Melinda Jean Welwood v. Commissioner

2019 T.C. Memo. 113
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 2019
Docket17254-17L
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2019 T.C. Memo. 113 (Melinda Jean Welwood 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.

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Melinda Jean Welwood v. Commissioner, 2019 T.C. Memo. 113 (tax 2019).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2019-113

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

MELINDA JEAN WELWOOD, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 17254-17L. Filed September 4, 2019.

JoAnne Wallace McIntosh, for petitioner.

Brooke S. Laurie, Sheila R. Pattison, and Roberta L. Shumway, for

respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

COHEN, Judge: The petition in this case was filed in response to a notice

of determination concerning collection action and a notice of determination

denying a request for relief under section 6015. The issue for decision is whether

petitioner is entitled to relief under section 6015(f) from liability on joint returns -2-

[*2] filed with Michael J. Welwood (M. Welwood) for 2008, 2011, 2014, and

2015 and whether collection may proceed with respect to unpaid liabilities for

2007, 2010, 2012, and 2013. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are

to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for relevant years, and Rule references are

to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulated facts are

incorporated in our findings by this reference. Petitioner resided in Texas when

she filed her petition.

Background

Petitioner was born in 1944. She completed two years of college.

Petitioner and M. Welwood were married on March 25, 1973. In 2003 they

separated and contemplated divorce but were reconciled in that same year.

Petitioner and M. Welwood remained married until his death on September 24,

2017. They had one son who was an adult at all material times.

Petitioner suffers certain health conditions that have been with her since

birth. Other health problems are age related but have not prevented her gainful

employment and are not unusual. -3-

[*3] In 2003, when the couple separated, they agreed to a division of property.

Pursuant to the agreement, M. Welwood assigned to petitioner half of his interests

in the profits, losses, and capital of the following partnerships: Castle Rock

Associates, LP; Harbor Vista Associates, LP; MJ/RM Associates, LP; MJW

Associates, LP; MJW/Claybourne Associates, LP; MJW/SCA Associates, LP;

MW/RA Associates, LP; Shakespeare Associates, LP; Summerville Associates,

LP; W/A Associates, LP; W/A Associates II, LP; Oak Knoll Apartments, Ltd.; and

Bluefield Associates. (There are minor inconsistencies in the names of entities in

the stipulated documents and the stipulation. The findings are based on the

documents as stipulated.)

The interests subject to the 2003 division of property agreement involved

partnerships created in the 1980s by M. Welwood and Robert Arcand. The

partnerships invested in low-income housing units and apartment buildings in

Oregon, Colorado, California, and Montana. M. Welwood and Arcand marketed

the partnerships to investors in high-income tax brackets who were looking for tax

reduction opportunities. M. Welwood and the other investors in the partnerships

were clients of the certified public accounting firm KPMG. The partnerships were

designed to generate tax savings in early years and avoid taxation on income in

later years by sale of the partnership interests and a step-up in basis to the -4-

[*4] purchasers. However, in 1986 changes in the tax laws limiting the deduction

of passive losses against other income caused the partnerships to lose value, which

made them unattractive to prospective buyers.

Sonja Haugen was a KPMG partner who had business dealings with

M. Welwood and the other investors in the partnerships. Haugen met petitioner in

the 1980s, and they became friends. When petitioner and M. Welwood

temporarily separated in 2003, Haugen recommended that petitioner not take

ownership of the partnership interests. However, petitioner took ownership on the

advice of her then attorney. From 2003 through 2015, partnership distributions for

the M. Welwood interests were recorded by the partnerships as one-half to M.

Welwood and one-half to petitioner.

In or about 2005 or 2006 petitioner obtained a Florida real estate license.

She and her husband moved to Texas in 2007 after encountering financial

difficulties in Florida. She has been constantly employed by her current employer

since 2008 and is currently a manager of employee benefits with take-home pay of

approximately $4,200 per month.

M. Welwood suffered a series of strokes culminating in two in 2010 that left

him cognitively challenged. In 2011 he was injured in an automobile accident.

He was hospitalized and in rehabilitation and nursing care facilities for various -5-

[*5] periods until his death, returning to the homes occupied by petitioner between

stays in a hospital or other facility. The last such facility was A Serene Setting,

where he began living in 2015 or 2016. While he was in the various facilities and

through the time of his death, petitioner managed his care and maintained the

household. She paid all of the household bills and the expenses of his care. She

would visit her husband and take him documents to sign. M. Welwood was

sometimes mentally incapacitated or otherwise cognitively impaired. During one

such period of incapacitation in 2011, petitioner signed their joint tax return for

2010 on his behalf pursuant to a durable power of attorney.

Petitioner and M. Welwood filed joint Federal tax returns through tax year

2015. Their joint returns for 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015

were filed after extensions to October 15 of the following year were obtained. As

of November 15, 2017, there were balances due on the joint returns, exclusive of

accrued penalties and interest, as follows:

Year Balance due

2008 $106,830.30 2010 16,420.34 2011 7,024.95 2012 14,767.20 -6-

[*6] 2013 16,688.50 2014 30,583.91 2015 22,263.43

Petitioner caused separate returns to be filed for 2016 under circumstances

described below. Petitioner’s separate return for 2016 and the separate return that

she caused to be filed for her husband were filed on January 2, 2018.

Haugen began to prepare income tax returns for petitioner and M. Welwood

after she retired from KPMG and their prior preparer became ill. She prepared

their joint returns for 2014 and 2015 and their separate returns for 2016, but she

did not sign them because she was unpaid. After M. Welwood’s automobile

accident and frequent hospitalizations and rehabilitation, petitioner collected the

information required for tax return filings and forwarded them either to their prior

preparer or to Haugen. Haugen explained to petitioner and discussed with her

counsel the effect of filing separate returns with the substantial tax liabilities

arising out of the partnerships reported by only M. Welwood. For 2016 the

separate return Haugen prepared for M. Welwood reported taxable gain of

$864,967 and tax liability of $225,532. On petitioner’s separate return for 2016

she reported wages and Social Security income of $68,337 and tax of $4,888. -7-

[*7] In an undated marital property agreement notarized on June 2, 2015,

petitioner purports to assign to M. Welwood her interests in the profits, losses, and

capital of the following partnerships: Castle Rock Associates, LP; Harbor Vista

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2019 T.C. Memo. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melinda-jean-welwood-v-commissioner-tax-2019.