Jacobson v. Commissioner

73 T.C. 610, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1979
DocketDocket No. 3907-77
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 73 T.C. 610 (Jacobson 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.

Bluebook
Jacobson v. Commissioner, 73 T.C. 610, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1 (tax 1979).

Opinion

Hall, Judge:

Respondent determined a $623 deficiency in petitioner’s income tax for 1974. Due to concessions made by petitioner, the issues remaining for decision are:

(1) Whether petitioner is entitled to deduct $5,900 as a theft loss;

(2) Whether petitioner and her husband are entitled to file a joint return under section 6013(b).1

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated by the parties and are found accordingly.

Petitioner and her husband Charles lived at 36 Mile, Tok Road in the rural community of Gakona, Alaska, prior to 1974. In November 1973, petitioner left their home on account of marital difficulties and moved to Seattle. She left all of her possessions in their Alaska home.

In June 1974, petitioner returned to Alaska and commenced living in Paxson, where she worked as a waitress in the Paxson Lodge. Paxson is about 90 miles from Gakona. Petitioner continued to leave her possessions in the Gakona home.

In September 1974, Charles, without petitioner’s knowledge or consent, asked his girlfriend to go to the Gakona house and clean it and give all petitioner’s clothes to a church rummage sale. A neighbor called petitioner to warn her that Charles’ girlfriend and her parents were in the house and were removing things from it. Petitioner contacted the local police who sent an Alaskan State trooper to the house. The trooper arrived while the girlfriend was still there. The girlfriend told the trooper that she was married to Charles and that she and her parents were cleaning the house and taking things to the dump. The trooper does not recall whether he saw them take anything out of the house or whether he asked them if they were taking anything. He did not remember any significant amount of personal belongings or furniture in the house. The trooper did not file a police report because he believed the matter was civil in nature. Later that day, the neighbor’s daughter saw the girlfriend loading things from the Gakona house into her pickup truck.

A week later, petitioner went to the Gakona residence and discovered that almost all of her possessions were missing. Petitioner did not contact the police again or make a report of missing items. Petitioner contacted several attorneys in an effort to regain her missing possessions. They all concluded that she had insufficient evidence to support any legal action.

On October 11, 1974, petitioner and her son went to the Gakona house and found the lock to the back door pried open and fresh footprints in the snow leading from the house to the highway. They called a policeman who filed a police report which stated that, while there were a number of valuable items in the house, apparently nothing was missing. The police file was closed without further action being taken. Petitioner later noticed she was missing moose horns and caribou horns. However, she did not report this fact to the police.

Petitioner lost considerable personal property in 1974, including antique tools and toaster, cooking equipment and cookbooks, bedding, yarn, a wolf rug, a wolverine rug, a potbelly stove, a necklace, binoculars, a CB radio, an oceanic radio, figurines, the moose horns, and the caribou horns. The value of these objects was approximately $4,000, and petitioner’s basis in these articles was the same.

Petitioner filed a separate return for 1974.2 In 1977, she and Charles decided to file an amended joint return for 1974. Petitioner had an amended return prepared by an accountant and on February 10, 1977, she flew to Fairbanks, Alaska, with the return. On February 11,1977, petitioner and Charles met in Fairbanks, signed the amended return, and then Charles took it and subsequently mailed it. The return was received at the Internal Revenue Service Center in Ogden, Utah, on February 16,1977. The Revenue Service has lost the envelope in which the return was mailed. On February 11, 1977, respondent mailed petitioner a deficiency notice for her taxable year 1974.

OPINION

The first issue is whether petitioner is entitled to a theft loss for 1974. Petitioner contends that missing property was stolen from the Gakona house on two separate occasions during 1974. Respondent asserts that petitioner has failed to establish that the thefts occurred and, alternatively, that she has failed to establish the amount of the loss she is entitled to if the thefts occurred.

Section 165(c)(3) allows the taxpayer a deduction for any loss sustained during the taxable year (and not compensated by insurance or otherwise) arising from theft. Petitioner must first prove that a theft occurred; a mere mysterious disappearance of the property in question is not enough. Elliott v. Commissioner, 40 T.C. 304 (1963); Jones v. Commissioner, 24 T.C. 525 (1955); Allen v. Commissioner, 16 T.C. 163 (1951).

Petitioner has established to our satisfaction that she owned the personal property that she claims was stolen, that the property was in the house when she left it, and that it was taken from the house without her permission during 1974. There is some evidence that most of petitioner’s property was probably taken by her husband’s girlfriend and her parents. Petitioner need not have sufficient evidence for a successful civil or criminal lawsuit against a particular alleged thief to be entitled to the loss deduction, nor, indeed, must petitioner prove who the thief or thieves were. If the reasonable inferences from the evidence point to theft rather than mysterious disappearance, petitioner is entitled to a theft loss. Elliott v. Commissioner, supra; Jones v. Commissioner, supra. A house full of personal property cannot easily “mysteriously disappear” like the brooch in Allen v. Commissioner, supra, which fell off or was taken off that taxpayer’s dress. Someone had to move petitioner’s property out of the house. It could have been moved out by her husband’s girlfriend and family, or it could have been taken by an unknown thief who broke into the house. In either event, the property was appropriated and removed without the owner’s knowledge or permission, and that is theft. The fact that the police failed to report the theft (in one case, because they thought the matter was a civil dispute when the girlfriend claimed to be petitioner’s husband’s wife, and, in the other case, because petitioner did not immediately realize that the moose and caribou horns were missing) is not sufficient evidence from which to conclude no theft occurred. There is no evidence petitioner carried any insurance on any of these items. We conclude that petitioner has carried her burden of proving that the missing items (which she listed and described in great detail in her testimony) were stolen, and that she has not received any compensation for the property.

We also conclude that petitioner has substantiated that her loss was at least $4,000 and that her basis in the lost items was also at least $4,000. Some of the items she lost were inherited, some were gifts, and the rest were purchased. Many of the items either kept their value or appreciated. Considering the evidence as a whole, we are satisfied that petitioner is entitled to a theft loss deduction for 1974 of $4,000 (less the $100 limit).

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Bluebook (online)
73 T.C. 610, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobson-v-commissioner-tax-1979.