Ferrington v. Department of Revenue

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedApril 28, 2014
DocketTC-MD 130349D
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ferrington v. Department of Revenue (Ferrington v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrington v. Department of Revenue, (Or. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

VICTORIA FERRINGTON, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 130349D ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION

The court entered its Decision in the above-entitled matter on April 9, 2014. The court

did not receive a request for an award of costs and disbursements (TCR-MD 19) within 14 days

after its Decision was entered. The court’s Final Decision incorporates its Decision without

change.

Plaintiff appeals Defendant’s Notices of Deficiency Assessment, dated February 27,

2013, denying Plaintiff’s claimed employee business expenses and job search expenses for tax

years 2010 and 2011. A trial was held in the Oregon Tax Court Courtroom, Salem, Oregon, on

January 27, 2014. Plaintiff appeared and testified on her own behalf. Nancy Berwick (Berwick),

Tax Auditor, appeared and testified on behalf of Defendant.

Plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 through 11 and Defendant’s Exhibits A through H were admitted

without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Plaintiff testified that she claimed deductions for business expenses incurred while

employed as an outside sales representative for Latin Media NW in tax year 2010 and as the

corporate sales manager for The Fruit Company during tax years 2010 and 2011. (Ptf’s Compl

at 1; Ptf’s Exs 2, 4; Def’s Exs C-D.) Plaintiff testified that she is entitled to deductions claimed

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130349D 1 for expenses relating to her job search conducted April through September 2010. (Ptf’s Ex 1 at

2; Def’s Ex B at 7.) She testified that the claimed business expenses and job search expenses

included payments made for a shared cell phone, internet, office supplies, computer repairs,

parking, meals and entertainment, and transportation expenses. (Ptf’s Exs 1, 6, 9.)

Plaintiff testified that her work with Latin Media NW in 2010 required substantial daily

travel to make sales calls and service existing clients. (See Ptf’s Ex 1 at 2.) She testified that her

employer’s reimbursement policy did not reimburse her for transportation, cell phone expenses,

client gifts, or other work-related expenses. (See Ptf’s Exs 1 at 2, 4 at 1.) Plaintiff submitted a

letter from Latin Media NW stating that it did not reimburse Plaintiff “for any incurred expenses

such as cell phone use, client gifts, and automobile gas mileage.” (Ptf’s Ex 4 at 1.) Plaintiff

provided one cell phone bill addressed to her daughter and testified that she paid her daughter for

a portion of the cell phone expenses. Plaintiff also provided a signed statement from her

daughter indicating that Plaintiff “tends to pay me every 2 months for her phone. The check is

usually $230.00 for every 2 months.” (Ptf’s Ex 3 at 1.) Plaintiff testified that the internet service

purchased for use at home is utilized for both work and personal use. In support of her claimed

internet expense, Plaintiff provided a welcome email and one monthly bill for her internet use in

2010. (Ptf’s Ex 9 at 18, 22.)

To substantiate her transportation expenses, Plaintiff submitted a log book that listed her

appointments for each relevant work day in 2010. (Ptf’s Ex 7.) In that log book, Plaintiff noted

the date and time of each appointment, and the name of the client and its address. (Id.) At the

top of each daily log entry, Plaintiff indicated her starting address – her home in Vancouver,

Washington – and the total number of miles for the day. (Id.) Plaintiff did not indicate the

///

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130349D 2 number of miles for each client contacted and at times did not state the specific business purpose

for the client contact. (Id.)

For a portion of tax year 2010 and all of tax year 2011, Plaintiff testified that she was

employed as the corporate sales manager at The Fruit Company. (Ptf’s Exs 1 at 2, 4 at 2.)

Plaintiff testified that her duties included early morning computer work at home, daily client

calls or meetings, sales calls, team member training, sample distribution, and additional work at

home in the evening. (See Ptf’s Ex 1 at 2.) Plaintiff testified that she worked significantly more

than 40 hours per week, both beginning and ending her work activities at home each day. (Ptf’s

Ex 1 at 3.) Plaintiff submitted a letter from her employer stating that The Fruit Company

reimbursed Plaintiff “for approved expenses incurred on behalf of the company, which are

typically only travel-related costs for attendance at trade shows.” (Ptf’s Ex 4 at 2.) Plaintiff

submitted a daily log book for her work for The Fruit Company in 2010 and 2011; the log book

for 2011 was similar in format to that submitted for 2010. (Ptf’s Exs 7, 10.) Plaintiff also

provided a summary excel spreadsheet of her 2011 log book. (Ptf’s Ex 8.)

Plaintiff testified that The Fruit Company corporate offices were located in Hood River,

Oregon. (See Ptf’s Ex 2 at 1.). Plaintiff testified that the direct commute to her office from her

home in Vancouver, Washington, was 53 miles, or 106 miles round-trip. On her 2011 tax return,

Plaintiff noted 10 miles as her daily commute; Plaintiff testified that because she began her work

at home most days and then traveled to her first sales call, she believed that she had no commute.

(Def’s Ex C at 3.) According to Plaintiff’s testimony, the stated 10-mile commute represented

an average of the occasional direct commute from home to work.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130349D 3 Plaintiff claimed the following expenses for tax years 2010 and 2011.

2010 2011

Transportation ($0.50 per $6,901.00 (13,803 miles) $19,313.00 (38,626 miles) mile rate) Parking $559.00 $67.00 Other Travel Expenses $300.00 $3,342.00 Other Business Expenses $4,503.00 $8,415.00 Meals & Entertainment $113.00 ($227.00 x 50%) $706.00 ($1,411.00 x 50%) Job Supplies $3,926.00 TOTAL $12,376.00 $35,769.00

(Def’s Exs C, D at 6, 12.) In addition, Plaintiff submitted the following receipts to support her

claimed expenses.

Gas $786.83 $3,305.06 Vehicle Expenses $451.24 $66.00 (car wash) Computer Expenses $304.98 $187.20 Cell Phone $370.62 (shared account with 0.00 her daughter) Internet 0.00 $36.991 Parking 0.00 0.00 Meals & Entertainment $145.51 $433.09 Office Supplies $46.25 (team snacks/drinks) $796.67 (team snacks/drinks) $42.68 (paper/copies) $78.38 (copies/binders) Trade Show Expenses $8.50 0.00 Postage $10.63 0.00 TOTAL $2,167.24 $4,903.39

1 Plaintiff provided one statement stating monthly charges of $36.99. (Ptf’s Ex 9 at 22.) Plaintiff provided an introductory email from Comcast, noting service began in June, 2011. (Id. at 18.)

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130349D 4 (Ptf’s Exs 9, 11.) Plaintiff acknowledged that several of her submitted receipts were illegible or

only partially copied. (Id.) Plaintiff admitted that on some receipts, the copies cut off Plaintiff’s

written notes regarding the expense, rendering them indecipherable. (Id.)

Defendant disallowed Plaintiff’s claimed expenses. Berwick testified that Plaintiff’s

claimed deductions were not substantiated by Plaintiff’s evidence. Berwick testified that

Plaintiff failed to adequately separate business and personal expenses, pointing to Plaintiff’s

receipts for cell phone and internet service charges. (See Ptf’s Exs 6 at 12-17, 9 at 22.) Berwick

expressed concern that Plaintiff claimed duplicate expenses, which resulted in double-counting

of some claimed deductions, including the use of both mileage and gas receipts for her claimed

transportation deduction.

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Ferrington v. Department of Revenue, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrington-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-2014.