COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE v. FLOWERS.
No. 145
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided January 2, 1946
326 U.S. 465
Argued December 11, 12, 1945.
The judgment of the court below affirming the convictions of the petitioners must therefore be
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or decision of these cases.
Mr. James N. Ogden for respondent.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a problem as to the meaning and application of the provision of
The taxpayer, a lawyer, has resided with his family in Jackson, Mississippi, since 1903. There he has paid taxes, voted, schooled his children and established social and religious connections. He built a house in Jackson nearly thirty years ago and at all times has maintained it for himself and his family. He has been connected with several law firms in Jackson, one of which he formed and which has borne his name since 1922.
In 1906 the taxpayer began to represent the predecessor of the Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad, his present employer. He acted as trial counsel for the railroad throughout Mississippi. From 1918 until 1927 he acted as special counsel for the railroad in Mississippi. He was elected general solicitor in 1927 and continued to be elected to that position each year until 1930, when he was elected general counsel. Thereafter he was annually elected general counsel until September, 1940, when the properties of the predecessor company and another railroad were merged and he was elected vice president and general counsel of the newly formed Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad.
The main office of the Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad is in Mobile, Alabama, as was also the main office of its predecessor. When offered the position of general solicitor in 1927, the taxpayer was unwilling to accept it if it required him to move from Jackson to Mobile. He had established himself in Jackson both professionally and personally and was not desirous of moving away. As a result, an arrangement was made between him and the railroad whereby he could accept the position and continue to reside in Jackson on condition that he pay his traveling expenses between Mobile and Jackson and pay his living expenses in both places. This arrangement permitted the taxpayer to determine for himself the amount
The railroad company provided an office for the taxpayer in Mobile but not in Jackson. When he worked in Jackson his law firm provided him with office space, although he no longer participated in the firm‘s business or shared in its profits. He used his own office furniture and fixtures at this office. The railroad, however, furnished telephone service and a typewriter and desk for his secretary. It also paid the secretary‘s expenses while in Jackson. Most of the legal business of the railroad was centered in or conducted from Jackson, but this business was handled by local counsel for the railroad. The taxpayer‘s participation was advisory only and was no different from his participation in the railroad‘s legal business in other areas.
The taxpayer‘s principal post of business was at the main office in Mobile. However, during the taxable years of 1939 and 1940, he devoted nearly all of his time to matters relating to the merger of the railroads. Since it was left to him where he would do his work, he spent most of his time in Jackson during this period. In connection with the merger, one of the companies was involved in certain litigation in the federal court in Jackson and the taxpayer participated in that litigation.
During 1939 he spent 203 days in Jackson and 66 in Mobile, making 33 trips between the two cities. During 1940 he spent 168 days in Jackson and 102 in Mobile, making 40 trips between the two cities. The railroad paid all of his traveling expenses when he went on business trips to points other than Jackson or Mobile. But it paid none of his expenses in traveling between these two points or while he was at either of them.
The taxpayer deducted $900 in his 1939 income tax return and $1,620 in his 1940 return as traveling expenses
The portion of
Three conditions must thus be satisfied before a traveling expense deduction may be made under
(1) The expense must be a reasonable and necessary traveling expense, as that term is generally understood. This includes such items as transportation fares and food and lodging expenses incurred while traveling.
(2) The expense must be incurred “while away from home.”
(3) The expense must be incurred in pursuit of business. This means that there must be a direct connection between the expenditure and the carrying on of the trade or business of the taxpayer or of his employer. Moreover, such an expenditure must be necessary or appropriate to the development and pursuit of the business or trade.
Whether particular expenditures fulfill these three conditions so as to entitle a taxpayer to a deduction is purely a question of fact in most instances. See Commissioner v. Heininger, 320 U.S. 467, 475. And the Tax Court‘s inferences and conclusions on such a factual matter, under established principles, should not be disturbed by an appellate court. Commissioner v. Scottish American Co., 323 U.S. 119; Dobson v. Commissioner, 320 U.S. 489.
In this instance, the Tax Court without detailed elaboration concluded that “The situation presented in this
The meaning of the word “home” in
We deem it unnecessary here to enter into or to decide this conflict. The Tax Court‘s opinion, as we read it, was grounded neither solely nor primarily upon that agency‘s conception of the word “home.” Its discussion was directed mainly toward the relation of the expenditures to the railroad‘s business, a relationship required by the third condition of the deduction. Thus even if the Tax Court‘s definition of the word “home” was implicit in its decision and even if that definition was erroneous, its judgment must be sustained here if it properly concluded that the necessary relationship between the expenditures and the railroad‘s business was lacking. Failure to satisfy any one of the three conditions destroys the traveling expense deduction.
Turning our attention to the third condition, this case is disposed of quickly. There is no claim that the Tax Court misconstrued this condition or used improper standards in applying it. And it is readily apparent from the
The facts demonstrate clearly that the expenses were not incurred in the pursuit of the business of the taxpayer‘s employer, the railroad. Jackson was his regular home. Had his post of duty been in that city the cost of maintaining his home there and of commuting or driving to work concededly would be non-deductible living and personal expenses lacking the necessary direct relation to the prosecution of the business. The character of such expenses is unaltered by the circumstance that the taxpayer‘s post of duty was in Mobile, thereby increasing the costs of transportation, food and lodging. Whether he maintained one abode or two, whether he traveled three blocks or three hundred miles to work, the nature of these expenditures remained the same.
The added costs in issue, moreover, were as unnecessary and inappropriate to the development of the railroad‘s business as were his personal and living costs in Jackson. They were incurred solely as the result of the taxpayer‘s desire to maintain a home in Jackson while working in Mobile, a factor irrelevant to the maintenance and prosecution of the railroad‘s legal business. The railroad did not require him to travel on business from Jackson to Mobile or to maintain living quarters in both cities. Nor did it compel him, save in one instance, to perform tasks for it in Jackson. It simply asked him to be at his principal post in Mobile as business demanded and as his personal convenience was served, allowing him to divide his business time between Mobile and Jackson as he saw fit. Except for the federal court litigation, all of the taxpayer‘s work in Jackson would normally have been performed in the headquarters at Mobile. The fact that he traveled frequently between the two cities and incurred
Travel expenses in pursuit of business within the meaning of
It follows that the court below erred in reversing the judgment of the Tax Court.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE, dissenting.
I think the judgment of the Court of Appeals should be affirmed. When Congress used the word “home” in
Congress allowed the deduction for “traveling expenses (including the entire amount expended for meals and lodging) while away from home in the pursuit of a trade or business.” Treasury Regulations 103, § 19.23 (a)-1, are to the same effect, with the word “solely” added after “home.” Section 19.23 (a)-2 also provides: “Commuters’ fares are not considered as business expenses and are not deductible.” By this decision, the latter regulation is
Respondent‘s home was in Jackson, Mississippi, in every sense, unless for applying
The company‘s principal offices were there, including one set aside for respondent‘s use. But the bulk of its trackage was in Mississippi and much of its legal work, with which he was concerned, was done there. His choice to keep his home in Jackson must have been affected by this fact, although it was motivated chiefly by more purely personal considerations. It is doubtful indeed, though perhaps not material, whether by not moving to Mobile he did not save the Government from larger deductions on account of traveling expense than those he claimed.
There is no question therefore but that respondent‘s home was in Jackson for every purpose, unless for the single one of applying
I think this makes a case squarely within the statute and the regulations. But the Tax Court ruled that the claimed deductions were “personal, living, or family ex-
Apart from this ruling, the Tax Court made no finding, of fact or law, that respondent was not engaged “in the pursuit of a trade or business“; that he was not “away
I agree with the Court of Appeals that if Congress had meant “business headquarters,” and not “home,” it would have said “business headquarters.” When it used “home” instead, I think it meant home in everyday parlance, not in some twisted special meaning of “tax home” or “tax headquarters.”3 I find no purpose stated or implied in the Act, the regulations or the legislative history to support such a distortion or to use
The Government relies on administrative construction, by the Commissioner and the Tax Court, and says that unless this is accepted the Act creates tax inequality. If so, it is inequality created by Congress, and it is not for the Commissioner or the Tax Court, by administrative reconstruction, to rewrite what Congress has written or to correct its views of equality. Moreover, in my opinion, the inequity, if any, comes not from the statute or the regulation but from the construction which identifies petitioner with a commuter.
That word too has limitations unless it also is made a tool for rewriting the Act. The ordinary, usual connotation, cf. 21 I. C. C. 428; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Towers, 245 U.S. 6, 12, does not include irregular, although frequent journeys of 350 miles, requiring Pullman accommodations and some twelve to fifteen hours, one way.
Congress gave the deduction for traveling away from home on business. The commuter‘s case, rightly confined, does not fall in this class. One who lives in an adjacent suburb or city and by usual modes of commutation can work within a distance permitting the daily journey and return, with time for the day‘s work and a period at home, clearly can be excluded from the deduction on the basis of the section‘s terms equally with its obvious purpose. But that is not true if “commuter” is to swallow up the deduction by the same sort of construction which makes “home” mean “business headquarters” of one‘s employer. If the line may be extended somewhat to cover doubtful cases, it need not be lengthened to infinity or to cover cases as far removed from the prevailing connotation of
Administrative construction should have some bounds. It exceeds what are legitimate when it reconstructs the statute to nullify or contradict the plain meaning of non-technical terms not artfully employed. Moreover, in this case the matter has been held in suspension by litigation with varying results5 and apparent qualification by the Tax Court consequent upon some of the decisions.6
By construing “home” as “business headquarters“; by reading “temporarily” as “very temporarily” into
