Estate of Long v. Commissioner
This text of 1978 T.C. Memo. 172 (Estate of Long 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
*345 Lana Chaney Long filed no Federal income tax returns for 1965 through 1968. After her death in 1968 her son was appointed her executor. Over two years after his appointment as executor, Lana Chaney Long's income tax returns were filed.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
WILES,
| Sec. 6651(a) 1 | ||
| Year | Tax | Addition to Tax |
| 1965 | $ 5,209.31 | $1,368.66 |
| 1966 | 12,348.95 | 5,674.84 |
| 1967 | 782.08 | 699.66 |
| 1968 | 268.60 | 2,085.35 |
| $18,608.94 | $9,828.51 |
Some of the issues have been settled. The only issue remaining for our consideration is whether the failure to timely file Lana Chaney Long's income tax returns for 1965 through 1968 was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.
Lana Chaney Long was a resident of Hagerstown, Maryland. Her income tax returns for the years in question were filed on February 18, 1971, with the District Director of Internal Revenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The petition herein was filed by her son, John A. Long, Jr., a resident of Stony Brook, New York.
Lana Chaney Long (hereinafter Mrs. Long) died on November 23, 1968. On December 4, 1968, her son, John A. Long (hereinafter petitioner), was named the executor of her estate. Prior to Mrs. Long's death, she had a history of physical and mental problems. From 1958 until her death ten years later, Mrs. Long had extended periods of hospitalization at various nursing homes and psychiatric institutions. During the years before us she had the following periods of convalescence: *347 in 1965 she spent approximately nine months in Avalon Manor, a nursing home; in 1966 from March until June she was in the Seton Institute in Hagerstown, Maryland, for psychiatric problems; she spent the remainder of 1966, all of 1967 and 1968, until her death, in the Fahrney-Keedy nursing home. During her stay at the various hospitals and nursing homes, Mrs. Long had periods when she was in a lucid state. There were periods every year when she was lucid. While in these lucid states she was very cooperative, and she kept her records and received mail. During other periods, however, she was very noncommunicative and protective of her records.
Because of her various problems, petitioner was twice appointed her conservator, once in 1958, and again in 1962. During other periods, including during the years before us, petitioner actively managed her business affairs. Because of his mother's illness petitioner asked for and received several extensions of time to file his mother's income tax returns. He received three extensions for filing her 1965 income tax return, extending the filing date to October 15, 1966. He received one extension for her 1966 filing deadline, extending that*348 date until July 15, 1967. And, he received one extension for her 1968 filing deadline, extending that date to July 15, 1969. Despite these extensions, no income tax returns, for the years in question, were filed until February 18, 1971. These returns were prepared by Charles J. Froehlich, Jr., C.P.A., who was hired during the summer of 1970.
On November 20, 1973, respondent sent petitioner, as executor, a statutory notice of deficiency stating that since Mrs. Long's income tax returns for the years in question "were not filed within the time prescribed by law, and you have not shown that such failure to timely file [her] returns was due to reasonable cause, 25 per centum of the tax is added in accordance with the provisions of
OPINION
The only issue we must decide is whether failure to timely file Mrs. Long's Federal income tax returns was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1978 T.C. Memo. 172, 37 T.C.M. 734, 1978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-long-v-commissioner-tax-1978.