During 1981, Alice Church earned $2,920 for six weeks work as a secretary. She and her husband John failed to report this amount on their joint income tax .return. After the Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued a deficiency notice, they availed themselves of the United States Tax Court’s simplified procedure for small tax cases 1 and filed a pro sese petition for review. The taxpayers’ contention was that the failure of Mrs. Church’s employer to withhold income tax from her wages relieved them of liability for the tax.
The Tax Court, reviewing the matter on stipulated facts, upheld the Commissioner’s deficiency notice in the amount of $1325. It held that the failure of the employer to withhold taxes, as it should have, did not lessen the taxpayers’ obligation to report and pay taxes on income that they in fact received.
Again availing themselves of a simplified Tax Court form, the taxpayers appealed.
In this Court, the Commissioner argues that since the notice of appeal was signed only by Alice Church, who is not an attorney, it is effective only as to her and
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not as to her husband. This contention is correct, and we accept it.
See Knoblauch v. Commissioner,
No harm was done in this case, however, since Mrs. Church’s position on the merits is baseless. It is clear that the failure of an employer to meet its obligation to withhold income tax does not in any way lessen the obligation of an employee to pay income tax. Indeed, we have long since rejected the contrary position even in the context of a criminal prosecution,
U.S. v. Kuntz,
We have been presented with neither reason nor authority for a different result here, and if this frivolous appeal had been prosecuted by counsel we should unhesitatingly have imposed sanctions. We refrain from doing so in this case, however. While we have in the past imposed sanctions for meritless
pro se
appeals,
e.g., Johl v. Johl,
The decision of the United States Tax Court is affirmed.
Notes
. This procedure is set forth in Rules 170-179 of the Rules of Practice and Procedure of the United States Tax Court.
