MEMORANDUM OPINION
HALPERN, JUDGE: By notice of deficiency dated February 18, 1998 (the notice), respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's 1994 and 1995 Federal income taxes of $ 2,569 and $ 12,390, respectively.
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
The issues for decision concern (1) petitioner's deductions for (A) alimony paid and (B) an additional personal exemption and (2) petitioner's omission from gross income of an amount received from Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Co.
Some facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, with accompanying exhibits, is incorporated herein by this reference. We need find few facts in addition to those stipulated and shall not, therefore, separately set forth our findings of fact. We shall make additional findings of fact as we proceed. Petitioner bears the burden of proof. See Rule 142(a).
BACKGROUND
At the time the petition was filed, petitioner resided in Australia.
Petitioner married Gabrielle Hodson on January 16, 1990. One child, Meagan Elizabeth Stahl (sometimes, Meagan), was born of that union, on September 20, 1991. Meagan is a child with special needs, who requires close and personal care from her mother. On May 12, 1994, Ms. Hodson filed for divorce in the Circuit Court of the Sixth Judicial Circuit, in and for Pinellas County, State of Florida (the divorce case and the State Court, respectively).
On August 18, 1995, the State Court entered its "Supplemental Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage" (the supplemental final judgment) in the divorce case. 1 Among the findings of fact and orders made by the State Court in the supplemental final judgment are the following:
2. Shortly after the Former Wife filed her Petition for
Dissolution of Marriage, the Former Wife moved for and the Court
granted an Ex Parte Injunction in which the Former Wife was
awarded temporary exclusive possession of a BMW automobile and
residence and froze certain assets of the parties. In response
to the Former Wife filing for dissolution of the marriage and
serving the Former Husband, the Former Husband quit his
$ 60,000.00 per year job in Pinellas County with E-Systems. He
claimed that the injunction freezing assets caused him to have
to move to family in Indiana and give up his job in Pinellas
County.
3. On May 26, 1994, the Former Wife's counsel filed an
Amended Motion for Temporary Fees, Support and Exclusive Use and
Possession of the Marital Home. The Former Wife's counsel did
not call this motion up for hearing until June 23, 1994, at
which time the Court removed the freeze on certain assets and
temporarily made certain assets available to the parties for use
to sustain them on an interim basis [by an order filed on July
1, 1994 (the July 1, 1994, order)]. The Former Wife's counsel
did not bring on for hearing the temporary support motion until
August 18, 1994, at which time the Court ordered unallocated
child support and alimony in the amount of $ 2500 per month, with
the first payment to be made on August 19, 1994. The Order
Setting Unallocated Child Support and Alimony is dated September
8, 1994, nunc pro tunc to August 18, 1994 [(the September 8,
1994, order)]. This order provided for disposition of certain
assets to fund the temporary unallocated child support and
alimony based upon Mr. Stahl's voluntary relinquishment of his
$ 60,000 per year job at E-Systems. 2
4. On March 29, 1995, the Court heard the Former Wife's
Motion for Order of Contempt in which the Former Wife proved
that the Former Husband had not paid the unallocated child
support or alimony as previously ordered. The Court found that
the Former Husband, Robert L. Stahl, willfully violated the
Order of this Court dated September 8, 1994 and refused to pay
the child support or pay to or on behalf of the Former Wife the
Hughes IRA account and other assets so as to pay the unallocated
child support and alimony. The Court further ordered that Robert
L. Stahl be committed to the Pinellas County Jail for a period
of 90 days or until such time as he purges himself from willful
contempt of court. The Court found that Robert L. Stahl had the
ability to purge the contempt and otherwise provided for the
release from the County Jail on the payment of the purged
amount.
5. Although the Former Husband presently resides in Dallas,
Texas, and the Court cannot extradite the Former Husband from
Texas for incarceration on a civil contempt order, Robert L.
Stahl voluntarily presented himself to the Pinellas County Jail
and requested incarceration on the contempt order on Wednesday,
May 3, 1995, five days before the non-jury trial. Robert L.
Stahl appeared at the non-jury trial of this cause in custody of
the Pinellas County Sheriff on the previously entered contempt
and commitment order entered by this Court for the failure to
pay child support. It is this Court's interpretation of the
Former Husband's actions that he is willing to take any action
including voluntarily going to jail to avoid his obligations to
his family and his disabled child.
* * * * * * *
7. Notwithstanding the Former Husband's voluntary
abandonment of his $ 60,000 per year job at E-Systems and the
voluntary dissipation of assets available to pay child support
and alimony pending the Final Hearing, the Former Husband has
made it clear that he has no intentions of paying any support as
Ordered by this Court or complying with lawful Judgments of this
Court. He has dissipated or hidden every asset which he could
control since the pendency of this action.
8. Until the hearing of June 29, 1995, the Former Wife had
been unable and prohibited by the Former Husband from
discovering the value of the Former Husband's pension and
profit-sharing benefits at his former employer.
9. At this time the Former Wife is unable to be employed
outside of the home because of the attention required by the
parties' disabled child. She, however, is seeking to become
employed in the future and is currently seeking employment. In
the interim, because the Former Husband has refused to pay child
support, although having the ability to do so, the Former Wife
is presently on public assistance through the receipt of AFDC.
* * * The Former Husband's child support obligation, commencing
June 1, 1995, shall be * * * $ 1234.25 per month
* * * * * * *
10. The Court has previously entered a qualified Domestic
Relations Order (QDRO) as to the Former Husband's Capital
Accumulation Plan (T-CAP). The Court's Order was dated November
10, 1994. That Order is hereby set aside and shall have no force
and effect.
The Court has also previously Ordered, in its Final
Judgment dated May 17, 1995, that a QDRO be issued to E-Systems
in the amount of $ 22,500 for unallocated support. That section
of said Final Judgment is hereby amended in that, pursuant to
the Stipulation of the parties, the Wife shall receive the
amount of $ 55,400 from the Former Husband's Capital Accumulation
Plan (T-CAP) or from the Former Husband's ESOP, whichever is
appropriate, for which a QDRO shall issue in full settlement of
the back child support ($ 22,500 as previously Ordered by the
Court in its Final Judgment dated May 17, 1995) and the
remainder ($ 32,900) as other equitable distribution.
Therefore, a single QDRO shall be ordered, in the amount of
$ 55,400, of which $ 22,500 is for a child support obligation and
$ 32,900 is for equitable distribution pursuant to the parties
agreement of June 29, 1995.
The Wife's claim for unallocated alimony is merged into
this Supplemental Final Judgment thus rendering any claim for
alimony pendente lite moot and unenforceable.
14. The Court had previously awarded the Former Wife the
amount of $ 500 per month, for six months, as and for alimony. An
Income Deduction Order (IDO) shall be issued to secure payment
of said alimony. Until such time as said IDO is entered, the
Former Husband shall pay said sums directly to Former Wife,
beginning August 1, 1995, and continuing until paid in full.
* * *
* * * * * * *
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that:
1. The marriage of the parties is irretrievably broken and
that the bonds of matrimony between the Former Wife, Gabrielle
Hodson, and Respondent, Robert L. Stahl, are dissolved,
effective May 17, 1995.
2. The parties shall share parental responsibility of the
minor child of the parties, Meagan Elizabeth Stahl. However,
there shall be no visitation, contact or access between Robert
L. Stahl and the minor child until Robert L. Stahl proves to the
Court, via evidence and expert testimony, that it is in the best
interests of the child that he have contact, access and
visitation with the minor child. Any such visitation will
require a further Order of the Court.
5. The Former husband is Ordered to pay the Former Wife six
months of non-modifiable alimony payments enforceable by
contempt, at $ 500 per month, via Income Deduction Order (IDO),
* * * beginning August 1, 1995, as and for rehabilitative
alimony.
7. The Court's previously ordered Qualified Domestic
Accumulation Plan (T-CAP), dated November 10, 1994, is hereby
set aside and shall have no force and effect.
In substitution thereof, pursuant to the Stipulation of the
parties on June 29, 1995, the Former Wife shall receive a total
amount of $ 55,400 from the Former Husband's Capital Accumulation
appropriate for which a QDRO shall issue in full settlement of
the back child support ($ 22,500 as previously Ordered by the
Therefore, a single QDRO is hereby Ordered to be entered
against E-Systems and the account of the Former Husband therein,
of which $ 22,500 is for a child support obligation and $ 32,900
is for equitable distribution. The QDRO shall be entered in the
total amount of $ 55,400 as defined above.
10. The Court retains jurisdiction * * * to enter the
required QDRO * * *
During 1995, and in accordance with the supplemental final judgment, petitioner paid Ms. Hodson $ 3,000 in cash.
By check dated December 21, 1995 (the check), Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Co. (Vanguard) paid $ 23,192.18 to the order of Meagan Elizabeth Stahl. The check states: "E-Systems, Inc.", "Disbursement Account", and "Plan Number 091184". For 1995, Vanguard issued a Form 1099R, "Distributions From Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit- Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc.", to petitioner, 3 showing a gross distribution from account number 091184 of $ 23,192.18 (the Vanguard distribution).
On petitioner's 1994 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, Form 1040 (1994 Form 1040), he deducted $ 20,000 for alimony paid. On his 1995 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, Form 1040 (1995 Form 1040), he deducted $ 15,500 for alimony paid. He also showed Meagan as his daughter and dependent and, on account thereof, deducted $ 2,500 as a personal exemption deduction. He failed to include as an item of gross income the Vanguard distribution.
In the notice, respondent adjusted petitioner's income for both years by disallowing the claimed deductions for alimony paid. For 1995, respondent further adjusted petitioner's income by disallowing the personal exemption deduction and including the Vanguard distribution. Petitioner challenges each of those adjustments.
DISCUSSION
I. THE DEDUCTION FOR ALIMONYGenerally, payments of alimony are deductible to the paying spouse (here, petitioner) and includable in income by the recipient spouse (here, Ms. Hodson). See secs. 71, 215. In pertinent part, section 215 provides:
SEC. 215. ALIMONY, ETC., PAYMENTS.
(a) General Rule. -- In the case of an individual, there
shall be allowed as a deduction an amount equal to the alimony
or separate maintenance payments paid during such individual's
taxable year.
(b) Alimony or separate maintenance payments defined. --
For purposes of this section, the term "alimony or separate
maintenance payment" means any alimony or separate maintenance
payment (as defined in section 71(b)) which is includable in the
gross income of the recipient under section 71.
Section 71(a) provides: "Gross income includes amounts received as alimony or separate maintenance payments." In pertinent part, section 71(b) and (c) provides:
SEC. 71. ALIMONY AND SEPARATE MAINTENANCE PAYMENTS
For purposes of this section --
(1) In general. -- The term "alimony or separate
maintenance payment" means any payment in cash if --
(A) such payment is received by (or on behalf of)
a spouse under a divorce or separation instrument,
(B) the divorce or separation instrument does not
designate such payment as a payment which is not
includible in gross income under this section and not
allowable as a deduction under section 215,
(C) in the case of an individual legally
separated from his spouse under a decree of divorce or
of separate maintenance, the payee spouse and the
payer spouse are not members of the same household at
the time such payment is made, and
(D) there is no liability to make any such
payment for any period after the death of the payee
spouse, and there is no liability to make any payment
(in cash or property) as a substitute for such
payments after the death of the payee spouse.
(2) Divorce or Separation instrument. -- The term
"divorce or separation instrument" means --
(A) a decree of divorce or separate maintenance
or a written instrument incident to such a decree,
(B) a written separation agreement, or
(C) a decree (not described in subparagraph (A))
requiring a spouse to make payments for the support or
maintenance of the other spouse.
(c) Payments To Support Children. --
(1) In general. -- Subsection (a) shall not apply to
that part of any payment which the terms of the divorce or
separation instrument fix (in terms of an amount of money
or a part of the payment) as a sum which is payable for the
support of children of the payer spouse.
(3) Special Rule Where Payment Is Less Than Amount
Specified In Instrument. -- For purposes of this
subsection, if any payment is less than the amount
specified in the instrument, then so much of such payment
as does not exceed the sum payable for support shall be
considered a payment for such support.
II. 1994 ADJUSTMENT
A. INTRODUCTIONPetitioner argues: "As ordered by the * * * [State Court], alimony was paid in the amount of $ 2,500.00 per month for June through December of 1994 and for January through May of 1995". 4 Respondent makes numerous arguments in response. Respondent's principal argument is: "At no time did the petitioner attempt to reconcile his alimony deduction with any actual payments (in cash) nor did he attempt to allocate the $ 2,500 payments between child support and alimony."
B. DISCUSSIONThe State Court ordered support for Ms. Hodson and Meagan by the September 8, 1994, order. In the preamble to that order, the State Court found that Ms. Hodson and Meagan were in need of support of $ 2,500 a month. The court also found that, since petitioner did not have the ability to provide that amount from earnings, it was necessary to liquidate assets of the parties (to the divorce case). The court ordered the liquidation of various assets and the payment of proceeds to Ms. Hodson's attorney, to be held in trust for the benefit of Ms. Hodson and Meagan. Ms. Hodson's attorney was ordered to pay out $ 2,500 a month (the $ 2,500 payments).
During his testimony in this case, petitioner conceded that he had no evidence that the $ 2,500 payments were made. His argument, as expressed on brief, is as follows:
These payments were made in cash through the petitioner's former
wife's attorneys, officers of the court, by said attorneys
liquidating certain assets of the petitioner and making periodic
payments and by direct payment from the petitioner and through
pay role deduction. The assets liquidated have been summarized
for the court and monies paid in alimony far exceed the
deduction taken by the petitioner. These assets were not
distributed by any other means and a finding that they were not
paid in alimony would return ownership of these assets to the
petitioner. Additionally, since collection for alimony was the
only authority to liquidate these assets, the officer of the
court executing these liquidations may have defrauded the United
States government and AAL [no definition of the term "AAL"
appears in the record].
The Florida court did find the petitioner in contempt for
failure to provide one [sic] the assets ordered to be liquidated
while accepting that the other assets were surrendered as
ordered. The court did provide an order stating the alimony
payments were not made but later reversed this finding after
being provided with the same information provided to this court.
Petitioner's argument that assets were liquidated in compliance with the September 8, 1994, order is completely at odds with findings made by the State Court in the supplemental final judgment. Among those findings are the following:
(1) The Court found that the Former Husband, Robert L. Stahl,
willfully violated the Order of this Court dated September
8, 1994 and refused to pay the child support or pay to or on
behalf of the Former Wife the Hughes IRA account and other
assets so as to pay the unallocated child support and
alimony. * * *
(2) It is this Court's interpretation of the Former Husband's
actions that he is willing to take any action including
voluntarily going to jail to avoid his obligations to his
family and his disabled child.
(3) [T]he Former Husband has made it clear that he has no
intentions of paying any support as Ordered by this Court or
complying with lawful Judgments of this Court. He has
dissipated or hidden every asset which he could control
since the pendency of this action.
There is no evidence that, as claimed by petitioner, the State Court reversed its finding that alimony payments were not made. Moreover, there is no evidence to support petitioner's calumnious claim that Ms. Hobson's attorney defalcated. Petitioner was not a credible witness. Petitioner has failed to prove that, during 1994 (or 1995), in compliance with the September 8, 1994, order, any proceeds from a liquidation of his assets were paid over to Ms. Hodson's attorney, or were used by that attorney to make $ 2,500 payments to or on behalf of Ms. Hodson or Meagan. Petitioner has failed to prove that, during 1994, he made any of the monthly payments required by the September 8, 1994, order.
In addition to claiming that he made the monthly payments required by the September 8, 1994, order, petitioner claims that the State Court, in the July 1, 1994, order, ordered him to pay alimony, which, indeed, he did pay. By the July 1, 1994, order, the State Court lifted the freeze it had imposed on certain assets (which it described as "the parties' assets"). It ordered certain sums from those assets paid to Ms. Hodson. Among those assets was an account with the MacDill Federal Credit Union, which the Court found to have an approximate balance of $ 2,166.15. It also ordered:
[T]he Wife is to receive from the Husband's non-marital assets
and his share of marital assets, the approximate sum of
$ 5,205.00, which sum shall be comprised of the following
approximate amounts:
(a) $ 900.00 -- Husband's share of U.S. Savings Bonds which
are marital property;
(b) $ 1,800 -- Husband's separate U.S. Savings Bonds;
(c) $ 600 -- Husband's one-half (
(d) $ 250.00 -- Husband's one-half (
(e) $ 1,000.00 -- from the MacDill Credit Union; and, (f)
$ 655.00 -- cash from Husband.
It is unclear what the State Court meant by "the parties' assets". To the extent Ms. Hodson received payments from assets in which she had an ownership interest, those payments, to the extent liquidating that interest, were not alimony to her. See Jaffe v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1999-196. Petitioner has failed to convince us that he complied with the July 1, 1994, order other than that Ms. Hodson received $ 2,125.73 from the MacDill Federal Credit Union. Petitioner has failed to convince us that his interest in that account was more than $ 1,000. To that extent, however, we find that he paid alimony to Ms. Hodson during 1994.
C. CONCLUSIONPetitioner is entitled to a deduction for alimony paid during 1994 of $ 1,000.
III. 1995 ADJUSTMENTS
A. ALIMONYPetitioner claims that, during 1995, pursuant to the September 8, 1994, order, he made five monthly payments of alimony (from January through May), each in the amount of $ 2,500. For the same reasons as with respect to 1994, petitioner has failed to prove that, during 1995, he made any of the monthly payments required by the September 8, 1994, order.
The parties have stipulated that, during 1995, and in accordance with the supplemental final judgment, petitioner paid Ms. Hodson $ 3,000 in cash. On brief, respondent concedes that, on account of such payment, petitioner is entitled to a deduction for alimony paid in 1995 of $ 3,000. We accept such concession.
Petitioner is entitled to a deduction for alimony paid during 1995 of $ 3,000.
B. PERSONAL EXEMPTION DEDUCTIONOn petitioner's 1995 return, he showed Meagan as his daughter and dependent and, on account thereof, deducted $ 2,500 as a personal exemption deduction.
Section 151(a) allows a deduction for certain exemption amounts, including the exemption amount ($ 2,500 for 1995) for certain dependents of the taxpayer. See sec. 151(c). As applicable to this case, the term "dependent" means a daughter of the taxpayer, over half of whose support for the year is provided by the taxpayer. See sec. 152(a)(1). Generally, if a child's parents are divorced, the child is in the custody of one or both for the year, and the parents provide more than half of the child's support, the custodial parent (the parent with custody for the greater portion of the year) is treated as having provided over half of the child's support for the year, and he or she may deduct the exemption amount with respect to such child for the year. See sec. 151(e). Section 1.152-4(b), Income Tax Regs., provides: "In the event of so-called 'split' custody, * * * 'custody' will be deemed to be with the parent who, as between both parents, has the physical custody of the child for the greater portion of the calendar year."
Petitioner failed to prove that, during 1995, Meagan received over half of her support from one or both of her parents. Even if we were to assume that she did, however, petitioner failed to prove that, as between him and Ms. Hodson, he had physical custody of her for the greater portion of the year. 5
Petitioner is not entitled to a deduction for the exemption amount with respect to Meagan for 1995.
C. VANGUARD DISTRIBUTIONPetitioner failed to report the Vanguard distribution ($ 23,192.18) as an item of gross income on the 1995 Form 1040. By the supplemental final judgment, the State Court found that petitioner and Ms. Hodson had stipulated (the stipulation) that Ms. Hodson would receive "the amount of $ 55,400 from * * * [petitioner's] Capital Accumulation Plan (T-CAP) or from * * * [his] ESOP, whichever is appropriate, * * * in full settlement of the back child support ($ 22,500 as previously Ordered by the Court * * *) and the remainder ($ 32,900) as other equitable distribution." The State Court stated its intent to enter a QDRO against E-Systems (petitioner's employer) "and the account of * * * [petitioner] therein, of which $ 22,500 is for a child support obligation and $ 32,900 is for equitable distribution."
We think that the following are fair inferences to be drawn from the (1) supplemental final judgment, (2) check, in the amount of $ 23,192.18, payable to Meagan, and (3) Form 1099R, received by petitioner and evidencing the Vanguard distribution: The Vanguard distribution was from either the T-Cap or ESOP, both of which were employer-sponsored benefit plans in which petitioner was a participant on whose behalf an account was maintained; the Vanguard distribution was made pursuant to the stipulation of petitioner and Ms. Hodson that she would receive $ 55,400 from those accounts ($ 32,900 as an equitable distribution and $ 22,500 (plus interest) in satisfaction of petitioner's child support obligation); the Vanguard distribution liquidated petitioner's obligation pursuant to the stipulation to pay overdue child support. We find accordingly.
The parties appear to agree that the Vanguard distribution was from a tax-exempt employees' trust described in section 401(a) (an employees' trust), and, therefore, the taxability of such distribution is determined under section 402. Section 402(a) provides, with detail not here relevant, that, unless otherwise provided in section 402, distributions by any employees' trust are taxable to the distributee. We have held that the distributee of a distribution from an employees' trust ordinarily is the participant or beneficiary (in or of the plan under which the employees' trust was established) who is entitled to receive the distribution. See Darby v. Commissioner, 97 T.C. 51, 58 (1991) ("In particular, the mere fact that the distribution is made by the plan administrator to A rather than to B does not make A the distributee."). Nevertheless, section 402(e)(1)(A) provides:
(A) Alternate Payee Treated as Distributee. -- For purposes
of subsection (a) and section 72, an alternate payee who is the
spouse or former spouse of the participant shall be treated as
the distributee of any distribution or payment made to the
alternate payee under a qualified domestic relations order (as
defined in section 414(p)).
Section 414(p) contains detailed specifications for a QDRO. We need not set forth those specifications.
Pursuant to section 402(e)(1)(A), petitioner can escape taxation on the $ 23,192.18 distribution only if it were made to petitioner's spouse or former spouse. The supplemental final judgment provided that Meagan was to receive $ 22,500 from one of petitioner's two pension plans, and, in fact, she did subsequently receive a distribution from one of petitioner's pension plans pursuant to that supplemental final judgment. Meagan is petitioner's child, not his spouse or former spouse; therefore, even if the supplemental final judgment satisfied the requirements for a QDRO, petitioner is the distributee and subject to tax on the $ 23,192.18. If the supplemental final judgment is not a valid QDRO, petitioner is the distributee for purposes of section 402(a) and is subject to tax on the amount distributed. Hawkins v. Commissioner, 102 T.C. 61, 77 (1994); Karem v. Commissioner, 100 T.C. 521, 531 (1993).
Moreover, in the supplemental final judgment, the State Court states that a QDRO "shall issue" and "a single QDRO is hereby Ordered to be entered against E-Systems and the account of the Former Husband therein". In order paragraph number 10 of the supplemental final judgment, the court retains jurisdiction: "to enter the required QDRO". We assume that the State Court intended an additional and separate order to implement its intent to issue a QDRO. Petitioner has, however, failed to show that such order was entered or, if entered, met the specifications of section 414(p). Clearly, petitioner is aware of the importance of a QDRO in establishing Ms. Hodson as an alternate payee for purposes of section 402(e)(1)(A), since he has proposed that we find that the Vanguard distribution "was made via a Qualified Domestic Relations Order". Petitioner has not claimed any difficulty in obtaining a copy of any QDRO entered by the State Court. We infer that, since no such order is in evidence, either no such order was entered or, if entered, did not meet the specifications of section 414(p). See Wichita Terminal Elevator Co. v. Commissioner, 6 T.C. 1158, 1165 (1946)("the failure of a party to introduce evidence within his possession and which, if true, would be favorable to him, gives rise to the presumption that if produced it would be unfavorable"), affd. 162 F.2d 513 (10th Cir. 1947).
We find that the Vanguard distribution is taxable to petitioner, as distributee, under section 402(a). Because the Vanguard distribution was made in satisfaction of petitioner's obligation to pay overdue child support, it does not give rise to a deduction for alimony paid. See sec. 71(c).
IV. CONCLUSIONWe sustain respondent's determination of a deficiency except to the extent that petitioner paid alimony to Ms. Hodson of $ 1,000 in 1994 and $ 3,000 in 1995.
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.