*25 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
P, an independent contractor, commenced a lawsuit against
D, alleging that D was liable to P for breach of contract and
conversion arising out of P's work for D. As to the conversion
claim, the jury awarded P actual and punitive damages, together
with interest and costs. P received the award in 1992, and, from
this amount, P paid his attorneys their fees and the court costs
(collectively, legal costs). P deducted the legal costs on his
1992 Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business, reporting that
the costs arose out of his sole-proprietor business, and he
reported the actual damages on that schedule as income from the
business. P did not include the punitive damages in his 1992
gross income. R determined that the legal costs were deductible
as a nonbusiness itemized deduction on Schedule A, Itemized
Deductions, and that the punitive damages were reportable as
nonbusiness income. R concedes that the legal costs are a
business expense to the extent they are attributable to P's
recovery of the actual damages. R asserts that the remaining
legal costs are a nonbusiness*26 itemized deduction because they
are attributable to P's recovery of the punitive damages. P and
R agree that the punitive damages are includable in P's business
income if the legal costs are a business expense.
HELD: All of the legal costs are attributable to P's trade
or business; hence, the legal costs are all deductible on
Schedule C as a business expense.
*28 *325 OPINION
LARO, JUDGE: This case is before the Court fully stipulated. See Rule 122. George W. Guill petitioned the Court to redetermine deficiencies of $ 100,916 and $ 434 in his 1992 and 1993 Federal income tax, respectively. Following the parties' concessions, the primary issue left to decide is whether *326 all of the attorney's fees and court costs (collectively, legal costs) paid by petitioner in the successful prosecution of his claim of conversion are expenses of his sole-proprietor business; petitioner was awarded actual damages, punitive damages, costs, and interest. We hold they are. Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for 1992. Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Dollar amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.
BACKGROUND
All facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and exhibits submitted therewith are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioner resided in Columbia, South Carolina, when he petitioned the Court.
Petitioner began working as an agent for Academy Life Insurance Co. (Academy) in the late 1970's. He worked for it as an independent contractor under a contract between the two. *29 Academy fired him in July 1986. When it did, it was contractually obligated to pay him renewal commissions on policies that he or an agent under his supervision had sold. After his firing, Academy remitted to him reduced monthly commissions. It also stopped sending to him the paperwork documenting his commissions.
In September 1987, petitioner sued Academy for breach of contract and conversion, praying in his complaint for an award of actual and punitive damages. Petitioner alleged that Academy was liable to him for: (1) An unlawful termination of contracts with resulting failure to pay money due thereunder (breach of contract and conversion), (2) unfair trade practices (also seeking treble damages and attorney's fees), (3) a termination of resident counselor status, (4) a failure to pay commissions, and (5) the fraudulent filing of Federal tax forms reporting income not paid to him. Following a jury trial, the U. S. District Court hearing the case directed a verdict against Academy for breach of contract and sent the issues of conversion and resulting damages to the jury. The judge instructed the jury as follows with respect to punitive damages:
The plaintiffs [petitioner*30 and the male taxpayer in Whitley
v.
damages in their conversion cause of action.
*327 The law permits the jury, under certain circumstances, to
award punitive damages in order to punish a wrong-doer for some
extraordinary misconduct, and to serve as a warning not to
engage in such conduct in the future.
Thus, if you find that the plaintiffs have shown by a
preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant converted the
plaintiffs' money with malice, ill will, a conscious
indifference to the rights of others, or a reckless disregard
for the rights of others, you may award the plaintiffs punitive
damages.
If you so find, it becomes your right to award punitive
damages in such an amount as you unanimously agree to be proper
in light of the character of the wrong committed, the punishment
which should be applied, and the ability of the defendant to
pay.
The jury found against Academy on the conversion claim and awarded petitioner $ 51,499 in actual damages for unpaid commissions and $ 250,000 in punitive*31 damages, together with "interest thereon at the rate of 8.85 per cent and his costs of action". The jury's verdict was affirmed upon appeal.
Academy paid $ 371,542 to petitioner in 1992, and, from that amount, he paid his attorneys the legal costs, which consisted of $ 148,617 in attorney's fees and $ 3,279 in court costs. Petitioner included the actual damages in income on his Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business, and he claimed on that schedule a deduction for the legal costs. Petitioner did not report any of the punitive damages on his 1992 Federal income tax return.
Respondent issued petitioner a notice of deficiency that reflects respondent's determination that the $ 250,000 in punitive damages is includable in petitioner's 1992 gross income as "Other Income" and that he must deduct the legal costs on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, as a miscellaneous deduction. Respondent's determination as to the punitive damages and the legal costs resulted in certain other "mechanical" adjustments, one of which was the applicability of the alternative minimum tax.
DISCUSSION
In a case of first impression, we must decide whether the litigation costs attributable to an independent contractor's*32 recovery of punitive damages are deductible on Schedule C as a business expense or on Schedule A as a nonbusiness *328 itemized deduction. 1 Petitioner also contests respondent's determination that petitioner did not receive the punitive damages on account of a personal injury. We recently held that the punitive damages received by Mr. Whitley, petitioner's coplaintiff in the Academy lawsuit, were includable in Mr. Whitley's gross income. See
*33 As to the primary issue,
A deduction of litigation costs under
Whether an ordinary and necessary litigation expense is deductible under
The ascertainment of a claim's origin and character is a factual determination that must be made on the basis of the facts and circumstances of the litigation. See
Petitioner's legal costs, which the parties agree are "ordinary" and "necessary" expenses, bear the required nexus to his sole-proprietor insurance business to meet the requirements for deductibility under
Respondent devotes much time in his opening brief to his proffered method of apportioning petitioner's legal costs between his business and nonbusiness activities, spending little*37 time arguing that apportionment of the legal costs is appropriate. As we understand respondent's argument on apportionment, petitioner must apportion his legal costs because, respondent asserts, petitioner has not proven that he incurred 100 percent of the costs in his insurance business. We disagree. After reviewing the record, which includes 19 stipulations and 9 exhibits, we are persuaded by more than a preponderance of the evidence that all of petitioner's legal costs were attributable to his insurance business and, more importantly, that all of the costs were connected to claims which arose in that business. Petitioner's complaint, for example, attests to the fact that each of his claims, and not simply his claim of conversion, arose from the sole-proprietor insurance business.
We consider it both ordinary and necessary from a business standpoint for petitioner to have filed the lawsuit against Academy and for him to have sought any and all damages to which he was entitled on account of Academy's breach of contract and related conversion. The mere fact that petitioner sought and was paid punitive damages to punish Academy for its "extraordinary misconduct, and to serve as a warning*38 [to it and to other persons] not to engage in such conduct in the future" does not change the fact that petitioner's legal costs were all attributable to his business activity. Pursuant to South Carolina law, see
*40 We recognize that, when appropriate, litigation costs must be apportioned between business and personal claims, and that business litigation costs are nondeductible to the extent that they constitute capital expenditures. See, e.g.,
We hold that petitioner may deduct the legal costs under
*42 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Footnotes
1. Respondent concedes that the punitive damages attributable to the actual damages are deductible on Schedule C as a business expense.↩
2. We recognize that South Carolina law does not provide that punitive damages are awarded in every case in which a tortfeasor is held liable for an act of conversion. See
Sherrill White Constr., Inc. v. South Carolina Natl. Bank, 713 F.2d 1047">713 F.2d 1047 , 1051-1052↩ (4th Cir. 1983) ("in order to recover punitive damages [under South Carolina law] there must be more than mere conversion. There must be malice, ill will, a conscious indifference to the rights of others, or a reckless disregard thereof."; citations and quotation marks omitted). The fact that the converter's degree of culpability enters into an award of punitive damages under South Carolina law, however, does not change the fact that the origin and character of a claim for punitive damage under that law is an act of conversion, which, in this case, stems from petitioner's business activity.3. The parties agree that our holding on this issue means that the punitive damage award is includable in petitioner's self- employment income and that it is subject to self-employment tax. See secs. 1401 and 1402.↩