Melissa Coffey Hulett a.k.a. Melissa Coffey v. Commissioner

150 T.C. No. 4
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 2018
Docket30676-09, 31119-09, 4720-10, 4949-10
StatusUnknown

This text of 150 T.C. No. 4 (Melissa Coffey Hulett a.k.a. Melissa Coffey 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.

Bluebook
Melissa Coffey Hulett a.k.a. Melissa Coffey v. Commissioner, 150 T.C. No. 4 (tax 2018).

Opinion

150 T.C. No. 4

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

MELISSA COFFEY HULETT a.k.a. MELISSA COFFEY, ET AL.,1 Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 30676-09, 31119-09, Filed January 29, 2018. 4720-10, 4949-10.

Ps filed a petition for redetermination of income-tax deficiencies for 2003 and 2004, which arose from R’s finding that Ps were not bona fide residents of the U.S. Virgin Islands and that Ps were nonfilers for federal tax purposes. Ps moved for summary judgment and claimed that they were bona fide Virgin Islands residents and that filing returns in the Virgin Islands satisfied their federal filing obligations. Ps argue that their subjective good faith belief of residency is sufficient to start the statute of limitations. Alternatively, Ps argue that R’s receipt of part of Ps’ Forms 1040 directly from the Virgin Islands constituted Ps’ returns’ being filed with R.

1 Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated: Emily Coffey, docket No. 31119-09; Judith S. Coffey, Petitioner & The Government of the United States Virgin Islands, Intervenor, docket No. 4720-10; and James L. Coffey, docket No. 4949-10. -2-

Held: The IRS’s receipt of a return determines its filing.

Held, further, Ps’ Forms 1040 were filed with the correct IRS service center.

Held, further, the first two pages of Ps’ Forms 1040 and attached Forms W-2 filed with the Virgin Islands and received by the IRS contained sufficient information to calculate tax liability.

Held, further, Ps’ Forms 1040 purported to be their tax returns.

Held, further, Ps’ Forms 1040 showed on their face an honest and reasonable attempt to satisfy their tax obligations.

Held, further, Ps’ Forms 1040 were properly executed under penalties of perjury.

Randall P. Andreozzi, Edward Doyle Fickess, Michael J. Tedesco, and

Heather L. Marello, for petitioners.

Gene C. Schaerr, Alexander H. Pepper, and Geoffrey P. Eaton, for

intervenor in docket No. 4720-10.

Michael W. Berwind, James G. Hartford, and Randal L. Eager, Jr., for

respondent. -3-

OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: Statute-of-limitations questions posed by taxpayers who

filed returns with only the United States Virgins Islands (VI) are not new: This is

the fourth case in a sequence. In Appleton v. Commissioner, 140 T.C. 273 (2013),

we held that a bona fide resident of the Virgin Islands had to file a federal return,

but that the return he filed with the Virgin Islands Bureau of Internal Revenue

(VIBIR) was that return. In Estate of Sanders v. Commissioner, 144 T.C. 63

(2015), vacated and remanded, 834 F.3d 1269 (11th Cir. 2016), we held that we

apply normal standards of residency when deciding who is a bona fide VI resident.

And in Cooper v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2015-72, we held that a subjective

good faith belief that one is a bona fide resident is not itself proof of bona fide

residency. Here our focus shifts yet again. We will assume that the taxpayer who

filed with the VIBIR is not a bona fide VI resident. But the VIBIR sent what she

filed--or at least a substantial part of what she filed--on to the IRS.

A nonresident of the VI with both U.S. and VI income has to file with both

the VIBIR and the IRS to satisfy her obligation to file a return under the Internal

Revenue Code. But does the VIBIR’s sharing of information with the IRS amount

to the filing of a return? -4-

Today we answer that question.

Background

We are asked to consider the Coffeys’ motions for summary judgment.2 We

find no facts. The background information comes from the documents that are in

the record and facts that the Commissioner does not contest.

Judith and James Coffey have been married for over 35 years. They had a

successful joint career in scholastic publishing and in May 1985 incorporated

Rainbow Educational Concepts, Inc., an S corporation. Rainbow Concepts is a

publisher’s development company that focuses on the editorial design and

production of school textbooks. It has an impressive list of big-name clients, such

as Houghton Mifflin, McGraw-Hill, and Scholastic. Judith was the president of

Rainbow Concepts until 2003, and James was and remains its vice president. It is

a profitable business. They reported nearly $1.5 million of adjusted gross income

on their 2003 joint income tax return and another $1.4 million on their 2004

return. With high income usually comes high taxes--at least sometimes.

2 We consolidated docket numbers 30676-09, 31119-09, 4720-10, and 4949- 10 for trial, briefing, and opinion. This opinion decides summary-judgment motions in two of these cases. Only Judith Coffey in docket number 4720-10, and James Coffey in docket number 4949-10, moved for summary judgment. When we refer to the “Coffeys”, we refer only to them. -5-

The Coffeys first became aware of some of the advantages of VI taxation in

2003. Chief among these is the VI’s Economic Development Program (EDP).

The EDP’s purpose is to bring business to the VI, and to do so, it offers very

lucrative tax incentives to some taxpayers who establish that they are bona fide VI

residents. See sec. 932;3 Huff v. Commissioner, 135 T.C. 222 (2010). This is not

a secret--Congress specifically allows the VI to reduce taxes on “income derived

from sources within the Virgin Islands or income effectively connected with the

conduct of a trade or business within the Virgin Islands.” Sec. 934(b)(1). The

EDP provides substantial benefits to participating companies: a 90% exemption

from local-income taxation, a 90% exemption from dividend taxation, and a 100%

exemption from gross-receipts taxation. See Huff, 135 T.C. at 227.

It didn’t take long for the IRS to notice these incentives and to identify their

potential for abuse. It made adventurous taxpayers aware of its skepticism of the

EDP by issuing Notice 2004-45, 2004-2 C.B. 33. In this notice the IRS described

what it believed to be a typical scenario where U.S. taxpayers improperly claim to

be bona fide VI residents to take advantage of the EDP when in reality their

3 All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. The subject of these cases requires citation of other titles of the United States Code, and we give the full citation for those. -6-

situation hadn’t changed one bit. An example given in the notice was of an

employee of a company in the U.S. who terminated his employment only to

become a partner in a VI partnership that provided the same services for the

company that the employee used to perform--same job, but dressed up in

consultant’s clothes.

The Coffeys spoke with some tax professionals and decided to take

advantage of the EDP in 2003. Judith ended her relationship with REC and

became a partner in a VI partnership, IFW St. Croix Group, LLLP, later becoming

StoneTree Group, LLLP (StoneTree). The Coffeys started looking for some

property in October of that year, and closed on a house in St. Croix in December.

They continued to own the house through at least 2010.

The Coffeys bought two cars, Judith got a VI driver’s license, and she

became a VI registered voter (and voted in its elections). Judith argues that she

was a bona fide VI resident starting in 2003 through at least 2006. To that end,

she believed that her filing obligations rested with the VIBIR and not the IRS.

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150 T.C. No. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melissa-coffey-hulett-aka-melissa-coffey-v-commissioner-tax-2018.