O'Meara v. Commissioner

8 T.C. 622, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 250
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1947
DocketDocket No. 8292
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 8 T.C. 622 (O'Meara 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
O'Meara v. Commissioner, 8 T.C. 622, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 250 (tax 1947).

Opinions

OPINION.

Opper, Judge:

Issue 1. — In support of the disallowance of the business expense deductions, respondent first contends on brief that during the taxable year Mt. Carmel and not Chicago was petitioner’s principal place of business, and thus was his “home” within our established interpretation of the word as used in section 23 (a) (1) (A) of the Internal Revenue Code.1 See, S. M. R. O'Hara, 6 T. C. 841. Petitioner, claiming prejudicial surprise, objects to our consideration of the contention.

We think the objection is well founded. The dispute here is solely as to the allowance of deductions for estimated tips, cost of meals, taxi fare, stenographic services, and entertainment expenses, all of which estimated amounts petitioner contends were paid by him on certain business trips which he made in 1941. It seems clear that petitioner’s entire train and plane fares on these trips and his total hotel bills at the destinations have been allowed by respondent, which allowance could have been predicated only on the theory that Chicago was petitioner’s “home.” The testimony of the examining revenue agent, the explanation of the disallowance in the deficiency notice, and the opening statement of counsel for respondent at the hearing are all to the effect that respondent’s position simply was that petitioner had not proved the amount of the expenditures claimed to have been made. That expenditures of the nature ascribed to them by petitioner were deductible if so made, and that the trips, including those to Mt. Carmel, were away from petitioner’s “home” were never, it seems, the subject of controversy between the parties. We do not mean to say that petitioner is thereby relieved from proving the elements of deductibility of the items in question, but in our view the standard of proof to which he may in good conscience be held is affected.

There is substantial evidence here indicating that petitioner’s stay in Mt. Carmel was temporary and that he was not regularly engaged in business there during 1941. The drilling and operating of wildcat oil wells in three states and negotiating for the acquisition of oil interests is in its nature, we think, a business more conducive to temporary residence than to the maintenance of fixed headquarters. At least this appears to have been so in the case of O’Meara Bros. The Mt. Carmel office was established in 1940, when they began drilling there. The joint venture maintained an office in Houston, Texas, as well as Mt. Carmel, during the taxable year and later moved the Mt. Carmel office to Shreveport, Louisiana, even though oil production at Mt. Carmel continued. It appears from the conflicting evidence that, although petitioner was registered at some Mt. Carmel hotel for the first five months of 1941, the entire time spent there by him during the year was little more than that spent at Chicago. The remaining approximately one-third year was spent in travel and temporary stay at one of the many other points he visited. Petitioner’s income tax returns for 1937 and for 1941 disclosed that his residence was in Chicago. Petitioner testified that he had business there and, while this testimony is in no detail, either from direct or cross-examination, we think respondent reasonably took the view prior to the preparation of his brief that travel by petitioner from Chicago to Mt. Carmel was travel away from “home.” Under these circumstances, we think respondent should not now be allowed to present over objection a contention which petitioner urges would, if made earlier, have caused him to introduce evidence which is not in the present record.

Expenditures such as are here involved are of a nature which we have recognized to be reasonably susceptible of estimate. See, e. g., Albert Nelson, 6 T. C. 764, 772. Moreover, they may be so proved, although doubt as to the accuracy of the estimate and as to other matters of proof with respect thereto will be resolved strongly against the taxpayer, since the “inexactitude is of his own making.” Cohan v. Commissioner (C. C. A., 2d Cir.), 39 Fed. (2d) 540.

Petitioner’s estimates are, in our opinion, in each instance fraught with considerable uncertainty as to business purpose, actual expenditure by petitioner, and amount. He testified generally, and we have found, that the travels were made in connection with the business of O’Meara Bros. This does not establish, however, the duration of the business activity at the destination or the business purpose of many of the estimated expenditures. After testifying positively to the dates and destinations of his 1941 journeys, petitioner offered practically no information as to the business activities undertaken on arrival. This deficiency in evidence goes to each estimated expenditure made during petitioner’s stay at his various destinations. In many instances its effect is that the expenses deducted appear to be based on estimates as to amounts, assumptions as to purpose, and liberal guesses as to frequency.

There is little testimony on which to báse estimates of thé amount of the intercity taxi travel made by petitioner in the course of business activity. As to the “special trips,” petitioner’s estimate assumes an expenditure for that purpose on every occasion where his transportation receipt or memorandum indicates travel between Chicago and one of the points near Mt. Carmel. We can not overlook the likelihood that the joint venture’s business automobile was on occasions used for such purpose or that the trip was made with an acquaintance at no cost to petitioner. These lapses of proof are not cured by the appearance of a very conservative estimate of the cost of such travel. It is likewise assumed by petitioner that he hired a taxi to and from each transportation terminal on every one of his 35 trips.

Petitioner’s testimony as to his estimates of tips is unpersuasive in similar respects. Not only do the amounts appear liberal, but the approximated frequency of the expenditures assumes a clocklike repetition of the occasion for such gratuities. For example, even though he was away part of the time, the Mt. Carmel tips during the first five months of 1941 are computed at 50 cents per day. Petitioner’s testimony that he carries “a lot of luggage, five bags” is, in our view, too general to support the full amount of the estimates for tips to hotel and train or plane porters. We have therefore determined that 50 per cent of the estimated amounts expended for tips and taxi fare is allowable for such service. Accordingly, we hold that such determined amount is deductible by petitioner.

We think petitioner’s evidence as to the necessity for and extent of stenographic service paid for by him while traveling is also too unde-tailed to establish $200 as a reasonable estimate therefor. The testimony is particularly unconvincing in view of the fact that the joint venture maintained offices at Mt. Carmel and at Houston during the year. A more persuasive effort to meet his burden of proof would have included some definitely establishable facts as to leases or contracts negotiated and typed during the travels. No evidence of that nature was offered. It appears also from a schedule submitted in evidence by petitioner, and received for limited purposes only, that the $345.95 allowed by respondent as a deduction of miscellaneous expense may have included some amounts expended for stenographic service. We have found that $50 is the allowable amount for stenographic services during the course of petitioner’s travels in 1941. Accordingly, we hold that $50 is deductible for such service.

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Bluebook (online)
8 T.C. 622, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omeara-v-commissioner-tax-1947.