Wе address here the issue whether under 26 U.S.C. § 280A(c)(l)(A) petitioner’s home office qualifies as his principal place of business.
I. BACKGROUND
Petitioner, Stanley D. Pomarantz, is a physician speсializing in emergency care medicine. As the sole proprietor and later as an employee of his corporation, Stanley D. Pomarantz, M.D., Inc., P.S., he contraсted with Riverton General Hospital for his services. During 1980 and 1981 he worked 33 to 36 hours per week at the hospital. He treated patients for approximately 14-16 hours of a 24-hour shift. During the remaining hours, he completed charts, followed up on patient treatment, and relaxed. Although he had no private office at the hospital, he had accеss to a work area, call room, and physician’s lounge. The work area contained phones, desk space, and bookshelves with medical journals, textbooks, аnd handbooks. He relaxed, made calls, read or wrote in the call room which also contained desk space and a phone.
Dr. Pomarantz maintained a homе office where he kept a library of medical journals and texts, business records for his professional service corporation and patients’ charts. There he sрent 150-250 hours per year reading publications. He also studied, *496 wrote and followed up on patient care. He treated no patients at home. In most weeks, and as аn average, he spent more time per week at the hospital rather than working at home.
On their joint income tax return in 1980, Dr. Pomarantz and his wife claimed a deduction of $1,454 for maintaining his home office while he was a sole proprietor. In 1980 and 1981, they deducted $3,816 and $3,599 respectively for Stanley D. Pomar-ant?, M.D., Inc., P.S. The Commissioner disallowed the home office deduction. The Tax Court found that Dr. Pomarantz’s home office did not qualify as his principal place of business within the meaning of 26 U.S.C. § 280A(c)(l)(A).
II. LEGAL BACKGROUND
26 U.S.C. § 280A generally prohibits any deduction for the business use of a taxpayer’s home.
1
Green v. Commissioner,
(a) General rule. — Except as othеrwise provided in this section, in the case of a taxpayer who is an individual or an S corporation, no deduction otherwise allowable under this chapter shall be аllowed with respect to the use of a dwelling unit which is used by the taxpayer during the taxable year as a residence.
Neither the legislative history nor the text of 26 U.S.C. § 280A(c)(1)(A) defines “prinсipal place of business.”
Baie v. Commissioner,
The Tax Court determines а taxpayer’s principal place of business by ascertaining which location is the focal point of business activity.
See Jackson v. Commissioner,
Circuit courts have reversed the Tax Court’s finding of principal plаce of business under the focal point test in three instances. Reversing that court’s finding that a violinist’s principal place of business was the Metropolitan Opera and not his home practice area, the Second Circuit found that “[b]oth in time and in importance, home practice was the ‘focal point’ of the appellant musicians’ employment-related activities.”
Drucker v. Commissioner,
Again it reversed the Tax Court and criticized the focal point test as shifting attention to the place where work is more visible rather than where the taxpayer accomplishes the dominant portion of work.
Weissman v. Commissioner,
*496 280A(с) — Exceptions for certain business or rental use; limitation on deductions for such use.—
(1) Certain business use. — Subsection (a) shall not apply to any item to the extent such item is allocable to a portion of the dwelling unit which is exclusively used on a regular basis—
(A) [as] the principal place of business for any trade or business of the taxpayer.
*497
The Sevеnth Circuit also reversed the Tax Court’s finding of principal place of business and questioned the usefulness of the focal point test.
Meiers,
Here, the Tax Court did not reconcile the decisions of the circuit courts, but found that by any standard Dr. Pomarantz’s home office did not qualify as his principal place of business within the meaning of § 280A(c)(l)(A).
III. ANALYSIS
We review the decisions of the Tax Court by the same standard that we review civil bench trials in the United States District Courts.
Grimes v. Commissioner,
By focusing on the facts and circumstances surrounding Dr. Pomarantz’s business, the Tax Court found that his home office was not his principal place of business under § 280A(c)(l)(A). Although arguably a mixed question of law and fact, we find that the Tax Court’s determination of prinсipal place of business is essentially factual and subject to the clearly erroneous standard. This case is similar to Commissioner v. Duberstein, where the Supreme Court stated:
Decision of the issue presented in these cases [whether a transfer is a gift within § 22(b)(3) ] must be based ultimately on the application of the fact-finding tribunal’s experience with the mainsprings of human conduct to the totality of the facts of each case. The nontechnical nature of the statutory standard, the close relationship of it to the data of practical human experience, and the multiplicity of relevant factual elements, with their various combinations, creating the necessity of ascribing the proper force to each, confirm us in our сonclusion that primary weight in this area must be given to the conclusions of the trier of fact.363 U.S. 278 , 289,80 S.Ct. 1190 , 1198,4 L.Ed.2d 1218 (1960).
See also Smith,
Furthermore, the expertise of the Tax Court warrants that we defer to its conclusions and adopt a clearly erroneous standard.
Thompson,
When apрlying the focal point test, the Tax Court looks to where goods or services are delivered and where income is produced. The Second Circuit reviews the nature of the taxpayer’s activities at each location noting where the dominant portion of work is accomplished. It considers also the importance of the tаsk performed and the time spent at each place, the space in which the activities can be conducted, the practical necessity of an offiсe and whether the work pursued there is a condition of continued employment.
Without adopting a specific standard, we believe that under any of these tests, the hospital, rather than the home, was Dr. Pomarantz’s principal place of business. He consistently spent more time on duty at the hospital rather than at home. The essence of his profession is the *498 hands-on treatment of patients which he did only at the hospital and never at home. Finally, he generated income only by seeing patients at the hоspital not studying or writing at home. His home office was not his principal place of business within 26 U.S.C. § 280A(c)(l)(A).
AFFIRMED.
