Wyatt v. Commissioner

56 T.C. 517, 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 16, 1971
DocketDocket No. 312-70 SC
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 56 T.C. 517 (Wyatt 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
Wyatt v. Commissioner, 56 T.C. 517, 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120 (tax 1971).

Opinion

Foreester, Judge:

Respondent has determined a deficiency in petitioners’ joint Federal income tax for 1967 in the amount of $77.22.

The only issue for decision is whether LaRue Wyatt is entitled to a deduction for educational expenses incurred in 1967.

ETNDINCS OE FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulations and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.

Petitioners herein are Don E. Wyatt and his wife, LaRue Wyatt (hereinafter sometimes referred to as LaRue), who both resided in Overland Park, Kans., at the time their petition in the instant case was filed. They filed a joint Federal income tax return for the year 1967 with the district director of internal revenue, Wichita, Kans.

LaRue received a bachelor of science degree in business administration from the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark., in June 1954.

After graduation1 and prior to August 1967, sbe was employed as follows:

School year 1954-55_Mt. Home Public Schools, Mt. Home, Teacher Ark.
School year 1955-56_Raymore High School, Raymore, Mo.. Teacher
8/56 to 1/57_ Russell Stover Candies, Inc., Kansas Secretary City, Mo.
3/57 to 7/58_Ilesler Co., Inc., Prairie Village, Kans- Secretary
7/58 to 9/60_Unemployed-School years 1960-61, Stanley High School, Stanley, Kans-Teacher 1961-62, and 1962-63.
Summer, 1963 to fall, School Youth Vocation Planning Secretary 1964. Board, Johnson County, Kans. (part time)
12/64 to 7/65_Moloney Electric Co., Prairie Village, Secretary Kans.
7/65 to 7/67_I-Iesler Co., Inc., Prairie Village, Kans- Secretary

When LaKue was employed as a teacher she taught secretarial skills, i.e., typing, shorthand, and bookkeeping. In 1967 she had a valid teaching certificate certifying that she was qualified to teach in the secondary public schools of the State of Kansas.

In February 1967, LaRue decided to continue her education further and enrolled as a student at the University of Missouri at Kansas City (hereinafter sometimes referred to as U.M.K.C.). She attended classes on a part-time basis in the evening during the term extending from February 6, 1967, to June 2, 1967, and during the June 5, 1967, to August 4, 1967, term, attended classes in the daytime. She expended a total of $458.07 for both terms.

During the aforementioned two terms, LaRue enrolled in a total of six academic courses. Of the six courses, five were in the field of education and one, -entitled “Law and Business Administration,” was in the field of business administration.

LaRue commenced employment on August 28, 1967, as a teacher in the Shawnee Mission High School District No. 6, Shawnee Mission, Kans. The contract for this employment was entered into on March 3, 1967. After beginning her job at Shawnee Mission High School, she enrolled as a candidate for a master of arts degree at U.M.K.C. in September 1967. Between September 1967 and August 1968, she completed work on the degree with a major in education, which she received in August 1968. During this period of time LaRue enrolled in a total of five academic courses, three of which were in the field of education and two (apparently electives) were in business administration. The latter two courses were entitled “Managerial Accounting” and “Law and Society.”

In her joint income tax return for the year 1961, LaRue deducted her education expenses for 1967 at U.M.K.C. as a business expense. Respondent denied the deduction to the extent of the $458.07, which was incurred during her first two terms at U.M.K.C., but allowed her expenses for the third term which began after she had resumed teaching.

OPINION

In the spring and summer of 1967, while still employed as a secretary, LaRue Wyatt incurred certain educational expenses. She took six courses at U.M.K.C., five of which were in the field of education and one in the field of business administration. According to petitioners, the expenditures were incurred for the purpose of improving, and in fact did improve, skills required in LaRue’s trade or business of being a school teacher or (alternatively) her trade or business of being a secretary, and hence, were deductible under section 1.162-5, Income Tax Regs.2

Respondent, on the other hand, argues that LaRue was not engaged in the trade or business of being a teacher at the time the disallowed expenses were being incurred. According to him, the expenses were merely preparatory to resuming such trade or business. Respondent argues further that such expenses cannot be considered to have been incurred to improve skills required in LaRue’s trade or business of being a secretary, and hence, they are not deductible under section 1.162-5, Income Tax Regs.

It is well settled that merely being a member in good standing of a profession is not the “carrying on of a trade or business.” Henry G. Owen, 23 T.C. 377 (1954). Thus, although LaRue had a valid teaching certificate in 1967 and, indeed, has met all minimum requirements for teaching for many years, this fact alone does not establish that she carried on a trade or business of teaching at the time she incurred her education expenses. Nor did the signing of a contract in March 1967 cause her ipso facto to be engaged in the teaching profession at that time. Cf. Mary O. Furner, 47 T.C. 165, 170 (1966), reversed on other grounds 393 F.2d 292 (C.A. 7, 1968).

The evidence establishes that from summer 1963 until late August 1967, LaRue was employed as a secretary, not as a teacher. Also, prior to summer 1963, she was employed as a secretary at various times between teaching positions. Her three consecutive jobs as a secretary from 1963 to 1967 were not undertaken to improve her secretarial teaching skills by firsthand experience in the secretarial field itself. A 4-year absence from teaching was unnecessary to serve such a purpose. As LaRue herself admitted with regard to her last secretarial position at Hesler Co., Inc.:

I know that it probably does not take 2 and a half year but, on the other hand, an employment record, if you take a job for 6 months and then quit and go back into teaching, it sometimes becomes difficult, then, for you to obtain another secretarial job. So, I felt that time-wise I owed it to the company to stay a little bit longer than that, than 6 months or so.

Indeed, she testified that she moved to Hesler Co., Inc., from a 6-month stay at Moloney Electric Co. because the Hesler job paid more.

In 1963, once LaRue commenced work as a secretary, and no longer sought to procure a teaching job, we think she ceased being engaged in that trade or business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 T.C. 517, 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyatt-v-commissioner-tax-1971.