The Tax Court upheld the Commissioner’s determination that appellant taxpayer was deficient in her 1961 return in the amount of $3,702.86. The facts were stipulated.
*531
Taxpayer, and her husband Theodore, filed a joint federal income tax return for 1961, claiming an overpayment of $6,701.20 and seeking a refund therefor. The joint return claimed a $23,504.99 deduction as Theodore’s distributive share of the net .operating loss allegedly sustained by Solari Furs in 1961. So-lari Furs, a partnership composed of Theodore and his son, did business in St. Louis, Missouri. The partnership return for the taxable year 1960 showed an income of over $15,000. No partnership return for 1961 was filed. Solari Furs and the two partners were adjudicated bankrupts in 1962 in involuntary proceedings. In connection therewith the bankrupts claimed an overpayment of 1961 income taxes because of a net capital loss in that year. This was denied because of the bankrupts’ failure to keep business records which would make a redetermination or recomputation possible. Solari Furs v. United States, 8 Cir.,
IRS Agent Epp examined the 1961 return and sought verification of the claimed operating loss. He did not talk to Theodore and did not personally examine the books and records of Solari Furs. When he requested that Theodore substantiate the loss he was told that Theodore was unavailable because of illness. Epp then sought verification from the accounting firm which had prepared the 1961 return, the attorney who had represented Theodore in the bankruptcy proceedings, and other agents who had audited the couple’s prior joint returns. He examined the bankruptcy court files and was told that the books and records of Solari Furs “were not available because such records were in the possession of an attorney.”
After an exchange of correspondence, the office of the District Director, on August 5, 1966, wrote Thelma’s attorney that: “No action will be taken in regard to Thelma Rosenberg for a period of ten days from the date of this letter in order to give her time to file a power of attorney if she so desires.” However, on August 12, 1966, a statutory notice of deficiency was mailed to Thelma, and on August 19 a preliminary letter, commonly referred to as a 30-day letter, was sent to her. In response she filed a “Protest Letter” and requested a conference with a representative of the IRS Appellate Division. She was not afforded prelitigation administrative review of the tax liability, and to protect her position she individually, not with her husband, filed an appropriate petition in the Tax Court; it sustained the deficiency determination. This appeal followed.
The taxpayer’s basic complaint is that the IRS violated its own procedural rules, particularly 26 C.F.R. §§ 601.105 and 601.106. She says that the violation, coupled with the failure to audit the books and records of Solari Furs: (1) resulted in an arbitrary determination of deficiency which shifted to the Commissioner the burden of establishing in the Tax Court the asserted deficiency, or (2) voided the notice of deficiency.
The mentioned sections provide administrative procedures available to a taxpayer who does not agree with the determination of the IRS Audit Division. See 9 Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation § 49.122. The taxpayer complains about the denial of an administrative hearing before the Appellate Review Division. See 26 C.F.R. § 601.-106(b) and (c). No reason was given for the denial though the procedures may be interrupted under some circumstances. See § 601.105(f). The procedural rules were promulgated under 5 U.S.C. § 301, formerly 5 U.S.C. § 22. See Luhring v. Glotzbach, 4 Cir.,
*532
A similar problem was considered in Luhring v. Glotzbaeh, 4 Cir.,
The mandatory-directory distinction was again employed in Cleveland Trust Company v. United States, 6 Cir.,
The taxpayer relies on United States v. Heffner, 4 Cir.,
Both Heffner and Leahey rely on Ac-cardi v. Shaughnessy,
Our decision in United States v. Lock-yer, 10 Cir.,
Both Heffner and Leahey are grounded on due process. The question in the instant case is whether the violation of the pertinent administrative procedures violates due process. Its resolution requires us to balance the interests of the government against the interest of the citizen. See Hahn v. Gottlieb, 1 Cir.,
No showing is made as to what, if anything, would have been gained by conference with the Appellate Division. The facts are stipulated. The taxpayer had a full hearing and determination de novo in the Tax Court.
We believe that there was no denial of due process and that the case is distinguishable from the criminal prosecutions considered in Heffner and Leahey. We agree with Luhring and Cleveland Trust that the procedures are directory rather than mandatory.
The Tax Court held that the taxpayer had not carried the burden of proving entitlement to a deduction based on the claimed business loss. The burden of proving the existence and amount of a deductible loss is on the taxpayer. Burnet v. Houston,
Finally, the taxpayer argues that she produced sufficient evidence to substantiate the claimed loss. The evidence on which the taxpayer relies consists of the worksheets, balance sheet, and income statement of an accountant who admittedly did not audit and did not pretend to know the accuracy of the figures which he used. Taxpayer says that circumstantial evidence corroborates the results reached by the accountant. The Tax Court found the evidence wholly inadequate as a basis for determining whether any loss occurred in 1961. This conforms with the result reached in the husband’s bankruptcy proceedings.
Affirmed.
