Reflectxion Resources, Inc. v. Commissioner

2020 T.C. Memo. 114
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 3, 2020
Docket12017-16
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 T.C. Memo. 114 (Reflectxion Resources, Inc. 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
Reflectxion Resources, Inc. v. Commissioner, 2020 T.C. Memo. 114 (tax 2020).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2020-114

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

REFLECTXION RESOURCES, INC., Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 12017-16. Filed August 3, 2020.

P, a medical staffing agency, hired therapists to work for client medical facilities. P entered into a professional services agreement with G for 11 calendar quarters, during which G paid the therapists and filed employment tax returns reporting itself, not P, as their employer, pursuant to I.R.C. sec. 3401(d). For the next 5 calendar quarters, P paid the therapists itself and filed the employment tax returns. In all 16 quarters the therapists were paid reimbursements for travel expenses that were not reported as wages subject to employment taxes.

R examined P’s employment tax liabilities for all 16 quarters and determined that the travel expense reimbursements were subject to employment taxes. For all 16 quarters P contended that the travel expense reimbursements are not taxable. For the 11 calendar quarters reported by G, P contended that the therapists were employees not of P but of G and that, if they were G’s employees, G was entitled to “section 530 relief” from employment taxes under the Revenue Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-600, sec. 530, 92 Stat. at 2885. R issued a -2-

[*2] “Notice of Determination of Worker Classification” in which he determined--ostensibly for all 16 quarters--that the workers are properly classified as P’s employees and that P is not entitled to section 530 relief.

Held: We have jurisdiction under I.R.C. sec. 7436(a)(2) as to the 11 calendar quarters reported by G, because after an audit R issued a determination concerning section 530 relief, as to which there was an “actual controversy”.

Held, further, we do not have jurisdiction as to the 5 calendar quarters reported by P, because, despite R’s purported “determinations” concerning the workers’ status as employees and concerning section 530 relief, P had reported the workers as employees and had never claimed section 530 relief for those reported quarters, and there was no “actual controversy” on those issues, as required by I.R.C. sec. 7436(a).

Saul Mezei, Mary H. Hevener, Steven P. Johnson, and John F. Craig III,

for petitioner.

Linda P. Azmon, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

GUSTAFSON, Judge: The petition in this case, brought by Reflectxion

Resources, Inc., pursuant to section 7436,1 seeks--

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal (continued...) -3-

[*3] a redetermination of the determinations and deficiencies in Federal income tax withholding and Federal Insurance Contributions Act (“FICA”) taxes for the sixteen calendar quarters in the years 2008 through 2011, set forth by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“Respondent”) in a Notice of Determination of Worker Classification (“NDWC”) dated February 26, 2016.

The principal merits issue that must eventually be decided in this case is whether

certain travel reimbursement expenses are subject to employment taxes as wages.

In this opinion we do not address that issue.

Rather, the case is now before us on “Petitioner’s Motion to Determine

Jurisdiction”, and we address the jurisdictional questions that petitioner has raised.

The parties agree that we have jurisdiction over the first 11 of the 16 quarters at

issue, and we so hold. Respondent contends that we also have jurisdiction over

the remaining 5 quarters, but we hold that we do not.

1 (...continued) Revenue Code of 1986 as in effect at all relevant times (codified in 26 U.S.C.). However, references to “section 530” are to the Revenue Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-600, sec. 530, 92 Stat. at 2885. -4-

[*4] Background2

Petitioner’s business

Petitioner was organized in 2001 as a corporation under the laws of the

State of Delaware. Its principal place of business when it filed its petition was in

Florida.3 The tax periods at issue are the 16 calendar quarters in the years 2008

through 2011. Throughout those periods, petitioner operated as a medical staffing

agency. It employed various therapists to fulfill contracts with clients throughout

the United States (hospitals, schools, physical therapy clinics, and other healthcare

facilities) who sought therapists for temporary staffing and for direct hire

purposes.

2 The facts underlying the jurisdictional issues are not in dispute. We therefore need not address any issues as to burden of proof or burden of production, nor any questions about the scope and standard of our review. In this statement of the background of the case, we largely follow respondent’s recounting of the facts. Respondent’s version is in turn based largely on the petition. 3 Under the general rule of section 7482(b)(1), our decision in this case may, absent stipulation of the parties under section 7482(b)(2), be “reviewed by the United States court of appeals for the circuit in which is located * * * (B) in the case of a corporation seeking redetermination of tax liability, the principal place of business or principal office or agency of the corporation”. Because petitioner seeks a redetermination of its liabilities and its principal place of business is Florida, appeal in this case would be to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. -5-

[*5] Reimbursement of therapists’ travel expenses

During the periods at issue, petitioner hired therapists who were local to

petitioner’s clients. Petitioner also hired “travel therapists” who, in order to accept

employment assignments for clients to whom they were not local, had to travel

from their locations to the clients’ geographical areas to perform services for the

clients.

During the periods at issue, petitioner reimbursed the travel expenses of

travel therapists--i.e., per diem payments for meals and lodging and other travel

expenses.4 Petitioner treated reimbursement payments for some travel therapists

(not at issue here) as wages subject to employment taxes--i.e., Federal Insurance

Compensation Act (“FICA”) tax and income tax withholding (“ITW”). However,

for other travel therapists, petitioner reimbursed travel expenses but did not treat

those payments as wages subject to FICA or ITW. The travel expenses that

petitioner did not treat as subject to employment taxes are the subject of the merits

issue in this case. (We do not resolve that dispute in this opinion.)

4 For some travel therapists, petitioner provided housing rather than reimbursing them for housing expenses. Both parties appear to assume that, for employment tax purposes, provision of housing is equivalent to reimbursement for housing expenses; and for purposes of this opinion, we assume the same. For simplicity’s sake we refer only to reimbursement in the following discussion. -6-

[*6] Gevity’s reporting in the first 11 quarters

For the 11 quarters ending March 31, 2008, through September 30, 2010

(“the Gevity-reported quarters”), petitioner was party to a professional services

agreement (“PSA”) with Gevity HR, Inc. (“Gevity”). Under the PSA, Gevity

(rather than petitioner) reported the wages and withholding of petitioners’

employees on Forms 941, “Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return”, and Forms

W-2, “Wage and Tax Statement”. Gevity did this reporting under its own

employer identification number (“EIN”). On those forms the payments for travel

reimbursement were not reported as wages subject to employment taxes.

Petitioner did not deposit any FICA taxes or ITW with the Internal Revenue

Service (“IRS”) under its own EIN for the Gevity-reported quarters.

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Bluebook (online)
2020 T.C. Memo. 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reflectxion-resources-inc-v-commissioner-tax-2020.