Glasgow v. Commissioner
This text of 1972 T.C. Memo. 77 (Glasgow 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
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
FORRESTER, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency of $389 in petitioners' income tax for the year 1967. The issue before us is whether petitioners are entitled to a deduction for educational expenses incurred during 1967.
Findings of Fact
Petitioners, John D. and Karla Kay Glasgow, filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1967 with the district director of internal revenue in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. They were residents of Morris, Oklahoma, at the time the petition herein was filed. Since the deduction at issue relates only to education undertaken by John D. Glasgow, we will hereinafter refer to him as the petitioner.
Petitioner was ordained into the*182 Baptist ministry at the age of 19, and at that point had the freedom to preach to any Baptist congregation without further preparation. He turned 19 on March 8, 1960. 311
In May 1959, petitioner was graduated from high school in Wagoner, Oklahoma. He matriculated at Northeastern State College, Tahlequah, Oklahoma, in the fall of 1959. Petitioner was a student at Northeastern State College during the fall semester of 1959, the spring and fall semesters of 1960, 1961 and 1962, and the spring semester of 1963. At the close of the spring semester in 1963 petitioner had accumulated 77 semester hours of college credits.
From late 1963 until sometime in 1966 petitioner minstered to a Baptist congregation in Oktaha, Oklahoma. Oktaha was not near enough to a college or university for petitioner to continue his education.
In 1967 petitioner was the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Savanna, Oklahoma, and he enrolled at Southeastern State College in nearby Durant, Oklahoma, for both the spring and fall semesters of 1967. The courses taken by him during those two semesters carried the following titles: introduction to teaching, humanities, American history since 1876, Oklahoma history*183 and government, American literature since Whitman, child and adolescent psychology, business communication, short story, European history from 1870 to 1919, to age of satire, English usage for business students, radio and television production. On his income tax return for 1967 petitioner claimed a deduction of $2,779 for tuition, transportation, and other expenses stemming from his enrollment at Southeastern State College. Respondent disallowed the entire deduction and determined a deficiency accordingly.
Petitioner was graduated from Southeastern State College in 1969 with a bachelor of arts degree and a major in English. Petitioner did not decide upon a specific degree program until the last year of his undergraduate study. Prior to that time he had structured his curriculum by choosing those courses which would best aid him in serving his congregation. Petitioner did not take the courses necessary to gain a teaching certificate in addition to his Baccalaureate degree, and was one of the rare students in his college who did not do so. Southeastern State College requires its students to accumulate a minimum of 124 semester hours in order to be graduated.
Prior to the spring semester*184 in 1967 petitioner's church encouraged him to attend Southeastern State College. Throughout the time petitioner was securing his college education he was primarily devoting his attention to his ministry. Petitioner's annual income was less for the three years immediately preceding the trial herein than it was for 1961.
Petitioner enrolled at the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas, in September 1971, and was working toward a degree there at the time of trial. Candidates for admission to Southwestern Seminary must either have received a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or have reached thirty years of age and have been graduated from high school. However, the programs leading to three of the four degrees offered by Southwestern Seminary are not open to those students without a baccalaureate degree. Petitioner was admitted to one of the programs at Southwestern Seminary which required a baccalaureate degree as a prerequisite.
Opinion
The issue before us is whether petitioner, an ordained Baptist minister, can deduct educational expenses which he incurred in 1967 while taking certain undergraduate courses at Southeastern State*185 College in Durant, Oklahoma. He claims that the expenses are deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses within the meaning of section 162 1 and the applicable Income Tax Regulations.
The regulations governing the deduction of educational expenses under section 162 were promulgated in 1958 and substantially amended in 1967.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1972 T.C. Memo. 77, 31 T.C.M. 310, 1972 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glasgow-v-commissioner-tax-1972.