RENEE VENTO, ET AL., Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket Nos. 992-06, 993-06, 1168-06.
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
Filed September 7, 2016.
147 T.C. No. 7
Ps did not file U.S. Federal income tax returns for 2001 but instead filed individual territorial income tax returns with the Virgin Islands Bureau of Internal Revenue for that year. Ps now concede that they were not bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands for 2001. They seek to credit against their U.S. tax liabilities for that year, under
Held: Ps are not allowed to credit against their U.S. income tax liabilities under
Notes
Joseph M. Erwin, Marjorie Rawls Roberts, and Erika A. Kellerhals, for petitioners.
John Aletta and James C. Fee, Jr., for respondent.
OPINION
HALPERN, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ Federal income tax for 2001, along with additions to tax under
Background
The case was submitted fully stipulated under Rule 122. When petitioners Renee Vento, Gail Vento, and Nicole Mollison filed their petitions in these cases, they resided in California, the Virgin Islands, and Nevada, respectively. Petitioners are sisters--the daughters of Richard G. and Lana J. Vento--and are (and always have been) citizens of the United States. Throughout 2001, petitioners lived in the United States, where they either worked, attended school, or cared for school-age children.3 Petitioner Renee Vento received a bachelor‘s degree from San Diego State University in June 2001. After her graduation, until the spring of 2002, Renee lived in Nevada, where she worked in her family‘s home office. From 1998 until December 2002, petitioner Gail Vento lived in Boulder, Colorado, where she was a full-time student at the University of Colorado. From 1995 until 2006, petitioner Nicole Mollison lived with her husband and their children in Nevada. During 2001, Nicole served as a volunteer and substitute teacher at a school attended by two of her children.
Although petitioners had previously made estimated tax payments to the U.S. Treasury for 2001, they did not file U.S. Federal income tax returns for that year but instead filed individual territorial income tax returns with the BIR in October 2002. Each of those returns included a payment of tax.
Because petitioners filed their 2001 returns with the BIR rather than the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), in 2003 the U.S. Treasury transferred to the BIR under
The notices of deficiency respondent issued on October 14, 2005, reflect his determination that none of petitioners was a bona fide resident of the Virgin Islands for 2001. Each petitioner now concedes that point and also concedes that none of her income for 2001 was sourced in the Virgin Islands and that she did not work in the Virgin Islands or conduct any trade or business there.
On October 17, 2005, petitioner Renee Vento filed an amended return with the BIR for 2001 requesting a refund of the tax reported on her 2001 Virgin Islands return. Records of the BIR designate Renee‘s 2001 Form 1040X as having a status of “closed” as of April 21, 2009, without the issuance of a refund check.
The parties’ stipulations that petitioners were not bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands for 2001 are consistent with the conclusions reached by the U.S. District Court for the District of the Virgin Islands and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in VI Derivatives, LLC v. United States, No. 06-12, 2011 WL 703835 (D.V.I. Feb. 18, 2011), aff‘d in part, rev‘d in part sub nom. Vento v. Dir. of V.I. Bureau of Internal Revenue, 715 F.3d 455 (3d Cir. 2013) in litigation concerning notices of deficiency and FPAAs issued by the BIR and the IRS to petitioners and their parents for 2001. In VI Derivatives, 2011 WL 703835, at *17, the District Court concluded that neither petitioners nor their parents were bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands for 2001. On appeal, the Court of Appeals determined in Vento, 715 F.3d at 477, that “the District Court erred in holding that Richard and Lana Vento were not bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands as of December 31, 2001,” but the Court of Appeals “readily agree[d] with the District Court that none of the Vento daughters was a bona fide resident at that time.”
Discussion
I. Background
A. The Taxation of Virgin Islands Income of U.S. Citizens or Residents
Although the Virgin Islands is an unincorporated territory of the United States,
As part of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA), Pub. L. No. 99-514, sec. 1274(a), 100 Stat. at 2596, Congress repealed the inhabitant rule and enacted
Before the enactment of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (Jobs Act), Pub. L. No. 108-357, 118 Stat. 1418, a subjective, facts-and-circumstances test governed whether an individual qualified as a bona fide resident of the Virgin Islands. Under those rules, an individual was generally considered a bona fide resident if actually present in the Virgin Islands and not a mere transient or sojourner. See
The indefiniteness of the governing standard encouraged some U.S. citizens to claim bona fide residence in the Virgin Islands, and thereby avoid U.S. taxation, without making “major lifestyle changes” and spending only “a few weeks or less out of the year” in the Virgin Islands. See Notice 2004-45, 2004-2 C.B. 33, 34. In Notice 2004-45, 2004-2 C.B. at 33, the IRS announced its intent to “challenge these positions in appropriate cases.”
Similar concerns prompted Congress to enact
B. The Foreign Tax Credit
By imposing tax on the worldwide income of U.S. citizens, residents and domestic corporations, the U.S. tax regime creates a potential for foreign source income of U.S. taxpayers to be taxed by both the United States and the jurisdiction in which it is earned. To ameliorate that double tax burden,
Income taxes paid to foreign jurisdictions or U.S. possessions are creditable only to the extent that they are compulsory amounts paid in satisfaction of a legal obligation.
An amount paid is not a compulsory payment, and thus is not an amount of tax paid, to the extent that the amount paid exceeds the amount of liability under foreign law for tax. An amount paid does not exceed the amount of such liability if the amount paid is determined by the taxpayer in a manner that is consistent with a reasonable interpretation and application of the substantive and procedural provisions of foreign law * * * in such a way as to reduce, over time, the taxpayer‘s reasonably expected liability under foreign law for tax, and if the taxpayer exhausts all effective and practical remedies * * * to reduce, over time, the taxpayer‘s liability for foreign tax * * *. An interpretation or application of foreign law is not reasonable if there is actual notice or constructive notice (e.g., a published court decision) to the taxpayer that the interpretation or application is likely to be erroneous. In interpreting foreign tax law, a taxpayer may generally rely on advice obtained in good faith from competent foreign tax advisors to whom the taxpayer has disclosed the relevant facts. * * *
II. The Parties’ Arguments
A. Whether the Amounts in Issue Qualify as “Taxes Paid”
Respondent alleges that, because petitioners were not legally liable for the Virgin Islands tax in issue, those amounts were not compulsory and thus were not “taxes paid“. See
Respondent further argues that, because the payments in issue exceeded petitioners’ liabilities for Virgin Islands tax, they “should ultimately be refunded“. See
Petitioners argue that, under
B. Whether the Amounts in Issue Were Paid in 2001
Respondent argues that “[p]etitioners have failed to show that any purported tax payments were made to the * * * Virgin Islands during 2001, other than certain estimated tax payments paid to the United States that were subsequently transferred by respondent to the BIR through the cover over procedure in 2003.” Respondent acknowledges that
C. The Applicability of the Section 904 Limitation
Respondent further argues that, even if the amounts in issue satisfied income tax obligations imposed on petitioners by the Virgin Islands, the amounts could not be credited under
While petitioners apparently do not dispute that the credits they claim exceed any
D. The Equality Principle
More generally, petitioners argue that the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit‘s equality principle requires that U.S. and Virgin Islands tax law “be construed harmoniously to produce one tax on citizens” and “avoid double taxation.”
Respondent observes that that Court of Appeals developed the equality principle as an aid to interpreting the mirror code applicable in the Virgin Islands. Because the present case involves the interpretation of U.S. tax law, respondent claims, the equality principle has no application.
III. Analysis
A. Introduction
On the basis of the arguments presented by the parties, we would be inclined to hold for respondent, but our conviction in that regard is strengthened by a more fundamental point that the parties’ technical arguments miss. In regard to those arguments: First, petitioners have not met their burden of proving that the amounts in issue were “taxes paid“. Second, we agree with respondent that “taxes paid” to the Virgin Islands are not exempt from the foreign tax credit limitation of
both Virgin Islands and U.S. tax, amounts paid as tax by U.S. citizens or residents to the Virgin Islands are outside the foreign tax credit regime of
B. Petitioners Have Not Met Their Burden of Establishing That the Amounts in Issue Qualify as “Taxes Paid“.
Petitioners claim that, because “there was no clear authority on determining residency in the Virgin Islands for 2001“, the position that they were bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands and thus required to pay Virgin Islands income tax for that year was a “reasonable interpretation” of applicable law. The absence of clear authority in regard to an issue, however, does not establish the reasonableness of all possible means of resolving it. The record includes no evidence that petitioners relied on the advice of competent advisers in taking the position that they were bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands as of December 31, 2001. Neither the U.S. District Court for the District of the Virgin Islands nor the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit had any apparent difficulty concluding that petitioners were not bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands for 2001. Of course, the courts’ decisions against petitioners do not, by themselves, establish that petitioners’ claims to bona fide Virgin Islands residence for 2001 were not based on reasonable interpretations of the applicable law. But, as we read their opinions, the courts did not seem to find the decision a close one. See Vento, 715 F.3d at 477 (“[W]e readily agree with the District Court that none of the Vento daughters was a bona fide resident[.]“); VI Derivatives, 2011 WL 703835, at *16 (characterizing the Vento daughters’ claims as “more easily resolved” than those of their parents).6
Moreover, the concerns expressed by the IRS and Congress in 2004 about perceived abuses of the standards for determining bona fide residence then in effect gave petitioners reason to know, before the expiration of the period of limitations for claiming a refund of the Virgin Islands tax they paid for 2001, that their claims of bona fide Virgin Islands residence might be erroneous. The concerns that prompted the IRS to issue Notice 2004-45, supra, and Congress to enact Even though by the fall of 2004 petitioners had reason to know of the possible error in their claims of bona fide Virgin Islands residence for 2001, only petitioner Renee Vento requested a refund of the tax she had paid to the Virgin Islands for that year.7 The record gives no indication of the extent to which she pursued her refund claim or the ultimate disposition of her request by the BIR.8 In sum, petitioners have not demonstrated, on the basis of advice obtained in good faith from competent advisers or otherwise, that they paid Virgin Islands tax for 2001 in reliance on a reasonable interpretation of the relevant law. Further, the record does not detail the efforts petitioner Renee Vento made in pursuing her refund claim, and it provides no evidence at all of any attempt by petitioner Nicole Mollison or petitioner Gail Vento to pursue claims for a refund of the tax they paid to the Virgin Islands, despite being on notice of the possible error in the legal interpretation on the basis of which they paid the tax. Therefore, petitioners have also failed to demonstrate that they exhausted “all effective and practical remedies” to reduce their liabilities for Virgin Islands tax. Even if the amounts in issue were otherwise creditable under Although our evaluation of the parties’ arguments leads us to conclude that petitioners are not entitled to credit the amounts in issue under The imposition of Virgin Islands tax on the income of U.S. individuals need not result in the type of double taxation that the foreign tax credit is designed to prevent. The coordination rules of A A The claim of a credit under Moreover, just as A noncodified provision of the TRA, namely, sec. 1274(b), 100 Stat. at 2597, confirms our conclusion that, even though taxes paid to U.S. possessions are generally creditable under Petitioners’ rather unusual situation might have given them an opportunity to slip through a crack in the statutory framework. The literal terms of In any event, we need not decide the case before us solely on the basis of Congress’ intent to allow credits under We recognize of course that petitioners, having already paid tax to the Virgin Islands on their 2001 income, will as a result of our decision end up paying a second tax on the same income to the United States. We take respondent‘s efforts to collect tax from petitioners on their 2001 income to mean that he has been unsuccessful in any attempts to secure from the Virgin Islands the tax petitioners have already paid for 2001. Because Vento established that petitioners did not owe tax to the Virgin Islands for 2001, no apparent legal grounds would justify the BIR‘s failure to either refund to petitioners or remit to the U.S. Treasury the amounts it collected from petitioners for 2001.15 Whatever sympathy we might have for petitioners, however, does not compel us to allow them a credit against their U.S. tax liabilities to which they are not legally entitled.16 To the extent that petitioners pay tax on the same income to both the United States and the Virgin Islands, they must seek a remedy elsewhere; they cannot find it in section 901.17 Decisions will be entered under Rule 155.C.
D. The More Fundamental Point: Congress Did Not Intend That Virgin Islands “Taxes Paid” by U.S. Individuals Be Creditable Under
H.R. Conf. Rept. No. 99-841 (Vol. II), at II-682 (1986), 1986-3 C.B. (Vol. 4) 1, 682.To the extent that the Virgin Islands either collects tax by the date of enactment or, pursuant to an assessment issued by August 16, 1986, collects tax by January 1, 1987, on non-V.I. source, non-V.I. effectively connected income of a V.I. inhabitant that is subject to U.S. tax for pre-1987 taxable years, that V.I. tax is to be creditable against the U.S. tax liability on that income. To the extent that that V.I. tax is imposed on U.S. income, it is to be creditable against U.S. tax on that particular income notwithstanding the general limitations on the foreign tax credit.
