Kandell v. Commissioner
This text of 1971 T.C. Memo. 287 (Kandell 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
SCOTT, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal income tax for the calendar year 1967 in the amount of $1,204.13.
The only issue for decision is whether petitioner is entitled to deduct $3,664.40 or any part thereof as educational expenses.
Findings of Fact
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.
Petitioner is an individual whose residence was in New York, New York at the time his petition in this case was filed. He filed his Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1967 with the district director of internal revenue, Los Angeles, California.
Petitioner is a graduate of the Wharton School of Finance. Prior to 1967 he had been engaged*49 in various businesses. He was in business in New York until around 1962 and from then until around 1965 he was employed in Los Angeles. During 1966 and the early part of 1967 he was engaged in managing his real estate investments.
Since 1962 petitioner had been a limited partner in the brokerage firm of Schweickart and Company. In August of 1967 petitioner came to New York and arranged to begin work at Schweickart and Company's New York office. He began working there in the accounting department at a salary of approximately $125 a week on August 28, 1967. He was well known to the personnel of Schweickart and Company because of his financial interest in the company and filed no formal application to obtain employment with that company. At the time he came to work for the company it was understood that he would not continue in the clerical capacity in which he was originally employed but would qualify himself to become either an account executive or a financial analyst.
Shortly after he began working with Schweickart and Company, he discussed with Winfield H. Schweickart, the senior partner of Schweickart and Company, his desire to become a registered representative, the technical*50 title of an account executive with a brokerage firm. Schweickart informed him that in order to become a registered representative, it would be necessary for him to take a course of study at the New York Institute of Finance which was offered by that institute as a formal training program for registered representative trainees. The only persons who could enroll in this course were employees of brokerage firms who were recommended by their firms for the course. Schweickart and Company recommended petitioner for the course.
The course of study was intended to supplement the on-the-job training given to a trainee in a brokerage firm who wished to qualify to become a registered representative. It was also intended to prepare the student for the registered representative's qualifying examination which was generally required by the rules of the New York Stock Exchange for a person to become a registered representative. At least 6 months' work as a trainee was required before an individual could take the examination. There were certain exceptions to the requirement that the examination be taken for persons over a certain age who had worked 6 months as a trainee in a brokerage firm and were*51 recommended by the firm for which they worked. Petitioner may have been old enough to have become a registered representative without the examination but he planned to and did take the examination to become a registered representative. He considered the course at the New York Institute of Finance good preparation for the examination. It is customary for persons planning to take the examination for a registered representative to obtain some form of training for the examination. If they do not take a formal course such as petitioner took, they will have tutorial 1228 assistance by a brokerage firm or take correspondence courses.
Petitioner took the course for registered representative trainees at the New York Institute of Finance between September 1967 and December 1967. He incurred a tuition expense of $850 for which he was not reimbursed by his employer. Starting on August 23, 1967 and for the duration of the course petitioner lived at the Croydon Hotel. He incurred and paid hotel expenses of $2,172.30, telephone expenses of $42.10, meal expenses of $450 and laundry expenses of $150 during the period from August 23 through the time he finished the course in December of 1967.
*52 After completing the course and taking the required examination to become a registered representative, petitioner worked as a registered representative for Schweickart and Company at their Broadway New York office. Petitioner's duties as a trainee with Schweickart and Company were primarily clerical in nature. While he was taking the courses at the New York Institute of Finance, he only went to the office a few hours each day since the classes consumed a greater portion of the day. When petitioner became a registered representative, he dealt directly with the public in selling stocks and securities and he was placed on a commission basis.
Petitioner on his Federal income tax return for 1967 deducted the amount of $3,664.40 as educational expenses in connection with his course at the New York Institute of Finance. This amount was composed of the $850 tuition he paid to the New York Institute of Finance and his hotel, laundry, meals, and telephone expenses from August 23, 1967, until he completed the course in December 1967.
Respondent in his notice of deficiency disallowed petitioner's claimed deduction of $3,664.40 of educational expenses with the explanation that he had not*53 established that he was entitled to the deduction.
Ultimate Findings of Fact
(1) Petitioner was pursuing the course of study at the New York Institute of Finance to qualify him as a registered representative which was a new business for him.
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1971 T.C. Memo. 287, 30 T.C.M. 1227, 1971 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kandell-v-commissioner-tax-1971.