Fischer, Weddle v. Dept. of Rev

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedApril 18, 2017
DocketTC-MD 160121C
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fischer, Weddle v. Dept. of Rev (Fischer, Weddle v. Dept. of Rev) 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
Fischer, Weddle v. Dept. of Rev, (Or. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

BRYAN J. FISCHER ) and JERRI L. WEDDLE, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 160121C ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION1

Plaintiffs appealed Defendant’s Notice of Assessment, dated February 2, 2016, for the

2012 tax year. Trial was held in the courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court on November 14, 2016.

Douglas S. Chiapuzio, attorney-at-law, appeared on behalf of Plaintiffs, and Plaintiffs both

testified. Greg Harris appeared and testified on behalf of Defendant. Plaintiffs’ exhibits A to G

and Defendant’s exhibits A to H were admitted without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

During the period under appeal, Plaintiff Bryan J. Fischer (Fischer) worked as a pile buck

for Hamilton Construction Company (Hamilton Construction). He built bridges. His typical

duties included welding, working with cranes, and constructing and tearing down the temporary

structures used as platforms from which other tradesmen built permanent spans. He often

performed work off the ground and over water, 200 feet in the air, exposed to wind and rain. His

shifts typically lasted from 8 to 12 hours, and occasionally as long as 15 or 16 hours. In 2012, he

put in his longest hours during the four weeks he worked in Alaska—126 hours of overtime 1 This Final Decision incorporates without change the court’s Decision, entered March 31, 2017. The court did not receive a statement of costs and disbursements within 14 days after its Decision was entered. See Tax Court Rule–Magistrate Division (TCR–MD) 16 C(1).

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 160121C 1 altogether. (See Ptfs’ Ex D at 1.)

Fischer worked at different job sites for greater or lesser periods of time. (See Ptfs’ Exs

C, D.) Although the total time to complete a bridge might be several years, Fischer testified that

pile bucks are pulled off of particular jobs once they get “above ground”—presumably once the

temporary structure is complete—at which point carpenters and laborers come in. When the

company was shorthanded at a given site, pile bucks might remain for a time to assist the

carpenters and laborers. However, Fischer never expected to stay at a job site for more than a

year because his specialized skills were in demand at multiple sites. When his employer required

him at a different site, he would receive notice as little as a week before; such was the case with

his transfer to the site in Alaska.

Fischer worked at four job sites in 2012: Troutdale, Oregon; Montpelier, Idaho; Seward,

Alaska; and Vancouver, Washington. (See Ptfs’ Exs C, D.) Fischer worked at Troutdale through

the first week of August, with an interruption of less than a week for the Montpelier job. (Id.)

His start date at Troutdale is unknown. Fischer offered no testimony on that point and he

declined to explain why he had not provided documentation of his 2011 work activity, as he had

done for his 2012 and 2010 activity.2 His 2012 job sites are summarized in the following table.

Location Start End Troutdale, Oregon No later than January 2, 2012 August 7, 2012 Montpelier, Idaho June 10, 2012 June 13, 2012 Seward, Alaska August 8, 2012 September 2, 2012 Vancouver, Washington September 3, 2012 September 14, 2012

(Id.) In 2010, Fischer worked at a single site all year, except for part of one week. (Def’s Ex E

at 1.)

2 At closing, Defendant’s representative stated that Fischer had testified to having started the Troutdale job in October or November during 2011. Plaintiff’s representative then repeated that claim in his rebuttal. The court’s review of the record indicates that Fischer testified to having worked a job in Coos Bay that October or November.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 160121C 2 Plaintiffs maintained their marital home in Salem, the city where Plaintiff Jerri L. Weddle

(Weddle) worked. Fischer stayed in a travel trailer while working in Troutdale and Vancouver.

He parked his trailer in the same location for both jobs, in a space rented by his employer. He

testified that his employer would have paid for him to stay in a motel, if space in a motel were

available, but that he found it more convenient to stay in the trailer. He found that he rested

better in a trailer, he did not need to pack his things up when he returned to Salem on the

weekends, and he was closer to the job site in case his employer called him back after his shift

was over. Fischer testified that he first used the trailer on a job site in Coos Bay, in October or

November of 2011. Plaintiffs had purchased the trailer on April 3, 2011. (Ptfs’ Ex G.)

Hamilton Construction did not have a standard reimbursement policy, but instead allowed

its project managers to negotiate per diem rates and expense reimbursements with individual

employees. (Ptfs’ Ex E at 1.) In 2012, Fischer did not receive reimbursement for his mileage or

for the hand tools and clothing he was required to purchase. In addition to paying for his space

in the Troutdale RV park, Hamilton Construction also paid for Fischer’s motel rooms in Alaska

and Idaho.

Plaintiffs submitted a 2012 calendar with job sites and mileage noted on dates of travel.

(Ptfs’ Ex C.) That calendar and Fischer’s testimony showed the following typical pattern for

Fischer’s travels while he worked in Portland.

Day Travel Activity Monday AM: Salem to Portland PM: Portland to Salem Tuesday AM: Salem to Portland Friday or Saturday PM: Portland to Salem

Fischer testified that he regularly returned to Salem to help his wife on Monday evenings

because overtime was never required on Mondays. The distance reported for the round trip was

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 160121C 3 124 miles to Troutdale and 118 miles to Vancouver. (Ptfs’ Ex C at 8, 9.) Fischer drove a total of

124 miles to and from the airport for the Alaska job. (Id.) No mileage was reported for the

Idaho job.

Plaintiffs and Defendant submitted receipts for tools and clothing. (Ptfs’ Ex F; Def’s Ex

H.) Several of the receipts were dated outside the year at issue, some of the receipts reflected

expenses for which Defendant had allowed deductions, one of the receipts was a duplicate, and

one receipt did not show a price. (Id.) Nonduplicative 2012 receipts showing prices were

admitted for the following disallowed expenses: a jacket from Under Armour ($39.97), several

pairs of heavy-duty jeans ($179.17 total), two tee shirts ($26.94 total), and a trowel and a float

that were purchased along with a piece of glass tile ($7.66 total). (Ptfs’ Ex F at 5, 8; Def’s Ex H

at 1, 3–4.)

Fischer testified that his employer required him to provide his own clothing suitable for

working in all kinds of weather. He testified that welding, in particular, was damaging to

clothing on account of burns from sparks, and that, once worn to work, his clothing was no

longer suitable for wear outside of work. Fischer also testified that his employer required him to

purchase his own hand tools. While testimony referred to the existence of meal expenditures, no

evidence of meal expenses was introduced.

II. ANALYSIS

This case presents the following issues:

(1) Whether Plaintiffs may deduct traveling expenses under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 162(a)(2) for Fischer’s weekly trips between Salem and Portland.

(2) Whether Plaintiffs may deduct daily commuting expenses under IRC section 162(a) for Fischer’s Monday trips between Salem and Portland.

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