Tolin v. Comm'r

2014 T.C. Memo. 65, 107 T.C.M. 1339, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 62
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 9, 2014
DocketDocket No. 17318-08
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2014 T.C. Memo. 65 (Tolin v. Comm'r) 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
Tolin v. Comm'r, 2014 T.C. Memo. 65, 107 T.C.M. 1339, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 62 (tax 2014).

Opinion

STEFAN A. TOLIN, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Tolin v. Comm'r
Docket No. 17318-08
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 2014-65; 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 62; 107 T.C.M. (CCH) 1339;
April 9, 2014, Filed
*62

Decision will be entered under Rule 155.

Richard W. Craigo, for petitioner.
Ardney J. Boland, III and Emile L. Herbert, III, for respondent.
GALE, Judge.

GALE
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

GALE, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's Federal income tax for 2002, 2003, and 2004 of $10,256, $13,179, and $24,231, respectively, and additions to tax under section 6651(a)(1) of $2,564, $1,977, and *66 $6,058, respectively.1 After concessions,2 the sole issue for decision is whether losses petitioner sustained in the operation of a thoroughbred horse breeding and racing activity (thoroughbred activity) were passive activity losses.3*63

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. Petitioner resided in Minnesota at the time he filed the petition.

Petitioner became licensed to practice law in Minnesota in 1977 and maintained a general solo practice in Minneapolis throughout the years at issue. He also devoted significant time to the thoroughbred activity, which involved his effort to profit from breeding a stallion he owned named "Choosing Choice". At trial petitioner estimated that he had practiced law for 1,200 hours in 2002, 1,100 hours in 2003, and 1,000 hours in 2004. The result in this case turns on the amount of time he devoted to the thoroughbred activity in each of those years.

*67 Background

Petitioner has enjoyed horse racing since he was an adolescent. He became involved in thoroughbred horse breeding and racing in 1990 when he purchased his first racehorse, a Minnesota-bred yearling (a one-year-old horse). He was representing a client before the Minnesota Racing Commission at the time, and it was his exposure to the industry through this representation that motivated his purchase. The following year petitioner bought a mare from the trainer *64 he had hired to train the yearling. The mare had knee problems and could no longer race, so petitioner moved the horse to Florida in 1992 and bred it to a stallion there.

Choosing Choice was foaled by petitioner's mare in 1993. Petitioner sent Choosing Choice to trainers in Florida and Texas in 1994 and 1995, respectively, who prepared the horse for racing. Choosing Choice's racing career began at the Sam Houston Race Park in Texas in September 1995. He exhibited prodigious speed as a two-year-old,4 running undefeated in four races at Sam Houston that year, including the Houston Juvenile Stakes.5

*68 In January 1996 petitioner moved Choosing Choice to Oaklawn Park in Arkansas, a venue that offered higher purses and better competition than was available at Sam Houston. Choosing Choice ran well in his first races at Oaklawn, finishing third in a stakes race and winning an allowance race with a $30,000 purse. Given that success, petitioner entered Choosing Choice in the Southwest *65 Stakes and the Rebel Stakes, graded stakes races with fields that included some of the most highly regarded three-year-old thoroughbreds in the country. Choosing Choice finished out of the money in the Southwest Stakes, but he held the lead for most of the $100,000 Rebel Stakes and was neck-and-neck on the stretch with the eventual winner (a horse named Ide) when he suffered a slab fracture in his right front leg.6

The injury prevented Choosing Choice from racing for the remainder of 1996 and all of 1997. He ran seven times in 1998, primarily shorter races at tracks in Maryland and Virginia, before suffering a second, more serious leg injury that prematurely ended his racing career. Overall, Choosing Choice won 6 of the 16 races he ran, finished third in 3 others, and earned $77,638.

*69 Petitioner believed that Choosing Choice could become a profitable stud horse because of his racing ability. He engaged a thoroughbred consultant who specialized in pedigree analysis, commonly known as "nicking", to research and analyze Choosing Choice's pedigree. Nicking is based *66 on the premise that past success in crossing the sire bloodlines of a stallion and a broodmare makes it more likely that they will produce a successful racehorse if bred together than if bred to mates with less compatible bloodlines. Those who perform nicking analyses use letter grades to denote the compatibility between the bloodlines of a hypothetical mating pair. The results of Choosing Choice's nicking analysis were promising; he had an "A++ Nick Rating" (based on crossing the bloodlines of his sire and dam), and his bloodlines were highly compatible with most of the American mare population.

In early 2000, when Choosing Choice recuperated from his second leg injury, petitioner had him transported to a horse breeding farm in New Mexico where his stud services were first offered for sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 T.C. Memo. 65, 107 T.C.M. 1339, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolin-v-commr-tax-2014.