Vincent Marcello, Sadie Marcello v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
This text of 380 F.2d 494 (Vincent Marcello, Sadie Marcello v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is the first of four related cases 1 reviewing decisions by the Tax Court holding that various members of the *496 Marcello family had deficiencies in their income tax for particular years. Vincent and Sadie Marcello concede that it was permissible for the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to use the “bank deposits plus expenditures” method to reconstruct income for the years 1946, 1947, 1949 and 1950, but contend that the method was applied in an unrealistic and impractical manner. The Tax Court held that the method used was a proper and permissible means of reconstructing the taxpayers’ income and, further, that the method was not vitiated because the taxpayers at trial successfully showed that the Commissioner’s alleged deficiency was too large. The taxpayers contend that certain deductions were improperly disallowed as personal, not business, expenses. They also claim that the Commissioner considered as income several items which the evidence amply shows were not income to the taxpayers. As to these latter two challenges, the Tax Court held for the Commissioner. Finally, the taxpayers make certain contentions as to a net operating loss in 1948 which they urge should be considered in determining the deficiencies for the other years involved. The Tax Court made no specific finding as to the carryover of any loss in 1948 to the other years. After a thorough reading of the material parts of the voluminous record, we affirm as to all issues except the issue involving the loss in 1948.
The pertinent facts are relatively clear. Vincent and Sadie Marcello are husband and wife, residing in Gretna, Louisiana. Vincent owned the Jefferson Music Company. He granted his brother Carlos a power of attorney authorizing Carlos to act as his agent and attorney in the business of Jefferson Music Company (hereafter Jefferson). As compensation for his services, Carlos received one-half of all the profits. Jefferson reported net income for the calendar years 1944 to 1950 on partnership returns. These partnership returns reflect that Vincent and Carlos each received one-half of the net profits.
The Commissioner determined that the books and records of Jefferson were inadequate to verify the correctness of the income and deduction items reported on the partnership returns filed for the years 1946, 1947, 1949 and 1950. He, therefore, resorted to the bank deposits plus expenditures method of redetermining income of Jefferson for these years. Naturally, the redetermination of Jefferson’s net profits caused a redetermination of Vincent’s distributive shares for the involved years. 2
We first focus our attention on the taxpayers’ contention that the bank deposit plus expenditures method was misused so as to make it an unreliable means to reflect income. As noted, the Commissioner determined, and the Tax Court found that the books and records of Jefferson were inadequate to verify the correctness of income and deduction items reported on the partnership returns. In such a case, Section 41 of the 1939 Internal Revenue Code permits the Commissioner to compute income in accordance with a method to clearly reflect income. 3 The method used by the Commissioner has previously been accepted by this Court. 4 Once deficiencies are *497 shown to exist, the taxpayer has the burden to show that various deposits do not represent income or that disallowed deductions were in fact proper business expenses. 5 The taxpayers were partially successful in carrying their burden. The fact that the Commissioner’s determination was not completely correct does not invalidate the method employed. 6 The method was still a proper one. The Commissioner merely erred in some of his choices as to what constituted income and what would not be allowed as deductions. 7 The Tax Court correctly upheld the method of reconstructing Jefferson’s income. 8
The taxpayers make two specific claims in regard to the adjustment of Jefferson’s income. First, they contend that certain unidentified checks totaling $4,000.39 for 1946 and $8,200.00 for 1947, drawn on the bank account of Jefferson, were for business expenses. The revenue agent, examining Jefferson’s books and records, did propose in his report that the alleged deductions be allowed. The Commissioner, not being bound by this agent’s recommendation, 9 disallowed the deductions. The taxpayers introduced no evidence, other than the revenue agent’s proposal, to reveal the purpose of these checks. They did- not present analyses of cheek disbursements, cancelled checks, bank statements or testimony concerning the unidentified items. As the Tax Court notes: “Petitioners had all the leads, books and records, and documentation available to respondent. And they were aware of the difference in the revenue agent’s recommendations and the respondent’s determination, but failed to introduce any evidence concerning these items.” The taxpayers did not carry their burden to show that they were entitled to certain credit against the income determined by the Commissioner.
The second contention involves a deposit on July 6, 1947 of $13,500.00, all of which the Commissioner considered as income. The taxpayers urge that $10,500.00 of this deposit was attributable to a loan to Carlos Marcello and, therefore, was not income to Jefferson. The taxpayers introduced into evidence a check claimed to evidence such a loan which did not bear the endorsement of Jefferson Music Company. The check was never identified as a part of that $13,500.00 deposit. The Tax Court found that the taxpayers failed to establish that $10,500.00 of the deposit represented non-income proceeds; 10 and that finding is not clearly erroneous.
The taxpayers attack the Commissioner’s determinations that they also received additional income in 1949 and 1950 from unknown sources. For 1949 the additional income was computed by subtracting from $8,327.32 in expenses $7,115.50 in sources of funds. The difference obviously came from some *498 where. For 1950 the Commissioner held amounts totaling $10,514.88 11 to be additional income.
The Commissioner determined that the likely sources of this unaccounted income were amounts received by the taxpayers from Jefferson and the New Southport Club. 12 These likely sources of income were not negated by the taxpayers. There was no testimony or written evidence to explain the source of funds for these additional income items nor was an attempt made to show a possible non-income source of funds. 13
The taxpayers contend that any net operating loss incurred in 1948 should have been taken into account in determining whether income was understated in the other years involved.
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380 F.2d 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-marcello-sadie-marcello-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1967.