Nehrlich v. Comm'r , 93 T.C.M. 1105 ( 2007 )


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  •                         T.C. Memo. 2007-88
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    THOMAS J. NEHRLICH, Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 20720-04L.               Filed April 12, 2007.
    Patrick J. Quinn, for petitioner.
    Catherine G. Chang, for respondent.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    HOLMES, Judge:   After a partnership named JTA Research was
    audited, one of its partners filed a petition in this Court
    challenging the disallowance of a large charitable deduction.
    But he filed the petition too late and we dismissed it for lack
    of jurisdiction.   The Commissioner then assessed each of JTA's
    -2-
    partners for the additional tax owed because of the disallowed
    deduction.   One of JTA's other partners, Thomas Nehrlich, didn't
    pay after being notified of the assessment, and he now challenges
    the underlying liability.
    Background
    Thomas Nehrlich and Jonathan Yee founded JTA in 1990 to sell
    computer consulting and programming services.   Frank Wypychowski
    joined JTA in 1994, and the partners adjusted their shares so
    that each owned one-third.   One year later, JTA donated dental-
    practice-management software to the University of Iowa.   JTA
    valued the software at $6 million and deducted the donation as a
    charitable contribution on its 1995 partnership return.
    JTA's 1995 return designated Wypychowski as the firm's tax
    matters partner (TMP), and the box under "Is this partnership
    subject to the consolidated audit procedures of sections 6221
    through 6233?" (the IRS's way of saying "TEFRA") was checked
    "Yes".1   The return also listed two items, both for $12,850.   The
    first was an income adjustment for “guaranteed payments to
    1
    TEFRA is the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of
    1982, Pub. L. 97-248, 96 Stat. 324, one part of which governs the
    tax treatment and audit procedures for most partnerships. See
    TEFRA secs. 401-406, 96 Stat. at 648-671. TEFRA requires the
    uniform treatment of all “partnership items”--a term defined by
    section 6231(a)(3) and (4), I.R.C.--and its general goal is to
    treat all partners alike when the IRS adjusts partnership items.
    Each TEFRA partnership is supposed to designate one of its
    partners as the TMP to handle TEFRA issues and litigation for the
    partnership. Congress frequently amends TEFRA, and though we
    note the current law where relevant, all other section references
    are to the Internal Revenue Code and regulations as in effect for
    1995.
    -3-
    partners” and the second was on the line labeled “other
    deductions.”    JTA identified both these items, in separate
    statements attached to its return, as “Health Insurance
    Premiums.”    Nehrlich agrees with the Commissioner that the double
    reporting of the premiums was simply a mistake.
    The Commissioner audited JTA's 1995 partnership return using
    TEFRA audit procedures, not because one of the partners had
    designated himself the TMP and the partnership return had a
    checked box stating that TEFRA procedures would apply, but
    because the examiner noticed that JTA allocated one item--the
    $12,850 in health insurance premiums listed under “other
    deductions”--other than in equal thirds.2    The focus of the
    audit, though, was the value of JTA’s gift to the University of
    Iowa.    The Commissioner concluded the software was worthless, and
    made a $6 million adjustment.    At the end of the audit, in
    October 2000, the Commissioner sent Wypychowski a Notice of Final
    Partnership Administrative Adjustment (FPAA) by certified mail.
    The Commissioner alleges that he also mailed an FPAA to Nehrlich,
    and offers as evidence the first page of an FPAA and a certified
    mailing list showing Nehrlich’s name and address.    However, he
    stipulated that he cannot prove Nehrlich received the FPAA, and
    Nehrlich claims that he did not.
    2
    Nehrlich was allocated $2405; Wypychowski, $3111; and Yee,
    $7334.
    -4-
    But it was Wypychowski who was the putative TMP, and as TMP
    he filed a petition with us in April 2001, 168 days after the
    FPAA had been mailed.    The Commissioner noticed the problem--a
    TMP generally has at most 150 days to file a petition, secs.
    6226(a)(90 days), 6226(b) (plus another 60 days as notice
    partner, see Barbados #6 v. Commissioner, 
    85 T.C. 900
    , 904 (1985)
    --and successfully moved to dismiss the case for lack of
    jurisdiction.    After winning dismissal, the Commissioner assessed
    Nehrlich for the deficiencies resulting from the disallowance of
    the charitable deduction for the years 1995 and 1996.3   Nehrlich
    did not pay, and the Commissioner followed up in September 2003
    by sending a collection due process (CDP) notice of his intent to
    levy and of the filing of a federal tax lien against Nehrlich’s
    property.
    Nehrlich asked for and got a CDP hearing, after which the
    Commissioner mailed him a notice of determination, concluding
    that
    You have indicated that you have the ability to full pay
    [sic]; you just disagree with the TEFRA assessments. You
    are prohibited from raising the liability issue in your
    hearing as you received the FPAA, (TEFRA equivalent of a
    statutory notice of deficiency) and you had prior
    opportunity to challenge the liabilities.
    Nehrlich, a California resident at the time, filed a
    petition with this Court, and we put the case on a trial calendar
    C Nehrlich had carried over the charitable deduction to later
    years. See sec. 170(d)(1).
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    for San Francisco.   The parties then submitted it for decision on
    stipulated facts.
    Discussion
    As a general rule, partnerships don’t pay taxes, and items
    of a partnership’s income, deductions, and credits are supposed
    to be reflected on its partners’ individual tax returns.    See
    sec. 701.   Before TEFRA, the IRS adjusted these partnership items
    after separately auditing each partner.   This easily led to
    inconsistent adjustments, and TEFRA’s requirement that the
    Commissioner conduct audits at the partnership level was supposed
    to ensure the uniform adjustment of partnership items.     Maxwell
    v. Commissioner, 
    87 T.C. 783
    , 787 (1986); H. Conf. Rept. 97-960,
    at 599-600 (1982), 1982-2 C.V. 600, 662-63.   Though the
    procedures are complicated, the desired result is easy to
    understand--a final determination concerning a partnership item
    that binds all the partners and treats them equally.   See sec.
    6221; Maxwell, 
    87 T.C. 787-88
    .
    TEFRA audits, with their sometimes arcane distinctions
    between “partnership,” “affected,” and “nonpartnership” items,
    can be burdensome, so Congress chose to keep the old audit rules
    under which each partner resolves his tax liability with the IRS
    separately, for “small partnerships.”    Tax Compliance Act of 1982
    and Related Legislation: Hearings on H.R. 6300 Before the House
    Committee on Ways and Means, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 259-61 (1982).
    -6-
    Until 1997, the consequences for the Commissioner of treating a
    TEFRA partnership as a small partnership and a small partnership
    as a TEFRA partnership could be severe:   If the Commissioner
    incorrectly classified a partnership, this Court lacked
    jurisdiction and had to dismiss the case.    Frazell v.
    Commissioner, 
    88 T.C. 1405
    , 1411 (1987); Maxwell, 
    87 T.C. 788
    -
    89.   The Commissioner had the authority to correct his mistake
    and issue the proper type of notice, but the statute of
    limitations wasn't tolled by any procedural flubs and might
    expire.   Sec. 6501(a).   This meant that a partner might go tax-
    free by defeating a notice of deficiency with the argument that
    the Commissioner should have sent him an FPAA, or defeating an
    FPAA with the argument that the Commissioner should have sent him
    a notice of deficiency.
    This problem has since been fixed,4 but the present case
    arose from a tax year that ended before the fix took effect.     And
    because this is a CDP appeal, it’s not our jurisdiction over
    Nehrlich’s case that is in dispute--the notice of determination
    is what gives that to us.   Secs. 6320(c), 6330(d)(1).    But
    whether the Commissioner erred in upholding Nehrlich’s underlying
    tax liability may well hinge on whether the Commissioner chose
    4
    Congress added section 6234 to the Code in 1997. Taxpayer
    Relief Act of 1997, Pub. L. 105-34, sec. 1231(a), 111 Stat. 788,
    1020. Section 6234(h) lets the Commissioner (and us) regard the
    wrong type of notice as the right one.
    -7-
    correctly in picking the TEFRA audit procedure for JTA.
    The reason for this is that Nehrlich’s challenge is a
    challenge to the Commissioner’s authority to assess the increase
    in tax caused by that disallowance.      He asserts that JTA was a
    small partnership, so that the Commissioner’s application of
    TEFRA audit procedures led to an invalid assessment and any later
    collection efforts were therefore improper.      See Freije v.
    Commissioner, 
    125 T.C. 14
    , 36 (2005) (collection actions related
    to an invalid assessment may not proceed).
    This is not a bad technical argument, because the Code draws
    the line between small and TEFRA partnerships in a somewhat odd
    way:    TEFRA applies its audit procedures only to “partnership
    items,” sec. 6221, which are defined to exist only with respect
    to partnerships, sec. 6231(a)(3).      TEFRA then defines
    “partnership” to exclude small partnerships, sec. 6231(a)(1)(B),
    and this then excludes them from TEFRA procedures because a small
    partnership would have only nonpartnership items, see sec.
    6231(a)(4); Maxwell, 
    87 T.C. 788
    .      The Commissioner can
    generally challenge nonpartnership items only through the
    deficiency process--as we said in Freije, the Commissioner’s
    failure to show that a deduction’s disallowance fell within some
    exception “to the proscription of section 6213(a) on assessments
    without deficiency procedures is fatal.”      Freije, 
    125 T.C. 35
    .
    -8-
    This argument, though, rests entirely on whether JTA met
    TEFRA’s definition of a “small partnership.”    See sec.
    6231(a)(1)(B).   For the 1995 tax year, this definition set two
    tests.   The first was whether JTA had ten or fewer partners, each
    of whom was a natural person or the estate of a dead partner.
    Sec. 6231(a)(1)(B)(i)(I).     The Commissioner concedes JTA passed
    this test.
    The second test for the 1995 tax year was whether JTA
    allocated each item to each partner the same way.    This “same-
    share” requirement meant, for example, that a one-third partner
    had to get one-third of the partnership’s income and deductions;
    if he got one-third of the income, but one-half of even one of
    the deductions, the partnership would be subjected to TEFRA.5
    Sec. 6231(a)(1)(B)(i)(II).    Nehrlich claims that the Commissioner
    was wrong to flunk JTA on the same-share test.    He reasons that a
    partnership’s “guaranteed payments”6 were not subject to the
    same-share requirement, and that JTA’s health insurance premiums
    were “guaranteed payments.”    Nehrlich is correct that guaranteed
    payments are not one of the items used in a same-share analysis.
    See sec. 301.6231(a)(1)-1T(a)(3), Temporary Proced. & Admin.
    5
    The same-share requirement was removed from section
    6231(a)(1)(B)(i) by the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, Pub. L. 105-
    34, sec. 1234(a), 111 Stat. 1024.
    6
    Guaranteed payments are payments made to a partner without
    regard to the partnership's income. Sec. 707(c).
    -9-
    Regs., 52 Fed. Reg. 6789 (Mar. 5, 1987); McKnight v.
    Commissioner, 
    99 T.C. 180
    , 184-86 (1992), affd. 
    7 F.3d 447
    (5th
    Cir. 1993).    And the Commissioner agrees with him that the
    $12,850 entry for health insurance premiums that JTA listed under
    “guaranteed payments” would not have been enough to make JTA a
    TEFRA partnership.
    But the Commissioner defends his determination by pointing
    to the $12,850 deduction that JTA took under the heading “other
    deductions.”    Under the old regulations, a partnership’s
    deductions were generally subject to the same-share rule.      See
    sec. 301.6231(a)(3)-1(a)(1)(i), Proced. & Admin. Regs.    Nehrlich
    counters by arguing that health insurance premiums are always
    “guaranteed payments,” no matter how they are listed on a
    partnership return, and that the Commissioner should have
    recognized the premiums as “guaranteed payments” before picking
    which set of procedures to follow.7    The Commissioner’s failure
    to spot JTA’s mistake in reporting the premiums as a deduction,
    he concludes, led to the mistaken issuance of an FPAA instead of
    a notice of deficiency, and so fatally undermined the assessment
    against him.
    7
    Nehrlich mentions that the health insurance premiums are
    affected items but he doesn’t argue the point with any
    specificity. “Affected items” are those that are affected by
    adjustments to partnership items, sec. 6231(a)(5), and we can’t
    see how the Commissioner’s one partnership-level adjustment--
    disallowing JTA’s charitable deduction--affected JTA’s health
    insurance premiums.
    -10-
    The standards for judging the Commissioner’s decision to
    treat JTA as a TEFRA partnership were set by a pair of cases:
    Z-Tron Computer Research & Dev. Program v. Commissioner, 
    91 T.C. 258
    , 262 (1988); and Harrell v. Commissioner, 
    91 T.C. 242
    , 246-48
    (1988).   We held in both those cases that the Commissioner should
    look only at the partnership return itself to analyze whether a
    partnership meets the same-share test.     The test is passed if, on
    the face of the return, (1) the partnership reported more than
    one partnership item for the year, and (2) those items were
    allocated to each partner in equal shares.      Harrell, 
    91 T.C. 246
    ; see sec. 6231(a)(1)(B)(i)(II).     We stressed in Harrell that
    the Commissioner should not consult sources other than the return
    that is in front of his examiner.      Harrell, 
    91 T.C. 247
    .
    Neither a partner nor the Commissioner can “claim a result other
    than that identified in the return and Schedules K-1 as filed and
    amended prior to the date of commencement of the partnership
    audit.”
    Id. This bright-line test
    defeats parties’ later
    attempts to secure an undue advantage after the statute of
    limitations has run.
    Id. A regulation told
    the Commissioner which items to look at in
    applying the test.   Sec. 301.6231(a)(1)-1T(a)(3), Temporary
    Proced. & Admin. Regs., 52 Fed. Reg. 6779 (Mar. 5, 1987).      One of
    those items is a partnership “deduction,” sec. 301.6231(a)(3)-1
    (a)(1)(i), Proced. & Admin. Regs., and so the Commissioner
    -11-
    properly looked at JTA’s “other deductions” category.    Comparing
    JTA’s partnership return with the individual partners’ K-1s, the
    Commissioner’s examiner could easily see that JTA had allocated
    these “other deductions” on its 1995 return other than in equal
    thirds.   Even though there was a high probability that JTA’s
    reporting the premiums paid for the partners as both a deduction
    and a guaranteed payment was a mistake, it wasn’t up to the
    examiner to figure this out.   Under our rulings in Harrell and
    Z-Tron, he should have done what he did--look only on the face of
    the returns.
    We therefore hold that the Commissioner did apply the same-
    share test correctly and JTA was a TEFRA partnership in 1995.
    Nehrlich’s assault on the resulting assessment having failed, he
    is liable for the tax and a
    Decision will be entered for
    respondent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: No. 20720-04L

Citation Numbers: 2007 T.C. Memo. 88, 93 T.C.M. 1105, 2007 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 86

Judges: \"Holmes, Mark V.\"

Filed Date: 4/12/2007

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/21/2020