Charles Lin & Amy Lin

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 21, 2023
Docket34218-21
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Charles Lin & Amy Lin, (tax 2023).

Opinion

United States Tax Court

T.C. Memo. 2023-37

CHARLES LIN AND AMY LIN, Petitioners

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

—————

Docket No. 34218-21. Filed March 21, 2023.

Charles Lin and Amy Lin, pro sese.

William J. Gregg, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

LAUBER, Judge: With respect to petitioners’ Federal income tax for 2019 the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) determined a deficiency of $4,679. 1 This deficiency reflected a determination that petitioners had failed to report the full amount of retirement income, taxable Social Security benefits, and dividends they had received. On an amended return for 2019 petitioners reported an increased rental loss on Schedule E, Supplemental Income and Loss. We sustain a por- tion of the deficiency attributable to the omitted income and hold that petitioners are not entitled to the additional rental loss deduction they claim.

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Reve-

nue Code (Code), Title 26 U.S.C., in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the nearest dollar.

Served 03/21/23 2

[*2] FINDINGS OF FACT

Some facts have been stipulated and are so found. The Stipula- tion of Facts and the attached Exhibits are incorporated by this refer- ence. Petitioners resided in Virginia when they timely petitioned this Court.

Petitioners were retired in 2019. They received during that year investment income, Social Security benefits, and retirement benefits. On their timely filed Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for 2019 they reported (as relevant here) dividends of $4,010, taxable Social Security benefits of zero, and retirement benefits of $61,976, of which they reported $50,629 as taxable.

On their 2019 return petitioners reported on Schedule E a rental real estate loss of $8,189. They incurred this alleged loss upon renting a room in their home to a close friend who needed a place to stay for ten months before returning to Taiwan. Petitioners charged the tenant a modest rent of $300 per month, yielding total rental income of $3,000. They did not execute a written lease with this tenant.

Petitioners resided in a three-floor house in suburban Virginia, which had been built in 1994. The tenant occupied a bedroom on the basement level with an adjoining bathroom and also had use of a kitchen. Other rooms in the basement included a utility room, a recre- ation room, a storage room that housed air conditioning equipment serv- ing the entire house, and a second storage room. Petitioners used the second storage room, and the tenant temporarily stored some luggage there.

Against the $3,000 of rental income petitioners offset expenses of $604 for insurance and $10,430 for taxes. These alleged expenses to- taled $11,034, but petitioners on their Schedule E incorrectly summed these amounts as $11,189. The $604 insurance expense was the amount paid for insurance on the entire house. The $10,430 tax expense was the sum of the property taxes paid on the entire house and on a time- share property that petitioners owned in Florida. 2 Petitioners supplied no evidence concerning the square footage of the space occupied by the tenant, the square footage of the entire house, or the percentage that the former represented of the latter.

2 Petitioners elected the standard deduction on their 2019 return and thus

could not claim property taxes paid as deductions on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions. 3

[*3] The IRS issued petitioners a timely notice of deficiency that de- termined omitted income on the basis of third-party reporting. The no- tice determined that petitioners for 2019 had received, but failed to re- port, additional dividend income of $282 (of which $68 was “qualified”) and Social Security benefits totaling $32,808. The notice determined that 85% of the latter amount was taxable, producing an adjustment of $27,887. The notice determined that petitioners had received other re- tirement income totaling $61,973 3 and that 100% of this amount was taxable, producing an adjustment of $11,344. The notice did not chal- lenge petitioners’ $8,189 Schedule E loss.

On June 17, 2021, petitioners filed an amended return for 2019. On this return petitioners admitted receipt of $282 of additional divi- dend income. On the basis of that concession we will discuss this ad- justment no further.

On their amended return petitioners again reported $50,629 of taxable retirement income. They noted that the U.S. Railroad Retire- ment Board had issued them Forms 1099–R, Distributions From Pen- sions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc., reporting that $8,213 of its distributions to them was nontaxable. Petitioners reported that another $3,134 of those distribu- tions was excludable from income as “rollovers.” See § 408(d)(3). At trial respondent stated that he is no longer pursuing the $11,344 adjustment relating to unreported retirement income. 4 On the basis of that conces- sion we will discuss this adjustment no further.

On their amended return petitioners admitted receiving $32,808 of railroad retirement benefits. That was the total amount of Social Se- curity benefits determined in the notice of deficiency. But petitioners reported that only $8,793 of that sum was taxable.

Finally, petitioners claimed on their amended return a Sched- ule E loss of $30,763, as compared with the loss of $8,189 they had orig- inally reported. The increased loss, which eliminated the $155 math error appearing on their original Schedule E, was attributable to the

3 The $3 difference between this sum and $61,976—the amount shown for “pen- sions and annuities” on petitioners’ return—is attributable to a rounding error. 4 The $3 difference between the $11,344 adjustment and $11,347—the total

amount of nontaxable distributions shown on petitioners’ amended return—is attribut- able to the rounding error noted supra note 3. 4

[*4] following previously unreported expenses, all of which were alleg- edly incurred in connection with rental of the basement room:

Item Amount

Cleaning and maintenance $655

Legal and professional fees 955

Repairs 3,913

Depreciation 17,051

Homeowner’s association fee 155

Total $22,729

At trial petitioners stated that the “cleaning and maintenance” expense was incurred in connection with maintenance of air condition- ing equipment that served the entire house. The “legal and professional fees” were incurred for preparation of their 2019 income tax return. The “repairs” expense was incurred in connection with renovation of their basement bathroom but only after the tenant had moved out. The de- preciation expense was calculated on $468,947, the tax basis of their en- tire house. The homeowner’s association (HOA) fee appears to have been incurred in connection with their time-share property in Florida. As with the Schedule E expenses reported on their original return, peti- tioners supplied no evidence concerning the square footage of the space occupied by the tenant, the square footage of the entire house, or the percentage that the former represented of the latter.

OPINION

After giving effect to the parties’ concessions, two issues remain for decision: the amount of petitioners’ allowable Schedule E loss and the taxable amount of their Social Security benefits.

A. Schedule E Loss

The Commissioner’s determinations in a notice of deficiency are generally presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of prov- ing them erroneous. See Rule 142(a); Welch v.

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Welch v. Helvering
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