Hansen v. Department of Revenue

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 24, 2012
DocketTC-MD 101043C
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hansen v. Department of Revenue (Hansen 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
Hansen v. Department of Revenue, (Or. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

DAVID S. HANSEN ) and MILDRED R. HANSEN, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 101043C ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

This is an appeal filed by Plaintiffs challenging certain adjustments made by Defendant

to their 2006 state income tax return. Defendant’s adjustments concern numerous deductions

claimed by Plaintiffs in calculating their 2006 Oregon tax liability, which came to $0 on both

their original and amended returns (Oregon Form 40). (Ptfs’ Exs 28, 29-1.)

Trial in the matter was held in the courtroom of the Oregon Tax Court on September 29,

2011. Plaintiffs were represented by Greg Ripke (Ripke), certified public accountant. Plaintiffs

did not appear at trial. Defendant was represented by Dane Palmer (Palmer).

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Plaintiffs personally prepared their tax returns for the years 2005, 2006, and 2007. The

returns showed no tax liability each year. Defendant audited Plaintiffs’ 2005 and 2006 returns,1

and during the course of that audit, Plaintiffs hired Ripke to prepare an amended return for

2006.2 Plaintiffs’ amended 2006 return was submitted as Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 29. Defendant

1 Plaintiffs’ 2007 return may also have been audited, but there was no testimony or other evidence presented on the matter, and it is not relevant to the resolution of this appeal. 2 Ripke stated during opening statements that he prepared an amended return for 2007. Again, that is not relevant to the matter currently before the court, which deals with Plaintiffs’ 2006 state tax liability.

DECISION TC-MD 101043C 1 continued the 2006 audit, examining the 2006 amended return and other documents Plaintiffs

provided. Defendant concluded Plaintiffs’ 2006 Oregon tax liability was $5,166, plus a penalty

of $1,033 for substantial understatement of income, and a post amnesty penalty of $1,291.

(Def’s Exs F1, F15.)

At the time of trial, the facts were as follows. Plaintiffs operate an adult nursing and

residential care home on approximately 40 acres of land in Eugene, Oregon. Plaintiffs purchased

the property on or about the year 2000. There are outbuildings on the property. Plaintiffs have

some farm animals on the property, plus farm equipment (including a tractor), and the parties

agree there was some farming activity. According to Ripke, Plaintiff David Hansen was at one

time a construction contractor, but became disabled and in need of another line of work.

Plaintiffs chose to provide residential adult foster care in their home.

On their amended 2006 return Plaintiffs reported a $0 tax liability based on a federal

adjusted gross income (AGI) of $14,116, Schedule A itemized deductions of $11,701, for an

Oregon taxable income of $2,415, resulting in a tax before credits (Oregon Form 40, line 31) of

$123. (Ptfs’ Ex 29.) That tax was erased by Plaintiffs’ two dependent exemption credits of $159

per person ($318 total exemption credit). (Ptfs’ Ex 29-1.) Plaintiffs’ federal AGI, which is the

starting point for determining Oregon taxable income and ultimately whether any tax is due to

the state, was predominately net business income. Plaintiffs did report $31 of interest income.

(Ptfs’ Ex 29-5.)

Plaintiffs reported federal Schedule C business income of $126,854, and $50,786 of

business expenses (excluding those associated with the business use of their home), for a

tentative profit on line 29 of $76,068. (Ptfs’ Ex 29-8.) Plaintiffs then subtracted $60,912

(Schedule C, line 30) for expenses related to the business use of their home (Form 8829). (Ptfs’

DECISION TC-MD 101043C 2 Ex 29-11.) Those expenses were based on Plaintiffs’ determination that 88.09 percent of their

home was regularly and exclusively used for business (on a square footage basis as required by

form 8829). (Id.) The resulting business income (federal Form 1040, line 12) was $15,156.

(Ptfs’ Ex 29-8.) Plaintiffs calculated a total income of $15,187 by adding the $31 of interest

income to the $15,156 net business income. (Ptfs’ Ex 29-5) Plaintiffs then subtracted $1,071 for

self-employment tax, and arrived at a federal AGI of $14,116. (Id.)

Defendant audited that return, increasing Plaintiffs’ Schedule C net profit by $67,155,

from $15,156 to $82,311, (Def’s Exs F1, F7.) The parties agree that Plaintiffs had $126,854 in

gross receipts. Defendant decreased Plaintiffs’ total expenses, before expenses for business use

of home, by $31,570, from $50,786 to $19,216, and Plaintiffs’ Form 8829 expenses for business

use of home by $35,585, from $60,912 to $25,327. (Def’s Ex F7.) Defendant added an

additional $823 of income from the distribution of the pension plan in accordance with Internal

Revenue Code (IRC) section 61 and ORS 316.048. (Def’s Ex F8.) That increase in income in

turn increased Plaintiffs’ deduction for one-half of their self-employment tax from $1,071 to

$5,815, for a net adjustment of $4,744. (Def’s Ex F9.) Defendant calculated Plaintiffs’ Oregon

tax to be $5166, plus a penalty of $1,033 pursuant to ORS 314.402 for substantial

understatement of taxable income (resulting from the approximately $67,000 income increase),

and a 25 percent post-amnesty penalty in the amount of $1,291. (Def’s Exs F13 – F15.)

The parties agree to gross revenues of $126,854, and to a business deduction of $3,894

for car and truck expenses. (Def’s Ex F7.) The parties also agree on the dollar amounts for

Plaintiffs’ mortgage interest, property taxes, and homeowners insurance. They disagree on the

remainder of the adjustments Defendant made to Plaintiffs’ 2006 return.

///

DECISION TC-MD 101043C 3 Additionally, the parties disagree on number of residents receiving nursing and foster

care services; Plaintiffs claim six and Defendant asserts that there were only five. The

disagreement is over a resident named “Sue,” who Plaintiffs’ representative Ripke insisted at

trial was a service recipient. However, Plaintiffs did not testify at trial and there is evidence that

conflicts with Ripke’s claim. It appears that the occupant named Sue paid some money to live in

Plaintiffs’ home in 2006 and, according to Ripke, that individual “occasionally” helps care for

the residents living in the home. Plaintiffs are only licensed to care for five foster care patients.

The court concludes Plaintiffs had five residents in the home receiving services. That is the

same conclusion this court reached in Plaintiffs’ 2005 appeal. See Hansen v. Dept. of Rev.

(Hansen), TC-MD No 081122D, WL 3089297 at *12 (Sept 29, 2009).

The parties also disagree on total number of people living in the home. On the evidence

before it, the court concludes that there were nine people living in the home and not eight as

Ripke contends. That is a fairly easy determination to make because Ripke acknowledges that

both Plaintiffs lived in the home, that Sue lived in the home, and that Plaintiffs had five foster

care patients. There is some dispute about whether Plaintiffs’ son was in the home, but, as

explained below, Defendant asserted the son does live in the home and introduced evidence to

support that claim, and Plaintiffs produced no evidence to the contrary. Accordingly, the court

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