Tefft v. Commissioner
This text of 1984 T.C. Memo. 127 (Tefft 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.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION COHEN,
FINDINGS OF FACT
All of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulation*548 is incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioners were residents of Phoenix, Arizona, at the time they filed their petition herein. They filed a 1979 joint individual income tax return with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Ogden, Utah.
Petitioner is a boilermaker by trade and a member of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers Local #627. Local #627 assigned him to employment with Bechtel Power Corporation beginning August 9, 1977, at the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station near Buckeye, Arizona, and he was so employed until April 8, 1982.
Construction work on the Palo Verde project commenced in May 1976. The project was one of the largest in the United States and involved the construction of a three-unit nuclear generating facility that would produce electric power for the Arizona Nuclear Power Project. The facility was designed to be constructed in three separate units with each unit containing approximately 10 buildings. At the initiation of the construction, the units were expected to be completed by 1983, 1984, and 1985, respectively. As of August 31, 1980, the overall project was 49.9 percent complete. As of October 1980, the anticipated completion*549 date for the third unit had been extended to 1986. 1
OPINION
A taxpayer cannot deduct the expenses of traveling to or living at his place of employment unless the traveling is required by the circumstances of his employment rather than by his "personal conveniences and necessities."
In some circumstances, the courts have recognized a narrow exception to the general rule denying deductibility of travel expenses. This exception applies when the taxpayer's employment is "temporary" and not*550 "indefinite or indeterminate."
Petitioners seek to have us apply a "reasonableness" test that, according to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1984 T.C. Memo. 127, 47 T.C.M. 1276, 1984 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tefft-v-commissioner-tax-1984.