During tax years 1988, 1989, and 1990, David Parrish received sizeable payments from M & L Business Machine Company (“M & L”) that he did not report on his federal income tax returns. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed substantial tax deficiencies, plus penalties or additions to tax for each of those three years. The Tax Court substantially upheld the deficiencies. Parrish appeals, arguing that the payments from M & L constituted a return of capital or principal, not taxable income, and alternatively that he is entitled to a shareholder’s deduction for the pass-through losses of M & L, a Subchapter S corporation. We affirm.
Parrish is a doctor of psychiatry. After selling his interest in a hospital in 1984, Parrish and others purchased all the stock of M & L, an existing office machine repair company. Parrish purchased twenty percent of M & L’s stock, becoming a vice president and director. Parrish also solicited associates, relatives, and friends to invest over $1,000,000 in M & L, which during this period was promising to pay investors interest rates ranging from 24% to 520%. In October 1990, M & L filed for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy trustee discovered M & L had operated ponzi and cheek-kiting schemes, using contributions from later investors to pay interest promised to earlier investors. Based upon an accounting firm’s analysis of M & L financial transactions, the trustee sued Parrish for receiving pre-bankruptcy preferential transfers and fraudulent conveyances and recovered a judgment of more than $375,000. 1
On his federal income tax returns for 1988, 1989, and 1990, Parrish reported receiving from M & L $28,000 in annual wages plus interest payments of $22,655 in 1989. The Internal Revenue Service investigated the obvious discrepancy between these amounts and the bankruptcy trustee’s $375,000 judgment. During the audit, Parrish admitted also receiving from M & L monthly payments of $6,000, plus $1,000 a month to lease a Cadillac and undetermined amounts of finder’s fees for soliciting investors. Parrish could not produce records substantiating either the amounts he paid into M & L as treasury stock purchases, loans, and other “investments,” or the substantial amounts he admittedly received from M & L during this period. After obtaining bank statements and other relevant records, the IRS Agent conducting the audit determined that Parrish’s records and tax returns did not accurately reflect his income from M & L for the three years in issue.
Reconstructing Parrish’s taxable income using the bank deposits method for 1988 and 1989 and the specific items method for 1990, the Commissioner concluded Parrish had unreported income of $72,415 in 1988, $236,-834.27 in 1989, and $163,822.31 in 1990. The Commissioner assessed tax deficiencies based upon this unreported income, adding on self-employment tax on the entire amount plus negligence, late filing, and accuracy related additions and penalties. Parrish commenced this action to challenge the deficiencies. After a one day trial, the Tax Court upheld the Commissioner on all issues except it reduced the amount of unreported income subject to the self-employment tax. Parrish appeals, challenging the following components of the assessed deficiencies.
I. Unreported Income. If a taxpayer fails to maintain adequate records of taxable income, the Commissioner may reconstruct income using a method that clearly reflects income.
See
26 U.S.C. (I.R.C.) § 446(b);
Caulfield v. Commissioner,
Parrish first argues the Commissioner erred by not treating the payments as a return of his investment because M & L made the payments to conceal its fraudulent misappropriation of that investment, like the payments to passive, defrauded investors in
Greenberg v. Commissioner,
Parrish next argues the Tax Court should have held that the payments he received from M & L were the non-taxable recovery of capital or loan principal under the “open transaction” doctrine established in
Burnet v. Logan,
For the foregoing reasons; we affirm the Tax Court’s determination that Parrish failed to report taxable income for the tax years in question in the amounts assessed by the Commissioner.
II. Pass Through of Subchapter S Corporation Losses. Alternatively, Parrish argues that as a shareholder of a Sub-chapter S corporation, M & L, he is entitled to a deduction for his share of M & L’s losses during the 1988-1990 tax years.
See
I.R.C. § 1366(a)(1). Parrish has the burden of proving he is entitled to the deduction.
Cf. Bennett Paper Corp. v. Commissioner,
III. Self-Employment Tax. Parrish next challenges the assessment of self-employment taxes on his unreported income. Self-employment income is defined as “income derived by an individual from any trade or business carried on by such individual.” I.R.C. § 1402(a);
see Schelble v. Commissioner,
IV. Penalties and Additions To Tax. Finally, Parrish argues the Tax Court erred in upholding the assessment of negligence and accuracy related penalties. The Commissioner assessed a negligence addition to tax for 1988 and accuracy related penalties for 1989 and 1990.
4
Both penalties are owing when an underpayment is due to the taxpayer’s negligence or disregard of rules or regulations.
See
§§ 6653(a), 6662(b). The Tax Court found that Parrish was negligent in failing to maintain adequate books and records, and to exercise due care in reporting his income. We review this factual determination for clear error.
See Langer v. Commissioner,
At oral argument, in response to a question from the court whether Parrish was a participant in, or a victim of, the M & L ponzi scheme, his counsel replied that as an investor Parrish was simply “a consummate doctor.” After reviewing the record, we conclude that was an insult to the integrity of the members of the medical profession. Parrish used M & L as a huge, undocumented piggy bank, while he encouraged friends and relatives to squander their savings on this worthless venture. His resulting tax problems are a predicament of his own making, not the product of overzealous enforcement of the federal tax laws.
The judgment of the Tax Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The parties in this case stipulated that the "circumstances of M & L and the nature of its activities during the 1980s are reflected in the finding[s]” of the Tax Court in
Premji v. Commissioner,
. Although the new statute does not apply to earlier tax years, it is worth noting that a highly publicized 1998 amendment to the Internal Revenue Code that in many cases will shift the burden of proof to the Commissioner does not apply to taxpayers who fail to maintain adequate tax records. See I.R.C. § 7491(a)(2)(B) (1998).
. Indeed, Parrish's undocumented assertions as to the extent of his investment have varied. Before the Tax Court, Parrish claimed to have purchased M & L stock for $243,000 and to have loaned M & L $334,500. On appeal, he contends he invested at least $975,000 in M & L.
. The negligence addition was assessed under I.R.C. § 6653(a). For returns due after December 31, 1989, that provision was replaced by the accuracy related penalty in I.R.C. § 6662. See Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989, Pub.L. No. 101-239, § 7721(c)(1), 103 Stat. 2106, 2395-2400.
