2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49 | Tax Ct. | 2010
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
COHEN,
After concessions, the issues for decision are whether petitioners are entitled to reduce rental income and capital gains by amounts not conceded by respondent; whether petitioner Esther K. Chow was a professional gambler, entitling her to deduct fully her gambling losses against gambling income on Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business, as business losses or whether those losses are deductible only on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, as itemized deductions; whether 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*50 petitioners are liable for additions to tax under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulated facts are incorporated in our findings by this reference. Petitioners resided in San Gabriel, California, at the time that they filed their petition.
Petitioner John F. Chow (Dr. Chow) is a retired physician. Petitioner Esther K. Chow (petitioner) studied as a medical laboratory technician. From 1974 through 1994,! petitioners operated a medical practice. They built a medical office and pharmacy on property on Del Mar Avenue in Rosemead, California. In 2004 and 2005, petitioners' income consisted of rental income, gains from sales of real property, and Social Security benefits.
Petitioners' rental property included residential property on Lilac Place in Los Angeles and, before its sale in 2005, the Del Mar Avenue property. They incurred various expenses, including legal expenses, relating to the rental property. During 2005, they incurred expenses of $ 25 paid to the Department 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*51 of Water and Power and $ 70.20 paid to the Department of Building and Safety with respect to the Lilac Place property.
The Del Mar Avenue property was sold in 2005 for $ 970,000. At that time, petitioners paid $ 51,760 to secure release of a lien recorded against the property by their former attorney, Kenneth Hopp. Hopp had represented petitioners in relation to a civil rights action against San Bernardino County, California. The lien was filed after Hopp secured a judgment against petitioners.
Also at the time the Del Mar Avenue property was sold, petitioners paid $ 25,000 to Dr. Chow's sister and her husband in repayment of a loan.
About 1987, petitioner began gambling. After Dr. Chow underwent surgery in 2003, petitioner began playing slot machines extensively and exclusively at the Morongo Casino in Cabazon, California. She gambled on 124 days in 2004 and 176 days in 2005.
In 2004, petitioner won 15 jackpots of $ 2,000 or more, and in 2005 she won 98 jackpots of $ 2,000 or more. In 2005, she won two $ 10,000 jackpots; two $ 15,000 jackpots; and single jackpots of $ 13,500, $ 13,530, $ 18,750, $ 19,200, $ 25,000, and $ 32,000. In all, she had gambling winnings of $ 283,072 and gambling 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*52 losses of $ 339,832 in 2004. She had gambling winnings of $ 1,079,292 and gambling losses of $ 1,232,005 in 2005. If the winnings and losses are calculated on a net basis for each slot machine session in which she played over a period of time and did not take! more than a 3-hour break, she had total gambling income of $ 36,216 and losses of $ 93,862 in 2004 and income of $ 231,836 and losses of $ 383,507 in 2005.
Petitioners did not use a professional preparer to prepare their Federal income tax returns. The first Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for 2004 received by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) was signed on October 31, 2006, and received on November 1, 2006. It was labeled "Amended Return" but was not on a Form 1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, prescribed for amended returns. On that return, petitioners deducted on Schedule A $ 60,350 as gambling losses, which they included in the amount of itemized deductions used to offset their adjusted gross income. They reported no taxable income and no tax due. Copies of 31 Forms W-2G, Certain Gambling Winnings, were attached to the return.
On January 22, 2007, petitioners signed and sent to the IRS a Form 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*53 1040X for 2004. They again included $ 60,350 as gambling losses on Schedule A and deducted them against adjusted gross income. They reported no taxable income and no tax due.
On February 5, 2007, petitioners signed and sent to the IRS another Form 1040X for 2004. On this Form 1040X, petitioner was identified as a "professional gambler since 1987". On a Schedule C, petitioners reported gambling income of $ 60,360 (the amounts shown on the attached copies of Forms W-2G) and deducted "cash capital used" of $ 88,650, showing a Schedule C loss of $ 28,540. Although the manner of computation is unclear from this Form 1040X, the reported adjusted gross income was reduced by amounts that included the claimed gambling losses. Petitioners reported no taxable income and no tax due.
Petitioners' Form 1040 for 2005 was signed by petitioners and sent to the IRS on April 17, 2006. Both petitioners were shown as "retired". On that return, they reported a $ 607,133 gain from sale of the Del Mar Avenue property. They deducted from adjusted gross income $ 334,217.90 as gambling losses based on a detailed! "Gambling Statement For 2005" attached to the return, but they did not include a Schedule C. Among 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*54 the deductions claimed on Schedule A as miscellaneous deductions were "loans reimbursements ($ 25,000 + $ 53,000)" totaling $ 78,000. Again petitioners reported no taxable income and no tax due.
On August 28, 2006, petitioners signed and sent to the IRS a Form 1040 marked "Amended Return 2005". Their occupations were shown as "retired". On Schedule A, petitioners claimed as miscellaneous deductions "GAMBLING LOSSES: Capital used: $ 1,054,170 WG forms: $ 710,543" and included $ 710,543 in the total itemized deductions claimed. They also deducted $ 710,543 from adjusted gross income on the first page of the Form 1040 and reported no taxable income and no tax due.
On February 5, 2007, petitioners signed and sent to the IRS a Form 1040X for 2005. On this Form 1040X, petitioner was shown as a "professional gambler since 1987 to present". A Schedule C was attached and reported a loss of $ 347,591, which was claimed to reduce adjusted gross income. Petitioners reported $ 35,764 as taxable income and $ 4,636 tax due.
Sometime before the Forms 1040X were submitted to the IRS in February 2007, petitioner met with an IRS representative concerning the proper method of reporting petitioners' income 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*55 and losses. The use of Schedule C was commenced after discussions with the IRS representative. Sometime before August 3, 2008, (the date of the statutory notice), petitioners' returns were examined by the IRS. During the course of the examination, bank records, including canceled checks, were delivered to the examining agent. The records were subsequently misplaced and were not available by the time of trial in July 2009.
OPINION
Unfortunately, the parties have expended much effort during the process of this case disputing matters that have no effect on the decision to be entered. Petitioners have from the beginning and through their posttrial briefs chosen to make spurious attack! s on respondent's agents and counsel and to file motions and requests for relief that have no reasonable basis in fact or in law. Their claims range from deliberate destruction and falsification of records to "elder abuse". We will not detail or address those claims in this opinion because they have no colorable merit and do not affect the resolution of issues properly before the Court.
Notwithstanding the difficulties created by petitioners' approach to this case, the parties were able to settle substantial 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*56 issues and to enter into stipulations of many of the controlling facts. Respondent has conceded charitable contribution deductions and some rental expenses that had been disallowed in the statutory notice. Other claimed rental expenses and basis adjustments relating to petitioners' sale of the Del Mar Avenue property remain in dispute as personal expenses or are unsubstantiated. The most significant issue is classification of petitioner's gambling losses as business losses of a professional gambler or losses in an activity not engaged in for profit. If the former, the losses may fully offset the gains reportable on Schedule C. If the losses are only reportable as itemized deductions on Schedule A, the itemized deductions (other than the gambling losses) are subject to reduction pursuant to
As a general rule, taxpayers have the burden of proving that they are entitled to the deductions that they claim.
Petitioners claim expenses in 2004 and 2005 relating to their Lilac Place rental property beyond the amounts allowed in the statutory notice or conceded by respondent. The disputed items for 2004 relate to lawsuits involving petitioners, a real estate broker, and others. Although petitioners have presented partial documents from several lawsuits, they have not presented credible evidence or corroborating evidence that they paid in 2004 the amounts that they claim for that year. They are not entitled to any additional rental deductions for 2004.
For 2005, petitioners presented copies of two money orders for $ 25 and $ 70.20 dated in 2005. The money orders appear to be for public services relating to the Lilac Place property. Petitioners are entitled to an additional deduction of $ 95.20 on Schedule E, Supplemental Income and Loss.
Petitioners seek to reduce their taxable gain on the sale of the Del 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*58 Mar Avenue property in 2005 by the amounts used to pay off a judgment obtained by their former attorney and to pay back a loan from relatives. Petitioners originally reported these items as miscellaneous expenses on Schedule A. Respondent contends that the origin of the judgment, i.e., attorney's fees incurred in civil rights litigation, was personal.
Petitioners contend that removal of the judgment lien was necessary to "clear title" to the Del Mar Avenue property and that Hopp's fees were deductible attorney's fees. However, respondent is correct that paying a judgment having a personal origin does not increase petitioners' basis in the property sold and that attorney's fees incurred in personal litigation are not otherwise deductible. See generally
Petitioners claim that they borrowed $ 25,000 from relatives and repaid the loan at the time the Del Mar Avenue property was sold. On their original Federal income tax return for 2005, they deducted this amount as "loans reimbursements" on Schedule A. It was not separately itemized on the schedules attached to the amended returns for 2005. Petitioners have not presented credible evidence that $ 25,000 was spent on amounts properly added to the basis of the property. They have failed to satisfy their burden of proof or to shift the burden of proof to respondent with respect to this item.
The parties have stipulated petitioner's winnings and losses as reflected in the records maintained by the Morongo Casino. Respondent has calculated the losses using a "session-based analysis", i.e., by netting wins and losses per slot machine session, as described in
Petitioners rely on
Consistent with other cases using the Groetzinger standard, the parties analyze petitioner's gambling activities with regard to regulations promulgated 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*61 under
Whether the taxpayer engages in an activity with the primary purpose of making a profit is a question of fact to be resolved based on all the facts and circumstances in a particular case.
Respondent asserts that petitioner had no business plan, did not seek or follow expert advice, and did not adhere to her alleged pattern of strategic times to gamble. Thus respondent argues that petitioner did not carry on her activities in a businesslike manner and did not use the skills involved in her prior successful activity of managing Dr. Chow's medical practice.
Petitioner testified that she had "on the job" training as a professional gambler beginning 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*63 in 1987; that she read a couple of books about slot machine strategy; and that she had reasons for gambling on particular days and during particular hours. The nature of gambling or other high-risk activities makes comparison to businesslike conduct of more traditional businesses difficult. There seem to be no recognizable standards for a businesslike approach to slot machine gambling. Therefore these factors are not conclusive.
The record contains information about petitioner's history of profits and losses only for the 2 years in issue. Petitioner received substantial jackpots, but she continued to play until the overall results, whether on a session-by-session basis or an annual basis, were substantial losses. Her gambling and her losses increased from 2004 to 2005, when the substantial proceeds of the sale of the Del Mar Avenue property permitted her to increase the "capital" she claims to have invested in the gambling activity. Petitioners, however, were retired, and the record suggests that sale of the Del Mar Avenue property eliminated a substantial source of rental income. Petitioners' other income would not permit petitioner to sustain such losses indefinitely in the future. 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*64 Petitioners' situation is distinguishable from cases respondent cites in which other sources of income allowed a taxpayer to pursue an activity as a hobby, without expectation of profit.
The parties dispute whether petitioner maintained appropriate records of her gambling activities. Petitioners claim that respondent's agents are responsible for loss of certain records and that, therefore, respondent cannot show that they did not maintain adequate records. Petitioner did not maintain a logbook, but the casino records of her activities allowed the parties to reconstruct the stipulated amounts of winnings and losses. Cf.
Respondent acknowledges that petitioner engaged in gambling during 2004 and 2005 with continuity and regularity. It is unclear from her testimony whether she derived pleasure from it, but that factor is generally neutral. See, e.g.,
Bearing in mind that the expectation of profit is a matter of subjective intent and need not be reasonable, see
Petitioners claim that they filed a Form 1040 for 2004 on April 10, 2005, and that they always filed their tax returns on time. The document that petitioners claim was their timely Form 1040 dated April 10, 2005, has attached Schedules C and E that are identical to those attached to the Form 1040X sent to the IRS in February 2007; they are not attached to the purported amended return filed in November 2006. Petitioners claim that the attachments were erroneous due to rushing to include the document as an exhibit to the stipulation.
After reviewing the entire history of petitioners' filings and shifting positions, we cannot accept the testimony concerning a timely filed 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49">*67 return for 2004. Because petitioners deny that the return was late, they have not suggested any reasonable cause. Therefore, petitioners are liable for an addition to tax under
On each version of their Forms 1040, petitioners attempted to deduct wagering losses against other income, directly contrary to
Petitioners also claim that there are no penalties due because they owe no tax, but they are wrong about that. The
We have considered the other arguments of the parties. They are irrelevant, moot, or without merit. To reflect concessions and our conclusions stated above,