T.C. Memo. 2016-85
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
ANGELA A. TERRELL, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 21136-14. Filed May 2, 2016.
Angela A. Terrell, pro se.
William J. Gregg, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
LAUBER, Judge: The Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) deter-
mined a deficiency in petitioner’s 2011 Federal income tax of $5,202 and an ac-
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[*2] curacy-related penalty of $1,340 pursuant to section 6662(a).1 After conces-
sions,2 the sole issue for decision is whether petitioner is entitled to an education
credit for 2011. We hold that she is.
FINDINGS OF FACT
During 2011 petitioner was enrolled as a full-time student at Hampton
University in Hampton, Virginia. Sometime during fall 2010 she registered for
courses for the upcoming spring 2011 semester. On November 23, 2010, the
university billed to her account tuition of $2,460 on the basis of her preliminary
selection of spring 2011 semester courses. On January 10, 2011, the university
billed to her account additional tuition of $1,230 on the basis of her final course
selections for that semester.
1
All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect
during the year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of
Practice and Procedure. All dollar amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.
2
Petitioner conceded that she omitted from her 2011 return $1,273 of can-
cellation of indebtedness income and $16,746 of taxable wages related to a sign-
ing bonus she received. Petitioner did not challenge, in her petition or at trial, the
accuracy-related penalty for a substantial understatement of income tax. If the
Rule 155 computations confirm a substantial understatement, we deem petitioner
to have conceded that she is liable for a section 6662(a) penalty in an amount to be
determined. See Rule 34(b)(4) (concession by failing to assign error); Leahy v.
Commissioner, 87 T.C. 56, 73-74 (1986) (concession by failing to argue).
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[*3] Petitioner financed her education largely with student loans. Although the
university billed tuition charges to her account as set forth in the previous para-
graph, her student loans were not disbursed until January 20, 2011, after the period
for students to add or drop courses had ended and after course schedules were
finalized. Loan proceeds of $10,199 were disbursed directly to the university,
which credited petitioner’s account with that sum. Loan proceeds in excess of
tuition and related fees were refunded to petitioner, who used the excess to pay her
living expenses during the spring 2011 semester.
The university filed with the IRS and sent to petitioner a Form 1098-T,
Tuition Statement, for 2011. This Form had no entry in box 1, captioned “Pay-
ments received for qualified tuition and related expenses.” It showed an entry of
$1,180 in box 2, captioned “Amounts billed for qualified tuition and related ex-
penses.” This sum corresponds to the tuition of $1,230 billed to petitioner’s ac-
count on January 10, 2011, plus mandatory fees of $50, minus a tuition credit of
$100 ($1,230 + $50 ! $100 = $1,180).
Petitioner, a cash basis taxpayer, timely filed Form 1040, U.S. Individual
Income Tax Return, for 2011. On this return she claimed an American Opportu-
nity Credit of $2,500. She claimed $1,500 of this credit on line 48 as an education
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[*4] credit against the regular tax. She claimed the $1,000 balance on line 66 as a
refundable credit and thus as a “payment.”
On June 2, 2014, the IRS sent petitioner a timely notice of deficiency, which
took the form of a Notice CP3219A. This notice disallowed petitioner’s claimed
education credit in its entirety, stating: “Your eligible educational institution did
not verify the amount claimed on your tax return, in box 1 of Form 1098-T, Tui-
tion Statement. Please provide a signed explanation of the amounts paid to sup-
port the amount(s) claimed.” The notice stated no other basis for disallowing the
claimed education credit. Petitioner, a resident of Virginia, filed a timely petition
for redetermination in this Court.
OPINION
A. Burden of Proof
The Commissioner’s determinations in a notice of deficiency are generally
presumed correct. Rule 142(a); Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111, 115 (1933).
The taxpayer must establish her entitlement to credits allowed by the Code and
substantiate the amounts of claimed credits. LaPoint v. Commissioner, 94 T.C.
733 (1990); sec. 1.6001-1(a), Income Tax Regs. Because we decide this case on
the preponderance of the evidence, we need not decide which party has the burden
of proof. See Knudsen v. Commissioner, 131 T.C. 185, 189 (2008).
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[*5] B. Education Credits
The Code allows a variety of education credits, including the American Op-
portunity Credit, a modified version of the Hope Scholarship Credit that was in
effect for tax year 2011. See sec. 25A(i). The American Opportunity Credit pro-
vides for a credit against tax equal to “100 percent of so much of the qualified tui-
tion and related expenses paid by the taxpayer during the taxable year * * * as
does not exceed $2,000,” plus “25 percent of such expenses so paid as exceeds
$2,000 but does not exceed $4,000.” Id. para. (1). The maximum amount of the
credit is thus $2,500 per year. Up to 40% of the credit is made refundable, for a
maximum refundable credit of $1,000. See id. para. (6).3
A taxpayer may claim a credit for qualified tuition and related expenses de-
frayed with proceeds of a student loan, even if those proceeds are paid by the lend-
er directly to the educational institution on the student’s behalf. See sec. 1.25A-
5(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. Loan proceeds disbursed directly to an educational
3
The American Opportunity Credit phases out for single taxpayers whose
modified adjusted gross income exceeds $80,000. Sec. 25A(i)(4). Respondent
does not dispute that petitioner’s gross income was below this threshold, taking
into account the omitted income that she has conceded. In the notice of defici-
ency, during trial, and in his post-trial brief, respondent’s sole dispute regarding
petitioner’s eligibility for the American Opportunity Credit concerned the amount
of qualified tuition that she paid during 2011. We accordingly deem respondent to
have conceded that petitioner met all other requirements for claiming this credit.
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[*6] institution are treated as being paid by the student on the date the institution
credits the proceeds to the student’s account. Id. para. (e)(3).
At trial we received into evidence an account statement from Hampton
University, on official letterhead, showing an itemized schedule of petitioner’s
tuition charges for the spring 2011 semester. This schedule shows a tuition charge
of $2,460 on November 23, 2010, another tuition charge of $1,230 on January 10,
2011, a $50 degree fee on January 25, 2011, and a $100 tuition credit on February
9, 2011, for total net tuition and related charges of $3,640 for the spring 2011
semester. The schedule further shows that student loan proceeds of $10,199 were
disbursed on January 20, 2011, resulting in a credit to petitioner’s account in that
amount on that date.
Although the university charged a portion of petitioner’s spring 2011
semester tuition to her account in November 2010, the loan proceeds that she used
to pay those tuition charges were not disbursed and credited to her account until
2011. She is therefore treated as having paid those expenses in 2011. Since she is
a cash basis taxpayer, this was the proper year for which to claim a credit for the
tuition that she paid in 2011. Sec. 1.25A-5(e)(3), Income Tax Regs.4
4
Generally an education tax credit is allowed only for payments of qualified
tuition and related expenses for an academic period beginning in the same taxable
(continued...)
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[*7] Contrary to respondent’s assertion, the Form 1098-T supplied by the univer-
sity does not point to a different conclusion. The only dollar amount appearing on
that form, $1,180, is in the box that shows the “amounts billed” for tuition during
calendar year 2011. The amount billed to petitioner during 2011 does not control
the size of her credit; the relevant number is the qualified tuition that she actually
paid during 2011. The Form 1098-T has no entry in box 1, which was supposed to
show “payments received” for qualified tuition. As petitioner remarked good-
naturedly at trial: “My school kind of dropped the ball a little bit where they’re
supposed to verify the amount” of tuition paid during 2011. The evidence at trial
has filled that gap.
On the basis of the credible documentation before us, we find that petitioner
paid $3,640 in qualified tuition and related expenses in 2011. Respondent thus
erred in completely disallowing her claimed education credit of $2,500. We con-
4
(...continued)
year that the payment is made. Sec. 1.25A-5(e)(1), Income Tax Regs. If a taxpay-
er prepays qualified tuition for an academic period that begins during the first
three months of the taxpayer’s next taxable year, the education tax credit is al-
lowed for the year the payment is made. Sec. 25A(g)(4); sec. 1.25A-5(e)(2),
Income Tax Regs. As discussed in the text, petitioner paid her tuition in 2011
when her loan was disbursed; the prepayment rule thus has no relevance here.
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[*8] clude that petitioner is entitled to an American Opportunity Credit
corresponding to the amount of tuition and qualified expenses that she paid
during 2011.5
In light of the foregoing,
Decision will be entered under
Rule 155.
5
Although petitioner claimed an American Opportunity Credit in the maxi-
mum amount of $2,500, it would appear that she is entitled to a credit of only
$2,410, that is, $2,000 plus 25% of the $1,640 balance of the tuition and related
charges that she paid. We leave this for the parties to confirm in the Rule 155
computations.