Seltz v. Director of Revenue
Seltz v. Director of Revenue
Opinion of the Court
In Buder v. Director of Revenue,
The dispute in this case arises from events related to Mr. Seitz’s 1988 sale of stock in Rexene, a corporation operating in Texas. As a director of Rexene, he was sued by former employees for breach of fiduciary duty and fraud. To settle the suit, in 1989, he relinquished $4.8 million of his proceeds from the stock sale. On his original 1989 federal return, he characterized the payment
On audit, the IRS contended that the settlement ought to be treated as a capital loss, since it was related to the sale of Mr. Seitz’s Rexene stock. Rather than litigate the issue, he settled with the IRS, which agreed to characterize the transaction as a repayment of an amount received under a claim of right.
The IRS Settlement
Mr. Seitz contends that he has never abandoned his position that the payment was a fully-deduetible expense for federal purposes, and that, in seeking a Missouri deduction, he is not bound by his settlement with the IRS. He relies on this Court’s decision in Buder. In that case, the taxpayers had avoided litigation with the IRS by signing a Form 870-AD, on which they agreed not to contest the assessment of about half the tax that the IRS had originally sought.
But Mr. Seitz also signed the much more detailed Form 4549. The differences between Mr. Seitz’s Form 870 and his Form 4549 are revealing. Where the Form 870 baldly refers to an “increase in tax and penalties,” the 4549 lists, in detail, the items supporting the changed amount of tax. It includes itemized “Adjustments to Income,” as well as total “Corrected Taxable Income.” The lack of such specific determinations on the 870 was the decisive factor in Buder: “The form does not refer to any upward adjustment of Buder’s adjusted gross income or taxable income.... By executing the settlement form, there was no need to determine the propriety of the contested deductions, and consequently no determination was made.”
The § 1341 Credit
If the federal “claim of right” treatment is binding for State purposes, Mr. Seitz argues, then that parallel treatment should extend to providing a Missouri deduction analogous to the federal credit. Section 1341 provides that repayment of an amount accepted under a claim of right generates either a deduction in the year of repayment,
If Mr. Seitz had received a federal deduction for the repayment, it would also be deductible from Missouri income.
But these arguments are flawed. “ ‘An allowance for deductions from gross income does not turn on general equitable considerations. Deductions depend upon legislative grace and are allowable only to the extent authorized by statute.’ ”
In any ease, the unfairness Mr. Seitz complains of is hard to discern. Section 1341 is designed to allow a taxpayer to recover taxes paid on income that is subsequently returned. But here, a deduction would be a reimbursement for state tax that was never paid. Mr. Seitz was a Texas resident in the year he reported receipt of the payment, and Texas has no income tax.
Conclusion
By settling with the IRS on Form 4549, Mr. Seitz agreed to the characterization of the items listed there, and the increase in adjusted gross income that resulted. He may not now pursue an inconsistent argument in his litigation with the Director. The deductions he claims in the alternative are not authorized by Missouri law.
The decision of the Administrative Hearing Commission is affirmed.
. 869 S.W.2d 752 (Mo. banc 1994).
. Section 143.121, RSMo 1994.
. I.R.C. § 1341.
. Buder, 869 S.W.2d at 752-53.
. Id. at 754.
. Id. at 753.
. I.R.C. § 1341(a)(4).
. I.R.C. § 1341(a)(5).
. Section 143.141, RSMo 1994.
. Matteson v. Director of Revenue, 909 S.W.2d 356, 359 (Mo. banc 1995) (quoting Brown Group, Inc. v. Administrative Hearing Comm'n, 649 S.W.2d 874, 877 (Mo. banc 1983)).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Bobby E. SELTZ v. DIRECTOR OF REVENUE
- Status
- Published