Claunch v. Commissioner

29 T.C. 1047, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 241
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1958
DocketDocket No. 61883
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 29 T.C. 1047 (Claunch 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.

Bluebook
Claunch v. Commissioner, 29 T.C. 1047, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 241 (tax 1958).

Opinions

OPINION.

Black, Judge:

We have endeavored in our Findings of Fact to make a full statement of the facts which relate to the sole issue which we have to decide in this proceeding. These facts may be summarized as follows:

Petitioner, for the years in question, was a boilermaker by trade. During the early part of 1953 he was employed in his trade on two separate jobs away from home, on one for a period beginning January 1 until January 20, 1953, and on the other for a period beginning January 27 through April 20, 1953. The respondent, recognizing that these jobs were temporary, allowed petitioner expenses claimed on his income tax return as to them. This is shown by the fact that petitioners on their joint return for 1953 claimed a deduction of $1,400 for “Board & Lodging away from home.” The Commissioner in his determination of the deficiency has allowed as a deduction $340 of the amount claimed and he has disallowed the remainder, $1,060.

Regarding the employment of the petitioner at Rome, Georgia, it is respondent’s contention that the employment was indefinite rather than temporary and he has disallowed petitioner’s claim for deduction of expenses while employed there. With the exception of 2 brief periods of about 2 weeks each when a nonrelated union was on strike, petitioner was continuously employed by Babcock & Wilcox Company as a boilermaker at the Rome plant of the Georgia Power Company for a period of approximately 2 years. That, according to respondent’s determination, was his post of duty during such time.

In the instant case, we have no issue as to the amount of petitioner’s gross income in either of the taxable years. Likewise, we have no issue as to the amounts of the expenditures by petitioner for meals and lodging while he was employed at Rome, Georgia. Petitioner has deducted $5 a day to cover expenditures for meals and lodging and respondent does not question that that is a reasonable amount nor that petitioner actually spent that much for meals and lodging while working on the job. What respondent does question is that these expenditures are deductible under the applicable statutes. He has determined that in each of the taxable years during the time that petitioner was employed by Babcock & Wilcox at Rome that his post of duty was at his place of employment and he was not entitled to a deduction for traveling expenses and meals and lodging while so employed. On the other hand, it is petitioner’s contention that his employment with Babcock & Wilcox at Rome was temporary within the applicable statutes and regulations and, therefore, the Commissioner erred in disallowing the deductions claimed.

The applicable statutes are printed in the margin.1

Whether the hind of expenses petitioner claims are deductible in the instant case depends upon the facts in each case. Petitioner, in contending that the amounts which he expended for meals and lodging while on the job at Rome in 1953 and 1954 are deductible, relies heavily on Harry F. Schurer, 3 T. C. 544 (1944), and E. G. Leach, 12 T. C. 20 (1949). We think these cases are clearly distinguishable on their facts from the instant case. For example, in the Schurer case the taxpayer was a journeyman plumber. His home was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, during the taxable year which was 1941. He accepted temporary employment at Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, at Aberdeen, Maryland, and at Morgantown, West Virginia. Upon completion of each of these assignments he returned to his home at Pittsburgh. On the ground that these employments of the taxpayer in the Schurer case were temporary, we held that the $920 which the taxpayer claimed as a deduction for board and lodging and the $21.20 which he deducted for railroad and bus fare should be allowed as deductions for traveling expenses while away from home. The facts in the Leach case, supra, were substantially the same as those present in the Schurer case. We followed that case in holding that the amounts claimed by the taxpayer as deductions for meals and lodging for 49 weeks while away from his home in Florence, Alabama, working on several different jobs in erecting structural steel, which jobs, according to our findings of fact in that case, ranged from a few weeks to several months each, were deductible. In that case we allowed the taxpayer a deduction of $564 as the cost of lodging incurred while away from home in pursuit of his business.

We think the facts in the instant case with reference to petitioner’s employment with Babcock & Wilcox in 1953 and 1954 at Rome, Georgia, are different from those present in the Schurer and Leach cases, supra. In those cases, employment on the several jobs on which the taxpayers were engaged during the taxable years was clearly temporary, and we so held. We do not think it is so in the instant case as to petitioner’s employment with Babcock & Wilcox. That employment was begun April 27,1953, and extended to April 22,1955, nearly 2 years. It is true that there were two interruptions due to strikes by another union which was also on the Babcock & Wilcox job. One of these interruptions was from July 1 to July 14,1953, and the other one was from July 14 to early in August 1954. Petitioner seems to think that because of these brief interruptions of his employment, his job with Babcock & Wilcox should be characterized as temporary and, therefore, brought within the rule laid down in the Schurer and Leach cases, supra. We disagree.

We think the instant case is more like that of Beatrice H. Albert, 13 T. C. 129 (1949), where the taxpayer was denied deductions for claimed expenditures as “traveling expenses * * * while away from home.” In holding against the taxpayer in that case we said:

The employment * * * lacked permanence, but, on the other hand, was indefinite in duration rather than obviously temporary, in that it was not the sort of employment in which termination within a short period could be foreseen, as was the situation in Harry F. Schurer, 3 T. C. 544, and E. G. Leach, 12 T. C. 20, The suggestion or warning that there might be a change of station upon short notice does not justify extensive discussion, since the evidence fails to show how probable this possibility was, except for the fact that the petitioner actually remained on duty in Lowell from 1943 until the end of 1945. * * *

See also Ford v. Commissioner, (C. A. 4, 1955) 227 F. 2d 297, affirming T. C. Memo. 1954-209.

There is a well recognized difference between “indefinite” employment and “temporary” employment. Henry C. Warren, 13 T. C. 205 (1949).

In the instant case, petitioner, according to his own testimony, knew that the job at Rome, Georgia, was going to be of considerable duration and the effect of his testimony is that he had no reason to believe that his employment would not last until Babcock & Wilcox completed its contract with Georgia Power Company. Petitioner does lay stress in his brief on the fact that his union had the power to call him off the job at any time it chose to do so and to send him to another place to work. We will assume that this is true on the strength of petitioner’s testimony to that effect, although no union official testified to anything about it.

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Bluebook (online)
29 T.C. 1047, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claunch-v-commissioner-tax-1958.