Wilson v. Commissioner

40 T.C. 543, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 97
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 19, 1963
DocketDocket No. 91229
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 40 T.C. 543 (Wilson 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
Wilson v. Commissioner, 40 T.C. 543, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 97 (tax 1963).

Opinion

AteiNS, Judge:

The respondent determined deficiencies in income tax in the amount of $2,278.07 and additions to tax on account of fraud in the amount of $1,139.03 for the taxable year 1958. At the trial the respondent conceded that no additions should be made on account of fraud. Other concessions having been made by both parties the issues remaining for decision are (1) whether petitioner received additional income as attorney fees and (2) whether petitioner sustained a deductible business bad debt loss.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are incorporated herein by this reference.

The petitioners are husband and wife residing in Osceola, Ark. They filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1958 on the cash receipts and disbursements method with the district director of internal revenue at Little Nock, Ark. Ealph E. Wilson will hereinafter be referred to as the petitioner.

The petitioner is an attorney licensed to practice in the States of Arkansas and Tennessee. As a part of his practice he .engaged in the preparation of Federal income tax returns for taxpayers.

On October 18,1957, the petitioner and his brother, Denver Wilson, purchased a controlling interest in the Liberal State Bank, Liberal, Mo., sometimes hereinafter referred to as the bank, each purchasing 29 percent of the outstanding capital stock. Petitioner became the vice president of the bank and his brother became the president. On July 1, 1958, the petitioner acquired the interest theretofore owned by his brother and became president of the bank. During 1958 the petitioner received salary from the bank totaling $5,130.

The returns which the petitioner, in his law practice, prepared for taxpayers during the year 1958, which numbered not less than 730, were returns of taxpayers who were small wage earners who desired to obtain loans based upon their potential tax refunds. During that year about 2,000 taxpayers had applied to the petitioner seeking his assistance in preparing their returns. The petitioner, however, in order to minimize as nearly as possible the chance of audits by the Internal Eevenue Service, prepared returns for only those individuals who claimed no dependents other than their immediate families, who claimed no itemized deductions, and all of whose income had been subject to the withholding tax. Loans were made, in the manner described hereinafter, to the taxpayers whose returns were prepared by the petitioner.

A taxpayer would furnish the petitioner all necessary data for the preparation of his return, including withholding tax statements (Forms W-2), and the petitioner would prepare the return. The returns prepared disclosed refunds in relatively small amounts, ranging from about $20 to about $150. In a stipulated example, total wages of the taxpayer was $3,000. Tax withheld by the taxpayer’s employer was $300. The tax liability as computed or determined by the petitioner was $150. The difference of $150 was treated as a potential refund.

The petitioner would then have the taxpayer make a demand promissory note payable to the order of Liberal State Bank for $150, bearing interest at 8 percent per annum. The bank took the notes only upon the guarantee thereof by the petitioner, made orally in discussion with the officers of the bank. The taxpayer would also sign a power of attorney designating the Liberal State Bank as attorney-in-fact to cash his refund check when it arrived and to use the proceeds to pay the note. The petitioner would deduct from the $150 the following:

Fee for preparing return_$15. 00
Discount_110. 00
Charge for life insurance_ 3. 50
Total deducted_ 28.50

He would then make payment of the remainder of $121.50 to the taxpayer either by issuing his personal check or by paying cash.

The petitioner would send in daily to the bank all notes, and the bank, after deducting the discount of $10 and the insurance charge of $3.50, would deposit the balance of $136.50 in the petitioner’s bank account. Thus, in the example, the petitioner would have paid out $121.50 to the taxpayer and there would have been credited to his account the amount of $136.50 ($121.50, plus $15 legal fee). The total amount so deposited in the petitioner’s bank account in 1958 on account of such legal fees was $8,162.75. There were no restrictions whatever upon the petitioner’s right to use this account, and he did in fact use it.

The $10 “discount” was retained by the bank as its income and was credited to its “Discount Account.” The charge for life insurance was to give protection to the bank as well as to provide a source of income to it.

The individual income tax returns prepared by the petitioner for the various taxpayers were filed with the district directors of internal •revenue at Little Bock, Ark., Kansas City, Mo., St. Louis, Mo., and Nashville, Tenn. Most of the taxpayers lived in Tennessee and Arkansas.

All of the returns which were filed with the district director of internal revenue at Nashville, Tenn., contained the same address in Memphis. All those filed with the district director at either St. Louis or Kansas City, Mo., contained the same address at Liberal, Mo. The use of these addresses in the taxpayers’ returns was to assure the bank’s receiving the refund checks.

The refund checks which were delivered at the two addresses were endorsed by the bank as attorney-in-fact under the powers of attorney and the proceeds were used to pay off the promissory notes executed in favor of the bank by the particular taxpayers concerned.

Sometime in March 1958 the Internal Kevenue Service requested the U.S. Post Office Department to discontinue the delivery of Federal income tax refund checks to the Memphis address. Consequently, some of the checks addressed to that address were not delivered. Subsequently, arrangements were made with the Internal Kevenue Service for the reissuance of some of such checks and delivery thereof to another attorney after the taxpayers concerned had executed new powers of attorney in favor of such other attorney. Under that arrangement no less than 100 such refund checks were reissued and mailed to the new attorney, and the bank received the proceeds therefrom. However, in some instances the Internal Kevenue Service did not reissue the refund checks. Of the notes given by taxpayers to the bank in 1958, notes of a total face amount of about $22,000 were never paid. In January 1959 the petitioner borrowed $10,000 and paid that amount to the bank on account of these unpaid notes. The petitioner has never collected on these notes.

Of the amount of $8,162.15 deposited by the bank in petitioner’s bank account in 1958 as legal fees for services rendered by the petitioner in preparing returns, $3,691.57 were fees paid by taxpayers whose notes were never paid to the bank and $4,471.18 were fees paid by taxpayers whose notes were paid.

In his income tax return for the taxable year 1958 the petitioner reported net income of $216.48 from his law practice.

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Wilson v. Commissioner
40 T.C. 543 (U.S. Tax Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
40 T.C. 543, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-commissioner-tax-1963.