Diaz Del Castillo v. Comm'r
This text of 2006 T.C. Memo. 165 (Diaz Del Castillo 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
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
GERBER, Judge: Respondent determined a $ 2,327.40 deficiency in petitioners' 2001 Federal income tax. Respondent's determination was based on the disallowance of a deduction claimed on petitioners' 2001 joint Federal income tax return for an $ 8,448 charitable contribution carryover. Petitioners contend, alternatively, that they are not liable for the deficiency under any of the following three theories: (1) The statutory notice of deficiency is invalid; (2) respondent is contractually estopped from determining a deficiency for the 2001 tax year; and (3) the manufacturer of the software used by petitioners to prepare their return was responsible for the deficiency, and petitioners should be allowed to interplead and make the software manufacturer a responsible party in this proceeding.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioners resided in Pomfret, Maryland, at the time that their petition was filed in this proceeding. Petitioners timely filed a joint Federal income tax return for 2001 that they prepared using Intuit TurboTax software*167 (Turbotax). The Turbotax software programs are designed so that a taxpayer's responses to questions, ostensibly, are automatically placed onto approved forms, and the tax due or overpaid is automatically computed. The promotional material on the software packaging states that it "double-checks for overlooked deductions, missing information and entries that could trigger an audit * * * [and] [e]ven gives you personalized advice as you go." By this methodology, petitioners provided answers to Turbotax's questions and were able to produce and print a copy of their return, which they signed and submitted to respondent for filing.
Petitioners' Turbotax-generated Federal return contained an $ 8,448 deduction of a charitable contribution carryover on line 17 of Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, labeled "Gifts to Charity" "Carryover from prior year". Petitioners were not entitled to deduct an $ 8,448 charitable contribution carryover from prior years. Petitioners believe that the $ 8,448 on line 17 was caused by faulty software in the Turbotax product. Approximately 2 years after petitioners' 2001 return was filed, on May 13, 2004, respondent sent a letter to petitioners notifying them*168 of a 2001 income tax examination solely involving their claimed "Gifts to Charity." In that same letter, respondent advised of the intention to disallow their deduction of an "amount you claimed on Line 17 of Schedule A as a carryover contribution from a prior year."
Subsequently, respondent, in a July 7, 2004, letter, provided petitioners with an examination report (30-day letter) explaining the proposed changes to petitioners' 2001 return. The first page of the July 7, 2004, transmittal letter advised petitioners that they owed income tax in the amount of $ 1,153.23. On Form 4549, Income Tax Examination Changes, however, the amount of tax due was shown as $ 2,327.40. On two other pages of the 30-day letter, the tax due was also shown as $ 2,327.40, along with interest computed to August 6, 2004, of $ 201.37, for total tax and interest of $ 2,528.77.
In response to respondent's July 7, 2004, 30-day letter, petitioners sent a letter, dated July 24, 2004, along with their check in the amount of $ 1,153.23 to respondent. In that letter, petitioners explained that the $ 8,448 claimed contribution carryover deduction was an error attributable to Turbotax software. In a September 7, 2004, letter, *169 respondent answered petitioners' July 24 letter, and among other matters, advised petitioners that the changes to their 2001 tax return resulted in a total tax obligation (apparently including interest to August 6, 2004) of $ 2,528.77. Respondent, on November 5, 2004, sent petitioners a statutory notice of deficiency for their 2001 year determining an income tax deficiency in the amount of $ 2,327.40. Petitioners thereafter commenced this proceeding.
OPINION
The controverted item in this case is an $ 8,448 contribution carryover deduction. Petitioners do not contend that they were entitled to that deduction. Instead, they make a collateral attack, contending, alternatively, that respondent's deficiency notice was invalid, or that respondent agreed to a lesser deficiency, or that the tax preparation software manufacturer is liable.
Petitioners' first argument is that the 2001 notice of deficiency is invalid. Petitioners argue that the notice has errors and does not reflect the correct amount of income tax deficiency. In particular, petitioners argue that the $ 2,327.40 income tax deficiency determined in the notice differs from the $ 1,153.23 referenced in the 30-day letter. That*170 discrepancy, according to petitioners, makes the deficiency notice unclear, inaccurate, and invalid. 1
The basic minimum requirements for a notice of deficiency are the following: (1) It must advise a taxpayer that respondent has determined a deficiency for a particular year; (2) it must specify the amount of the deficiency; and (3) it must provide sufficient information to permit the computation of the deficiency.
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2006 T.C. Memo. 165, 92 T.C.M. 112, 2006 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diaz-del-castillo-v-commr-tax-2006.