) of section 71(b)(1) is met. We disagree with petitioners’
contention.
Whether a postdeath obligation exists may be determined by
the terms of the divorce or separation instrument, or, if the
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instrument is silent on that matter, by State law. Morgan v.
Commissioner, 309 U.S. 78, 80-81 (1940); see also Kean v.
Commissioner, 407 F.3d 186, 191 (3d Cir. 2005), affg. T.C. Memo.
2003-163. But there is no need to resort to State law to
determine the character of the payments at issue.5 Paragraph
4(b) of the agreement provides that the payments to be made
thereunder shall terminate on the death of either party or upon
the payment of all amounts due pursuant to paragraph 15,
whichever occurs first. Such language is conspicuously lacking
in paragraph 15. The agreement requires Mr. Fields to make
payments pursuant to paragraph 15 until fixed amounts ($500,000
in 2000, $500,000 in 2001, and $525,000 in 2002) are paid. It
does not state that the obligation to make those payments
terminates upon the death of Karen Fields. Therefore, the
amounts Mr. Fields paid pursuant to paragraph 15 of the agreement
do not satisfy the requirement of subparagraph (D) of section
71(b)(1).
Having sustained respondent’s determination that the
payments Mr. Fields made to Karen Fields of $500,000 in 2000,
$500,000 in 2001, and $525,000 in 2003 are not alimony, we now
5
Petitioners rely on Va. Code Ann. sec. 20-109.1 (2004),
which provides that upon the death or remarriage of the spouse
receiving support, spousal support shall terminate unless
otherwise provided by stipulation or contract. We already found
that payments Mr. Fields made pursuant to par. 15 were not
spousal support payments but instead were part of a division of
marital assets.
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turn our attention to respondent’s determination with respect to
the accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a).
Respondent determined that petitioners’ 2003 underpayment
was attributable to negligence or disregard of rules or
regulations under section 6662(b)(1) and/or to a substantial
understatement of income tax under section 6662(b)(2). We
address only respondent’s claim that petitioners’ underpayment
for 2001 was attributable to a substantial understatement of
income tax under section 6662(b)(2). We do so because a finding
that there was a substantial understatement of income tax alone
would be determinative that petitioners are liable for the
section 6662(a) penalty.
Under section 7491(c), the Commissioner has the burden of
production with respect to any penalty. Once the Commissioner
meets the burden of production, the taxpayer continues to have
the burden of proof with respect to whether the Commissioner’s
determination of the penalty is correct. Rule 142(a); Higbee v.
Commissioner, 116 T.C. 438 (2001). The submission of a case
without trial under Rule 122(a) does not alter the requirements
otherwise applicable to adducing proof. Rule 122(b).
For purposes of section 6662(b)(2), an understatement is
equal to the excess of the amount of tax required to be shown in
the tax return over the amount of tax shown. Sec. 6662(d)(2)(A).
The difference is considered “substantial” in the case of an
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individual if the amount of the understatement for the taxable
year exceeds the greater of 10 percent of the tax required to be
shown in the return for that taxable year or $5,000 Sec.
6662(d)(1)(A). The amount of the understatement must be reduced
by that portion of the understatement which is attributable to
(1) “the tax treatment of any item by the taxpayer if there is or
was substantial authority for such treatment”, sec.
6662(d)(2)(B)(i),6 or (2) any item if (a) “the relevant facts
affecting the item’s tax treatment are adequately disclosed in
the return or in a statement attached to the return”, sec.
6
Following submission of this case, by means of an
attachment to their brief petitioners attempted to introduce into
evidence a written opinion by a law professor in support of a
claim that there was substantial authority as provided in sec.
6662(d)(2)(B)(i) for their treatment of Mr. Fields’s payments to
Karen Fields. The written opinion, which does not cite any
legal authorities, was not included in the stipulation of facts
and exhibits submitted pursuant to Rule 122. Consequently, the
Court returned the attachment. See Rules 143(b), 151.
Petitioners later sought, by means of a motion, to amend the
stipulation of facts to include the written opinion. Respondent
objected to petitioners’ motion, and we denied petitioners’
motion to amend.
We are mindful that the material petitioners wish the Court
to consider is dated Apr. 28, 2006, whereas petitioners’ 2003
return was filed on Oct. 14, 2004. Substantial authority for
purposes of sec. 6662(d)(2)(B)(i) must exist at the time the
return containing the item is filed or on the last day of the
taxable year to which the return relates. See sec. 1.6662-
4(d)(3)(iv)(C), Income Tax Regs. Accordingly, even if the
material constituted “authority” as contemplated by sec.
6662(d)(2)(B)(i), which is doubtful, see sec. 1.6662-
4(d)(3)(iii), Income Tax Regs., the material would not constitute
substantial authority for purposes of sec. 6662(d)(2)(B)(i).
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6662(d)(2)(B)(ii)(I), and (b) “there is a reasonable basis for
the tax treatment of such item by the taxpayer”, sec.
6662(d)(2)(B)(ii)(II). Disclosure of an item is not effective to
remove the item from the understatement to which the tax is
attributable where the treatment of the item for tax purposes
does not have a reasonable basis as defined in section 1.6662-
3(b)(3), Income Tax Regs. Sec. 1.6662-4(e)(2)(i), Income Tax
Regs.
Section 1.6662-3(b)(3), Income Tax Regs., provides that the
reasonable basis standard “is not satisfied by a return position
that is merely arguable or that is merely a colorable claim.” If
a return position is reasonably based on one or more of the
authorities set forth in section 1.6662-4(d)(3)(iii), Income Tax
Regs. (taking into account the relevance and persuasiveness of
the authorities, and subsequent developments), the return
position will generally satisfy the reasonable basis standard
even though it may not satisfy the substantial authority standard
as defined in section 1.6662-4(d)(2), Income Tax Regs. See
section 1.6662-4(d)(3)(ii), Income Tax Regs., for rules with
respect to relevance, persuasiveness, subsequent developments,
and use of a well-reasoned construction of an applicable
statutory provision for purposes of the substantial
understatement penalty.
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Petitioners’ 2003 return reported tax of $89,507.
Respondent determined, and we agree, that the tax required to be
shown on the return was $259,476. Thus, the understatement was
$169,969. This amount exceeds 10 percent of the tax required to
be shown in the return and obviously is greater than $5,000.
The record does not disclose on what basis petitioners
claimed that Mr. Fields’s payments under paragraph 15(b) to Karen
Fields were alimony. Because Mr. Fields did not originally claim
the 2000 payment of $500,000 as alimony, it is apparent that at
one time Mr. Fields did not consider that payment to be
deductible. Other than petitioners’ uncorroborated claim (first
set forth in their posttrial brief) that Mr. Fields changed the
tax treatment of the payments made under paragraph 15(b) of the
agreement on the advice of his tax return preparers, a claim
discussed infra, nothing in the record indicates that petitioners
relied on one or more of the authorities set forth in section
1.6662-4(d)(3)(iii), Income Tax Regs., or otherwise had a
reasonable basis for deducting the payments made under paragraph
15(b) of the agreement on their 2003 return. Thus, petitioners
have failed to carry their burden of showing that they had a
reasonable basis for their tax treatment of the 2003 payment to
Karen Fields, and accordingly the exception to the section
6662(a) penalty found in section 6662(d)(2)(B)(ii) is not
applicable.
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Pursuant to section 6664(c)(1), no penalty under section
6662 shall be imposed “with respect to any portion of an
underpayment if it is shown that there was a reasonable cause for
such portion and that the taxpayer acted in good faith with
respect to such portion.” The determination of whether the
taxpayer acted with reasonable cause and in good faith depends on
the pertinent facts and circumstances, including the taxpayer’s
efforts to assess the taxpayer’s proper tax liability, the
knowledge and experience of the taxpayer, and the reliance on the
advice of a professional, such as an accountant. Sec. 1.6664-
4(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. Reliance on the advice of a
professional, such as an accountant, does not necessarily
demonstrate reasonable cause and good faith unless, under all the
circumstances, such reliance was reasonable and the taxpayer
acted in good faith. Id. In this connection, a taxpayer must
demonstrate that his/her reliance on the advice of a professional
concerning substantive tax law was objectively reasonable.
Goldman v. Commissioner, 39 F.3d 402, 408 (2d Cir. 1994), affg.
T.C. Memo. 1993-480. In the case of claimed reliance on an
accountant who prepared the taxpayer’s tax return, the taxpayer
must establish that correct information was provided to the
accountant and that the item incorrectly omitted, claimed, or
reported in the return was the result of the accountant’s error.
Westbrook v. Commissioner, 68 F.3d 868, 881 (5th Cir. 1995),
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affg. T.C. Memo. 1993-634; Weis v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. 473, 487
(1990); Ma-Tran Corp. v. Commissioner, 70 T.C. 158, 173 (1978).
In their posttrial brief, petitioners claim that Mr.
Fields’s tax preparer, American Express, realized that it had
erred in not deducting as alimony the $500,000 deferred payment
Mr. Fields made in 2000 and therefore advised Mr. Fields to file
an amended return to correct its error, which Mr. Fields did on
December 31, 2002. Petitioners also assert on brief that their
claiming deductions for the deferred payments made in 2001 and
2003 was approved by their return preparers for those years.
Further, petitioners assert, because the Internal Revenue Service
did not challenge the tax treatment of the deferred payments for
2000 and 2001, they had no reason to believe that respondent
might disallow the claimed alimony deduction for 2003.
Although it appears that Mr. Fields had assistance from
accountants in preparing his returns for each of the years in
issue, no evidence was submitted as to what Mr. Fields told the
preparers and what the preparers told him. See Garfield v.
Commissioner, ___ Fed. Appx. ___ (2d Cir., Aug. 18, 2008), affg.
T.C. Memo. 2006-67. There is nothing in the record to
substantiate petitioners’ uncorroborated and first-time
assertions made in their posttrial brief that American
Express admitted error in preparing Mr Fields’s tax return for
2000 filed on October 15, 2001. We have no way of knowing
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whether the filing of the amended 2000 tax return on August 31,
2002, was to correct an “error” made by American Express, as
asserted by petitioners, or resulted from Mr. Fields’s desire to
claim and/or insistence on claiming the benefit of a greater
alimony deduction. Nor do we have any way of knowing what
information the other tax preparers (Coppergate Associates
International and Meridian Services, Ltd.) had in preparing
petitioners’ 2001 and 2003 tax returns. Moreover, the lack of a
previous challenge by respondent of Mr. Fields’s claimed alimony
deductions for the deferred payments made in 2000 and 2001
pursuant to paragraph 15 of the agreement does not show that
petitioners had reasonable cause for the erroneous position taken
for 2003.
On the limited stipulated facts before us, we cannot find
that Mr. Fields, apparently a knowledgeable attorney, had
reasonable cause for, or acted in good faith with respect to,
changing his original position with respect to the
characterization of the $500,000 payment to Karen Fields in 2000
and, adhering to an erroneous position, with respect to the
$525,000 payment in 2003.
Because petitioners have failed to prove that they are
entitled to relief under section 6664(c)(1), we reject their
arguments that they should be relieved of the section 6662
penalty.
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To reflect the foregoing,
Decisions will be entered
for respondent.