OPINION
The Rockwells, husband and wife, who filed joint income tax returns for the years in dispute and whom we shall call Rockwell for convenience, appeal from a decision of the Tax Court. Tax Court Memorandum 1972-133,
I. The Tax Court’s Findings.
Whether property is held primarily for sale in the ordinary course of trade or business is a question of fact. Estate of Freeland v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 9 Cir., 1968,
In a brief of over 100 pages, Rockwell’s counsel analyze the record exhaustively and repetitively and cite a great many cases. The length of the brief seems to be a function of the complexity of Rockwell’s dealings and of the amount of money involved, more than $738,000.00. We commend counsel’s diligence but not their editorial judgment. They could have said everything that they do say in about half as many pages. Almost always, when we grant permission to file an oversized brief, we have cause to regret having done so.
We said in Los Angeles Extension Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
supra,
It is rare indeed that one will find any precedent value in applying the decision of one case to the facts of another case. At the most, other cases decided by the courts on this subject may be persuasive or suggestive of the approach of the courts to cases where the facts may be somewhat similar.
For this reason, we do not burden this opinion with an analysis of the cases that counsel cite. None announces any principle that would require a reversal here.
II. The Burden of Proof.
A. What the burden is.
Rule 32 of the Rules of Practice of the Tax Court (now Rule 142(a), see 26 U.S.C.A. § 7453 (1975 Supp.)) places the burden of proof on Rockwell.
See
Helvering v. Taylor, 1935,
First, Rockwell’s argument confuses the separate functions of the initial presumption in favor of the Commissioner and of the burden of proof placed on the taxpayer. The presumption in favor of the Commissioner is a procedural device which requires the taxpayer to come forward with enough evidence to support a finding contrary to the Commissioner’s determination. Caratan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 9 Cir., 1971,
The burden of proof is yet another hurdle. After satisfying the procedural burden of producing evidence to rebut the presumption in favor of the Commissioner, the taxpayer must still carry his ultimate burden of proof or persuasion.
Brumley-Donaldson,
supra; American Pipe and Steel Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 9 Cir., 1957,
Second, Rockwell’s reliance on our decisions in Herbert v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 9 Cir., 1967,
Whatever the proper rule may be where inclusion in income is controverted, there is no dispute that the taxpayer bears the burden of proof in substantiating claimed deductions. As we stated in
Herbert, supra,
It appears to us that the Tax Court has confused the burden of establishing receipt of income with the burden of supporting allowable deductions from income. In the former case the burden is on the Commissioner, and in the latter case the burden is upon the taxpayer.
In Nor-Cal Adjusters v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 9 Cir., 1974,
When as here, a taxpayer claims a deduction which is disallowed by the Internal Revenue Service, the burden is on the taxpayer to prove to the Tax Court the merit of the deduction. The shifting of that burden can only be caused by the interjection of “new matter” as provided by Rule 32 of the Rules of Practice of the United States Tax Court.
Under these principles, the burden of proof falls on Rockwell here, where the principal legal issues are whether the taxpayer was entitled to capital gains treatment, which is achieved through what amounts to a deduction under IRC § 1202 or through the alternative formula provided by § 1201, and certain depreciation deductions. Similarly, whether Rockwell could invoke IRC § 1031 to escape recognition of gain on an exchange of “like kind” real properties is a question of tax mitigation, provided by legislative grace, and falls within the burden of proof rules applicable to disputed deductions. Also incidentally involved in this case is the self-employment tax issue. Where there is no dispute that Rockwell received gains includable in gross income from his real property endeavors and the issue of whether he is exempt from the self-employment tax is incidental to the question of whether his business was trading in real property, the burden of proof as to that incidental issue likewise falls on Rockwell.
The nature of the factual inquiry here bolsters our conclusion that Rockwell must shoulder the burden of proof. Here, as in
Brumley, supra,
the crucial factual issue is Rockwell’s purpose. Here we are concerned with whether he held the properties primarily for sale in the ordinary course of trade or business. There we were concerned with whether the “principal purpose” of the taxpayer in acquiring a corporation with a net operating loss was the evasion or avoidance of federal income taxes.
See
IRC § 269. It is logical to place on the tax-
We hold that it was proper for the Tax Court to impose the burden of proof on Rockwell. Although we agree with him that he carried his burden of coming forward with evidence to rebut the presumption favoring the Commissioner, we cannot say that the Tax Court erred in finding that he failed to carry his additional burden of proof.
B. The constitutionality of the burden of proof.
Rockwell argues that to impose the burden of persuasion on him is to deny him due process of law. The argument borders on the frivolous. In most litigation, from time immemorial, the burden of proof — i.e., the burden of persuasion — is on the plaintiff. If Rockwell had paid the tax and sued in the district court to recover it, he would have had to shoulder that burden. The alternative right, provided by the Congress, to contest the deficiency before the Tax Court without first paying the tax, is a matter of grace, granted to relieve taxpayers of the necessity of paying before suing. There is no reason to hold that the provision of this alternative remedy shifted the taxpayer’s burden of proof.
In tax matters, the Congress can condition the taxpayer’s right to contest the validity of a tax assessment pretty much as it sees fit.
See
Cheatham v. United States, 1875,
Moreover, if the question were res integra, we would uphold the rule. The taxpayer knows the facts that relate to whether he was dealing in buying, trading, and selling the properties in question. He can (and Rockwell did) testify as to what his intent or purpose was. The Commissioner, on the other hand, must rely on circumstantial evidence, most of it coming from the taxpayer and the taxpayer’s records, in deciding whether or not to assert a deficiency. It is not at all unfair, in such a case, to place on the taxpayer the burden of persuading the trier of fact, in this case the Tax Court.
The Tax Court committed no reversible error in exercising its discretion to exclude certain cumulative evidence offered by Rockwell.
Affirmed.
Notes
. These cases need not necessarily be read this way. The First Circuit has attempted to reconcile language in our opinions, to the effect that the Commissioner’s presumption of correctness disappears upon the taxpayer’s presentation of evidence which would support a contrary finding and that the burden of proof then shifts to the Commissioner, with its holding in
Rexach, supra,
that the burden of proof
never
shifts to the Commissioner, whether the litigation is a taxpayer’s petition to the Tax Court for redetermination of a
[L]anguage relating to the disappearance of the “presumption,” found in Clark, Cohen v. C.I.R.,266 F.2d 5 , 11 (9th Cir. 1959) and more recently in Herbert v. C.I.R.,377 F.2d 65 , 69 (9th Cir. 1967), would seem to refer not to a shifting of the ultimate burden of persuasion to the Commissioner but to the fateful consequences for him if, in the face taxpayer’s initial presentation of evidence proving the deficiency erroneous, there is added to the record (whether from the Commissioner’s or the taxpayer’s witnesses or documents) no contradictory evidence supporting the bare assessment, [citation omitted] Lawrence v. C.I.R.,143 F.2d 456 (9th Cir. 1944), the other case cited by the district court, stands for this proposition. United States v. Rexach, supra,482 F.2d at 17 n. 3.
We would add that Caratan, supra, also supports this proposition.
