Mesi v. Commissioner

25 T.C. 513, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1955
DocketDocket No. 50868
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 25 T.C. 513 (Mesi 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
Mesi v. Commissioner, 25 T.C. 513, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16 (tax 1955).

Opinions

OPINION.

Rice, Judge:

This is another in a long series of cases involving the question of whether a bookmaker has accurately reported the income derived from his illegal gambling business. As in many of the previous cases, the respondent does not contest' the accuracy of the gross receipts and operating expenses reported by the taxpayer, but has determined that the taxpayer overstated the wagering losses realized in his business and, consequently, understated his income. The first issue which we must decide, therefore, is whether petitioner is entitled to claim as a deduction the amounts shown on his records as having been paid to winning bettors, in computing the income earned from his bookmaking business in 1946.

In the instant case, the petitioner has supposedly maintained and preserved for the respondent’s inspection a complete file of his original records. These records, more specifically the 20-line sheets, do not identify any of the bettors but they seem to contain an accurate listing of the amounts received and the amounts paid out with respect to every bet. Daily and monthly summaries of these 20-line sheets were compiled and, on the basis of such summaries, petitioner’s return for the year here in issue was prepared. The mathematical accuracy of such summaries, and of petitioner’s return, has not been questioned.

Petitioner’s records and income tax return disclose total recipts from wagers amounting to $793,287.50 in 1946, and a gross profit on such wagers of approximately 5% per cent. Respondent contends that since approximately 11% per cent of the amounts wagered at parimutuel tracks in Illinois is retained for the benefit of the racing association and the State, and since the amount retained at parimutuel tracks throughout the United States ranges from 10 to 17 per cent of all bets placed, petitioner’s reported gross profit for the year 1946 should have been 11% per cent of the total wagers received. Therefore, in order to increase petitioner’s gross profit from 5% per cent to 11% per cent, respondent lias determined that petitioner overstated the amounts paid out to winning bettors in the aggregate amount of $48,010.41.

The essence of respondent’s argument is that petitioner must be presumed to have paid between 35 and 50 per cent of his net profits for protection from police interference with his illegal activities. Respondent contends that such nondeductible expenses must have been entered and concealed on petitioner’s books by entering fictitious losses and by padding the amounts paid to winning bettors, thus resulting in a gross profit of but 5% per cent. Respondent has, therefore, disallowed the deduction of $48,010.41 of the wagering losses claimed by petitioner, for lack of substantiation.

Respondent introduced the testimony of the chief investigator for the Chicago Crime Commission, an independent citizens’ organization, to the effect that bookmakers cannot operate in Chicago unless they pay for protection. However, petitioner was unequivocal in his testimony that he did not make any payments for protection. The fact that other gamblers in Chicago may have been required to do so is of no evidentiary force with respect to any .such payments made by petitioner. We do not know what petitioner’s relations with the criminal syndicate were or why he may have been able to remain in business without paying for protection. But, in any event, the record indicates that petitioner’s activities were not completely free from police interference. His wagering establishment was raided several times and petitioner was compelled to change his location and even operate from alleyways and a garage during the year 1946. We have consequently been unable to find as a-fact that petitioner made any protection payments during that year.

We recognize the difficulties facing respondent in attempting to audit the records of a taxpayer who is engaged in an illegal business and where the identity of his customers is not ascertained and recorded. Petitioner’s own accountant testified that there was no way in which the accuracy of the 20-line sheets could be verified as to the amounts received from and the amounts paid out to bettors. Moreover, petitioner’s records were susceptible of easy manipulation. Lines on the 20-line sheets could be left blank until the end of the day and, after all the races had been run, petitioner could then enter fictitious bets on losing horses and retain such fictitious losses for his own personal use. In addition, since no control was maintained over the sequence in which the alphabetically and numerically coded 20-line sheets were used, those sheets disclosing few or no losses could be removed from the file of petitioner’s records and the net receipts disclosed by such sheets could be pocketed by petitioner.

Our system of income tax collection relies on individual self-assessment. Taxpayers are required to file returns setting forth their income, their deductions, and a self-computed tax. The self-assessment system would be unworkable unless means were provided whereby the accuracy of the self-determined tax could be checked. The regulations1 therefore provide that each individual must keep such books and records as are sufficient to establish the individual’s gross income. The mere mathematical accuracy of such records is insufficient; they must clearly reflect the taxpayer’s income.

The issue of whether petitioner’s records accurately reflect his income for the year 1946 is one of fact, to be decided on the basis of all the evidence in the record. Jack Showell, 23 T. C. 495 (1954), on appeal C. A. 9, Mar. 9, 1955. Respondent contends that, since petitioner’s" records do not permit the verification of the various payments made to winning bettors, he may determine the amount of deductions permitted to petitioner for such unsubstantiated expenditures under the rule of Cohan v. Commissioner, 39 F. 2d 540 (C. A. 2, 1930). However, although petitioner has failed to carry his burden of proving that the total amount claimed to have been paid to winning bettors was, in fact, so paid, we find respondent’s determination of such amount to be excessive. Respondent has determined that $48,010.41 of the losses claimed by petitioner must be disallowed because his reported gross profit amounted to but 5% per cent whereas the parimutuel machines in the State of Illinois operated on a gross profit of 11% or 12% per cent, depending upon their location. But, petitioner’s winnings or losses have no relation whatsoever to the amount retained out of bets placed at parimutuel tracks. The evidence shows a lack of relation between the percentage of winnings in the petitioner’s business and the amount retained at parimutuel tracks. The amount retained out of bets placed at such tracks is a mathematical amount established by law. The elements of chance and skill have but slight effect on the profits earned by such tracks. They could rarely lose, whereas petitioner might easily suffer substantial net losses from a day’s betting if he accepted a disproportionate number of bets on winning horses. Cf. H. T. Rainwater, 23 T. C. 450 (1954). The mere suspicion on the part of the Commissioner that the petitioner’s records do not accurately reflect his correct income is not sufficient reason to justify adoption of the Commissioner’s percentage of winnings in the face of the evidence in this case which shows it is excessive.

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McGrath v. Commissioner
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Mesi v. Commissioner
25 T.C. 513 (U.S. Tax Court, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
25 T.C. 513, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mesi-v-commissioner-tax-1955.