Markell v. State Tax Commission

4 Mass. Supp. 215
CourtMassachusetts Appellate Tax Board
DecidedJanuary 26, 1983
DocketDocket No. 99817
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Mass. Supp. 215 (Markell v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Markell v. State Tax Commission, 4 Mass. Supp. 215 (Mass. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

This is an appeal under the formal procedure pursuant to G.L. c. 62C, s. 39 from a refusal of the appellee to abate an income tax assessed under chapter 62C, s. 26 for the year 1975.

These findings of fact and report are made pursuant to a request by the appellant under the provisions of c. 58A, s. 13, as amended, and Rule 32 of the Rules of Practice and Procedure of the Appellate Tax Board.

FINDINGS OF FACT & REPORT

The appellant, a resident of the commonwealth, filed a timely return with his spouse for calendar year 1975 in which he reported income as a “securities investor” on Schedule C. He listed as item 4 on that schedule dividends of $174,558 and claimed as deductions $2,250' for professional fees and $137,662 as interest [216]*216paid to the security brokers and ah amount of $140 as a telephone expense.

The appellee issued a Notice of Intention to Assess a deficiency tax dated 9/26/77 based on the assertion that the dividends were erroneously reported as 5% business income and no deduction for interest and other expenses should be allowed. On February 28, 1978, the commissioner actually assessed an additional tax of $15,019.98 plus interest and an additional tax for failure to estimate of $3,016.97, for a total of $18,036195. The appellant’s application for abatement filed on or about April 21, 1978 was denied by the appellee on July 13,1978 and a timely appeal to this board was taken September 8, 1978.

Having reported the dividends and taken the deductions on Schedule C as noted above, the appellant reported the remainder of income in the amount of $34,546 as net profit from business or profession, item 21 on Schedule C, as item 12, page l of his 1975 income tax return. He reported no income from wages and salaries. His total 5%' income, item 19, page 1, was $38,078, which included the balance of Massachusetts Savings Bank interest of $3,532. Exemptions of $3,800 left his total taxable 5% income of $34,278 resulting in a tax at 5% of $1,714. His total taxable 9% income was. reported, as $5,348 which represented a net amount after taking exclusions of $3,872 from security dividends received by his spouse and 9% interest totaling $9,220 which resulted in a tax at 9% of $481. Thus, his combined tax was reported as $2,195 to which was. added a surtax of $165 resulting in a final tax of $2,360, shown on his return, Exhibit 1.

The appellant reported his security transactions quite differently on his federal return, Exhibit 2. In that return he did not file a Schedule C showing profit or loss from business or profession but reported the dividend income on Schedule B, “Dividend and Interest Income”, and took a deduction for interest paid to brokers on Schedule A, “Itemized Deductions”, item 19, while deductions for preparation of his tax return and the business telephone expense were taken under item 33 of Schedule A.

As to the nature and activity of the appellant in7 relation to his purchase and sale of securities, the board found the facts as agreed to by the parties, the salient features of which we summarize. Claiming the right to report his income as 5% income rather than 9% income and the right to, take a deduction fór interest and expenses on the ground that the appellant was engaged in a “trade or, business”, we advert to those activities which could possibly form the basis of a “trade or business.”

In the conduct of his security transactions, the appellant maintained a desk- at E.F. Hutton Company, Inc. and at Rothchild & Company, now known as L.F. Rothchild, Unterberg, Towbin. He was not employed by these companies and he paid no rent for the use of office space. The brokerage houses received compensation through the large volume of transactions done by the appellant through margin accounts and on which the firms earned interest income as well as brokerage commissions.

The appellant devoted his full-time to his dealings in securities and was not engaged in any other job or business. Based, on.his own observations of market actions of stock owned or under consideration for purchase and on the appellant’s personal investigation of the pertinent factors affecting the industry and/or the particular company, including its past and anticipated performance, its assets and management, the appellant made his own decisions as to what , purchases and sales he would make. He read the Wall Street Journal daily and would study the tear sheets of Standard & Poor describing the business operations, financial history and debt and equity structure of a company ini which he contemplated an investment. He also regularly read business periodicals such as Forbes and Business Week and the annual and quarterly reports of all companies in [217]*217which he owned stock.

Exhibit 5 is a list of stocks he held in 1975 and Exhibit 6 is a resume of pertinent information concerning his portfolio for that year. He had 157 sell transactions involving 84,726 shares. His buy transactions numbered 269 involving 32,245 shares. The total value of shares sold was $1,997,505, while the total value of the shares bought was $2,423,666. Owning shares at some time during the year in 188 companies, the gross value of his holdings on December 31, 1975 was $4,312,056, while his equity value was $2,522,561. On January 1,1975, the gross value was $3,832,945, while his equity value at that time was $2,683,170.

Neither the appellant nor any other witness testified in this case so that the board was unable to get answers to questions it had concerning the appellant’s mode of activity and ,his reasonings and intentions with respect to his purchases and sales of securities. On the board’s analysis of the limited facts with respect to appellant’s activities concerning the management of his investment portfolio the board ruled that the appellant failed to introduce sufficient facts to prove he was engaged in a. trade or business as that concept is applied under the code in our statute. The board further ruled that all the taxable income in question resulting from the appellant’s investment activities was subject to tax at the rate of 9% and no deduction for expenses and interrat should be allowed. Accordingly, a decision was rendered for the appellee.

OPINION

The issues in this case are basically twofold: (1) Are dividends received by the appellant includable in Part A gross income or Part B gross income?- (2) Was the appellant actively conducting a “trade or business”, and thus, entitled to a deduction for expenses, and interest?

The appellant rqjorted his income from dividends on investments in his Part B gross income taxable at 5% as qppqsed to inclusion in his Part A gross income taxable at 9%.

M.G.L. c. 62, s. 2(a), defines Massachusetts gross income as federal gross income with modifications not here relevant. Chapter 62 as amended by St. 1973, c. 723, unlike the provisions of c. 62 as amended by St. 1971, c. 555, provides in section 2(b) for the immediate division of Massachusetts gross income, before determining adjusted gross income, into two classes: Part A gross income consisting of “total interest, dividends and net capital gain ...”, again with exceptions not here relevant, and Part B gross income which is the remainder of Massachusetts gross income.

The division of these two types of income can be traced to our original income tax law St. 1916, c. 269. That statute provided in G.L. c. 62, s. 5(e) that interest and dividends taxable under s. 1 should not be taxed under s. 5 which imposed taxes on annuities, business income and net capital gain derived from intangibles.

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Related

Higgins v. Commissioner
312 U.S. 212 (Supreme Court, 1941)
McDonald v. Commissioner
323 U.S. 57 (Supreme Court, 1944)
United States v. Gilmore
372 U.S. 39 (Supreme Court, 1963)
Whipple v. Commissioner
373 U.S. 193 (Supreme Court, 1963)
Barnes v. State Tax Commission
296 N.E.2d 510 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1973)
Forte Investment Fund v. State Tax Commission
343 N.E.2d 420 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Mass. Supp. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markell-v-state-tax-commission-masstaxbd-1983.