The question presented by this appeal from a decision by the Tax Court is whether Thomas Cadwallader, a professor of psychology at Indiana State University, is entitled to a deduction from income tax for the expense of maintaining an office in his home. Cadwallader has the exclusive use of two offices in the psychology department, one 11 feet by 13 feet and the other 12 by 12, plus a 4 by 7 storage room. But he does most of his research and writing in his home office. The statute, so far as relevant here, allows an employee to take a home office deduction only if the office is exclusively used on a regular basis for the convenience of his employer as the employee’s principal place of business. 26 U.S.C. § 280A(c)(l)(A). The Tax Court denied the deduction on the ground that the “focal point” of Cadwallader’s work for the university was the campus, where he teaches thirteen hours a week, meets with students, attends faculty meetings, and keeps substantial research materials.
We owe no deference to the Tax Court’s legal theories, our relation to the. Tax Court being the same as our relation to the district courts.
Prussner v. United States,
After the decision in the present case, the Tax Court abandoned the focal point test, at least for cases where the employer provides no office for the employee.
Soliman v. Commissioner,
We should think about the purpose of the home office deduction and why it is so limited — for it must be either the taxpayer’s principal place of business, or a place
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where he meets or deals with customers, clients, or patients, or a separate structure used in connection with the business; it must be used exclusively and on a regular basis for these things; and it must be for the exclusive convenience of the employer, if as here the taxpayer is an employee rather than an independent contractor. 26 U.S.C. § 280A. Expenses incurred solely to produce income should in principle be deductible from income tax because otherwise the taxpayer would be taxed on his gross revenue, not on his income. The difficulty is that often expenses have a dual purpose — they produce income but they are also a form of consumption, producing not income but utility.
Moss v. Commissioner,
The current statute guards against abuse in a variety of ways. The home office must be for the convenience of the employer; that is, it can’t just be a place in which the employee chooses to do some of his work. It must be used exclusively for the employer’s work, implying that it has no personal, no household, use. And unless it is distinctively furnished and equipped as an office — which is the implication of its being used for meetings with clients, customers, or patients — or, clearer still, it is a separate structure, the taxpayer must show that it is his principal place of business, not just a cosy den in which he grades exam papers in the evening. If the conditions in the statute are satisfied, then even if the home office is not a separate structure there is a reasonable probability that the taxpayer’s house is actually larger than it would be if he did not imperatively require a home office. For the home office that satisfies the statutory conditions is one that not only is vital to the taxpayer’s business or employment but also has no use but office use. In such a case the added expense of the office is incurred solely to produce income; it yields no, or at least very little, personal utility.
With the purpose behind the home office deduction and its limitations in mind, we can examine the application of the statutory term “principal place of business” to the facts of this case unencumbered by the vagaries of the focal point test or the “all relevant factors” laundry list that is its principal competitor.
Soliman v. Commissioner, supra,
Affirmed.
