RICHARD R. ALLEN, SR., a resident of Fayetteville, NC, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, acting by and through the Internal Revenue, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 98-1401
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided: April 20, 1999
PUBLISHED. Argued: October 27, 1998. Before WILKINSON, Chief Judge, and ERVIN and WILKINS, Circuit Judges.
Reversed by published opinion. Judge Ervin wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge Wilkinson and Judge Wilkins joined.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Charles Bricken, Tax Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
OPINION
ERVIN, Circuit Judge:
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and taxpayer Allen dispute whether
As the expert agency charged with administering the Internal Revenue Code, the Treasury may promulgate reasonable regulations for the purpose of implementing ambiguous Code provisions. We find without doubt that
I.
With the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Congress largely eliminated the deduction for personal interest under the U.S. Tax Code. Pursuant to a provision of this Act,
The Treasury has issued regulations implementing
In 1995 the IRS denied Taxpayer Allen a deduction for his payment of income tax deficiency interest. Allen subsequently filed a tax refund suit in district court. The district court ruled that the language of
II.
The facts of this case are essentially uncontested. Allen is a real estate developer; he is also the director and majority shareholder of D.R. Allen & Son, Inc. (the “Company“), a North Carolina corporation in the business of general contracting. In August of 1983 the Company found itself in need of additional working capital, which it sought to borrow from First Union Bank. In his personal capacity as the owner of valuable real estate, Allen agreed to transfer certain of his properties to the Company, to provide an injection of equity and to serve as collateral for the First Union loan.
The two transfers at issue occurred in 1984. The first involved a partnership, Clarendon House, that held among its assets a tract of land upon which apartments were subsequently built. On January 1, 1984, Allen transferred his interest in the Clarendon House partnership to the Company. The Company sold the Clarendon House tract in May of 1984.
Allen petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination of the deficiency. While the Tax Court proceeding was pending, Allen paid the government $1,000,000 toward his potential 1984 income tax liability, directing that $500,000 of this sum should be applied to interest on his as-yet undetermined deficiency. In 1993 the parties settled the Tax Court case, with Allen agreeing to an increase in his 1984 income tax liability of $541,882. The following year Allen filed an amended 1992 return and claimed a refund of $159,650 in 1992 income tax, based on a deduction from his 1992 income of the $500,000 paid to the IRS as interest on his 1984 deficiency.
In January of 1995 the IRS disallowed Allen‘s refund claim, noting in a letter of explanation that income tax deficiency interest is considered nondeductible personal interest pursuant to
Following a bench trial the district court ruled in Allen‘s favor. The court concluded that
Having invalidated
III.
The validity of
We begin our own inquiry by asking whether the statute is facially ambiguous. Ordinarily we give great deference to the Commissioner‘s interpretation of ambiguous Code provisions; thus when a statute is ambiguous we must uphold any
This is not such an occasion. As enacted,
States Tax Court, which could not agree upon a single reading of the statute. See Redlark, 106 T.C. at 31.
Taxpayer Allen persuaded the district court that
We decline to adopt the view that the Standing line controls the meaning of
The holding of Standing must be limited to the calculation of adjusted gross income; the holdings of Polk and Reise to the calculation of net operating loss. We shall not attempt to distill from these three cases more comprehensive decision rules for interest allocation. As Judge Halpern of the Tax Court concluded in his Redlark dissent, to do so would be to allow a small tail to wag a very large dog. See Redlark, 106 T.C. at 73.
The 1986 Tax Reform Act fundamentally altered the tax character of personal interest, creating the presumption that such interest is non-
deductible. This sweeping change in the tax law casts doubt upon the contemporary relevance of the Standing cases.3 Additionally, after the Treasury promulgated
IV.
Because we find that
Pursuant to these allocation rules, deficiency interest is allocable to the payment of income taxes, an expenditure that is purely personal in nature. Income taxes are a personal expenditure because an individual‘s income tax obligation arises from all sources of income, not merely business income, and because the payment of income taxes is regarded, in an economic sense, as personal consumption, not as a cost of earning income.4 It follows, therefore, that individual income tax deficiency interest is not “properly allocable” to a trade or business. In plain English, interest on an unpaid income tax debt is never a cost of doing business, because no taxpayer may claim that he or she is in the business of not paying taxes.
We find
The General Explanation of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 more directly contradicts the position of taxpayer Allen. This document, created after the enactment of the statute it explains, provides in pertinent part: “[p]ersonal interest also includes interest on underpayments of individual Federal, State, or local income taxes notwithstanding that all or a portion of the income may have arisen in a trade or
We recognize that the General Explanation is not controlling authority, but, in the absence of any clearer statement of legislative intent, this explanation of the statute, prepared by the joint committee staff, may nonetheless shed some light on the matter. The definition of “personal interest” in the General Explanation explicitly includes deficiency interest; this interpretation of the statute supports the position that the Treasury has taken in
Lastly, Allen reminds this Court that the Treasury‘s interpretation of
V.
REVERSED
