John R. Kirkpatrick v. Commissioner , 2018 T.C. Memo. 20 ( 2018 )


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  •                         
    T.C. Memo. 2018-20
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    JOHN R. KIRKPATRICK, Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 11181-16.                         Filed February 22, 2018.
    P was ordered in a divorce proceeding interim order to transfer
    $100,000 directly and nontaxably into an IRA titled in W’s name and
    further to pay W $40,000 for attorney’s fees and suit money. P
    directed distributions from his IRAs into a checking account from
    which he wrote checks to W and to third parties. P reported the
    $140,000 of distributions (among others, the taxability of which he
    has conceded) as nontaxable on his 2013 Federal income tax return.
    Held: P’s IRA distributions are not a nontaxable transfer of an
    account incident to divorce under I.R.C. sec. 408(d)(6) but instead are
    taxable income to him under I.R.C. sec. 408(d)(1). Bunney v.
    Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 259
    , 265 (2000), followed.
    John R. Kirkpatrick, pro se.
    Alicia A. Mazurek, Lisa DiCerbo, and Robert D. Heitmeyer, for respondent.
    -2-
    [*2]                       MEMORANDUM OPINION
    LARO, Judge: This case arises out of respondent’s adjustments to
    petitioner’s return for the 2013 taxable year. The case was submitted fully
    stipulated for decision without trial. See Rule 122.1
    Respondent determined a $98,712 deficiency in petitioner’s 2013 Federal
    income tax, and a $19,742 section 6662(a) and (b)(2) accuracy-related penalty for
    a substantial understatement of income tax that he has conceded. After the parties’
    concessions, the sole issue we decide is whether $140,000 in individual retirement
    account (IRA) distributions that petitioner received during 2013 is taxable income
    under section 408(d)(1) or a nontaxable transfer of an account incident to divorce
    under section 408(d)(6). We hold that it is the former.
    Background
    I.     Overview
    The parties submitted this case fully stipulated under Rule 122. The
    stipulation of facts and the facts drawn from stipulated exhibits are incorporated
    herein. Petitioner is a medical doctor and a licensed physician in the State of
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue
    Code (Code) applicable for the relevant year. Rule references are to the Tax Court
    Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    -3-
    [*3] Michigan and the District of Columbia. He resided in Michigan when he
    filed his petition with this Court. This case is appealable to the Court of Appeals
    for the Sixth Circuit absent stipulation of the parties to the contrary.
    II.   Petitioner’s Divorce
    Petitioner was married to Christiana D. Kirkpatrick for an unspecified
    period. On April 17, 2012, while petitioner was residing in the State of Maryland,
    Ms. Kirkpatrick filed for divorce in the circuit court for Montgomery County,
    Maryland. At the time, Maryland was not a “no fault divorce” jurisdiction, thus
    requiring a party seeking a divorce to show cause for its granting. After Ms.
    Kirkpatrick filed for divorce, petitioner was “kicked out of the house” that he
    shared with her. He moved to Michigan in July 2012.
    Petitioner and Ms. Kirkpatrick did not divorce amicably. The proceeding
    involved, among other things, matters relating to custody, support, and visitation
    of the couple’s two minor children. On September 24, 2012, a court hearing was
    held in the divorce case, at which time a consent order was finalized between the
    parties. In that order, Ms. Kirkpatrick’s request for pendente lite spousal support
    was granted.2 Although the order addressed multiple financial considerations
    2
    Under Maryland law, pendente lite orders, such as for alimony, are
    temporary arrangements allowing for support to be provided to a spouse until the
    (continued...)
    -4-
    [*4] incident to the divorce proceedings, two particular paragraphs are relevant
    here. The first reads: “ORDERED, that the Defendant shall transfer to Ms.
    Kirkpatrick the sum of One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000.00) directly
    (and in a non-taxable transaction) into an IRA appropriately titled in Ms.
    Kirkpatrick’s name within fourteen (14) days of the entry of this Order and that
    the funds will not be withdraw [sic] until 2013”. The second provides:
    “ORDERED, that the Defendant shall pay to the Plaintiff a lump sum of Forty
    Thousand Dollars ($40,000.00) by 5:00 pm on September 26th, 2012 for Pendente
    Lite Attorney’s Fees and Suit Money via direct deposit”.
    Petitioner was separated from Ms. Kirkpatrick for the entirety of the 2013
    taxable year, and the two did not live together at any time during that year. The
    divorce of petitioner and Ms. Kirkpatrick was finalized on June 30, 2014, when
    the circuit court entered a judgment of absolute divorce.
    2
    (...continued)
    final resolution of a divorce proceeding. See, e.g., Rethorst v. Rethorst, 
    133 A.2d 101
    , 109 (Md. 1957) (“The purpose of alimony pendente lite has frequently been
    stated as being to provide temporary support for a wife in need thereof for a
    reasonable time until her suit for divorce can be brought to trial.”); see also
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1314 (10th ed. 2014) (noting that “pendente lite” is the
    Latin for “while the action is pending”).
    -5-
    [*5] III.    Petitioner’s IRA Withdrawals and Payments to Ms. Kirkpatrick
    Petitioner did not transfer any money into an IRA titled in Ms. Kirkpatrick’s
    name at any time after the consent order was entered on September 24, 2012, or
    before their divorce was finalized on June 30, 2014. However, he did make
    payments directly to Ms. Kirkpatrick throughout 2013. Petitioner, who at that
    time was over 59-1/2 years of age, paid the money he was ordered to pay to her
    through a series of checks. To make these payments, he withdrew funds from two
    of his IRAs held at JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (JPMorgan), and transferred
    those disbursements to his JPMorgan checking account, from which he wrote
    checks to Ms. Kirkpatrick. Petitioner also wrote checks to third parties in partial
    satisfaction of the money he was ordered to pay to Ms. Kirkpatrick pursuant to the
    consent order.
    Petitioner received two Forms 1099-R, Distributions From Pensions,
    Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc.,
    from JPMorgan for the 2013 taxable year. One showed gross distributions of
    $116,489.39 from the first account. The other showed gross distributions of
    $294,665.64 from the second account. Each had a box checked to indicate that the
    taxable amount was not determined. Petitioner and Ms. Kirkpatrick filed a joint
    Federal income tax return for the 2013 taxable year, on which they reported total
    -6-
    [*6] IRA distributions of $411,155, with only $116,489 of that amount claimed to
    be taxable.
    IV.   Notice of Deficiency and the Parties’ Concessions
    On February 8, 2016, respondent issued the notice of deficiency for the
    2013 taxable year, wherein he determined a $98,712 deficiency and a $19,742
    substantial understatement penalty. Respondent determined that petitioner had the
    following taxable income items for 2013: (1) interest of $13 from Capital One
    N.A.; (2) Schedule D/capital gain dividends of $4 from Wellesley Income Fund
    Inv. Vanguard; (3) taxable dividends of $5 from Wellesley Income Fund Inv.
    Vanguard; and (4) taxable retirement income of $294,665 from JPMorgan.
    Petitioner concedes all of the above income items, except for $140,000 of
    the taxable retirement income from JPMorgan that he had reported as nontaxable
    on his return as originally filed. Respondent in turn concedes that petitioner is not
    liable for the $19,742 accuracy-related penalty for an underpayment attributable to
    a substantial understatement of income tax.
    The last day for petitioner to file a petition contesting respondent’s
    determination was May 9, 2016. See sec. 6213(a). The Court received the
    petition on May 10, 2016, but because it was mailed on May 6, 2016, and bore a
    corresponding U.S. postmark, it is treated as timely filed. See sec. 7502(a).
    -7-
    [*7]                                 Discussion
    I.     Overview
    Generally, “any amount paid or distributed out of an individual retirement
    plan shall be included in gross income by the payee or distributee, as the case may
    be”, sec. 408(d)(1), for the taxable year in which the payment or distribution is
    received, sec. 1.408-4(a)(1), Income Tax Regs. An IRA is a type of individual
    retirement plan. Sec. 7701(a)(37)(A). There is an exception to the general rule of
    taxability, however, for transfers of accounts incident to divorce:
    The transfer of an individual’s interest in an individual retirement
    account or an individual retirement annuity to his spouse or former
    spouse under a divorce or separation instrument described in
    subparagraph (A) of section 71(b)(2) is not to be considered a taxable
    transfer made by such individual notwithstanding any other provision
    of this subtitle, and such interest at the time of the transfer is to be
    treated as an individual retirement account of such spouse, and not of
    such individual. Thereafter such account or annuity for purposes of
    this subtitle is to be treated as maintained for the benefit of such
    spouse.
    Sec. 408(d)(6). The “divorce or separation instrument” referenced in section
    408(d)(6) must be “a decree of divorce or separate maintenance or a written
    instrument incident to such a decree”. See sec. 71(b)(2)(A); see also sec. 1.408-
    4(g)(1), Income Tax Regs. (“The transfer of an individual’s interest, in whole or in
    part, in an individual retirement account * * * to his former spouse under a valid
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    [*8] divorce decree or a written instrument incident to such divorce shall not be
    considered to be a distribution from such an account * * * to such individual or his
    former spouse; nor shall it be considered a taxable transfer by such individual to
    his former spouse notwithstanding any other provision of Subtitle A of the
    Code.”). Thus there are two requirements mandated by section 408(d)(6): (1)
    there must be a transfer of the IRA participant’s “interest” in the IRA to his spouse
    or former spouse, and (2) the transfer must have been made under a divorce or
    separation instrument. Bunney v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 259
    , 265 (2000).
    II.   The Parties’ Positions
    A.     Petitioner’s Argument
    Petitioner believes that the $140,000 distribution in question qualifies as a
    transfer of an account incident to divorce. He argues that the consent order by the
    Maryland court granting interim spousal support to Ms. Kirkpatrick is a “written
    instrument incident to” a divorce decree within the meaning of section
    71(b)(2)(A), as incorporated by reference in section 408(d)(6) and further
    referenced in section 1.408-4(g)(1), Income Tax Regs.
    Petitioner further asserts that nothing in section 408 or the regulations
    thereunder offers any specific guidance on the timing of a transfer for it to qualify
    under the section 408(d)(6) exception. Therefore, he maintains, it is logical to
    -9-
    [*9] assume that any such transfer is nontaxable so long as it occurs in a timeframe
    beginning with the issuance of a written instrument, such as the consent order, and
    through a judgment of absolute divorce. Petitioner points out that this was the
    case here, because his payments were made in 2013, which was after the consent
    order was issued in 2012 but before the divorce was finalized in 2014.
    Finally, petitioner’s view is that the fact that the funds passed through his
    checking account on the way from him to his spouse’s IRA should have no
    bearing on the taxability of the exchange because the funds were moved within the
    allowable time limit for this type of transaction.
    B.     Respondent’s Argument
    Respondent’s position is that none of the distributions petitioner received in
    2013 from the JPMorgan IRAs met the requirements of the section 408(d)(6)
    exception. First, respondent argues that petitioner did not transfer any interest in
    his IRAs to Ms. Kirkpatrick: No IRA was opened in her name, nor was there any
    transfer of funds from petitioner’s IRAs to any IRA owned by Ms. Kirkpatrick.
    Respondent points out that this Court in the past has held that section 408(d)(6)
    does not apply to proceeds from an IRA cashed out and paid pursuant to a divorce
    order or judgment or otherwise transferred to a nonparticipant spouse. See
    Bunney v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. at 265
    ; see also Jones v. Commissioner, T.C.
    - 10 -
    [*10] Memo. 2000-219, 
    80 T.C.M. (CCH) 76
    , 77-78 (2000); Czepiel v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1999-289
    , 
    78 T.C.M. (CCH) 378
    , 381-382 (1999),
    aff’d without published opinion, No. 00-1257, 
    2000 WL 1902238
     (1st Cir. Dec. 5,
    2000).
    Second, while he admits that the consent order was a written document
    entered by a Maryland State court as part of the divorce proceeding between
    petitioner and Ms. Kirkpatrick, respondent maintains that petitioner did not
    comply with the order’s terms. Respondent notes that the order required petitioner
    to transfer in a nontaxable transaction $100,000 into an IRA titled in Ms.
    Kirkpatrick’s name within 14 days of the order’s entry, which petitioner failed to
    do. Thus, respondent asserts, the transfers should not be considered as made
    under a divorce or separation instrument or written instrument incident to such.
    Furthermore, respondent observes that petitioner’s focus on the timeframe
    within which the amounts were paid to Ms. Kirkpatrick is misplaced. Respondent
    argues that the primary question is whether there was a transfer of an IRA interest,
    and not whether the distribution and transfer of IRA funds occurred within a
    certain time. Respondent also contends that petitioner’s assertion on brief that
    money passed from him to Ms. Kirkpatrick’s IRA is not supported by the record,
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    [*11] although even if it were so supported, respondent asserts, it would not be
    dispositive because there had been no transfer of an interest in the IRA itself.
    Finally, respondent posits that any argument by petitioner that Maryland
    divorce law should be determinative as to the IRA distributions’ taxability is
    erroneous, because State-specific requirements for obtaining a divorce in
    Maryland do not preempt or override the Code. Thus, according to respondent, all
    of the IRA distributions that petitioner received from JPMorgan during 2013 and
    used to make payments to Ms. Kirkpatrick and others under the purview of the
    then-pending divorce in Maryland State court are taxable to petitioner.
    C.     Petitioner’s Rebuttal
    Petitioner disagrees with respondent’s arguments. He maintains that the
    conditions set forth in the circuit court’s consent order satisfy the two Bunney
    requirements that there be a transfer of the IRA participant’s interest to his spouse
    or former spouse and that the transfer be under a divorce or separation instrument.
    Petitioner further asserts that he complied with all of the conditions set forth in the
    circuit court’s order. He argues that he provided $140,000 to Ms. Kirkpatrick in a
    tax-free exchange. He believes, however, that she did not undertake the necessary
    steps on her part of establishing an IRA to accept the transferred funds and that he
    should not be responsible for her failure to do so.
    - 12 -
    [*12] Petitioner further contends that the Maryland rules of divorce are written
    and controlled by that State’s courts and from time to time are in opposition to the
    Internal Revenue Service’s position on what is and what is not taxable. To not
    follow the State court’s instructions in his divorce case, petitioner argues, would
    have exposed him to contempt of court.
    III.   Taxability of Petitioner’s $140,000 Distribution From His IRAs
    While the parties claim to be disputing $140,000 of distributions from
    petitioner’s IRA, the actual sum in dispute appears to be only $100,000. In
    arriving at the $140,000 disputed amount, the parties have invited our attention to
    only two specific paragraphs in the circuit court’s consent order. One required
    petitioner to transfer $100,000 directly and in a nontaxable transaction to an IRA
    titled in his then-wife’s name. The other required petitioner to pay to Ms.
    Kirkpatrick $40,000 for attorney’s fees and suit money. The parties’ arguments
    have focused on the consent order paragraph pertaining to the $100,000 sum. The
    parties have not disputed the $40,000 sum specifically, nor the consent order
    paragraph to which it relates. This is understandable because the order for
    petitioner to pay $40,000 for attorney’s fees and suit money clearly is not an order
    for the transfer of an interest in an IRA, and the sum could have been paid out of
    any funds--retirement or otherwise. See Czepiel v. Commissioner, 78 T.C.M.
    - 13 -
    [*13] (CCH) at 381. Petitioner has not advanced any argument about how or why
    IRA distributions to pay this $40,000 award should be excluded from his gross
    income and thus is deemed to have conceded it. See, e.g., Thiessen v.
    Commissioner, 
    146 T.C. 100
    , 106 (2016) (“[I]ssues and arguments not advanced
    on brief are considered to be abandoned.”). Accordingly, the dispute in this case
    effectively is confined to $100,000 of petitioner’s IRA distributions.
    A.     The Code and the State Court’s Consent Order
    Before proceeding, we address a suggestion advanced by petitioner that the
    Maryland court’s instructions to him in the consent order conflicted with the Code.
    We note that under the Supremacy Clause, Article VI, Clause 2 of the U.S.
    Constitution: “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be
    made in Pursuance thereof * * *, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the
    Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or
    Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” State law thus is preempted
    insofar as it conflicts with Federal law, for instance where it is impossible to
    comply with both State and Federal requirements or where State law impedes the
    full accomplishment and execution of congressional purposes and objectives. See
    English v. General Elec. Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    , 79 (1990). Accordingly, to the extent
    that a State court’s dictates conflict directly with Federal tax law, the former must
    - 14 -
    [*14] yield to the latter. See, e.g., Burnet v. Harmel, 
    287 U.S. 103
    , 110 (1932)
    (“State law may control only when the federal taxing act, by express language or
    necessary implication, makes its own operation dependent upon state law.”);
    Griffin v. United States, 
    400 F.2d 612
    , 614 n.1 (6th Cir. 1968) (“This state
    judgment, of course, does not control the application of the federal tax laws.”
    (citing Morgan v. Commissioner, 
    309 U.S. 78
     (1940))); United States v. Dallas
    Nat’l Bank, 
    152 F.2d 582
    , 585 (5th Cir. 1945) (“Having been enacted within the
    scope of the power delegated to the Federal Government, the Internal Revenue
    statutes are a part of the supreme law of the land. If they are in conflict with State
    law * * *, the latter must yield.”); Robertson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-
    526, 
    74 T.C.M. (CCH) 1257
    , 1261 (1997) (“A State’s public policy to the contrary
    cannot control the operation of Federal tax laws unless otherwise expressly
    provided for by Congress.” (citing Burnet v. Harmel, 
    287 U.S. at 110
    )).
    Thankfully, in this case we are not faced with such discord. The only
    relevant reference to taxation in the Maryland court’s consent order is in its
    direction to petitioner to transfer $100,000 “directly (and in a non-taxable
    transaction) into an IRA appropriately titled in Ms. Kirkpatrick’s name”. The
    court’s language is not attempting to dictate how the Federal Government should
    treat for tax purposes any such payment. Rather, it is instructing petitioner to
    - 15 -
    [*15] transfer money directly into an IRA owned by Ms. Kirkpatrick and to do so
    in a nontaxable way that complies with existing law. This is an instruction not on
    petitioner’s behalf but to him, an instruction moreover that petitioner did not obey:
    He neither made a transfer within 14 days of the order’s entry as required therein
    nor transferred the sum directly into an IRA titled in Ms. Kirkpatrick’s name. We
    therefore conclude that there is no conflict between the Code and the circuit
    court’s consent order. Petitioner’s argument on this point is misplaced.
    B.     Applicability of the Section 408(d)(6) Exclusion From Gross Income
    We agree with respondent that petitioner does not fall within the section
    408(d)(6) exclusion from gross income and that the disputed distributions from his
    JPMorgan IRAs should be included in his gross income. As noted above, this
    Court has held that for section 408(d)(6) to apply, two requirements must be met:
    (1) there must be a transfer of the IRA participant’s interest in the IRA to his
    spouse or former spouse, and (2) the transfer must have been made under a section
    71(b)(2)(A) divorce or separation instrument. Bunney v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. at 265
    . As the Court observed in Bunney, two commonly used methods of
    transferring an interest in an IRA are to (1) change the name on the IRA to that of
    the nonparticipant spouse or (2) direct the IRA’s trustee to transfer the IRA assets
    to the trustee of an IRA owned by the nonparticipant spouse. 
    Id.
     at 265 n.6. In
    - 16 -
    [*16] Bunney we rejected the idea that taking a distribution from an IRA and then
    making a payment to one’s spouse qualifies as a transfer of an interest in that IRA.
    Id. at 265. We further clarified in Jones v. Commissioner, 80 T.C.M. (CCH) at 77-
    78, that the section 408(d)(6) exception is limited and that “interest” is not
    synonymous with the money or other assets held in an IRA--indeed, that the
    withdrawal of funds from an IRA extinguishes the owner’s interest in that IRA or
    the appropriate proportion thereof. See also Czepiel v. Commissioner, 78 T.C.M.
    (CCH) at 381 (“Petitioner did not transfer all or a portion of his interest in his
    IRA’s to Ms. Czepiel. He received distributions from those IRA’s and paid the
    funds distributed to him from those IRA’s to Ms. Czepiel.”).
    The salient facts of this case closely resemble the facts in Bunney and Jones.
    Any differences, such as that in Bunney the taxpayer took postdivorce
    distributions from his IRA whereas petitioner took distributions while separated
    but not yet divorced from Ms. Kirkpatrick, are not material. What matters for
    purposes of the section 408(d)(6) exception is that there be a transfer of an
    individual’s interest in an IRA to his spouse or former spouse. This did not occur
    here. Indeed, as respondent rightly observes, these is no indication besides
    petitioner’s statement on brief (which under Rule 143(c) cannot constitute
    evidence) as to what Ms. Kirkpatrick did with the funds that were transferred to
    - 17 -
    [*17] her. There is no evidence that the money that petitioner withdrew from his
    IRAs ever found its way into an IRA titled in Ms. Kirkpatrick’s name.
    Ultimately, petitioner’s argument rests on the idea that the alleged substance
    of what occurred should govern and not its strict form. This we cannot accept,
    even if we assume--although we restate that we do not find as a fact--that the
    funds distributed from petitioner’s IRAs did find their way into an IRA titled in
    Ms. Kirkpatrick’s name. As the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, to which
    this case is appealable, articulated in Summa Holdings, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    848 F.3d 779
    , 782 (6th Cir. 2017), rev’g 
    T.C. Memo. 2015-119
    : “‘Form’ is
    ‘substance’ when it comes to law. The words of law (its form) determine content
    (its substance).” The words of the law relevant here, section 408(d)(6), are
    specific: “interest in an individual retirement account”. The statute does not say
    “assets from an individual retirement account”, or more broadly, “interest in or
    assets from an individual retirement account”. This Court in Bunney, Jones, and
    Czepiel has given effect to the will of Congress as expressed in the plain meaning,
    see Griffin v. Oceanic Contractors, Inc., 
    458 U.S. 564
    , 570 (1982) (“Our task is to
    give effect to the will of Congress, and where its will has been expressed in
    reasonably plain terms, ‘that language must ordinarily be regarded as conclusive.’”
    (quoting Consumer Prod. Safety Comm’n v. GTE Sylvania, Inc., 
    447 U.S. 102
    ,
    - 18 -
    [*18] 108 (1980))), of section 408(d)(6) that only certain limited, direct IRA
    transfers qualify thereunder. Form matters. Here, all relevant sources--the Code;
    the caselaw; Internal Revenue Service guidance, see Bunney v. Commissioner,
    
    114 T.C. at 265
     n.6; and even the consent order in petitioner’s divorce
    proceedings--suggest that taking distributions from IRAs and writing checks to
    one’s spouse is not the appropriate form for a tax-free transfer of an account
    incident to divorce under section 408(d)(6). Thus we find that there was no
    transfer of petitioner’s interest in the IRAs to Ms. Kirkpatrick.
    Because we have found that petitioner did not transfer an interest in his
    IRAs to his then wife, we do not reach the second inquiry of whether a transfer
    was made under a section 71(b)(2)(A) divorce or separation instrument. See Jones
    v. Commissioner, 80 T.C.M. (CCH) at 78. Accordingly, we sustain respondent’s
    deficiency determination.
    IV.   Conclusion
    Petitioner was ordered by the State court conducting the proceedings in Ms.
    Kirkpatrick’s divorce from him to transfer $100,000 directly and in a nontaxable
    transaction into an IRA titled in her name. Petitioner withdrew funds from his
    IRAs and deposited them in his checking account, from which he wrote checks to
    his then wife and others. In view of this, the $100,000 of distributions from
    - 19 -
    [*19] petitioner’s IRAs does not fall within the section 408(d)(6) exclusion from
    gross income for transfers of accounts incident to divorce and thus is taxable
    income to him. See Bunney v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. at 265
    ; see also Jones v.
    Commissioner, 80 T.C.M. (CCH) at 77-78. All other amounts raised in this case
    have been actually or constructively conceded.
    We have considered all of the parties’ arguments, and to the extent not
    discussed above, conclude that those arguments are irrelevant, moot, or without
    merit.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    Decision will be entered for
    respondent as to the deficiency and
    for petitioner as to the accuracy-
    related penalty under section 6662(a).