*555 David Litzenberg, in 1981, accepted five horses from a neighbor in satisfaction of a $74,994 debt. Though Litzenberg raced and bred the horses, he lost money; one of the horses was destroyed. The Service determined deficiencies with respect to David Litzenberg's 1982 through 1984 taxes, contending Litzenberg's horse breeding activities were not engaged in with a profit motive. Accordingly, the Service contended that Litzenberg could not deduct horse breeding expenses. The Service also disputed Litzenberg's claimed casualty loss for the destruction of a horse. Litzenberg petitioned the Tax Court, which considered his profit motive, whether the destroyed horse was owned by Litzenberg, and the amount of Litzenberg's depreciable basis in the remaining horses.
After a trial, the court held that Litzenberg had engaged in horse breeding with a profit motive. The court noted that Litzenberg had entered the horse breeding business by accident (accepting the horses in satisfaction of a debt) and had tried to make it a financial success, rather than writing off the entire debt that his neighbor was unable to pay. The court also determined that the five horses had a total fair market value*556 at the time of their transfer of $29,800, leaving $45,194 of debt unsatisfied.
During
Tax Court Judge Parker has ruled that Litzenberg is bound by the Service's initial computations, which do not reflect the difference between the value of the horses and the debt partially satisfied. Judge Parker concluded that Litzenberg was improperly attempting to raise new issues. "
MEMORANDUM OPINION
PARKER, JUDGE: This case is before the Court on disputes arising in regard to the parties' computations under
ISSUES LITIGATED AND DECIDED
By statutory notice of deficiency dated April 14, 1987, respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' Federal income taxes for the years 1982, 1983, and 1984 in the amounts of $50,830, $30,630, and $27,061, respectively. Some issues raised in the deficiency notice were resolved in the parties' stipulation of facts. This case was tried in Phoenix, Arizona on April 14, 1988. At trial three issues were presented to the Court, namely, (1) whether petitioners' horse breeding and racing activity was an "activity not engaged in for profit" under section 183; (2) whether petitioners were entitled to a casualty loss of $6,150 for the destruction of the horse, Mister Mitch, in 1982; and (3) if petitioners were entitled to deduct expenses in connection with their horse breeding and racing activity, whether petitioners had established*560 the basis in their horses for purposes of loss or depreciation deductions on their Schedule F for the years 1982, 1983, and 1984. Those were the only issues raised or tried during the trial on April 14, 1988.
On April 18, 1988, the Court recalled the case and rendered its oral findings of fact and opinion pursuant to section 7459(b) and Rule 152. In this bench opinion, the Court held that petitioners' horse breeding and racing activity was an activity engaged in for profit and that petitioners were not entitled to the casualty loss because Mr. Mitch had been given away before the destruction of that horse occurred. The Court also determined the fair market value and hence the basis for each horse. The basis for each of the five horses acquired in 1981 was as follows:
| Sea Rulla | $ 12,000 |
| Rusty Knight | 12,300 |
| Bar's Open | 5,000 |
| Miss Crescent | 400 |
| Mister Mitch | 100 |
| Total | $ 29,800 |
Briefly stated, the facts showed that in 1981 petitioners had loaned or advanced some $74,994 to one Mr. DiPiero, a neighbor, and that when Mr. DiPiero could not repay the money, petitioners took possession of the horses because he had no other assets and petitioners' then attorney*561 advised them it was better to take the horses than to get nothing from Mr. DiPiero. Although this was a close case on its facts, the Court concluded that petitioners had an actual and honest objective of making a profit.
In the parties' initial
Petitioners argued at trial that the bases for the five horses should be the entire amount of the DiPiero indebtedness forgiven or discharged in exchange for these horses. Petitioners cited in support thereof
Petitioners do not challenge those basis determinations, and in any event a
*563 Petitioners now challenge the treatment of the $45,194 "balance" of the DiPiero indebtedness (the $74,994 debt - $29,800 basis determined by the Court = $45,194). Petitioners rely on the following language in our Shaheen opinion, characterizing any such excess as a bad debt under
If a creditor receives property in exchange for discharging a debt then the debt is considered paid to the extent of the fair market value of the property acquired. IF THE AMOUNT OF THE DEBT EXCEEDS THE FAIR MARKET VALUE OF THE PROPERTY RECEIVED THEN THE EXCESS IS DEDUCTIBLE AS A
The creditor's basis in the acquired property is its fair market value at the time it is received.
* * *
*564 It is too late to raise such a bad debt issue in
(c) LIMIT ON ARGUMENT: Any argument under this Rule will be confined strictly to consideration of the correct computation of the deficiency, liability, or overpayment resulting from the findings and conclusions made by the Court, and no argument will be heard upon or consideration given to the issues or matters disposed of by the Court's findings and conclusions or to any new issues. This Rule is not to be regarded as affording an opportunity for retrial or reconsideration.
See Bankers' Pocahontas Coal Co. v. Burnet, 287 U.S. 3U8 (1932); Molasky v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. (Sept. 26, 1988); Harwood v.
Here the 1981 loans to*565 the neighbor were not made in connection with Mr. Litzenberg's business as an engineer, and any bad debt deduction would be deductible only as a nonbusiness bad debt (i.e., as short-term capital loss) and only after the debt became totally worthless.
While a short-term capital loss deduction can be carried over to later years (sec. 1212(b)), no claim in connection with such a nonbusiness bad debt or a carryover therefor was ever raised up to the time of the
Petitioners could have but did not make any alternative argument in regard to a bad debt deduction for 1981 and a carryover to 1982.
We further think this is not a case where it can be said that an issue was in fact, if not in form, raised by the deficiency notice.
See and compare
However, any such "facts" in regard to a purported bad debt deduction in 1981 "were not the result of a litigated issue but are, as to this item, only incidental to the facts necessary to determine the issues properly litigated."
Petitioners' initial
No issue as to Schedule D gains or losses was ever raised or litigated at the trial, and the computation under
While petitioners' 1981 tax return is in evidence, 4a tax return is merely a statement of a taxpayer's claim and does not establish the correctness of the figures and facts stated therein
*569 In their revised
Lastly, in support of their claim for the capital loss carryover, petitioners argue that in the intervening period between the parties' first and second round of computations, petitioners have agreed to adjustments not before the Court, proposed by Respondent (the $4,930 casualty loss adjustment in 1983) and in the spirit of substantial justice feel entitled to similar consideration on the 1982 [sic] capital loss carryforward.
This is litigation, not mediation or negotiation. Respondent is not entitled to the $4,930 casualty loss adjustment. In the Court's bench opinion, the Court, in discussing the horses Gar Ware and Clipper Count, pointed out that those horses were given away but petitioners nonetheless claimed*571 a casualty loss on their 1983 tax return for each horse in the amount of $2,550 each. The Court also pointed out that respondent had not disallowed that casualty loss deduction, no issue had been raised in the case about that deduction, and "the Court will not further consider the matter."
The
For the foregoing reasons, the decision in this case will be entered based upon respondent's initial
Petitioners took no exception to those computations except for the two new issues -- the bad debt and capital loss carryover issues that petitioners*572 sought to raise for the first time in their initial
Decision will be entered as indicated above.
Footnotes
Notes
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the taxable years in question, and all "Rule" references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. ↩
2. In
Shaheen v. Commissioner, , we considered and rejected the same argument as follows:T.C. Memo. 1982-445 Petitioners cite
Gould Securities Co. v. United States, ,96 F.2d 780 (2d Cir. 1938)Society Brand Clothes, Inc. v. Commissioner, , and18 T.C. 304 (1952)Sargent v. Commissioner, , as support for their contention that the basis in property received in exchange for the discharge of indebtedness is the amount of debt discharged. Petitioners can find no solace in these cases, however, because they squarely hold that the basis equals the entire discharge amount only if (1) the fair market value of the acquired property meets or exceeds the discharge amount; or (2) the acquired property has no ascertainable value. * * * [T.C. Memo. 1970-214 ; 51 P-H Memo T.C. par. 82,445 at 82-1971. Fn. ref. omitted.] Similarly here, the market value of the horses did not meet or exceed the discharge amount and petitioners did not establish that the horses had no ascertainable value. Accordingly, the cases cited in the above quoted material are likewise inapplicable to the facts of the present case. Petitioners do not suggest otherwise. In any event a44 T.C.M. 694 at 698Rule 155↩ proceeding is not an occasion to reargue the merits of the Court's findings of fact and opinion.3. See also
Sargent v. Commissioner, .T.C. Memo. 1970-214 However, any bad debt was deductible, if at all, in 1981 when petitioners took the horses from DiPiero. The year 1981 is not before the Court. Also this bad debt claim would constitute a new issue not raised in the statutory notice of deficiency, in the pleadings, in the parties' pre-trial memoranda, or at trial.↩
3. See also
Lewis v. Commissioner, ;T.C. Memo. 1986-211 Pereira v. Commissioner, .T.C. Memo. 1976-66 ↩4. On petitioners' 1981 tax return, their Schedule D showed net short-term capital gains of $19,529, a net long-term capital loss of ($87,133), which after certain computations resulted in a deduction of a loss of $3,000 for the year and a long-term capital loss carryover from 1981 to 1982 of ($61,604). However on petitioners' 1982 tax return, that long-term capital loss carryover was not reported, and petitioners' Schedule D for 1982 reported capital gains income of $26,218. Petitioners' 1981 return was not audited, but their 1982 return was. ↩
5. On September 1, 1988 petitioners submitted another computation and a document entitled "Response to Respondent's Report to the Court and Motion to Revise Decision." Any such motion is improperly joined (Rule 54) and also premature since no decision has yet been entered by the Court (Rule 162). The Court has filed petitioners' revised computations under
Rule 155↩ and has filed the other document as their Report to the Court.
