423 So. 2d 859 | Ala. Civ. App. | 1982
This is an income tax case.
The Circuit Court of Montgomery County, after an ore tenus hearing, found that the taxpayer should have included as income in his 1976 state income tax return the gain from the sale of certain property. Additionally, the circuit court found that the statutory penalty assessed against the taxpayer by the State Department of Revenue was not justified.
The taxpayer appeals from the first finding and the state cross-appeals as to the penalty. We affirm.1
The record viewed with the attendant presumptions reveals the following facts.
In May of 1976, the taxpayer and his wife purchased 100 acres of land from Mrs. Elsie Estes for $7,146.41. On August 26, 1976, the taxpayer and his wife sold twenty acres of this land using their son as a conduit to Ms. Lee Stephens for $8,100. *861
In November of 1976, the taxpayer and his wife were sued by Mrs. Estes, who charged the taxpayer, Odis Best, with fraud and misrepresentation in the initial sale of the 100 acres of land. In February of 1977, the taxpayer bought back the twenty acres of land from Ms. Stephens for $10,150.
On April 10, 1977, the taxpayer and his wife filed a joint 1976 Alabama income tax return which did not include the gain received from the sale of the twenty acres in 1976.
In December, 1979, the State Department of Revenue began an investigation and audit of the taxpayer and his wife. At the completion of the audit in April, 1981, the Revenue Department entered its final assessment against the taxpayer and his wife. In pertinent part, that assessment found the taxpayer and his wife had not reported the aforesaid gain on the 1976 sale of twenty acres. The Revenue Department also claimed a penalty for a false or fraudulent return. The taxpayer and his wife appealed to the Montgomery Circuit Court which entered an order finding the gain should have been included but that no penalty was justified.
The Alabama Code requires that all income should be included in a taxpayer's gross income in the year it is received, although losses may later occur against such income. Ala. Code §§
The repurchase of the twenty acres in 1977 and its effect on the transaction did not change the taxpayer's legal duty to report the gain he received on the sale of the twenty acres in 1976.
Furthermore, the "claim of right doctrine," which the Revenue Department relies on in part, holds that "[i]f a taxpayer receives earnings under a claim of right and without restriction as to its disposition, he has received income which he is required to [report], even though it may still be claimed he is not entitled to retain the money, and even though he may still be adjudged liable to restore its equivalent." NorthAmerican Oil Consolidated v. Burnet,
The taxpayer, through able counsel, contends he falls within an exception to "the claim of right doctrine" which provides the rule does not apply "when in the year of receipt a taxpayer recognizes his liability under an existing and fixed obligation to repay the amount received and makes provision for such repayment." Hope v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra, at 741.
However, such a claim by the taxpayer is not supported by the evidence. Although the taxpayer testified he made an agreement with Ms. Stephens in 1976 to repurchase the land, both Ms. Stephens and her attorney testified in depositions that no such understanding was reached, nor discussed, in 1976.
Where there are unreconcilable conflicts in the evidence, the function of believing one party and disbelieving the other is for the trier of facts. Haas v. Madison County Board ofEducation,
Therefore, the trial court's finding that the taxpayer "should have included as income" the gain from the sale of property is affirmed, as clearly such a finding is supported by the evidence.
The relevant statute provides for a penalty against "any person . . . rendering a willfully false or fraudulent list or return . . . and in the case of a willfully false or fraudulent return or list. . . ." Ala. Code §
In this instance, whether the taxpayer filed a "willfully false or fraudulent return" within the provision of §
If there is evidence to support the trial court's finding, such finding must be affirmed. Jansen v. Fair Harbor Marina,Inc.,
There was evidence before the trial court and legal theories presented to the trial court that would support a finding that the taxpayer's action were not "willfully false or fraudulent," to wit, as in Pollock, the taxpayer had a "right to have a disputed question judicially determined without the assessment of a penalty." State v. Pollock, supra,
We therefore affirm.
We also note that the taxpayer contends the trial court abused its discretion in assessing costs against him since he prevailed on two of the issues before the trial court.
Rule 54 (d), A.R.Civ.P., leaves the taxing of costs within the sound discretion of the trial judge. Bukley v. Carroll,
"While it is true that costs are generally taxed as a matter of course to the losing party, rule 54 (d) gives the judge the authority to allocate them otherwise." Ex parte Osborn,
We find no abuse of discretion in the taxing of costs against the taxpayer in this case, and affirm.
The actions of the trial court in this case are due to be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
WRIGHT, P.J., and BRADLEY, J., concur.