Bouterie v. Commissioner

36 F.3d 1361, 1994 WL 579666
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 7, 1994
Docket93-05534
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 36 F.3d 1361 (Bouterie v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bouterie v. Commissioner, 36 F.3d 1361, 1994 WL 579666 (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner-Appellant Rita B. Bouterie (“Taxpayer”) appeals an order of the United States Tax Court (“Tax Court”) denying her request for the costs incurred in litigating a Petition for Redetermination of Taxes (“Petition for Redetermination”), which she filed in response to a Notice of Deficiency (“Notice”) issued by the IRS. The Tax Court found that Taxpayer had failed to establish that the IRS’ litigation position was not “substantially justified” and thus held that Taxpayer was not entitled to costs pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7430. We find to the contrary that Taxpayer established beyond serious question that the IRS’ position was wholly lacking in justification, whether substantial or otherwise, given the absence of any defensible basis for that position in law or in fact. We therefore reverse the decision of the Tax Court and remand for a determination of the reasonable litigation costs that Taxpayer may recover.

I

FACTS AND PROCEDURE

The facts and state law issues of this case are no longer in dispute. Taxpayer and William H. Boyle (“Mr. Boyle”) were married in 1966 without executing a pre-nuptial agreement. As of November 1978, the spouses were domiciled in Louisiana, and accordingly were subject to the community property laws of that state.

On November 13, 1978, Taxpayer sued her husband in Louisiana for a “separation from bed and board” (legal separation), which was granted on May 31, 1979. Even though the final judgment of divorce was not rendered until 1985, the 1979 judgment granting the legal separation had the effect of terminating the “community of acquets and gains” (marital community) between Taxpayer and Mr. Boyle ipso facto, but retroactively to November 13,1978, the date Taxpayer had filed her petition for legal separation.

Mr. Boyle was a life insurance agent who was paid on commission. For each insurance policy he sold, he earned both a current “sales commission” and the right to future “renewal commissions” for each subsequent year that the policy remained in force. Mr. Boyle continued to receive renewal commissions on policies he had sold prior to the termination of the marital community with Taxpayer, but he did not share these commissions with her.

Taxpayer subsequently filed a suit in Louisiana to partition all property formerly belonging to the marital community, including the right to receive future renewal commissions on policies sold during the existence of the marital community, ie., those policies sold prior to November 13, 1979. In 1983, a Louisiana court ruled on the suit, holding, inter alia, that:

Commissions payable to William Boyle on renewal premiums for policies of insurance written prior to November 13, 1978, are community property. Commissions payable to William Boyle on renewal premiums for policies of insurance written on or *1364 after November 13, 1978, are the separate property of William Boyle.

This decision was affirmed on appeal. 1

Even after that judgment became final and executory, though, Mr. Boyle continued to oppose vigorously the payment to Taxpayer of her one-half of any renewal commission income from policies written prior to the date that the marital community was terminated. Beginning September 1, 1985, however, all renewal commission payments on policies written before the termination of the marital community were deposited into an escrow account. On June 17, 1988, pursuant to a partial settlement agreement, all funds in the escrow account were divided equally between the former spouses, who also agreed that all future renewal commissions resulting from policies written before the termination of the marital community would be shared equally. It was not until October 16, 1990, however, that the Louisiana trial court entered an order partitioning the remainder of the assets that had formerly belonged to the marital community, including renewal commissions. As a result, that court ordered Mr. Boyle to pay Taxpayer in excess of $488,000 to equalize the partition; the majority of this amount was required to account for renewal commissions received by Mr. Boyle between 1978 and 1984 (but never shared with Taxpayer) on policies written before November 13, 1978.

In May 1989, while the Louisiana suit was still pending, the IRS issued a Notice to Mr. Boyle, claiming deficiencies of over $400,000 for tax years 1978 through 1984 (except for 1982), 2 an eight-year period during which Mr. Boyle apparently had not filed income tax returns. During this same period Taxpayer also had neglected to file two income tax returns. 3 In the Notice, the IRS determined that Mr. Boyle should have reported as ordinary income (1) one-half of the amount of the renewal commissions he was paid in 1978 (before the marital community was terminated), and (2) the total amount of the renewal commissions he was paid thereafter, regardless of when the policies which generated those renewals had been written.

In August 1989, Mr. Boyle filed a Petition for Redetermination in the Tax Court. He alleged, inter alia, that the IRS erred in determining his filing status for tax years 1978 through 1984 and in finding that he owed taxes on the total amount of the renewal commissions for policies written before the termination of the marital community. 4

On January 25, 1991 — after the Louisiana judgment of partition had been rendered— the IRS for the first time issued a Notice to Taxpayer, claiming that she owed taxes on renewal commissions resulting from policies written up until the marital community ended but paid in full thereafter to Mr. Boyle between 1978 and 1984. Seizing on the 1983 *1365 state court decision, which imprecisely characterized the renewal commissions as “community property” — failing to distinguish between the rights to receive such commissions (which had been community assets) and the commissions actually earned and paid wholly to Mr. Boyle after the marital community terminated — the IRS insisted that Taxpayer had an immediately taxable one-half interest in this renewal commission income regardless of her lack of actual receipt and her legal and factual inability to obtain her share. This determination was clearly inconsistent with the position taken by the IRS in its May 1989 Notice to Mr. Boyle, in which the IRS had claimed that Mr. Boyle was required to declare as his income all renewal commission income received after the marital community was terminated. Nevertheless, based on its bald assertion that Taxpayer owned a community property interest in the renewal commissions, the IRS calculated that she owed an income tax deficiency of $289,562.33 for tax years 1978-82 and 1984. 5

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Bluebook (online)
36 F.3d 1361, 1994 WL 579666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bouterie-v-commissioner-ca5-1994.