Mark P. Himmel & Deborah W. Himmel

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 17, 2025
Docket30412-12
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mark P. Himmel & Deborah W. Himmel (Mark P. Himmel & Deborah W. Himmel) 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
Mark P. Himmel & Deborah W. Himmel, (tax 2025).

Opinion

United States Tax Court

T.C. Memo. 2025-35

MARK P. HIMMEL AND DEBORAH W. HIMMEL, Petitioners

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

—————

Docket No. 30412-12. Filed April 17, 2025.

Robert C. Barrett, Jr., for petitioners.

Andrew J. Lorenz and Ardney J. Boland, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

ASHFORD, Judge: Beginning in 1981, petitioners engaged in breeding, boarding, showing, and training Arabian horses. They continued to engage in the activity at least up until trial despite reporting losses dating back to at least 1993. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) audited petitioners’ joint Forms 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for the 2004–09 taxable years (years at issue), all of which were filed after the specified filing dates (including extensions), and determined that the loss deductions they claimed relating to their horse activity should be disallowed. 1 Consequently, by

1 The IRS also determined that petitioners had increased income and expenses

on Schedules E, Supplemental Income and Loss, income and expenses for 2004–08, unreported wage income for 2008, unreported qualified dividends for 2004–07, increased net capital losses for 2004, 2005, 2008, and 2009, and increased “other income” for 2004–09, none of which petitioners contested at trial (or on brief). Furthermore, the IRS determined that petitioners were entitled to an increased child tax credit for 2004, an increased recovery rebate for 2008, and an increased make

Served 04/17/25 2

[*2] Notice of Deficiency dated September 14, 2012, the IRS determined the following deficiencies in petitioners’ federal income tax, additions to tax pursuant to section 6651(a)(1), 2 and accuracy-related penalties pursuant to section 6662(a) for the years at issue:

Additions to Tax / Penalties Year Deficiency § 6651(a)(1) § 6662(a) 2004 $10,155 $2,539 $2,031 2005 29,993 7,498 5,999 2006 19,289 4,810 3,858 2007 13,578 3,395 2,716 2008 16,702 2,415 3,340 2009 11,730 2,933 2,346

After briefing was complete, the parties agreed in a Stipulation of Settled Issues that petitioners are not liable for the accuracy-related penalties. Accordingly, the issues remaining for decision are whether petitioners (1) engaged in their horse activity for profit within the meaning of section 183(a) and (2) are liable for the additions to tax. We resolve both issues in respondent’s favor.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The Stipulation of Facts, the Supplemental Stipulation of Facts, and the attached Exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioners resided in Louisiana when their Petition was timely filed with the Court.

I. Petitioners’ Backgrounds

Petitioners are college graduates who have been married since 1978 and have one daughter (born in 1990).

Mr. Himmel graduated from Southeastern Louisiana University in 1974 with a degree in marketing. The following year he began working at KEM Supply House, Inc. (KEM Supply House), which sold

work/government retiree credit for 2009, none of which petitioners assigned error to in their Petition. 2 Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to the Internal Revenue

Code (Code), Title 26 U.S.C., in effect at all relevant times, regulation references are to the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 26 (Treas. Reg.), in effect at all relevant times, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Some monetary amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar. 3

[*3] office supplies, janitorial supplies, paper products, and furniture. At the time of trial, Mr. Himmel had a 30% ownership interest in KEM Supply House, and the remaining ownership interests were held by his mother, older sister, and younger brother. From 1975 to 1990 Mr. Himmel was the sole manager of KEM Supply House. However, after suffering from health problems in 1990, he took a more peripheral role and only generally helped with the business’s accounting matters.

Mrs. Himmel graduated from Loyola University in New Orleans in 1977 with a degree in dental hygiene and worked as a full-time dental hygienist from 1977 to 1990. From 1990 to 2008 Mrs. Himmel worked as a part-time dental hygienist. After 2008 she worked only occasionally, substituting for other dental hygienists who were unavailable to work. Additionally, in 2002 Mrs. Himmel’s father was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, and in 2004 she moved in with him to help care for him until he passed away in April 2011.

II. Petitioners’ Horse Activity

Mr. Himmel began caring for horses in his community as a young child in exchange for riding privileges. During his college years he exhibited horses in shows, and he purchased his first horse in 1976. In 1980 he went on to purchase five mares, two of which he sold for a profit.

Since at least 1979 Mrs. Himmel has been involved in the Arabian horse industry, having cared for horses and held committee chair and other leadership positions in various state, regional, and national horse associations. She has also exhibited horses in competitions at the local, regional, national, and international levels, having won some of those competitions.

In 1981 petitioners formed Plantation Arabians, a sole proprietorship, which trains, breeds, boards, and shows horses.

A. Petitioners’ Business Plans and Expert Advice Pertaining to Plantation Arabians

Petitioners became friends with fellow breeders and trainers who they had met at horse shows and exchanged industry know-how with. Petitioners met Joel Gangi in 1978, a fellow exhibitor, breeder, and trainer. Since then petitioners and Mr. Gangi have attended shows together and exchanged opinions on techniques for training and showing horses. Petitioners met Gary Dearth at a horse show in 1991. Mr. Dearth had a family farm that successfully bred Arabian horses and had 4

[*4] done so for over 40 years. Mr. Dearth’s business model was to breed, raise, show, and then sell Arabian horses. He advised petitioners to follow a similar business model but on a smaller scale.

Petitioners did not have a written business plan for Plantation Arabians but had an informal plan to breed their own horses, buy horses from others, and then train and show the horses to enhance their sale value. Petitioners also conducted several other activities that earned limited income including boarding, training, hauling, and showing client horses. During the 1980s petitioners’ stallions earned stud fees. However, that ended in 1988 after the Arabian Horse Registry of America approved transporting frozen horse semen in 1988 and petitioners’ studs were pushed out by better stallions that could be marketed nationally.

Throughout the years at issue petitioners owned and cared for at least 20 horses at Plantation Arabians. 3 Care for the horses was labor intensive and required daily and year-round duties, such as cleaning and mucking out stalls, grooming horses, feeding and watering horses, and tending to pastures.

Most of Plantation Arabians’ activities took place on petitioners’ property; in 1981 they had purchased undeveloped property at 515 Back Project Road (Back Project property) for $125,000 and built a 900- square-foot residence on the land as well as a 4,000-square-foot barn with ten stalls, a tack room, a wash room, and a 25-foot open bay. Petitioners moved into the residence around 1982 when both structures were completed, and they have lived there since. Also around that time petitioners erected fences throughout the property and developed five pastures.

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