Oatis v. Commissioner
This text of 6 T.C.M. 569 (Oatis 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
DISNEY, Judge: These cases, duly consolidated for hearing, involve income tax for the calendar year 1944. Deficiency was determined against each petitioner in the amount of $1,814.23. The only questions for determination are as to allowance of various deductions claimed.
Findings of Fact
The petitioners are husband and wife, residing in Louisiana. Each reported one-half of the community income on a return filed with the collector for the district of Louisiana. The wife had no separate income. The husband is engaged in the business of automotive manufacture and supply in New Orleans, Louisiana. During the taxable year he was a member of a partnership. He will be referred to hereinafter*201 as the petitioner.
As a distribution of partnership profits, he received two checks, one for $12,821.25 on January 22, 1944, and another for $24,253.33 dated October 18, 1944. The latter check was cashed November 30, 1944. John P. Oatis deposited $10,500 and $750 in bank on December 2, 1944, $1,875 on December 8, 1944, and $2,800 on January 17, 1945, but on December 8, 1944, December 11, 1944, and on February 21, 1945, checks were cashed in the respective amounts of $750, $1,875 and $2,800. The $750 and $1,875 checks were for purchase of war bonds; the $2,800 to the collector for amended estimate of 1944 tax. The rest of the money was kept at home. On December 6, 1944, petitioner was on the way to purchase war bonds with $8,250 in cash in his car. He left the car on the street and it was broken into and the money taken. Though the police were called at once, and investigated, none of the money was ever recovered, and petitioner had no insurance to cover it. He did not usually keep $13,000 or $14,000 on hand, but he had an armored drawer set into the wall where he kept money in a little tin box. He intended on December 6, to buy the bonds from one Comiskey who was in charge of a drive. *202 A Mr. Cousins who knew Comiskey was to go along. Comiskey was petitioner's assessor and he had met him, though he did not know him particularly. He was under no obligation to buy from Comiskey, but thought it was a good idea that if the assessor was handling it, one might as well buy from him as anyone else. No one was with Oatis at the time of the theft. He telephoned the police.
The petitioner John P. Oatis from about 1936 to about 1940 employed one M. G. Smith as an expert mechanic, manufacturing automotive springs. After quitting work with Oatis about 1940, Smith became ill and was under treatment at an infirmary. Oatis lent him money from time to time, being in need of skilled help and considering the prospect good that Smith would return to work. Smith was not related to Oatis. On June 2, 1944, Smith, for money borrowed, gave Oatis his 90-day promissory note for $414. About September 1945 he died. No part of the note was ever paid. Oatis had kept a memorandum of the loans, from which the note was drawn, but did not have it at time of trial. About December 31, 1944, Smith seemed to be getting better, but later had a relapse. Oatis did not know when he determined that Smith*203 would be unable to repay the $414, and gave him more money in 1945. Smith was in a dying condition by March 1945. One Owen L. Murphy, who had a restaurant and rooming house next door to Oatis' shop, knew Smith, who stayed at his rooming house for several years. In 1944 and 1945 Murphy advanced Smith cash and meals and lodging, because Smith was sick, destitute, and unable to work. He was not related to Murphy. Smith had always paid his bills. Murphy thought he would recover, but never got back any money lent Smith. At the end of 1944, Murphy felt that Smith was going to be able to pay the money back, more than at any other time.
About September 27, 1944, Oatis paid $33.75 state taxes on real estate. On February 2, 1944, he paid real estate taxes of $75.82.
In the taxable year petitioner's family expenses were $4,000 to $5,000. Sales tax was 3 per cent. Oatis paid gasoline tax, and a license tax of $5 on a car.
Oatis usually gave $10 a year to the Red Cross, but had no receipts, and at trial claimed a gift of $10 to the Community Chest; also from $2 to $5 a week to the Catholic Church. He did not know what he gave in 1944 to March-O-Dimes, or to Anti-Tuberculosis League or Doll*204 and Toy Fund. The petitioner's income tax returns claimed deductions of $350 to Catholic Church, $25 to Red Cross, $25 to Community Chest, $10 to March-O-Dimes, $4 to Anti-Tuberculosis League and $10 to Doll and Toy Fund; also $10 for auto and driver's license, $160 for "Sales Tax, City and State," $28.80 for gasoline tax, $36.50 for cigarette tax, and $191.48 for state income tax.
Opinion
We are here to decide upon the deductibility of various items contended for by the petitioner as deductible under various subdivisions of
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6 T.C.M. 569, 1947 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oatis-v-commissioner-tax-1947.