Kidd v. Department of Revenue

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 24, 2012
DocketTC-MD 111185N
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

ROBERT E. KIDD ) and CAROLYN A. KIDD, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 111185N ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

Plaintiffs appeal Defendant‟s Notice of Deficiency Assessment (Notice), dated August 5,

2011, for the 2007 tax year. Trial was held in this matter in the Tax Courtroom on August 2,

2012. Judy R. Dethloff (Dethloff), CPA, appeared on behalf of Plaintiffs. Robert E. Kidd

(Robert) and Carolyn A. Kidd (Carolyn) testified on behalf of Plaintiffs.1 Bruce McDonald, Tax

Auditor, appeared on behalf of Defendant. Plaintiffs‟ Exhibits A through K and Defendant‟s

Exhibits A through E were received without objection.

Dethloff identified “three areas of disagreement” between Plaintiffs and Defendant:

Plaintiff‟s claimed deduction of $1,600 for trust expense reimbursement; Plaintiffs‟ “tax home”

for the 2007 tax year; and Plaintiffs‟ request for waiver of the 2007 amnesty penalty. (See Ptfs‟

Ex A at 1; Ptfs‟ Compl at 4-5.) The parties agree that Plaintiffs‟ “originally reported trust

income in the amount of $1,600 was a non-taxable reimbursement of expenses.” (Def‟s Ltr at 1,

March 19, 2012; Ptfs‟ Ex A at 1.)

///

1 When referring to a party in a written decision, it is customary for the court to use the last name. However, in this case, the court‟s Decision recites facts and references to two individuals with the same last name, Kidd. To avoid confusion, the court will use the first name of the individual being referenced.

DECISION TC-MD 111185N 1 I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Carolyn testified that she is an “operating engineer” for the International Union of

Operating Engineers (IUOE) Local 701 (“the union”), the jurisdiction of which is all of Oregon

and five counties in Southwest Washington. She testified that the union hall is in Gladstone,

Oregon. Carolyn testified that she is certified to work as a “crane operator” and that she also has

12 years experience in “heavy highway”; in addition to cranes, she is certified to operate

machinery including scrapers and excavators. Carolyn estimated that there are about 4,000

members of the union and very few are women. She testified that employers sometimes

specifically request women and minority workers for jobs and that she suspects that she has

received some additional opportunities because she is a woman.

Carolyn testified regarding the protocol for receiving work through the union: when one

job ends, she contacts the union either by telephone or in person to be added to the “out of work

list.” She testified that, when she is on the “out of work list,” she will wait for a call from the

union for a particular job opening. Carolyn testified that there is only a short amount of time to

respond to job openings; typically 24 hours or less. She testified that the consequences for

declining a job opening are that she would be moved to the bottom of the call list and may

jeopardize her ability to collect unemployment benefits between jobs. Carolyn testified that the

same consequences result from quitting a job, with the additional consequences of damage to her

reputation and a possible “red flag” as “not for rehire.”

Carolyn provided a letter from the IUOE Dispatch Office detailing her work history from

August 1999 through December 2009. (Ptfs‟ Ex B at 1.) From August 1999 through December

2007, Carolyn had jobs in “Chemult, OR to Sacramento Calif” (109 days); Longview,

Washington (57 days); Eugene, Oregon (two jobs lasting 1,723 days and 7 days, respectively);

DECISION TC-MD 111185N 2 Salem, Oregon (39 days); Vancouver, Washington (168 days); and Portland, Oregon (two jobs

lasting 348 and 330 days, respectively). (Id.)

Carolyn testified that, during 2007, she worked for Hoffman Structures Inc. at the “So.

Waterfront” site in Portland, Oregon, from January 3, 2007, through November 28, 2007. (See

Ptfs‟ Ex B at 1.) Previously she worked for Hoffman Construction at the “OHSU” site in

Portland from January 20, 2006, through December 18, 2006. (Id.) Immediately preceding that

position, she worked for Hoffman Structures, Inc. in Vancouver, Washington from August 4,

2005, through January 18, 2006. (Id.) Carolyn testified that she was dispatched by the union to

the Vancouver job with Hoffman Structures. She testified that, at the end of the Vancouver job,

she was offered a position with Hoffman Construction at the OHSU site beginning two days later

on January 20, 2006. Carolyn testified that she had to seek approval from the union to take the

OHSU job and that the union could have denied her request. Carolyn testified that she received

the job with Hoffman Structures at the South Waterfront site in Portland through the union, but

she was specifically requested by Hoffman Structures for the job. She testified that, if she had

been working on another job at the time of the request, the union would not have called her.

Robert testified that Hoffman Structures and Hoffman Construction are “separate legal entities,”

although superintendents do talk to one another.

Plaintiffs both testified that, during 2007, they lived in Albany, Oregon. Plaintiffs

testified that, as of the date of trial, they had lived in Albany for 10 years, prior to which they

lived in Beaverton, Oregon for six years. Plaintiffs moved to Albany because, from April 2000

through January 2005, Carolyn worked in Eugene, Oregon. (Ptfs‟ Ex A at 2.) Carolyn‟s

employment in Eugene “required her to travel between Eugene & Portland and Albany was a

good central location on the I-5 corridor.” (Id.) Carolyn testified that she returns to her home in

DECISION TC-MD 111185N 3 Albany in between jobs and on days off. She testified that, when she is at home in Albany, she

shops for groceries, cooks meals, washes clothing, pays bills, and rests. Carolyn testified that

Plaintiffs have a home office with a desk, computer, printer, file cabinets, and a shredder. She

testified that they maintain personal records in that office and did not deduct the office on their

income tax returns. Carolyn testified that she did not have any employment in Albany in 2007.

Plaintiffs maintain that Carolyn‟s tax home in 2007, and prior years, was Albany. (Ptfs‟

Ex A at 2-3.) Plaintiffs consider Albany to be in the Mid-Willamette Valley area, which they

consider to include Salem, Albany, and Eugene, Oregon. (See Ptfs‟ Ex B at 1.) Consistent with

her understanding that Albany was her tax home, Carolyn “did not claim any employee business

expenses as she commuted from Albany to Eugene daily” from 2000 through 2005. (Ptfs‟ Ex A

at 2.) From August 2005 through January 2006, Carolyn “claimed employee business expenses

as she temporarily spent the work week in Vancouver, WA and return[ed] to her home in Albany

for weekends & holidays.” (Id.) Carolyn also “claimed employee business expenses” when she

worked in Portland, Oregon from January through December 2006 and from January through

November 2007. (Id. at 3.)

Plaintiffs provided the union‟s “2007 dispatch log * * * specifically for jobs in the

Willamette Valley area.” (Ptfs‟ Ex D.) Carolyn testified that she was qualified for the jobs on

the list, but could not take any of them because she was employed during 2007 for Hoffman

Structures. She testified that she assumes the “dispatch log” for the Portland metro area for 2007

would be similar or longer.

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