2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147 | Tax Ct. | 2008
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
GOLDBERG,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. At the time the petition was filed, petitioners resided in New York, New York.
During the taxable year in issue petitioner husband (Dr. Merkin) was self-employed as a psychiatrist. His medical practice is located on Park Avenue in New York City. Dr. Merkin has been engaged in private 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*148 practice as a psychiatrist since 1972. Petitioner wife (Mrs. Merkin) is, according to petitioners' tax return, an investor.
Petitioners' primary residence is located on West 13th Street in New York City. Petitioners own a secondary residence in Guilford, Connecticut.
In 1999, when Dr. Merkin was 59 years old he began to ponder new ways whereby he could augment his income in retirement. Motivated by his preexisting interest in gambling and in particular the card game of poker, Dr. Merkin began reading up on betting games and attending card game conventions. At these conventions Dr. Merkin played poker and video slot machine games and purchased literature and other materials concerning casino games and odds-making.
Dr. Merkin became particularly fascinated with video poker. Unlike table poker, where a dealer deals a set of cards to a player or group of players, in video poker a machine deals a hand of five cards to a single player, and the player sees on the machine's screen -- according to the cards he or she is dealt -- the odds and subsequent payout amounts for possible final card combinations (such as a full house, straight suit, or flush suit of cards). During the latter half of 1999 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*149 Dr. Merkin decided to play video poker exclusively because he believed that it was a type of casino game where knowledge of mathematical probabilities -- a knowledge he honed into his system -- could improve his odds of winning video poker jackpots.
Although Dr. Merkin frequented several casinos and gaming establishments during the year in issue, he spent most of his time playing video poker at the Mohegan Sun Casino (Mohegan Sun) in Uncasvile, Connecticut. Mohegan Sun is approximately 40 miles from the petitioners' secondary residence in Guilford, Connecticut.
Dr. Merkin had a definitive routine when gambling at Mohegan Sun. First, upon arrival at the casino Dr. Merkin would scout the various video poker machines located throughout the facility in order to find a machine that was paying out the highest jackpot amounts according to bets placed. Dr. Merkin would then select a video poker machine to play by inserting a Mohegan Sun "Player's Club" card -- similar to a credit card -- into a slot on the machine. Dr. Merkin relied upon the card to record the length of time that he played the machine and his betting history. The card would also record his winnings and losses. When Dr. Merkin 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*150 hit a jackpot on the machine, the card would record the jackpot and freeze both his card activity and the machine itself until a member of the Connecticut Board of Gaming could inspect the machine for signs of illegal tampering and/or software irregularities.
Each time that Dr. Merkin would use his Player's Club card in a gaming machine he would accrue Player's Club points. These points were awarded at the rate of one point per dollar spent and according to the length of play. Points were accruable and could be traded in at the casino for food, beverages, accommodations, travel, and other prizes. The points had no cash value and were not awarded in addition to winning a video poker jackpot.
Mohegan Sun issued Dr. Merkin a Form W-2G, Certain Gambling Winnings, for 2003 reflecting gross winnings of $ 691,575. Petitioners timely filed their 2003 income tax return. They reported total income of $ 228,157, consisting of the following items: (1) Wage income of $ 57,187; (2) taxable interest of $ 18; (3) taxable State income tax refund of $ 537; and (4) business income of $ 170,415.
Petitioners attached two Schedules C, Profit or Loss From Business, to their 2003 return. The first pertained 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*151 to Dr. Merkin's private medical practice and reported gross receipts of $ 238,500 and deductions of $ 49,411 for a net Schedule C gain of $ 189,089. The second pertained to Dr. Merkin's activity as a professional gambler and reported gross gambling receipts of $ 691,575 and claimed a deduction of $ 710,249 of gambling losses, for a net Schedule C loss of $ 18,674. Thus, after combining the figures listed on both Schedule C forms, petitioners' net business income reported was $ 170,415.
In arriving at their adjusted gross income petitioners deducted $ 6,328 from their total income. Petitioners claimed itemized deductions of $ 82,120 and personal exemptions of $ 10,736, resulting in taxable income of $ 128,973 and a total tax of $ 37,719 after including the alternative minimum tax and self-employment tax.
On October 11, 2005, respondent issued petitioners a notice of deficiency. Respondent determined that Dr. Merkin was not engaged in the trade or business of gambling during 2003 and therefore could not deduct his gambling losses on petitioners' Schedule C. Instead, respondent determined that petitioners had to report Dr. Merkin's gambling winnings in total income and could deduct the 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*152 gambling losses on a Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, but only to the extent of Dr. Merkin's gambling winnings. On the basis of the foregoing, respondent determined that the amount of tax required to be shown on petitioners' 2003 return was $ 59,220. Petitioners reported tax due of $ 37,719 on their return, resulting in a deficiency of $ 21,501. Respondent also determined petitioners were liable for an accuracy-related penalty under
OPINION
Taxpayers generally bear the burden of proving that the Commissioner's determinations are incorrect.
Irrespective of whether the activity constituted a trade or business,
Respondent determined that Dr. Merkin was not in the trade or business of gambling during 2003 and thus could not claim his gambling losses as a Schedule C deduction on petitioners' 2003 return. Petitioners argue that Dr. Merkin was in the trade or business of gambling because he pursued the activity in good faith, with regularity, and for the production of income.
To be engaged in a trade or business within the meaning of
Although a reasonable expectation of a profit is not required, the taxpayer's profit objective must be actual and honest.
Thepertinent regulations set forth a nonexhaustive list of factors that may be considered in deciding whether a profit objective exists. These factors include: (1) The manner in which the taxpayer carries on the activity, (2) the expertise of the taxpayer or his advisers, (3) the time and effort expended by the taxpayer in carrying on the activity, (4) the expectation that assets used in the activity may appreciate in value, (5) the success of the taxpayer 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*156 in carrying on other similar or dissimilar activities, (6) the taxpayer's history of income or losses with respect to the activity, (7) the amount of occasional profits, if any, which are earned, (8) the financial status of the taxpayer, and (9) the elements of personal pleasure or recreation.
Petitioners argue that we should hold that Dr. Merkin was engaged in the trade or business of gambling in 2003 and accordingly that petitioners are entitled to claim a loss attributable to this activity on their 2003 Schedule C. After consideration of the facts contained in the record, and for the reasons discussed
Dr. Merkin did not carry on his gambling activity in a businesslike manner. See
Petitioners 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*158 were misguided to assume that Dr. Merkin's Players Club card would keep a complete business record of his activities at a casino and that this record would absolve them of the duty to maintain business records. See
To further illustrate this point, although Dr. Merkin testified that he spent 47 out of 52 weekends during 2003 playing video poker at Mohegan Sun for at least 24 hours per weekend (for a total of approximately 1,128 hours), he did not provide any credible evidence to corroborate this testimony. In fact, the only credible evidence in the record with respect to Dr. Merkin's time spent playing video poker in 2003 was a Player's Club statement generated by Mohegan Sun and provided by petitioners at trial. This statement shows that Dr. Merkin spent 19,140 minutes or 319 hours (19,140/60) playing video poker at Mohegan Sun in 2003. We do not believe that Dr. Merkin spent 1,128 hours at MoheganSun solely on the 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*159 basis of his testimony to that effect and in the absence of any receipts or records aside from a noncontemporaneous calendar of time spent at the casino that petitioners produced in anticipation of trial. Moreover, Dr. Merkin admitted that it was a mistake on his part to have relied on the Player's Club card to record all of his time spent playing video poker. We note that if petitioners were as concerned with the amount of Player's Club points that Dr. Merkin was earning from his playing as he represented in his argument, he would likely have checked the balance of points and time played on his Player's Club card before the end of 2003. Then, if a discrepancy existed between the casino's record and Dr. Merkin's estimate of hours spent playing video poker at the casino, he could have resolved the issue and obtained an accurate accounting of his time spent playing video poker at the casino during the year in issue. He failed to do this.
We infer that Dr. Merkin's testimony that he spent approximately 1,128 hours playing video poker during 2003 represented petitioners' attempt to equate the amount of time Dr. Merkin spent practicing medicine with the amount of time he spent playing video 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*160 poker. Dr. Merkin did not testify as to the amount of time he spent engaged in his medical practice in 2003, and for the aforementioned reasons we do not find his testimony and his calendar of the time purportedly spent at Mohegan Sun in that year credible. Accordingly, we cannot make a well-informed judgment as to how much time Dr. Merkin devoted to each of these activities during the year in issue.
Ultimately, and on the basis of the one source of credible evidence before us -- the Player's Club statement -- we believe that Dr. Merkin spent 319 hours playing video poker at Mohegan Sun in 2003. Despite Dr. Merkin's playing time (whether it was 319 or 1,128 hours), he did not testify that he spent any time honing or adjusting his system when it became clear to him that he was not on track to make a profit playing video poker in 2003. See
Although Dr. Merkin may have read video poker magazines and spent time on the casino floor scouting various machines, there is nothing in the record to validate petitioners' claim that Dr. Merkin is a renowned poker expert. See
Petitioners maintain that Dr. Merkin played video poker with an honest intent to make a profit and that he did in fact make a profit, if not always through his gambling winnings, then through the many Player's Club points that he accrued while playing video poker at Mohegan Sun. See
To be sure, petitioners argue at length that the added element of the Player's Club points distinguishes their case from other cases involving gambling losses because the large number of Player's 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*162 Club points that Dr. Merkin earned and redeemed in 2003 illustrates that his activity was not only entered into for profit but was, in fact, profitable. We disagree.
Petitioners filed Schedules C for Dr. Merkin's gambling activities for all of the 4 taxable years preceding the year in issue. Petitioners reported a total of $ 105,326 in gambling losses for those years and reported a gambling loss of $ 18,674 for 2003. Despite those losses, Dr. Merkin maintains that his activities were profitable because he redeemed hundreds of thousands of his accrued Player's Club points for items such as airfare, travel, and automobiles throughout the years, including 2003.
Petitioners have maintained throughout their case that Dr. Merkin's earning hundreds of thousands of Player's Club points was, in fact, profit to them and that the value of the points should be included in the amount of profit generated by Dr. Merkin's gambling activities. It is petitioners' position that if we include the value of these points as profit, we will see not only that Dr. Merkin's gambling activity was indeed profitable, but also that Dr. Merkin continued to engage in the gambling because of an actual profit objective 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*163 as evidenced by the value of the Player's Club points. We disagree.
We fail to see how Dr. Merkin's earning Player's Club points supports petitioners' contention that his gambling activity was engaged in with an actual and honest profit objective. Dr. Merkin's Player's Club points were based on his dollar amounts bet and length of play. While there is no accounting of the points Dr. Merkin earned and redeemed for 2003 and there is nothing in the record showing the items for which he redeemed the points for 2003, such evidence would do nothing more than show what "prizes" Dr. Merkin received in exchange for his total wagering at Mohegan Sun in 2003. That is, if petitioners received airfare, accommodations, and/or trips from the Player's Club program, they did so because of the amount of money that Dr. Merkin was spending at the casino. The items he earned through redemption of his Player's Club points were items that he essentially paid for with the amounts that he bet. Put another way, if petitioners were to have purchased all of the items they received through the redemption of their Player's Club points in 2003, it is highly improbable that the value of those items would equal the 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*164 amount of money wagered by Dr. Merkin in 2003.
Moreover, and with respect to the items for which Dr. Merkin redeemed his Player's Club points in 2003, we note that petitioners failed to report as income the value of any car, airfare, or travel that they acquired from the casino in 2003. In
Petitioners also argue that Dr. Merkin's substantial income from his medical practice should have no effect on our determination with respect to petitioners' profit objective. See
Finally, petitioners have not persuaded us -- despite Dr. Merkin's testimony about his system and the Player's Club points-that Dr. Merkin, when he played video poker machines programmed by the casino, had as his primary objective income or profit. As Dr. Merkin candidly admitted through his testimony regarding his scouting the various machines, casinos are in the business of generating revenues. To be 2008 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 147">*166 sure, Dr. Merkin's scouting process illustrated how casinos manipulate the computer gaming machines to increase the odds that the house will usually prevail. As a result, his system -- developed in hopes of beating video poker machines -- ultimately proved ineffective. Dr. Merkin conceded this reality when he admitted at trial that his system did not work.
Accordingly, in the light of
Respondent determined that petitioners are liable for an accuracy-related penalty under
Although the Commissioner bears the burden of production with respect to the penalty, in this case, petitioners failed to raise the penalty as an issue in their petition, at trial, or on brief. See
On the record before us, and for the reasons previously discussed, we hold that Dr. Merkin's gambling activity in 2003 did not rise to the level of a trade orbusiness activity as contemplated by
To reflect our disposition of the issues,
Footnotes
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect for the taxable year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The shift from Schedule C to Schedule A lowers the ceiling imposed by
sec. 68 on itemized deductions (other than the deduction for the gambling loss itself). See n.6.Calvao v. Comm'r , T.C. Memo 2007-57">T.C. Memo 2007-57↩