Brown v. Comm'r
This text of 2012 T.C. Summary Opinion 5 (Brown v. Comm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
PURSUANT TO
GUSTAFSON,
The Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") determined a $1,553 deficiency in the 2007 Federal income tax of petitioners Clifton Gregory Brown and Alma Elizabeth Brown. The issue for decision is whether the Browns are entitled to deduct interest that they paid to the State of New York. We hold that they are not.
The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 121. The cross-motions show that the material facts are not in dispute; and on December 1, 2011, the Court held a conference *6 call with the parties to confirm that neither party desires a trial. Under Rule 121 a non-movant's burden is only to raise genuine issues of material fact, and all factual inferences are drawn in favor of the non-movant. Since we will grant the IRS's motion, we draw all inferences in favor of the Browns and assume that the facts are as follows:
In 2002, 2003, and 2004, Mr. Brown sold shares of Citigroup stock, and he derived capital gains from those sales. The Browns reported the gain on income tax returns that they filed for those years—i.e., both Federal income tax returns and returns for South Carolina, the State in which they then resided.
In 2006 the State of New York audited the Browns' State income tax returns for those years and determined that they owed income tax to the State of New York on the gains from the 2002 through 2004 Citigroup stock sales and that they owed interest on the unpaid tax. The Browns eventually paid to the State of New York $40,969 in income tax and $7,652 in interest. Although our record does not show it, we assume in the Browns' favor, for purposes *7 of the IRS's motion, that these amounts relate entirely to the Citigroup stock sales and that they were fully paid in 2007.
In 2007 the Browns filed amended South Carolina income tax returns for the years 2002 through 2004, reducing their South Carolina income by the amounts attributable to the Citigroup stock sales and claiming the resulting refunds of South Carolina income tax. In May and August 2007, South Carolina paid to the Browns the refunds that they had requested, along with interest totaling $3,593.
In 2008 the Browns filed their Federal income tax return for 2007. They did not report as income on that return the interest that they had received in 2007 from South Carolina. However, South Carolina did report to the IRS its payments of interest to the Browns. The IRS compared this information to the return that the Browns had filed, noted the omission, and issued on March 29, 2010, a notice of deficiency, determining a deficiency in the Browns' 2007 Federal income tax in the amount of $1,553, which was the tax attributable to the inclusion in the Browns' income of the interest they received *8 from South Carolina in 2007. On June 28, 2010, the Browns timely filed their petition, asking this Court to redetermine the deficiency.
The Browns' position is that they should not be taxed on the $3,593 of interest they received from South Carolina because of the greater amount of interest—$7,652—that they were required to pay to the State of New York. As they put it, their position "rests not on specific legal issues of the I.R.C., but on the totality and proper interpretation of the facts." They were compelled to recharacterize their stock sale gains as New York income rather than South Carolina income, and this change resulted in their receiving overpayment interest from South Carolina but paying underpayment interest to the State of New York— and in larger amounts. In the net, they were not at all enriched by these related transactions. On the contrary, they were worse off to the extent of $4,059. The Browns therefore urge that it is inequitable and illogical to attribute income to them from the South Carolina interest receipts while ignoring the New York interest payments, because to do so (they say) ignores the economic reality: They did not gain from this circumstance;
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2012 T.C. Summary Opinion 5, 2012 Tax Ct. Summary LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-commr-tax-2012.