Alberto Delgado & Virginia Delgado ( 2023 )


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  •                    United States Tax Court
    
    T.C. Summary Opinion 2023-8
    ALBERTO DELGADO AND VIRGINIA DELGADO,
    Petitioners
    v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent
    —————
    Docket No. 13919-19S.                                    Filed March 13, 2023.
    —————
    Oscar Javier Ornelas, for petitioners.
    David Sohn and Sheila R. Pattison, for respondent.
    SUMMARY OPINION
    HALPERN, Judge: This case was heard pursuant to the
    provisions of section 7463 of the Internal Revenue Code in effect when
    the petition was filed. 1 Pursuant to section 7463(b), the decision to be
    entered is not reviewable by any other court, and this opinion shall not
    be treated as precedent for any other case.
    Respondent issued a Statutory Notice of Deficiency (Statutory
    Notice) to petitioners determining a deficiency in, and an accuracy-
    related penalty with respect to, their 2016 income tax of $5,795 and
    $1,159, respectively. Petitioners assigned error to the determinations of
    both the deficiency in tax and the penalty. Respondent has conceded the
    1 Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal
    Revenue Code (Code), Title 26 U.S.C., in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule
    references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. All dollar amounts
    have been rounded to the nearest dollar.
    Served 03/13/23
    2
    penalty, which concession we accept. For the reasons set forth below,
    we sustain the deficiency in tax.
    Background
    The parties have filed a First Stipulation of Facts stipulating
    certain facts and the authenticity of certain documents. The facts
    stipulated are found, and the documents stipulated are accepted as
    authentic. The parties have filed a Supplemental Stipulation of Facts
    stipulating one additional exhibit, Exhibit 7–R, which comprises a
    written declaration (Shanahan Declaration) of Kaaren Shanahan,
    identified as an employee of respondent’s, and a “Note Transcript” from
    the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Automated Under Reporter (AUR)
    program. For reasons discussed infra note 8, we do not receive into
    evidence either the Shanahan Declaration or the Note Transcript.
    Neither party called any witnesses or proffered documents
    beyond those stipulated. We need to find few facts beyond those
    stipulated. We set forth those facts pertinent to our discussion.
    Petitioners’ 2016 Return
    Petitioners timely filed IRS Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income
    Tax Return, for their 2016 (calendar) tax year (2016 Return).
    Petitioner husband (Mr. Delgado) worked for Walgreen Co.
    (Walgreen) in 2016. For 2016, Mr. Delgado received two tax information
    returns from Walgreen. One, an IRS Form W–2, Wage and Tax
    Statement, reported $8,437 of wages paid to him, and the second, an IRS
    Form 1099–MISC, Miscellaneous Income, reported $49,062 of “other
    income” paid to him. Walgreen also reported to respondent the
    information on those two information returns. Petitioners included on
    the 2016 Return the $8,437 reported to them on the Form W–2 but not
    the $49,062 reported to them on the Form 1099–MISC.
    Petitioners claimed education credits of $2,000 and a child tax
    credit of $1,000 on the 2016 Return.
    Respondent’s AUR Program
    May CP 2000 Notice
    The 2016 Return drew notice under the AUR program, and, on
    May 7, 2018, respondent sent petitioners a Notice CP 2000 (May CP
    3
    2000 Notice), which is a notice sent to a taxpayer when the taxpayer’s
    return information does not match data reported to the IRS by
    employers, banks, and other third parties. Table 1 in the May CP 2000
    Notice, titled “Changes to your 2016 Return,” shows the following among
    other things.
    Table 1
    Changes to your 2016 Return
    Your income         Shown on 2016           As corrected by IRS       Difference
    and deductions      Return
    Other income                          $0                 $49,062           $49,062
    Change to taxable             —                      —                      49,062
    income
    Your tax            Shown on 2016           As corrected by IRS       Difference
    computations        Return
    Taxable income                    $41,578                $90,640           $49,062
    Tax                                 5,309                 14,199             8,890
    Education credits                   2,000                         0         −2,000
    Child tax credit                    1,000                   200               −800
    Total tax                     —                      —                      11,690
    Tax you owe                   —                      —                     $11,690
    Table 2, under the heading “Explanation of changes to your
    2016 Form 1040,” shows the following.
    4
    Table 2
    Other Income
    Received       Address    Account       Shown on    Reported     Difference
    from                      information   Return      to IRS by
    others
    WALGREEN       ...        SSN: . . .           $0      $49,062      $49,062
    CO.                       Form 1099–
    MISC
    Following Table 2 is a description of the reason why a portion of
    the child tax credit was disallowed (the credit was later allowed in full)
    and the reason why the education credits were disallowed (i.e., for lack
    of substantiation).
    Petitioners were advised, if they did not agree with the proposed
    changes, to respond to the notice with a signed statement explaining
    their disagreement and to include any documentation that would
    support their claim. They were given until June 6, 2018, to respond or
    respondent would send them a Statutory Notice.
    December CP 2000 Notice
    On December 24, 2018, respondent sent petitioners a second
    Notice CP 2000 (December CP 2000 Notice), which began by thanking
    petitioners for their response to the May CP 2000 Notice and continued:
    “Based on your response, we’ve determined you owe $7,527 (including
    interest), which you will need to pay by January 23, 2019.” 2 The
    December CP 2000 Notice contains Table 3, similar to Table 1 but with
    some revised entries, as follows.
    2 The $7,527 includes a deficiency of $5,795 as well as a substantial
    understatement penalty of $1,159 and interest of $573.
    5
    Table 3
    Changes to your 2016 Return
    Your income          Shown on Return          As corrected by       Difference
    and deductions                                IRS
    Other income                        $0                    $25,312                $25,312
    Change to                   —                         —                           25,312
    taxable income
    Your tax             Shown on Return          As corrected by       Difference
    computations                                  IRS
    Taxable income                  $41,578                   $66,890                $25,312
    Tax                               5,309                     9,104                  3,795
    Education credits                 2,000                         0                −2,000
    Child tax credit                  1,000                     1,000                       0
    Total tax                   —                         —                            5,795
    Tax you owe                 —                         —                           $5,795
    Table 4, under the heading “Explanation of changes to your
    2016 Form 1040,” shows the following.
    Table 4
    Other Income
    Received       Address     Account            Shown on       Reported to   Difference
    from                       information        Return         IRS by
    others
    WALGREEN       ...         SSN: . . .             $49,062       $49,062              $0
    CO.                        Form
    1099–MISC
    6
    Following Table 4 is the same description as in the May CP 2000
    Notice of the reason the education credits were disallowed (lack of
    substantiation).
    Finally, like the May CP 2000 Notice, the December CP 2000
    Notice invited petitioners to respond by January 23, 2019, or respondent
    would send them a Statutory Notice.
    Statutory Notice
    Respondent mailed the Statutory Notice to petitioners on April
    22, 2019. The Statutory Notice is addressed to petitioners and consists
    of seven pages. On each page but the last (a waiver for petitioners’ use
    if they decide to concede the deficiency and the penalty) appears the
    Social Security number of one of them (we assume petitioner husband
    because his name appears first on the Statutory Notice). All the pages
    reference the 2016 tax year. Immediately under petitioners’ address on
    the first page is the following banner, in bold print: “Notice of
    Deficiency[,] Proposed increase in tax and notice of your right
    to challenge.” Table 5 follows.
    Table 5
    Summary of proposed changes
    Increase in tax (deficiency)                   $5,795
    Substantial tax understatement penalty          1,159
    The first substantial paragraph of text on the first page is as
    follows.
    We have determined there is a deficiency (increase) in your
    2016 income tax based on information we received from
    third parties (such as employers or financial institutions)
    that doesn’t match the information you reported on your
    tax return. See below for an explanation of how this
    increase was calculated. This letter is your NOTICE OF
    DEFICIENCY, as required by law.
    The fifth page of the Statutory Notice contains two tables
    identical to the two tables in the December CP 2000 Notice (Tables 3
    7
    and 4) and the same description as follows Table 4 as to why the
    Education Credits were disallowed (lack of substantiation).
    Petition
    The following are among petitioners’ assignments of error:
    1. The Statutory Notice fails to specifically identify the income
    resulting in the increase in petitioners’ taxable income.
    2. Respondent failed to accord petitioners a deduction for
    attorney’s fees paid in connection with the collection of income.
    3. Respondent failed to give petitioners credit for qualified
    educational expenses incurred in 2016.
    Among petitioners’ averments is that petitioners “incurred . . .
    deductible attorney’s fees in connection with the collection of income
    from Walgreens [sic].”
    Answer
    Respondent denied that he erred as petitioners assigned.
    Premature Assessment
    Sometime soon after petitioners filed the Petition, respondent
    assessed the tax and penalties determined in the Statutory Notice. Soon
    thereafter, respondent abated those assessments.
    Discussion
    I.    Introduction
    In general, the parties agree as to the questions presented to the
    Court. Petitioners frame those questions as follows.
    1. Is the Statutory Notice entitled to a presumption of
    correctness, and, if not, did respondent carry his burden to
    prove that the deficiency was assessed correctly?
    2. Is respondent’s Exhibit 7 admissible?
    3. Did respondent abate the deficiency assessed against
    petitioners before trial?
    8
    At trial and on brief, petitioners concede that if (1) the Court finds
    that the Statutory Notice is valid, (2) respondent does not bear the
    burden of proof, and (3) respondent did not concede error in the
    deficiency by abating the tax assessed against petitioners, they have
    nothing to rebut respondent’s adjustments increasing their income by
    $25,312 and disallowing their claimed education credits.
    II.     “Is the Statutory Notice Entitled to a Presumption of Correctness,
    and, If Not, Did Respondent Carry His Burden to Prove That the
    Deficiency Was Assessed Correctly?”
    A.      Introduction
    It is not clear what petitioners are driving at with this compound
    question. 3 They begin their argument that the Statutory Notice should
    not be presumed to be correct by citing Scar v. Commissioner, 
    814 F.2d 1363
     (9th Cir. 1987), rev’g 
    81 T.C. 855
     (1983), for the proposition that a
    statutory notice “must reflect a consideration by the Service of
    information that relates to the particular taxpayer to whom the notice
    is directed.” In Scar, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
    considered a statutory notice that, on its face, revealed that no
    determination of a deficiency had been made with respect to the
    taxpayers for the year in question. See id. at 1370. The Court held that
    the statutory notice was invalid and the petition contesting the
    statutory notice should have been dismissed in the taxpayers’ favor for
    lack of jurisdiction. See id. If the Commissioner fails to issue a valid
    statutory notice, we will, on that ground, dismiss the case for lack of
    jurisdiction. See, e.g., Abeles v. Commissioner, 
    91 T.C. 1019
    , 1038 (1988).
    If the case is dismissed, however, then the burden of proof is no longer
    of any consequence. It is only with respect to a valid statutory notice
    that the allocation of the burden to prove facts necessary to determine
    the correct amount of a deficiency in tax matters.
    3 It is also not clear whether petitioners (i.e., their counsel) comprehend that,
    as used in the Code, the words “deficiency” and “assessment” are terms of art. A
    deficiency is defined generally as the excess of tax owed over tax shown by the taxpayer
    on a return plus the amount of tax previously assessed less any rebates. See § 6211(a).
    An “assessment” is the recording of a taxpayer’s liability in the Commissioner’s books
    and records. See § 6203. Assessment is necessary before the Commissioner may begin
    collection of any unpaid tax by giving notice, and demanding payment, of the unpaid
    tax. See, e.g., § 6303. In general, the Commissioner is prohibited from assessing the
    deficiency in tax (or any remaining part of it) for a period after the mailing of a notice
    of deficiency and until after the conclusion of any resulting proceedings in court. See
    § 6213(a).
    9
    We will first consider whether the Statutory Notice is valid.
    Because we find that it is, we will then turn to petitioners’ arguments
    concerning the burden of proof.
    B.     Validity of the Statutory Notice
    1.     Introduction
    Section 6212(a) authorizes the Secretary (i.e., the Commissioner
    or his delegate) to send a statutory notice of deficiency when he
    determines a deficiency in tax. But the Code does not specify the form
    of the statutory notice. Section 7522(a) provides that the statutory
    notice must “describe the basis for, and identify the amounts (if any) of,
    the tax due, interest, additional amounts, additions to the tax, and
    assessable penalties included in such notice.” “But even an inadequate
    description does not invalidate a notice.” Dees v. Commissioner, 
    148 T.C. 1
    , 4 (2017). And the Commissioner does not need to explain how a
    deficiency was determined. Ginsburg v. Commissioner, 
    127 T.C. 75
    , 82
    (2006); see also Scar v. Commissioner, 
    814 F.2d at 1367
    .
    We have held that “[t]he essential purpose of a deficiency notice
    is to provide a formal notification that a deficiency in taxes has been
    determined.” Pietz v. Commissioner, 
    59 T.C. 207
    , 213–14 (1972). Our
    view of what it takes to accomplish that purpose has been evolving. See
    DeCrescenzo v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2023-7
    . Three cases mark
    that evolution: Scar, 
    81 T.C. 855
    , Campbell v. Commissioner, 
    90 T.C. 110
     (1988), and Dees, 
    148 T.C. 1
    . The Statutory Notice passes muster
    under each.
    2.     Scar, Campbell, and Dees
    The Statutory Notice is addressed to petitioners and, on the first
    page, states the taxable year involved and sets forth the amounts of the
    deficiency in tax and penalty determined. It thus satisfies the
    requirements of section 6212(a) as we interpreted them in Scar. See
    Scar, 
    81 T.C. at 860
    –61 (“The requirements of section 6212(a) are met if
    the notice of deficiency sets forth the amount of the deficiency and the
    taxable year involved.”).
    Because the Statutory Notice does not reveal on its face that
    respondent failed to determine a deficiency in petitioners’ 2016 income
    tax, a presumption arises under Campbell that he did determine such a
    deficiency. See Campbell, 
    90 T.C. at 113
    . Petitioners offer nothing to
    rebut the presumption, arguing only that the Statutory Notice “should
    10
    not be presumed correct because no evidence exists to substantiate
    where the $25,312 in supposed unreported income originated or why it
    is taxable.” (Emphasis added.) Whether respondent is (or should be
    presumed to be) correct in his determination of a deficiency in tax is a
    different question from whether he determined a deficiency in the first
    place. Petitioners have presented no evidence that respondent failed to
    determine a deficiency (and penalty) with respect to petitioners for 2016.
    The Statutory Notice passes muster under Campbell. See 
    id.
     at 113–14.
    It likewise passes muster under Dees, 
    148 T.C. at 6
    , in which we
    said: “[I]f the notice is sufficient to inform a reasonable taxpayer that
    the Commissioner has determined a deficiency, our inquiry ends there;
    the notice is valid.” Clearly the Statutory Notice would inform a
    reasonable taxpayer that respondent determined a deficiency in his
    2016 tax; it says as much on its first page. And, while our hypothetical
    reasonable taxpayer might scratch his head over the “Explanation of
    changes to your 2016 Form 1040,” see supra p. 7 and Table 4, showing a
    zero difference between the amount reported by “WALGREEN Co.”
    ($49,062) and the amount shown on the 2016 Return ($49,062), he would
    have no doubt from the explanation following Table 4 that the education
    credit was disallowed for lack of substantiation, which, looking at the
    computations in Table 3, would leave a deficiency in tax even if the
    $25,312 “Change to taxable income” were eliminated.
    3.      Conclusion
    We will not dismiss this case for lack of jurisdiction on the
    grounds that the Statutory Notice is invalid.
    C.     Burden of Proof
    1.      Introduction
    Generally, the burden of proving facts relevant to the
    Commissioner’s determination of a deficiency in tax is on the taxpayer.
    See Rule 142(a)(1). 4 “That . . . has often been interpreted to mean that
    the taxpayer bears the ultimate burden of persuasion; i.e., the risk of
    nonpersuasion, as well as the initial burden of production.” Westby v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2004-179
    , 
    2004 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 186
    ,
    4 Petitioners have not raised the applicability of section 7491(a), which shifts
    the burden of proof to the Commissioner in certain situations. We conclude that
    section 7491(a) does not apply here because petitioners have not produced any evidence
    that they have satisfied the preconditions for its application.
    11
    at *22–23. There are, however, situations where the taxpayer is
    relieved of either the initial burden of producing evidence relevant to the
    Commissioner’s determination of tax or the full burden of proof with
    respect thereto. 5 One situation where the initial burden of production
    is on the Commissioner is in the case of what is sometimes called a
    “naked assessment;” i.e., the determination of a tax liability “without
    rational foundation and excessive.” United States v. Janis, 
    428 U.S. 433
    ,
    441 (1976) (quoting Helvering v. Taylor, 
    293 U.S. 507
    , 514 (1935)).
    Petitioners devote almost a third of their Opening Brief to arguing that
    respondent has made a naked assessment. 6
    2.      Arbitrariness
    The rule of Taylor may be simply put: A court is given sufficient
    cause to set aside the Commissioner’s determination of a deficiency if it
    is shown to the Court that the determination was arbitrarily made and
    is excessive. See Helvering v. Taylor, 
    293 U.S. at 515
    . Petitioners argue
    that the Statutory Notice is without foundation (i.e., “[n]othing in the
    . . . record . . . explains the source of the $25,312 that Respondent claims
    5   For example, Rule 142(a) provides that, with respect to new matters,
    increases in deficiency, or affirmative defenses pleaded in the answer, the burden of
    proof is on the Commissioner.
    6  Another situation in which the Commissioner bears the initial burden of
    production is in unreported income cases. We have said: “[T]he Commissioner must
    establish a ‘minimal evidentiary showing’ connecting the taxpayer with the alleged
    income-producing activity or demonstrate that the taxpayer actually received
    unreported income.” Walquist v. Commissioner, 
    152 T.C. 61
    , 67 (2019) (citation
    omitted). The requisite evidentiary foundation to connect a taxpayer with an income
    producing activity is minimal and need not include direct evidence. See, e.g., Banister
    v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2008-201
    , 
    2008 WL 3925877
    , aff’d, 
    418 F. App’x 637
     (9th
    Cir. 2011). In Banister, 
    2008 WL 3925877
    , at *2, we held that a deficiency notice based
    on information from third-party payors that they paid the taxpayers was enough to
    meet the minimal evidentiary burden even though direct evidence of payment was not
    in the record. Here, Mr. Delgado receive two information returns from Walgreen, one
    a Form W–2 reporting wages of $8,437 paid him for 2016 (which petitioners reported
    on the 2016 return) and the second a Form 1099–MISC reporting $49,062 of “other
    income” paid him for that year. Those two forms evidence Mr. Delgado’s connection
    with an income-producing activity. The fact that respondent’s adjustment for
    unreported “other income” is for an amount less than the amount reported on the Form
    1099–MISC does not alter the fact that respondent has connected Mr. Delgado with an
    activity that, in addition to paying him wages, may have paid him “other income,”
    which petitioners failed to report. Respondent has made the minimal evidentiary
    showing required of him. Nonetheless, he will still bear the burden to produce evidence
    of a deficiency in tax if petitioners can show his determination was arbitrary and
    erroneous. See Walquist, 
    152 T.C. at 68
    .
    12
    Petitioners received but failed to report . . . or why such amount is
    taxable”) and is inherently arbitrary. Accordingly, petitioners argue
    that the Statutory Notice constitutes a “naked assessment,” which is
    “invalid” within the rule of Taylor. 7
    The burden is on the taxpayer to prove that the Commissioner
    arbitrarily determined a deficiency in the taxpayer’s tax. See 
    id.
     If the
    taxpayer carries that burden, then the burden of going forward with
    evidence of a deficiency in tax shifts to the Commissioner. See Berkery
    v. Commissioner, 
    91 T.C. 179
    , 186 (1988), aff’d without published
    opinion, 
    872 F.2d 411
     (3d Cir. 1989). In Taylor, the Supreme Court used
    the term “arbitrary” in its usual and ordinary sense meaning: for
    example, “capricious, irresponsible,” or the like.          Calafato v.
    Commissioner, 
    42 B.T.A. 881
    , 889 (1940), aff’d, 
    124 F.2d 187
     (3d Cir.
    1941). With that meaning in mind, we conclude that petitioners have
    failed to prove that respondent arbitrarily determined a deficiency in
    their 2016 income tax.
    For some or all of 2016, Mr. Delgado worked for Walgreen, and it
    reported to both Mr. Delgado and to respondent that, for 2016, it had
    paid Mr. Delgado wages of $8,437 and “other income” of $49,062.
    Petitioners did not report the latter sum on the 2016 Return, and, as a
    consequence, respondent sent petitioners the May CP 2000 Notice,
    which (1) described the discrepancy between what Walgreen had
    reported as other income received by Mr. Delgado and what petitioners
    had reported, (2) questioned two tax credits petitioners had claimed,
    (3) proposed changes to the amounts of income and tax they had
    reported, and (4) invited petitioners, if they did not agree with the
    proposed changes, to respond with a signed statement explaining their
    disagreement and any documentation that would support their claim.
    Apparently, petitioners took up the invitation to respond because
    respondent begins the December CP 2000 Notice by thanking them for
    their response to the May CP 2000 Notice. On the basis of their
    7 To hold that a statutory notice is invalid within the rule of Taylor because it
    constitutes a “naked assessment” is not to hold that it is invalid in the sense that this
    Court lacks jurisdiction over the notice. See supra Part II.B. “Helvering v. Taylor . . .
    teaches that when a [taxpayer] makes a showing casting doubt on the validity of a
    deficiency determination, the statutory notice itself is not rendered void; the result of
    such showing is that the [Commissioner] must then come forward with evidence to
    establish the existence and amount of any deficiency.” Suarez v. Commissioner, 
    58 T.C. 792
    , 814 (1972), overruled as to another issue, Guzzetta v. Commissioner, 
    78 T.C. 173
     (1982). To avoid confusion, we will refer to a statutory notice held to constitute a
    naked assessment as “arbitrary.”
    13
    response, respondent reduced the amount of additional tax he believes
    they owe. In the section of the December CP 2000 Notice in which he
    proposes changes to the 2016 Return, respondent has reduced his
    proposed change for unreported “other income” from $49,062 to $25,312.
    In the explanation sections of both notices, see supra Tables 2 and 4, he
    identifies Walgreen as the source of the unreported income and
    references a Form 1099–MISC. Anomalously, the explanation section of
    the December CP 2000 Notice states that petitioners reported $49,062
    on their return as income received from Walgreen (which equals the
    amount stated as the amount Walgreen reported to respondent,
    resulting in a difference (unreported income) of zero). As in the May CP
    2000 Notice, the December CP 2000 Notice invites petitioners to respond
    if they do not agree with respondent’s proposed changes. There is no
    evidence petitioners responded to the December CP 2000 Notice.
    The inference that we draw from that telling is that, because of
    his intercourse with petitioners, respondent came to believe that, for
    2016, Mr. Delgado had received income from Walgreen that petitioners
    had failed to report but in an amount not greater than $25,312. We
    must speculate as to respondent’s state of mind because neither party
    called a witness to testify as to the intercourse nor has respondent
    pursued admission of his Exhibit 7–R. 8 We are not much troubled by
    the anomalous entry in the December CP 2000 Notice explanation that
    petitioners reported $49,062 received from Walgreen (and, therefore, did
    not understate their income from it). The 2016 Return is in evidence
    and contradicts that entry (a “clerical error,” claims respondent).
    Moreover, besides the history of events leading up to the
    Statutory Notice, we have petitioners’ assignment that respondent, in
    error, disallowed them a deduction for attorney’s fees and their
    averment that, for 2016, they “incurred . . . deductible attorney’s fees in
    connection with the collection of income from Walgreens [sic].” We also
    8 Respondent’s Exhibit 7–R purportedly contains a business record of his (i.e.,
    the Note Transcript) that would inform us of the intercourse between him and
    petitioners. At trial, petitioners objected to our admitting Exhibit 7–R into evidence.
    After some discussion of petitioners’ objections (relevancy, authenticity, and hearsay),
    we instructed the parties to make their arguments about admissibility on brief.
    Petitioners have done so, while respondent, under the heading “Exhibit 7–R is
    admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence,” announces that, because he
    understands petitioners to concede the adjustment for unreported income if the
    Statutory Notice is found valid, he “is no longer pursuing the evidence in Exhibit 7–R.”
    Given respondent’s apparent ambivalence and his failure to make argument as we
    directed, we consider him to have abandoned (withdrawn) Exhibit 7–R, and do not
    address petitioners’ objections.
    14
    have respondent’s counsel’s uncontested claim made at trial that
    petitioners’ 2016 unreported income resulted from “a[n] employment
    discrimination claim that Mr. Delgado had with Walgreens [sic].” That
    is consistent with Mr. Delgado’s receiving from Walgreen for 2016 “other
    income” reported to him on Form 1099–MISC in addition to wages
    reported to him on Form W–2.
    We are satisfied that neither the $25,312 adjustment to income
    nor the credit disallowance made in the Statutory Notice was made by
    respondent capriciously, irresponsibly, or otherwise arbitrarily in the
    usual and ordinary sense of those words. See Calafato, 
    42 B.T.A. 881
    .
    In other words, petitioners have failed to prove that respondent’s
    determination of a deficiency in tax for 2016 was arbitrarily made.
    Respondent need not, on account of having made a “naked assessment,”
    come forward with evidence of a deficiency.
    3.     Conclusion
    Before concluding our discussion of burden of proof, we note that
    petitioners have not raised section 6201(d), which provides that, if a
    taxpayer asserts a reasonable dispute with respect to any item of income
    reported on a third-party information return and the taxpayer has fully
    cooperated with the Secretary, the Secretary has the burden of
    producing reasonable and probative information concerning that
    deficiency in addition to that information return. Perhaps petitioners’
    failure to raise section 6201(d) is due to their having no reasonable
    dispute that they did not receive $25,312 of “other income” from
    Walgreen. 9
    Petitioners have given us no reason to deviate from the general
    rule that, in Tax Court litigation, the taxpayer bears the burden of proof,
    and we find that petitioners do bear the burden of proof. See Rule 142(a).
    III.   Premature Assessments
    Sometime soon after petitioners filed the Petition, respondent
    assessed the tax and penalties determined in the Statutory Notice but,
    quickly thereafter, abated those assessments. Petitioners argue that
    respondent’s abatement of the assessments before trial signifies that
    respondent “[intended] to abate the tax . . . previously assessed . . . and
    close this case prior to trial.” Respondent counters that his abatement
    9 Nor is there evidence of their cooperation with the Secretary. Petitioners
    responded to the May CP 2000 Notice but resist providing us their response.
    15
    “does not mean that petitioners . . . [had no] additional tax liability for
    . . . 2016.”
    Where a Petition has been filed, section 6213(a) prohibits
    assessment or collection of a deficiency until our decision in the case
    becomes final. None of the exceptions to section 6213(a) is applicable in
    the present case. The assessment was prohibited by section 6213(a), and
    the abatement was proper. In Connell Business Co. v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 2004-131
    , 
    2004 WL 1194626
    , at *5, where the taxpayer
    made an argument like petitioners’, we said:
    While the abatements might be construed to constitute an
    admission that the prior assessments were premature,
    they in no way constitute admissions as to the proper
    amount of the deficiencies. See Pfeifer v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 1983-437
     (“There is no merit to [the taxpayer’s]
    contention that the abatement [of a premature assessment]
    was determinative of his tax liability.”).
    The same applies here.
    IV.   Deficiency in Tax
    Having rejected petitioners’ arguments that the Statutory Notice
    is invalid, that respondent bears the burden of proof, and that, by his
    abatement of the premature assessment, respondent conceded error in
    his determination of a deficiency in tax, we are left with petitioners’
    concession that, if we reject those arguments, they have nothing to rebut
    respondent’s adjustments increasing their income by $25,312 and
    disallowing their claimed education credits. On the basis of petitioners’
    concession, we sustain those adjustments.
    V.    Section 6673(a)(1) Penalty
    Petitioners have no arguments on the merits to respondent’s
    adjustments resulting in a deficiency in income tax. Their grounds for
    this lawsuit are process related, and we have rejected all of those
    grounds. The course of respondent’s determination of a deficiency in
    petitioners’ 2016 income tax is fairly clear. There is, however, one
    opaque chapter, i.e., petitioners’ intercourse with respondent in
    response to the May CP 2000 Notice. Petitioners have not volunteered
    that information, and they have objected to respondent’s attempts to
    inform us. Petitioners’ response to the May CP 2000 Notice may well
    have resolved the confusion resulting from the improbable statement
    16
    both in the December CP 2000 Notice and in the Statutory Notice that
    petitioners had reported $49,062 on the 2016 Return. Petitioners’
    failure to be forthright and their lack of arguments on the merits lead
    us to suspect that perhaps they have little or no reason for bringing this
    lawsuit other than to delay collection of a tax rightfully owing.
    In pertinent part, section 6673(a)(1) allows us to impose a penalty
    of up to $25,000 if (1) the taxpayer has instituted or maintained
    proceedings before the Tax Court primarily for delay or (2) the
    taxpayer’s position in the proceeding is frivolous or groundless.
    “Groundless” means “lacking a basis or a rationale.” Groundless, Black’s
    Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). Further, “[t]he purpose of section 6673
    is to compel taxpayers to think and to conform their conduct to settled
    principles before they file returns and litigate.”            Takaba v.
    Commissioner, 
    119 T.C. 285
    , 295 (2002).
    Before entering decision in this case, we will order petitioners to
    show cause why we should not impose a penalty on them under section
    6673(a)(1) for instituting or maintaining this proceeding primarily for
    delay by advancing groundless process-related arguments.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    An appropriate order will be issued.