MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACTS AND OPINION
WHITAKER, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in income taxes and additions to tax for the years and in the amounts as follows:
| | Additions to Tax |
| Year | Deficiency | Sec. 6653(b) 1 |
| 1971 | $1,238.69 | $1,082.68 |
| 1972 | 5,383.63 | 2,758.60 |
| 1973 | 9,544.54 | 8,052.59 |
| 1974 | 5,600.65 | 3,217.44 |
The principal issues for decision are whether petitioners understated their gross income on their income tax returns for each of the years and whether any part of the underpayment of tax for each year was due to the fraud of petitioner Clente A. Bevitori (hereinafter Bevitori.) 2 In the event fraud is not found, petitioners raise the defense of the statute of limitations. For convenience we have combined our Findings of Fact and Opinion.
Some of the facts have been stipulated. At the time of the filing of the petition, petitioners, who are husband and wife, resided in Longwood, Florida. Petitioners filed joint U.S. Individual Income Tax Returns for each of the years 1971 through 1974, inclusive, 3 using the cash basis method of accounting.
For some time prior to and including the first eight months of the year 1971, Bevitori was employed by Commercial Credit Corporation (and his wife by Continental Oil Company) in Ponca City, Oklahoma. In the fall of 1971, petitioners moved back to Lawton, Oklahoma, where Bevitori's mother, Mrs. Geneva Bevitori (Mrs. Bevitori), resided, in order to commence work for Custom Recording Company, Inc. (Recording), a producer of music tape recordings with its business activities centered in South Carolina. Bevitori's duties for Recording were to establish new outlets for the sales of tapes and to promote sales to existing outlets west of the Mississippi. Charles A. Schafer (Schafer) was the owner and president of Recording. 4 In late 1971 or early 1972, Mrs. Bevitori established a business under the name of Custom Distributors (Distributors) 5 as a distributor of Recording's tapes with its business location in Lawton.
Bevitori's compensation arrangement with Recording was a commission of 10 percent on all net sales of tapes west of the Mississippi, earned as the tapes were actually paid for by the distributors. Bevitori also was given a drawing account or an advance against commissions, initially $1,800 per month, which essentially was fixed as the amount petitioners needed for living purposes. The drawing account was gradually increased thereafter to more than $3,000 per month.
On the basis of the record as a whole, it is unclear whether, at the end of 1971, petitioner's entitlement to commissions was more or less than the payments he received during 1971. For the remaining years, 1971 through 1974, Bevitori's commissions equaled or exceeded the amounts paid to him and charged to his drawing account. The amounts of the periodic draws received as advance commissions or as advances against commissions were received by Bevitori under a claim of right without any obligation or intention on his part to repay to Recording any of the payments so received, irrespective of whether or not at any particular time the aggregate of the payments may have been in excess of commissions actually earned on a cumulative basis or otherwise. Nor did Recording intend that any year end deficit in Bevitori's drawing account constitute a debt to it.
During 1972, 1973 and 1974, Bevitori also engaged in sales activities for Distributors and received from it at various times cash advances, commissions, travel and other expense reimbursements and miscellaneous payments. These sums were received by petitioner under a claim of right with no intent or obligation to repay. 6
The parties have stipulated to the receipt by Bevitori of payments from Recording and from Distributors during each of the years 1971 through 1974 in the following amounts:
| 1971 | 1972 | 1973 | 1974 |
| Recording: | $8,270.00 | $35,527.50 | 7 $67,964.28 | $44,148.52 |
| Distributors: | | $ 200.00 | $ 4,385.34 | $20,253.95 |
| Total | $8,270.00 | $35,727.50 | $72,349.62 | $64,402.47 |
The parties have also stipulated that Bevitori is entitled to no deduction for charitable contributions in 1971 or 1972 and that he is entitled to deductions for charitable contributions in 1973 of $7.50 and in 1974 of $54; that Bevitori received interest income of $90.06 in 1973 and that he is entitled to business expense deductions in excess of those claimed on his tax return for 1971 amounting to $2,243.18. The 1973 interest income was included in petitioners' 1973 income tax return. The charitable contribution deductions and the additional 1971 business expenses were allowed in the notice of deficiency.
It is further stipulated that during 1973 petitioners built a residence on a lot purchased by them in Lawton in 1972. Part of the down payment came from Recording in the form of a check dated April 18, 1973, in the amount of $10,000. 8 During the audit Bevitori, at least initially, informed respondent's agents that this sum was a loan. Apparently his initial statement to respondent's agents was later qualified with the admission that the sum would have been "repaid" out of commissions. In his oral testimony, he again claimed the sum as a loan and also testified that he gave Schafer a promissory note to reflect the loan. Bevitori's testimony is directly contradicted by Schafer, who indicated that Bevitori clearly understood that the greater part of the sum was to be taken out of already earned commissions and the balance out of soon to be earned commissions, and that no note was ever executed. No note evidencing this transaction was delivered to Schafer by Bevitori. We find as a fact that this sum of $10,000 was an advance against commissions earned or to be earned and that, like other receipts from Recording, was received by Bevitori under a claim of right without any obligation or intention on his part to repay.
There is further uncertainty in the record as to whether Recording issued a Form 1099 to Bevitori covering the annual payments by Recording to him for any of the years in question. Apparently Bevitori was not treated as an employee of Recording for tax purposes; no tax was withheld from any payments to him and no Form W-2 was prepared or filed. No Form 1099 was introduced into evidence. 9 On this record it would be difficult to make a finding of fact as to which years, if any, Recording issued a Form 1099 to Bevitori. Since the burden of proof on fraud is upon respondent and the receipt of a Form 1099 would be pertinent principally on the fraud issue, we will accept petitioner's contention that no such forms were received, notwithstanding the lack of credibility of petitioners' witnesses.
The principal characters in the business transactions out of which the tax issues in this case arose, Mrs. Bevitori, Bevitori and Schafer, all testified.Their credibility is a major factor in the fraud determination. Both Bevitori and Schafer were indicted for fraudulent evasion of taxes. Bevitori pled guilty to willfully evading income tax for the year 1973 and received a light sentence.Schafer, on the other hand, contested the criminal charge, was convicted and sentenced to prison for a short period.Based upon our observations of the individuals who testified and our comparison of their testimony with that of other witnesses, of documents and with other parts of the record, we find the testimony of Bevitori and Mrs. Bevitori to be highly suspect. It was patently obvious that Mrs. Bevitori was coloring her testimony in order to attempt to establish that her son paid no attention to record keeping or to the financial aspects of his business and that the tax returns were based upon verbal reports by Schafer to her as to taxable income paid by Recording to Bevitori. This posture of complete reliance by Bevitori upon his mother, to some extent upon his wife, and ultimately on Schafer was vigorously echoed by Bevitori in his testimony. The facts, however, belie such testimony. Bevitori's defense is in part legal and in part factual. In essence he contends that payments from Recording were not taxable until earned as commissions and presumably that the tax returns included the earned commissions as verbally reported to Mrs. Bevitori by Schafer, at least for the years 1971, 1972 and 1973. Thus, Mrs. Bevitori testified that for each of those three years she obtained by telephone from Schafer the amount of Bevitori's income for the year and either gave that figure to Bevitori or reported it directly to the accountant. This testimony is corroborated only in general terms by Bevitori and is controverted by the record as a whole. We conclude that Mrs. Bevitori's story is a fabricated excuse for her son's tax delinquency. By contrast Schafer was forthright and credible, and we accept his testimony.
The Federal income tax return of petitioners for the year 1971 was prepared by an accountant and filed on December 15, 1972. The accountant testified that he dealt directly with Bevitori. That return does not reflect any compensation received from Recording. Notwithstanding Bevitori's testimony to the contrary, we find that Bevitori failed to disclose to the accountant any facts as to his job with or receipt of payments from Recording. The returns for the years 1972, 1973, and 1974 was filed respectively on December 12, 1974, January 9, 1975, and August 25, 1975. In the case of these returns, petitioners' counsel acted as tax return preparer.Similarly, Bevitori dealt directly with his attorney, acting as return preparer, and gave his attorney both incorrect and incomplete information. 10 While the record contains relatively little information as to tax return preparation with respect to the year 1974, Bevitori was no more candid or accurate with his tax return preparer with respect to that year. Also, Bevitori in at least one instance furnished inaccurate and misleading information to respondent's agents with respect to the $10,000 payment from Recording received in 1973 and his testimony on this point was inaccurate.
From this record we cannot determine the basis for the income figures used in the returns for 1972, 1973 and 1974. Payments received by Bevitori during each year from Recording and from Distributors in the aggregate were substantially in excess of the amounts reported on the income tax returns. It is not even explicit in the testimony of Mrs. Bevitori and Bevitori that the tax return gross income figures are the amounts allegedly given to Mrs. Bevitori by Schafer over the telephone. Moreover, there is no assertion by petitioners that any of the payments received by Bevitori from Distributors were in whole or in part included in any tax return gross income total. Neither do petitioners contend that these payments from Distributors were not taxable in the year of receipt. Thus, while it is evident that the gross income reported on the 1972 through 1974 tax returns must have been derived from Recording, there is a total absence of proof as to the rationale for or the method by which payments from Recording were segregated by petitioners between receipts treated as taxable and nontaxable in each of these years. Whatever the source of these 1975 through 1974 gross income figures may have been, the source was not a verbal communication from Schafer, or any other report by Recording directly or indirectly to Bevitori. 11
Sales of the tapes, both the volume of sales by Recording west of the Mississippi and the sales by Distributors, increased rapidly during the year 1973 and then dropped off in 1974 and 1975 with the termination of Bevitori's relationship with Recording in 1975. 12
Both in 1973 and in 1974, Bevitori and his attorney traveled to Recording's place of business in South Carolina to reconcile their respective accounting records.
A part of petitioners' underpayment of tax in each of the years 1971 through 1974, inclusive, was due to fraud.
We first must determine the tax character of the payments received by Bevitori from Recording.Petitioners contend that the payments should be treated as loans for tax purposes and that Bevitori did not earn taxable income until commissions were actually earned by him. We have found as a fact that for every year other than 1971 the earned commissions each year equaled or exceeded the payments by Recording to Bevitori. Hence, even if petitioners' position were correct, the result in three of the years would be the same. In any event, as to each year, including 1971, the law is clear. We have found, contrary to petitioners' contentions, that there was no intent on the part of Bevitori to make repayment of any of the funds received nor any intent on the part of Schafer or any of his corporations to enforce repayment of any advances which at the end of any year may have exceeded earned commissions. These payments were received under a claim of right and constituted taxable income in the year of receipt. Beaver v. Commissioner,55 T.C. 85 (1970); Fisher v. Commissioner,54 T.C. 905 (1970); see also, Moorman v. Commissioner,26 T.C. 666 (1956). The cases cited by petitioners are not on point. In addition, any reimbursement which Bevitori received from Recording for moving expenses and travel and like expenses incurred by him were required to be included in gross income to be offset by expenses actually incurred. Section 61; Commissioner v. Kowalski,434 U.S. 77 (1977); Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co.,348 U.S. 426 (1955); Rietzke v. Commissioner,40 T.C. 443 (1963); see also Moorman v. Commissioner,supra.Thus, all of the payments received from Recording in each of the four years constituted income taxable to petitioners in the year received.
During the years 1972, 1973 and 1974 Bevitori received from Distributors payments, the amounts of which were stipulated and which in the stipulation have been variously characterized as commissions, advances for commissions, advances for or reimbursements of travel and supplies, and miscellaneous "checks." As we have found, these amounts were received by petitioner under a claim of right with no intent or obligation to repay and are includible in gross income under section 61.
Thus, for the years 1971 through 1974, petitioners' corrected gross income was as determined by respondent in the statutory notice, 13 viz.:
| 1971 | $20,003.56 |
| 1972 | 35,727,50 |
| 1973 | 72,439.68 |
| 1974 | 65,780.47 |
Petitioners appear to concede that collateral estoppel bars petitioners from denying that whatever deficiency we find for the year 1973 was fraudulent as to Bevitori. 14 We have found a substantial deficiency for 1973 and, therefore, by reason of collateral estoppel, Bevitori is liable for additions to tax under section 6653(b). With respect to the years 1971, 1972 and 1974, respondent bears the burden of proof with respect to fraud and such proof must be by clear and convincing evidence. Section 7454(a); Rule 142(b), Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Crucial to the determination is whether in this case Bevitori had an actual specific intent to evade a tax believed to be owing. E.g., Webb v. Commissioner,394 F.2d 366, 377 (5th Cir. 1968), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court; Powell v. Granquist,252 F.2d 56, 60 (9th Cir. 1958), Estate of Pittard v. Commissioner,69 T.C. 391, 400 (1977). Such intent may be inferred from circumstantial evidence. Powell v. Granquist,supra at 61; Gajewski v. Commissioner,67 T.C. 181, 200 (1976), affd. without published opinion 578 F.2d 1383 (8th Cir. 1978); Beaver v. Commissioner,supra at 92, 93.
There is no dispute as to the amount of payments received in each year by Bevitori from Recording and from Distributors. Petitioners seek to avoid or explain the circumstantial evidence pointing towards fraud on Bevitori's part at least as to the payments by Recording on two bases, which are not entirely consistent--that Bevitori relied upon others for information and advice and that the law governing the taxability of the payments was uncertain.
Bevitori disclaims knowledge of books and records, seeking to hide behind the "skirts" of his mother, who in turn attempts to lay the blame for any underpayment on Schafer. Petitioners contend that Bevitori reported on his tax returns for each year the income which Schafer told his mother was taxable to him. There is, however, absolutely no corroboration of this part of Mrs. Bevitori's testimony. Neither is it clear in the record that the amounts allegedly given to her by Schafer correspond to the income shown on petitioners' tax returns. Neither Bevitori nor his mother have sought to explain why, if Bevitori were totally ignorant of the facts, it was he and only he who had direct dealings with the accountant who prepared the 1971 tax return and with petitioners' counsel who prepared the tax returns for the remaining three years. No dates of the alleged telephone conversations were mentioned. Apparently no memoranda were made of the calls or of the amounts of income reported by Schafer. At least none were offered in evidence, nor was there testimony that memoranda were made. It is inconceivable that Mrs. Bevitori would not have made some sort of a notation of the amount of taxable income to be reported on her son's tax return, since that figure had to be communicated to the return preparers by him. That Mrs. Bevitori and Bevitori would not have arranged for written confirmation of the telephoned figures is also unbelievable, particularly since Mrs. Bevitori, according to her own testimony, was well aware of the requirements for issuance of an annual Form 1099 by Recording. And in spite of the fact that petitioners' counsel accompanied Bevitori to Schafer's place of business in 1973 and again in 1974 to reconcile their records, there is no suggestion that either of the Bevitoris informed the attorney-tax return preparer of the lack of any Forms 1099 or of uncertainty as to the amount of taxable income.
It is also beyond reason to credit Bevitori with good faith in advising his attorney as his tax return preparer for 1972 that his business arrangement with Recording commenced in August of 1972, rather than in October 1971. Bevitori cannot deny that he was aware that annual tax returns were his obligation or that his return for the year 1972 was due on April 15, 1973. Moreover, his argument that his payments from Recording were not taxable until earned would have required reporting the 1971 payments for 1972. Had he done so, his 1972 return certainly would have shown his business as commencing in 1971. Neither do we believe that by August 1974, when Bevitori went to his attorney to seek help with tax return delinquencies for 1972 and 1973, he was not well aware of the fact that he had earned substantial commissions from Recording which were required to be reported. Even if Bevitori did not know the exact amount of his earnings in each of the years 1972 and 1973, he was certainly required to be candid with his tax return preparer. Unless he were attempting to evade his tax responsibilities and to mislead his tax return preparer, we do not believe that Bevitori would have failed to advise his preparer of the allegedly unsuccessful efforts to obtain accurate information from Recording as to commissions earned, especially when he and his attorney traveled to Recording's office both in 1973 and 1974 to reconcile books. Even if we were to assume that accurate information had not been obtained from Schafer or Recording by the tax return filing time for the years 1972 and 1973, Bevitori could and should have filed returns on the best information available on or before the due dates, sought extensions, or at the very least sought his attorney's advice. His feeble excuse for the late filing is not acceptable.
Petitioners' alternative contention is that the fraud addition would not lie where there is a genuine doubt as to the taxability of a receipt. Petitioners cite for this proposition Mayock v. Commissioner,32 T.C. 966 (1959); and Jemison v. Commissioner,45 F.2d 4 (5th Cir. 1930). In Mayock, the petitioner was a credible witness and the Court simply accepted his testimony that he believed as a matter of law that not all of the receipts in question was taxable to him. In Jemison, the Fifth Circuit held for the petitioner because the petitioner had disclosed all of the facts to his attorney and had been advised that the disputed item was not taxable. Neither of these cases is factually applicable here. Bevitori offered no basis for his belief, if he had one, that the taxability of the payments from Recording was unclear. Rather, his conduct "indicated a subjective belief in the unlawfulness of the conduct." United States v. Ingredient Technology Corp.,698 F.2d 88, 97 (2d Cir. 1983), cert. denied U.S. (June 20, 1983).
Finally, there is the matter of commissions earned from and reimbursements paid by Distributors. Petitioners have chosen simply to ignore this facet of the case. Omission of more than $20,000 of income from Distributors from the 1974 return reflected the pattern of understatement commenced with the year 1971. This is persuasive evidence of fraud. Otsuki v. Commissioner,53 T.C. 96, 107-108 (1969).
This case is analogous to Drieborg v. Commissioner, a Memorandum Opinion of this Court, affd. in part and revd. in part, 225 F.2d 216 (6th Cir. 1955), in which we found fraud on the part of the petitioner husband who had furnished his tax return preparer incorrect facts and had understated his income for a number of years. Bevitori was aware of and must be held responsible for the pattern of understating his gross income for four consecutive years.
In addition, we have found as a fact that Bevitori misrepresented to respondent's agents during the investigation the facts as to the alleged $10,000 loan. This is another clear indication of fraud. McGee v. Commissioner,61 T.C. 249 (1973), affd. 519 F.2d 1121, 1126 (5th Cir. 1975). Finally, as we have found, Bevitori's testimony is not worthy of belief in material respects.
Respondent has by clear and convincing evidence shown that the understatements of income resulted from Bevitori's willful and knowing intent to evade his income tax liabilities for each of the years 1971 through 1974, both inclusive. Thus, the additions to tax under section 6653(b) are also due for each of the years 1971, 1972 and 1974. In view of our conclusions as to fraud, we do not reach the issue as to the statute of limitations. The other arguments advanced by petitioners need no further comment.
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.