On May 14, 2004, Timothy J. Burke received a notice of deficiency from the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) stating that Burke owed taxes on his distributive share of his partnership’s income for 1998. Burke petitioned the tax court for a rede-termination of his tax liability, arguing that he was not liable for tax on his 1998 distributive share because the partnership’s receipts were placed in escrow. The tax court rejected Burke’s argument and granted the IRS’s motion for summary judgment. Burke appeals the tax court’s ruling. After careful consideration, we affirm.
I. Background
On October 13, 1993, Burke formed a partnership with Jeffrey Cohen named “Cohen & Burke,” agreeing to split the proceeds of the enterprise evenly after allocating a ten percent origination fee to the partner who generated new business. In 1998, a dispute arose between the two partners when Cohen allegedly refused to comply with a superseding partnership agreement that linked the distribution of the partnership’s proceeds more tightly to each partner’s individual efforts 1 and stole money received by the partnership. As a result of the dispute, Burke filed suit against Cohen in Massachusetts state court on October 4, 1999, alleging breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, deceit, and conversion, and requesting an *173 accounting. Cohen and Burke agreed to keep the partnership receipts in an escrow account pending the outcome of the litigation.
Meanwhile, Cohen filed the partnership tax return for 1998 reporting $242,000 in ordinary income, with $121,000 as each partner’s distributive share. 2 Burke reported zero as his distributive share of partnership income and filed a notice of inconsistent determination stating that Cohen’s partnership tax filing was factually and legally inaccurate.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued Burke a notice of deficiency alleging that Burke had improperly failed to report his distributive share of partnership income on his individual return. Burke timely petitioned the tax court for redeter-mination of the deficiency, claiming that his distribution of partnership income from 1998 should not have been taxed that year because the money was being held in escrow and he therefore did not have access to it. The IRS filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that, as a matter of law, a partner’s distribution of partnership income was taxable in the year the partnership received the income, regardless of whether the partner actually received the distribution. Burke filed an opposition to the IRS’s motion for summary judgment claiming that there were material facts in dispute precluding summary judgment in favor of the IRS and moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of whether he was required to report his distributive share of the 1998 partnership income. The tax court granted summary judgment in favor of the IRS, holding that Burke was required to include his distributive share of partnership income for the 1998 taxable year even though he had not yet received that distribution.
II. Discussion
We review the award of summary judgment
de novo. State Police Ass’n v. Comm’r,
A. Burke’s 1998 Taxable Income
Section 701 of the Internal Revenue code provides that “[a] partnership as such shall not be subject to the income tax imposed by this chapter. Persons carrying on business as partners shall be liable for income tax only in their separate or individual capacities.” 26 U.S.C. § 701. Section 703(a) provides that “[t]he taxable income of a partnership shall be computed in the same manner as in the case of an individual.” Id. § 703(a).
Burke argues that his distribution of partnership income for 1998 should not have been taxed that year because that income was (and remains) “frozen” in an escrow account, such that neither he, nor his partner, has access to the income. In support of his argument, Burke cites several cases (none of which deal with partnership or partner taxation) that hold that an individual taxpayer must only include income to which he has a claim of right.
See, e.g., N. Am. Oil Consol. v. Burnet,
Citing § 703’s language that “[t]he taxable income of a partnership shall be com *174 puted in the same manner as in the case of an individual,” Burke contends that under these cases, the partnership did not earn taxable income in 1998 because “the restriction of funds ... defers the recognition of income at the partnership level, as it does for individuals, until the restriction is removed.”
But § 703 does not help Burke. A self-imposed restriction on the availability of income cannot legally defer recognition of that income.
See Reed v. Comm’r,
It is well settled that partners’ distributions are taxed in the year the partnership receives its earnings, regardless of whether the partners actually receive their share of partnership earnings: “Few principles of partnership taxation are more firmly established than that no matter the reason for nondistribution each partner must pay taxes on his distributive share.”
United States v. Basye,
B. Facts in Dispute
Burke also argues that the tax court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the IRS because there were facts in dispute which may affect the outcome of the lawsuit. He claims that the court incorrectly assumed Burke’s taxable income for 1998 was “approximately $151,000,” when, in fact, that number was disputed on the ground that it included, money that Cohen had stolen from the partnership.
The IRS states (and the tax court found) that the IRS used Burke’s own calculation of the partnership’s gross receipts for 1998, subtracting from that number Burke’s calculations of the allegedly stolen funds, in arriving at Burke’s taxable income for 1998. This assertion is supported by the record and Burke does not directly contest it. Instead, he asserts— without citing to the IRS’s calculations— that Cohen’s tax filings were inaccurate because he had included the allegedly stolen partnership income in the calculation of the partnership’s gross receipts. Perhaps there would have been a genuine issue of material fact if, in fact, the IRS had used Cohen’s tax filings to arrive at the $151,000 figure for 1998 taxable income to Burke, but the IRS did not. The IRS used Burke’s calculations of partnership income. Accordingly, the facts to which Burke refers are not actually in dispute.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the tax court’s order and opinion.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Burke alleges that on January 1, 1996, Burke and Cohen entered into an oral partnership agreement (the "partnership agreement”), pursuant to which the partnership’s income was to be allocated as follows: (1) A guaranteed payment of 10 percent of the gross profits from the tax return preparation business would be paid to the originating partner; (2) 100 percent of the gross profits from legal services attributable to each originating partner was allocated to that partner; (3) the remaining net profits were allocated equally to each partner; and (4) with respect to work referred from one partner to the other, a referral fee of 33 percent of gross profits from the referred work would be paid to the referring partner. Burke prepared and filed the partnership returns for 1996 and 1997 in accordance with the partnership agreement.
. Cohen's position in the state court litigation was that the partnership agreement was not valid and that each partner was entitled to fifty percent of the partnership’s profits. On October 16, 2002, the jury found for Burke "with regard to the partnership between January 1, 1996 through December 31, 1998”; i.e., that the income of tire partnership should be allocated according to the partnership agreement.
. Under 26 U.S.C. § 7701(a)(2), the term "partnership” includes a "joint venture ..., through or by means of which any business, financial operation, or venture is carried on, and which is not, within the meaning of this title, a trust or estate or a corporation; and the term ‘partner’ includes a member in such a ... joint venture.”
