Rapoport v. Commissioner

74 T.C. No. 11, 74 T.C. 98, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 145
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 23, 1980
DocketDocket No. 9934-77
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 T.C. No. 11 (Rapoport 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
Rapoport v. Commissioner, 74 T.C. No. 11, 74 T.C. 98, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 145 (tax 1980).

Opinion

Hall, Judge:

Respondent determined a $3,707 deficiency in petitioners’ 1975 income tax.

The issue presented is whether the research professorship stipend petitioner-husband received from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee was a fellowship excludable from gross income under section 117(a),1 and, if so, whether petitioner-husband was a candidate for a degree within the meaning of section 117(b)(1).

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.

Petitioners resided in Milwaukee, Wis., when they filed their petition. Dorothy Rapoport is a party solely by virtue of having filed a joint return with her husband. When we refer to petitioner herein we shall be referring to Amos Rapoport.

During 1974 and 1975, petitioner was a professor of architecture and anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (hereafter referred to as UWM). On October 1, 1974, UWM informed petitioner that he was awarded a UWM research professorship which was to run for 3 years commencing with the 1974-75 academic year. The award carried with it a research fund of $10,000 per year (in lieu of his regular salary); petitioner was given reasonable latitude in allocating the funds to support for himself and to payments for research assistants, travel, capital equipment, etc. During 1975, petitioner received $13,975 of this award for his support and was paid an additional amount for research assistants, travel, etc.2

The research professorship program was initiated in 1973 in the graduate school of UWM. The graduate school has campus-wide responsibility for encouraging scholarship and research. Only current faculty members could be considered for the research professorship program. The criteria for evaluating candidates for the research professorships were stated as follows:

(1) The most important criterion is outstanding distinction in research and scholarship, coupled with appointment conditions which encourage, or indeed require, the selected professor to enrich the academic life and promote the mission of the University.
(2) The candidate should exhibit an effectiveness as a teacher, particularly in the form of teaching (lecture courses, seminars, laboratories, doctoral supervision) that the candidate is most likely to pursue at UW-Milwaukee.
(3) General intellectual and personal vitality of the candidate are important. He should have the ability to inspire and develop various projects such as the stimulation of innovative academic programs, particularly of a campus-wide nature.
(4) Appropriate consideration will be given to the relation of the candidate’s field to the academic mission of UW-Milwaukee.
(5) The recipient must be a faculty member during the period in which he holds the designation of Research Professor.

The university believed that the research professorship could be used as an excellent means of recruiting talented faculty members. The dean of the graduate school noted that “the Research Professorship award can be an excellent means of recognizing the research of creative faculty members currently at UWM.”

UWM made retirement contributions and continued to provide all the normal- employee fringe benefits to petitioner during the term of the research professorship. In addition, the university continued to withhold Federal and State income taxes and FICA taxes on his grant during the term of the professorship. If petitioner had resigned from UWM’s faculty during the time he was receiving the benefits of the research professorship, the award would have ceased and no further payments would have been made to petitioner. However, petitioner was not required to remain on campus while his grant continued. He was free to do his research wherever he chóse, and to take temporary teaching positions elsewhere.

Petitioner has a master’s degree in architecture and has been working on a Ph. D. degree from an English university since 1969. There was no connection between the award made to petitioner and the obtaining of his doctoral degree from the point of view of UWM, the grantor of the award.

The source of funding for the research professorship awards was the State of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.

A recipient of the award was required to submit to the dean of the graduate school an annual progress report on his research during the term of the research professorship. Petitioner was free to perform research of his own choosing and generally to spend the award on any research project he saw fit. During the term of the award from UWM, petitioner was not required to enroll in any graduate program at UWM or any other university. Petitioner was relieved of all teaching and other university related duties and was on a leave of absence from UWM while he held the research professorship. For 5 months of the period during which petitioner held the research professorship in 1976, he was employed on salary as a professorial fellow at a university in Israel. During that period, he did not draw any funds from his research professorship award. The rest of the time, he worked on and finished a book, wrote some articles on subjects related to his Ph. D. thesis, traveled to various countries to study settlements in those countries, and attended conferences. He spent some of the award on typing, filing, research assistants, Xeroxing, and the like.

Petitioner was not required to remain a professor at UWM for any period after the termination of the research professorship.

Petitioner’s salary as a professor prior to his being awarded the research professorship was $20,000 a year.

At UWM’s request, petitioner worked at the university for the month of January 1976. During that period, he was paid his regular salary and was not paid from the research professorship award.

OPINION

Section 117(a)3 provides that gross income does not include any amount received as a fellowship grant, or amounts received to cover expenses for travel, research, clerical help, or equipment incidental to a fellowship grant and so expended. Section 117(b)(1)4 provides that in the case of a degree candidate, the exclusion does not cover amounts received as compensation for work performed. Section 117(b)(2)5 provides that in the case of individuals who are not candidates for a degree, the grantor of the fellowship must be an organization exempt from tax which is described in section 501(c)(3) or a certain type of governmental organization, and the exclusion is limited to $300 a month for not longer than 36 months.

Only the amount received by petitioner for his support is in issue ($13,975). The amounts expended for expenses are not in issue. Likewise the grantor’s qualification under section 117(b)(2)(A) is not questioned.

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Related

Sellingsloh v. Commissioner
1980 T.C. Memo. 403 (U.S. Tax Court, 1980)
Rapoport v. Commissioner
74 T.C. No. 11 (U.S. Tax Court, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 T.C. No. 11, 74 T.C. 98, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rapoport-v-commissioner-tax-1980.