*659 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
Respondent determined the following deficiencies in and additions to tax as follows:
Additions to Tax | ||||
Year | Deficiency | § 6651 1*661 | § 6653(a)(1) | § 6653(a)(1)(A) |
1984 | $ 14,509 | $ 1,451 | $ 725 | |
1985 | 70,311 | 7,031 | 3,516 | |
1986 | 35,333 | -0- | $ 1,767 |
Additions to Tax | |||
Year | § 6653(a)(2) | § 6653(a)(1)(B) | § 6661 |
1984 | * | $ 3,627 | |
1985 | 17,578 | ||
1986 | 8,833 |
After concessions regarding 1984, 1985, and 1986, the only issues for decision are: (1) the amount of properly deductible automobile expenses for tax year 1985; (2) the amount of properly deductible travel and entertainment expenses incurred by petitioner on behalf of Pan-Asiatic Marketing International, Inc., for tax year 1985; and (3) whether petitioners are liable for additions to tax under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioners resided in San Jose, California, at the time they filed their petition.
Petitioners filed a joint Federal income tax return for 1985. During 1985 petitioners resided in San Jose, California, on a ranch approximately 25 miles from Mr. Verbica's office. Petitioner 2 is a real estate broker and in 1985 was engaged in the real estate business. *662
Automobiles
Petitioner included three automobiles in computing his automobile expense for 1985: his new 1985 Cadillac, his wife's 1976 Fleetwood Brougham Cadillac, and his father-in-law's 1974 Coupe de Ville Cadillac (which petitioner used when his car was being repaired).
Petitioner deducted the paint and body work performed on his wife's car after petitioner drove the car for a few weeks. Petitioner also deducted the down payment and the monthly car payments on the 1985 Cadillac. Additionally, petitioner deducted the costs of commuting between home and office. During 1985 petitioner did not maintain any contemporaneous log or written record of automobile activities or expenses.
Import-Export Activities
In the latter part of 1984 a Mr. Cordero informed petitioner of possible business opportunities in the Philippines. Eventually, petitioner also met with Mr. Adeva and spoke with Mr. Nituda, the presidential assistant to then President*663 Marcos.
In 1985 petitioner paid for transportation, lodging and meals for Messrs. Nituda, Cordero, and Adeva, a Mr. Lindsay, and petitioner to travel round trip from San Francisco, California, to Washington, D.C., on March 4 through March 7. The purpose of the trip was to meet with Michael Deaver, assistant to then President Reagan, to further the goal of engaging in business in the Philippines.
On June 10, 1985, Pan-Asiatic Marketing International, Inc. (Pan-Asiatic), held an organizational meeting and named Messrs. Lindsay, Verbica, Cordero, and Nituda as four equal shareholders. The corporation was set up to import and export sugar, copra, garments, and other products. Between June 14, 1985, and June 17, 1985, petitioner bought Mr. and Mrs. Nituda $ 5,904.66 worth of gifts including a TV, VCR's, dresses, jewelry and radios. On August 7, 1985, petitioner once again traveled to Washington, D.C., in efforts to facilitate the development of the import-export business.
After Ex-President Marcos left the Philippines, petitioner's corporation unsuccessfully attempted to conduct business with the new president of the Philippines, President Aquino. The corporation remained unsuccessful*664 and eventually became defunct in 1989. The corporation never bought or sold any products whatsoever.
OPINION
Automobile Expenses
The parties stipulated that in 1985 petitioner incurred $ 29,475.05 of automobile expenses, of which $ 15,286.95 represents car payments. Petitioner argues his business use is 85 percent, and the down payment and car payments are immediately deductible in light of the fact that petitioner claimed no depreciation deduction on his automobiles from 1985 through 1989. Petitioner on brief argues that his automobile deduction equals 85 percent of $ 29,475.05.
Respondent argues that the amount of expenses available for an automobile deduction is the $ 29,475.05 total expenses less the $ 15,286.95 car payments, equalling $ 14,188.10. Respondent further argues that petitioner's business use is 25 percent. We agree with respondent that the appropriate automobile deduction is 25 percent of $ 14,188.10.
In
*665 Ordinary and necessary expenses generally are deductible, whether incurred in a trade or business (
We held car payments were not currently deductible capital expenditures when petitioner attempted to deduct the payments on another Cadillac in a previous case before*666 this Court. See
While the Court recognizes that each taxable year stands on its own, we again find that petitioner's percentage of business usage is 25 percent. The 25 percent finding is supported by petitioner's testimony that he conducted his real estate brokerage business the same way in 1985 as he did in 1978. Petitioner offered no evidence, such as a contemporaneous trip log, to corroborate his claim of 85 percent business use in 1985. Petitioner's testimony at trial concerning the business use of automobiles was at times contradictory. Here, just as in 1978, petitioner included the commute between his home and office in calculating his expenses. Petitioner's commute is not deductible.
Travel and Entertainment
Petitioner claimed $ 15,282.55 in travel and entertainment expenses on his 1985 tax return. Pan-Asiatic never reimbursed petitioner for these expenditures. Respondent concedes that $ 517.32 of the expenses is properly deductible. The remaining amount falls into two categories, pre-incorporation and post-incorporation expenses. The pre-incorporation expenses consist of travel and entertainment expenses incurred by petitioner and four business associates relating to a trip from San Francisco, California, to Washington, D.C. The post-incorporation expenses consist of gifts to Mr. Nituda and his wife, and travel and entertainment expenses petitioner incurred on another trip to Washington, D.C. Petitioner is not entitled to deduct any of these*668 expenses.
Generally, the trade or business of a corporation is not also the trade or business of its shareholders, and shareholders do not engage in a trade or business by investing in the stock of a corporation.
The post-incorporation expenses represent expenses incurred by Pan-Asiatic, not petitioner. Accordingly, petitioner may not deduct payments of Pan-Asiatic's expenses from his personal income, because they are not his expenses.
Neither can petitioner deduct the expenses incurred before Pan-Asiatic was incorporated. *669 Petitioner was not engaged in the import-export business during 1985, and thus, he is not entitled to a
Furthermore, petitioner is not entitled to a loss under
Additions to Tax
For 1985
Petitioner is liable for additions to tax under
To reflect the foregoing, and concessions made by the parties,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Footnotes
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code as amended and in effect for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
*. 50 percent of the interest payable under sec. 6601 with respect to the portion of the underpayment attributable to negligence.↩
2. All future references to petitioner refer to Mr. Verbica.↩
3. Petitioner at trial and in his brief proffers a blanket assertion with no corroboration that he placed the 1985 joint return in the U.S. mail on April 15, 1986. The mere assertion of timely mailing coupled with nothing more is not enough to persuade this Court that justice requires us to disregard the binding effect of the stipulation. See
sec. 301.6651-1(c)↩ , Proced. & Admin. Regs. See also Rule 143(b).