Chabot, Judge:
Respondent determined deficiencies in Federal individual income tax and additions to tax under section 6651(a)(1)1 (failure to file timely tax returns) against petitioner as follows:
Additions to tax
Docket No. Year Deficiency sec. 6651(a)(1)
6507-83 1980 $433
14905-84 1981 1,349
15225-84 1982 2,477 2$362.25
By amendment to answer, respondent asserts an increased deficiency for 1980 in the amount of $539.58, for a total deficiency in the amount of $972.58. This is based on disallowance of a deduction of $3,000 and is disputed. At trial, respondent also asserted that petitioner had a 1980 long-term capital gain of $156 that had not been taken into account; petitioner concedes the correctness of this additional adjustment.
These cases have been consolidated for trial, briefs, and opinion. After concessions by both parties, the issues for decision3 are as follows:
(1) Whether petitioner was entitled to bad debt deductions under section 166 on account of arrearages in payments due irom her ex-husband;
(2) Whether petitioner was entitled to a child care credit on account of transportation expenses paid for her children; and
(3) Whether petitioner was entitled to a child care credit on account of her payment of the employee’s share of social security taxes on behalf of a babysitter.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated; the stipulations and the stipulated exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
When the petitions were filed in the instant cases, petitioner resided in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Petitioner married Richard Donald James Perry (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Perry) on November 26, 1966. At that time, petitioner was a chemist at Union Carbide Corp. in Tarrytown, New York; Perry was a marketing assistant manager for the Nestle Co., and attended night school.
In January 1967, Perry quit his job and became a full-time student at Iona College in New Rochelle, New York. Perry continued as a full-time student until he was graduated in June 1969, receiving a bachelor’s degree in business administration. While Perry pursued his degree, petitioner continued working. During those years, petitioner spent about $10,000 for books, tuition, and other expenses allocable to Perry.
In mid-1969, Perry entered the Army. Petitioner’s and Perry’s first child, Elizabeth (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Beth), was born on April 28, 1970. Perry then served a tour in Vietnam. On his return, he, petitioner, and Beth moved to Atlanta, Georgia, where he became a marketing manager for Mead Corp. Their second child, Leonard (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Tad), was born on May 18, 1972.
Petitioner and Perry were divorced on June 23, 1975, by judgment of the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia. The Georgia court’s divorce decree (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the divorce decree) incorporated a property settlement and support agreement between petitioner and Perry. The divorce decree granted custody of their minor children to petitioner.
Bad Debt Deduction
In paragraph 2 of the divorce decree4, Perry was ordered to pay to petitioner a total of $400 per month ($200 for each child) “for the support, care, maintenance and education of the children”. (The payments so ordered are hereinafter sometimes referred to as paragraph 2 payments.) In paragraph 3 of the divorce decree5, Perry was ordered to pay an additional amount of up to $400 per month, depending on the level of Perry’s net income, as “alimony for [petitioner’s] proper support and maintenance”. (The payments so ordered are hereinafter sometimes referred to as paragraph 3 payments.)6
Paragraphs 11 and 12 of the divorce decree provide as follows:
11.
The husband, so long as he makes the payments herein called for to the wife for her support and that of the children as the same fall due, and complies with his other obligations hereunder, he shall have the sole and exclusive right to claim the said children as his dependents for federal and state income tax purposes.
12.
This Agreement is intended to provide for the full future obligations as between the parties hereto based on the present income and financial condition of the husband and the wife, and neither party hereto shall be barred from seeking a revision of the same under the provisions of Georgia Code Annotated sec. 30-220, et seq. This Agreement constitutes the entire understanding between the parties, and there are no representations or warranties other than expressly herein set forth. Except as provided herein, no modification or waiver of any of the terms hereof shall be valid unless in writing and signed by both parties. No waiver of any breach hereof or default hereunder shall be deemed a waiver of any subsequent breach or default of a same or similar nature.
In June of 1976, Perry informed petitioner that he would not make any of the payments he owed to petitioner under the divorce decree. At that time, petitioner was unemployed and attending school. Petitioner then began a long series of enforcement efforts. Petitioner had a complaint filed under the Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act7. As a result, beginning in August of 1976, Perry began making payments of $250 per month. In February of 1977, Perry filed suit in Louisiana Family Court to have the $800-per-month payments required under the divorce decree (paragraph 2 payments plus paragraph 3 payments) reduced. Petitioner, by reconventional demand, asked the Louisiana court to award her $14,000 for payments ($4,800 of “child support” and $9,200 of “alimony”) in arrears from Perry as of April 1, 1977. On May 23, 1978, the Louisiana court ordered Richard to pay to petitioner $6,450 “for child support as stipulated due.” The Louisiana court’s judgment did not refer to (1) Perry’s contention that his payment obligations should be reduced and (2) petitioner’s reconventional demand for $9,200 of “alimony”. The Louisiana court’s judgment did “recognize and render executory” in Louisiana, the divorce decree that had been issued by the Georgia court.
In 1979, petitioner obtained a writ of fieri facias8 from the Georgia court for $9,442.50 of arrearages in paragraph 2 payments due to that date. In 1985, she obtained another writ of fieri facias for $7,408 of arrearages in paragraph 2 payments due from 1979 through 1985. She did not seek writs of fieri facias for the arrearages in paragraph 3 payments because, pursuant to advice of legal counsel, she believed that the fieri facias procedures were not available for the collection of payments labeled as alimony.
By the spring of 1985, Perry had become up-to-date in his paragraph 2 payments obligations. However, Perry has not made any paragraph 3 payments.
On her tax returns for 1980, 1981, and 1982, petitioner claimed dependency deductions for both Beth and Tad; respondent has not disallowed any of these dependency deductions.
On her 1980, 1981, and 1982 Federal income tax returns, petitioner claimed above-the-line deductions in the amounts of $3,0009, $4,80010, and $4,80011, respectively, on account of the arrearages in paragraph 3 payments for those years. For 1982, petitioner reported an adjusted gross income of $29,607.
During each of the years 1980, 1981, and 1982, petitioner spent from her own funds more to support Beth and more to support Tad than she received from Perry for each of these children.
The petitions in the instant consolidated cases were filed on March 24, 1983, May 21, 1984, and May 23, 1984. On September 30, 1985, petitioner executed a document titled: “Continuing Guarantee and Agreement to Pay Support Obligations of Richard D. Perry” (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the guarantee)12 under which petitioner purported to guarantee payment to Beth and Tad of the payments due from Perry under the divorce decree. The guarantee was to be retroactive to June 23, 1975.
Child Care Credit
During 1980 through 1982, petitioner was employed as an attorney on a full-time basis. Beth and Tad came home from school about 3 p.m., and petitioner did not usually get home from work until about 7 p.m. Because of her employment, petitioner found it necessary to secure day-care services for Beth and Tad. Among the babysitters petitioner hired for Beth and Tad’s day-care was Verna Crawford (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Crawford).
Petitioner paid Crawford about $3 an hour, and also agreed to pay Crawford’s share of social security taxes as part of Crawford’s compensation for babysitting. During 1982, petitioner paid the employee’s portion of social security taxes on behalf of Crawford.
During 1982, petitioner paid for airfare to send Beth and Tad to stay with their grandparents in Shreveport, Louisiana, during school holidays, instead of hiring a babysitter. If petitioner had hired a babysitter for those time periods, then the babysitter would have cost more than the airfare.
OPINION
I. Bad Debt Deduction
Respondent contends that petitioner is not entitled to bad debt deductions on account of the arrearages of Perry’s paragraph 3 payments because: (1) Petitioner did not establish a basis in any debt; (2) petitioner did not establish the worthlessness of her right to the paragraph 3 payments; and (3) the nonpayment of the paragraph 3 payments does not fall within the definition of a capital asset to give rise to a capital loss deduction. Alternatively, respondent maintains that, if petitioner is entitled to bad debt deductions, then the amount should be less than that claimed by petitioner, in order to prevent overlapping deductions.
Petitioner maintains that she has proven all the elements necessary to show the existence, amount, basis, and worthlessness of a debt for 1980, 1981, and 1982.
We agree with respondent that petitioner does not have a basis in the debt.
In order to deduct a nonbusiness bad debt (sec. 166(a) and (d))13, the taxpayer must show14 that a number of requirements have been satisfied. The requirement we examine in the instant case is that the debt be one in which petitioner has a basis (sec. 166(b)).15
A legally enforceable divorce decree set forth Perry’s obligations to make payments to petitioner. These obligations were not contingent on any expenditure by petitioner. During the years in issue, Perry was obligated to make paragraph 3 payments of $400 per month (see note 5, supra), regardless of whether petitioner spent little, much, or nothing at all on child support. Similarly, petitioner’s expenditures were independent of Perry’s court-ordered payments, and neither created nor affected the amount of the debt that Perry owed to petitioner.
When faced with this situation in Swenson v. Commissioner, 43 T.C. 897 (1965), we held that in such a situation the taxpayer did not have a basis in the debt, and so no deduction was allowable under section 166. Petitioner has not presented any argument which would lead us to distinguish or overrule Swenson.
We conclude that petitioner had no basis in the arrear-ages in paragraph 3 payments, and is therefore not entitled to a bad debt deduction.
Petitioner raises several arguments to support her contention that she has a basis in the debt.
Petitioner argues that the guarantee provides a basis in the debt from Perry. The guarantee did not exist during any of the years in issue; it is petitioner’s attempt to create post-hoc “facts”. No payments could have been made during any of those years under the guarantee. In paying for the support of Beth and Tad, petitioner was merely satisfying her own obligations to her own children.
As the mother of her children, petitioner was already effectively the guarantor of their support. Under Georgia law (Ga. Code Ann. sec. 19-7-2 (1982)), “the duty of parents to support their children is joint and several, and does not cease upon separation or divorce of the parents.” Collins v. Collins, 172 Ga. App. 748, 324 S.E. 2d 475, 476 (1984). Under Louisiana law (La. Civ. Code Ann. art. 227 (1952)), the obligation to support one’s children “continues after separation or divorce, and applies to both mothers and fathers.” Marcus v. Burnett, 264 So. 2d 737, 739 (La. App. 1972), affd. on this issue and modified on another issue 282 So. 2d 122 (La. 1973). Payment made on one’s own obligation does not give rise to a bad debt deduction. Dreyfuss v. Commissioner, 140 F.2d 922 (5th Cir. 1944), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court dated February 26, 1943; Estate of Schwehm v. Commissioner, 17 T.C. 1435 (1952). Petitioner acquired no basis in Perry’s support obligation from (1) the mere execution of a document restating an obligation which was already hers or (2) the payment of support for her children.
Petitioner cites section 1.166-9, Income Tax Regs., as authority for the use of a guaranty as a basis for the nonbusiness bad debt deduction. However, that regulation deals with agreements entered into by a taxpayer in the course of that taxpayer’s trade or business (sec. 1.166-9(a), Income Tax Regs.) or transactions entered into for profit (sec. 1.166-9(b), Income Tax Regs.). The guarantee shows, on its face, that petitioner entered into it in order to assure her children that their mother would provide for them even if their father did not. This motivation has nothing to do with petitioner’s trade or business or her desire for profit. The cited regulation does not support petitioner’s claim in the instant cases.
Petitioner brings to our attention statements from the Court of Appeals’ opinion in Imeson v. Commissioner, 487 F.2d 319 (9th Cir. 1973), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court.16 In Imeson, the Court of Appeals’ opinion notes our position in Swenson; it then suggests possible analogies to the position of “a taxpayer who pays materialmen’s liens on his house after the builder has defaulted” or “a guarantor who pays the creditor when the principal debtor defaults” (487 F.2d at 320), in which events a bad debt deduction may be allowable. That opinion also suggests analogies to the treatment of “uncollectible unpaid wages or salary” or the situation where a “taxpayer wife * * * who [pays] her and her husband’s joint income tax liability” (ibid.), in which events a bad debt deduction is not allowable. After suggesting the existence of a problem, the Imeson opinion specifically states that “We do not resolve these questions” (ibid.).
We conclude that the materialmen’s lien and guarantor analogies only serve to illustrate the shortcomings in petitioner’s case. In the materialmen’s lien and guarantor situations, the taxpayer’s role as creditor would have arisen only when and to the extent that the taxpayer paid the original debt. In the instant cases, any debt that Perry owed to petitioner arose, and was determined as to amount, without regard to petitioner’s expenditures.
We conclude that the guarantee did not provide petitioner with a basis in the support obligations.
Petitioner also argues that her financing of Perry’s education17 was an investment in his earning potential, that the paragraph 3 payments were intended to be the return on her investment in Perry (to the extent that they were not intended to be child support), and that when those payments became uncollectable, she incurred a capital loss. Petitioner’s argument, in essence, is that by financially supporting Perry during I1 A years of their 8 Vis-year marriage, she obtained a basis in the debt arising from the divorce decree. We do not agree.
Perry’s obligation to make the paragraph 3 payments arose from the marital relationship and was defined by the divorce court. Petitioner’s support of Perry during their marriage may well have enhanced his earning potential, but it cannot be said that petitioner supported Perry in order to acquire a right of action against him upon their subsequent divorce. Swenson v. Commissioner, 43 T.C. at 899. The amounts that petitioner spent to help educate her husband were no more than personal expenses (see sec. 262) that do not provide her a basis in a debt.
A purported loan between family members is always subject to close scrutiny. Caligiuri v. Commissioner, 549 F.2d 1155, 1157 (8th Cir. 1977), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court18; Estate of Reynolds v. Commissioner, 55 T.C. 172, 201 (1970). The same is true as to a purported investment. The presumption, for tax purposes at least, is that a transfer between family members is a gift. Estate of Reynolds v. Commissioner, 55 T.C. at 201 and cases there cited. If there ever was a written agreement between petitioner and Perry, then it would be petitioner who would be expected to produce it. If Perry ever had made payments to petitioner to evidence an obligation to repay petitioner’s investment, then it would be petitioner who could show such payments. Petitioner testified and produced checks and other records. Petitioner did not testify or produce any evidence regarding Perry’s obligation to repay any of the money that petitioner spent. See Wichita Terminal Elevator Co. v. Commissioner, 6 T.C. 1158, 1165 (1946), affd. 162 F.2d 513 (10th Cir. 1947). From this we conclude that petitioner’s expenditures in 1967 through 1969 did not give rise to a debt from Perry to her.
The divorce decree deals at length in paragraph 8 with “The property jointly and/or severally held by the parties” and specifies dispositions with great particularity. There is no reference in paragraph 8 to Perry’s debt to petitioner. On the other hand, paragraph 9 specifically provides that Perry “will assume responsibility for all obligations and debts of the parties which accrued prior to January 1, 1975”. Paragraph 3 (see note 5, supra) deals, by its terms, with “payments to the wife [petitioner] as alimony, for her proper support and maintenance”. Paragraph 3 obligations are separate from property divisions and pre-existing liabilities of paragraphs 8 and 9. Paragraph 12 provides that “This Agreement constitutes the entire understanding between the parties, and there are no representations or warranties other than expressly herein set forth.” From this, we conclude that the divorce decree did not embody, in the paragraph 3 payments, any obligation as to which petitioner’s 1967-1969 expenditures furnished a basis.
We conclude that petitioner had no basis in Perry’s support obligations for the years in issue, and consequently that petitioner is not entitled to bad debt deductions for the years in issue.
Petitioner insists that she ought to be allowed to deduct the shortfall in Perry’s support payment obligations. If this were to be viewed as an appeal to public policy, i.e., the public failed to see to it that Perry satisfied his legal obligations and so the public ought to make up for this to some extent by reducing petitioner’s tax obligations, then we have two responses.
Firstly, the statute for the years in issue does not embody that policy; to get that policy into the law, petitioner should go to the Congress, in which has been “vested” “All legislative Powers herein granted”. U.S. Constitution, Art. 1, Sec. 1.
Secondly, since the tax benefit of such a deduction relates directly to the taxpayer’s marginal tax bracket, it would appear that this claimed public policy would provide the greatest relief to those who have the greatest amount of other income and little or no relief to those who truly depended on the fulfillment of the support obligations. The Congress, of course, may enact any public policy it chooses (unless otherwise limited by the Constitution), but the policy that would be advanced by allowing such a deduction may fairly be viewed as topsy-turvy.
In any event, this Court will not so legislate in the guise of filling in gaps in the statute, or whatever other judicial power it is that petitioner would have us exercise.
We hold for respondent on this issue.
II. Child Care Credit19
In the case of a taxpayer who maintains a household which includes as a member one or more “qualifying individuals”, section 44A(a) allows as a credit an amount equal to the “applicable percentage” (in the instant cases, 20 percent) of the “employment-related expenses”20 paid by the taxpayer during the taxable year.
Respondent does not question that Beth and Tad were “qualifying individuals” within the meaning of section 44A(c)(l).
A. Transportation Expenses
Respondent does not dispute that the trips to Shreveport were for the dominant purpose of assuring Beth’s and Tad’s well-being and to permit petitioner to be gainfully employed, or that petitioner paid the amounts for which she claimed the child care credit.21 Rather, respondent contends that the airfare is disqualified from being an “employment-related expense”, within the meaning of section 44A by section 1.44A-l(c)(3), Income Tax Regs.
Petitioner contends that she sent the children to their grandparents in Shreveport during certain school holiday periods because (1) her regular babysitter was not available at those times and (2) the airfare was less expensive than it would have been to hire babysitters for those periods. (This is because petitioner would have had to pay for care for about 11 hours per day during those periods, while on regular school days she merely had to pay for sitters for the afternoons.) Also, petitioner contends that the airline cabin attendants provided care to the children during their trips to Shreveport. Petitioner relies on our opinion in Zoltan v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. 490 (1982), as authority for treating the air travel cost as employment-related expenses.
We agree with respondent.
In pertinent part, section 44A(c) defines “employment-related expense” as either expenses for household services, or expenses for the care of a qualifying individual. Since none of the disputed expenses constitutes household expenses within the meaning of section 44A(c)(2)(i), the issue for our consideration is whether the airfare expenses were incurred for the “care” of petitioner’s children within the meaning of section 44A(c)(2)(ii).
When the characterization of an expense is challenged under section 44A(c)(2)(A)(ii), the issue is resolved by reference to the specific facts at hand. Sec. 1.44A-1(c)(1)(i), Income Tax Regs.; Zoltan v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. at 494.22
In Zoltán, we dealt with the transportation expenses question as follows (79 T.C. at 497-498):
Expenses incurred for transportation are subject to the disqualification provisions of section 1.44A-l(c)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs., which in pertinent part provides:
Expenses incurred for transportation of a qualifying individual * * * between the taxpayer’s household and a place outside the taxpayer’s household where services for the care of the qualifying individual are provided are not incurred for the care of a qualifying individual.
We are of the opinion that the expenses incurred for the transportation of petitioner’s son to Washington are not disqualified by this language.
The cost of transportation from petitioner’s home to the place of departure is the type of expense that this language excludes. The care of Paul Zoltán commenced at that point. The transportation by bus to Washington began after petitioner’s son was placed under the care of the supervisors of the expedition. This transportation was inseparably tied to that care and does not fit within the disallowance provisions of section 1.44A-l(c)(4), Income Tax Regs.14 [Emphasis added.]
The transportation expenses in the instant cases fall on the disallowance side of the line we drew in Zoltán. Petitioner acknowledges on answering brief that the children were cared for on the flights by the cabin attendants. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the cabin attendants were under the direction of petitioner’s parents (the services providers in the instant case). Accordingly, for reasons explained in Warner v. Commissioner, 69 T.C. 995 (1978), and Zoltán, the regulation precludes us from treating the transportation expenses as employment-related expenses.
B. Employee Social Security Payments.
In 1982, petitioner paid Crawford’s wages and both the employer’s and employee’s share of social security taxes resulting from Crawford’s babysitting work. Petitioner claimed a child care credit for 1982 for all of those amounts. Respondent, after concessions, disputes only petitioner’s entitlement to a child care credit for paying Crawford’s share of social security taxes imposed by section 3101. Respondent concedes that petitioner paid the amounts for which she claimed the child care credit.23
We agree with petitioner.
Petitioner agreed to, and did, pay wages to Crawford. Petitioner agreed to, and did, pay Crawford’s share of social security taxes to respondent. Petitioner’s payment of Crawford’s tax obligation is compensation to Crawford, just as the paid wages are compensation to Crawford. Old Colony Tr. Co. v. Commissioner, 279 U.S. 716, 729-730 (1929). To paraphrase section 44A, petitioner’s payment of Crawford’s portion of social security taxes, as part of Crawford’s compensation for caring for Beth and Tad, constitutes amounts paid for the care of qualifying individuals.
The fact that Crawford could not deduct those amounts as taxes (secs. 275(a)(1)(A), and 164; Zwiener v. Commissioner, 743 F.2d 273, 276 (5th Cir. 1984), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court24) does not affect the treatment of this item as compensation to Crawford (see sec. 1.164-2(f), Income Tax Regs.).
Apparently this is a matter of first impression. Perhaps it was not controverted before, because the answer seemed to be so clear. The parties insisted on disputing it now, so we take the trouble to state the obvious.
We hold for petitioner on this issue.
To take account of the parties’ settlements of many of the adjustments, our determinations on the issues for decision, and the matters described in notes 21 and 23, supra.
Decisions will be entered under Rule 155.