Cannizzaro v. Commissioner
This text of 1982 T.C. Memo. 633 (Cannizzaro v. Commissioner) 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
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
DAWSON,
OPINION OF THE SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE
GILBERT,
FINDINGS*115 OF FACT
Some of the facts in this case have been stipulated and are found accordingly. The stipulations of fact and the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioner filed a timely Federal income tax return as an unmarried individual for the year 1978. During 1978, and at the time the petition herein was filed, he was a practicing attorney residing in San Francisco, California.
On a schedule attached to his 1978 income tax return, petitioner listed dividends from 23 separate sources which he showed in the amount of $6,345.23. 3 From this total, petitioner directly deducted the amount of $1,043.43, representing interest payments made with respect to a margin account maintained during 1978 with a stockbroker. Petitioner did not designate this payment of interest as an itemized deduction and did not attempt to claim any other itemized deductions on his tax return for 1978. After further reducing the total amount of dividends received by $882.48 for nontaxable dividends, and $100 for the exclusion allowed under section 116, petitioner reported taxable dividends of $4,319.32.
*116 In the statutory notice of deficiency, respondent proposed to increase petitioner's taxable dividends by $1,174. It appears that respondent calculated this adjustment by comparing the total amount of dividends shown as taxable on petitioner's return with information submitted to respondent by persons who had paid various dividends to petitioner. The notice of deficiency made no reference to the interest payment made to the stockbroker. In a brief submitted at the trial, petitioner admitted that he had understated his dividend income, but by an amount substantially smaller than that shown in the notice of deficiency; here also, no reference was made to the interest payment.
At the trial, the statements in petitioner's brief were not addressed by respondent's counsel, and no credible evidence was offered by either party relating to the source and/or amount of each of the various dividends received by petitioner. However, respondent's counsel conceded that, notwithstanding the notice of deficiency and petitioner's brief, the only adjustment he was seeking to make to petitioner's tax return was to increase petitioner's taxable dividend income by $1,043.43. Based on this concession, *117 we find that the information contained in petitioner's 1978 tax return correctly identifies the source and establishes the amount of each dividend received by petitioner in 1978; but, for the reasons stated below, petitioner is not entitled to deduct any amount of the interest paid to his stockbroker from his dividend income. Therefore, we find that petitioner had taxable dividend income in the amount of $5,664.05 for 1978.
OPINION
The single issue in this case concerns the propriety of petitioner's treatment of the $1,043.43 interest payment. Petitioner has deducted the interest payment directly from his dividend income. Respondent seeks to disallow this deduction solely on the ground that the interest payment represents an itemized deduction not exceeding petitioner's zero bracket amount for 1978.
Initially, it should be noted that petitioner offered no explanation as to why he thought it proper to deduct the interest payment directly from his dividend income. We observe here that, even if the payment represents a properly allowable deduction, it was improper, on these facts, for petitioner to report the transaction in this manner. See sections 62 and 63. The Court will, *118 however, consider whether petitioner is entitled to any tax benefit from the interest payment.
Section 163 of the Code provides that there shall be allowed as a deduction all interest paid or accrued within the taxable year. When not attributable to a trade or business, the deduction for interest under section 163 constitutes an "itemized deduction" that may only be used to arrive at taxable income to the extent that the total of all of the taxpayer's itemized deductions exceed his zero bracket amount. Section 63. Similarly, ordinary and necessary expenses incurred for the production of income, which are allowable as deductions under section 212, are also subject to the zero bracket amount limitation.
The record clearly shows that the total of petitioner's interest payments did not exceed his zero bracket amount of $2,200 for 1978.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1982 T.C. Memo. 633, 44 T.C.M. 1557, 1982 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannizzaro-v-commissioner-tax-1982.