                  T.C. Memo. 2003-347



                UNITED STATES TAX COURT



MICHAEL J. DOWNING AND SANDRA M. DOWNING, Petitioners v.
      COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



Docket No. 12108-98.            Filed December 29, 2003.



     Ps resided in Louisiana, a community property State.
Shortly before their wedding, in 1989, they “filed for
registry” (La. Civ. Code Ann. art. 2332 (West 1985)) in St.
Tammany Parish (where both of them then resided) a marriage
contract which provided that “The intended husband and wife
shall be separate in property * * *.” Before the years in
issue (1994 and 1995), Ps moved to Jefferson Parish. P-H
operated a plumbing business during the years in issue. Ps
filed separate tax returns for the years in issue, on which
they reported only their respective incomes, without regard
to Louisiana’s usual community property laws. R determined
that (1) substantial amounts of income from P-H’s plumbing
business had not been reported on Ps’ separate income tax
returns, (2) the marriage contract did not have the effect
of stopping application of Louisiana’s usual community
property laws for Federal income tax purposes, (3) both Ps
are liable for the fraud addition to tax for both years in
issue, and (4) there were other miscellaneous adjustments.
                              - 2 -

          1. Held: Ps’ marriage contract did have the effect of
     stopping application of Louisiana’s usual community property
     laws for Federal income tax purposes. R has conceded that
     such a holding would result in P-W’s not being liable for
     deficiencies and additions to tax for the years in issue; R
     has asserted against P-H increased deficiencies and
     additions that are intended to apply if all the omitted
     income were properly reportable by P-H.

          2. Held, further, R proved by clear and convincing
     evidence that P-H had unreported plumbing business income
     for 1994 and for 1995, that each year’s unreported plumbing
     business income resulted in an underpayment of tax for that
     year, and that at least some part of each year’s
     underpayment of tax was due to P-H’s fraud. Amounts
     determined. Sec. 6663, I.R.C. 1986.

          3. Held, further, no portion of the underpayment of
     tax for either year was not due to fraud, except to the
     extent the underpayment resulted from causes other than
     unreported plumbing business income. Amounts determined.
     Sec. 6663(b), I.R.C. 1986.



     John S. Ponseti, for petitioners.

     Susan S. Canavello, for respondent.



             MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION



     CHABOT, Judge: By separate notices of deficiency, respondent

determined deficiencies in individual income tax and penalties

under section 66631 (fraud) against petitioners as follows:




     1
        Unless indicated otherwise, all section and chapter
references are to sections and chapters of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 as in effect for the years in issue.
                                - 3 -

                                                     Penalties
                                                 1
                         Year     Deficiency         Sec. 6663

    Michael J. Downing   1994           $7,396        $5,444
                         1995           29,557        22,088

    Sandra M. Downing    1994           $2,545        $2,012
                         1995           20,432        15,404
1
   Of these totals for Michael J. Downing (hereinafter sometimes
referred to as Michael), for 1994, $2,773 is income tax under ch.
1 and $4,623 is self-employment tax under ch. 2; for 1995,
$19,065 is income tax under ch. 1 and $10,492 is self-employment
tax under ch. 2. For Sandra M. Downing (hereinafter sometimes
referred to as Sandra), all the amounts are income tax under ch.
1.

     Both sides apparently view the facts in the instant case as
leading to Michael’s being solely liable for self-employment tax
on any additional net earnings from self-employment, regardless
of the disposition of the community property issue. That is,
neither side views Sandra’s involvement in the business as
resulting in a partnership. See sec. 1402(a)(5)(A). Petitioners
did not file joint returns for either of the years in issue
(infra note 4), and so Sandra does not have joint and several
liability for Michael’s self-employment tax. See sec. 1.6017-
1(b), Income Tax Regs.; see also Johnson v. Commissioner, 74 T.C.
1057, 1062 (1980), affd. 661 F.2d 53 (5th Cir. 1981).

       In each notice of deficiency, respondent determined in the

alternative to the fraud penalty that “the addition prescribed by

Section 6662(a)” applies (in an unspecified amount) for each

year.    In the answer, respondent narrows this determination to

the negligence penalty, section 6662(b)(1), but the amount

remains unspecified.

       At trial and on brief respondent conceded that if

petitioners’ marriage contract was effective to take petitioners

out of Louisiana’s usual community property matrimonial regime,
                               - 4 -

then decision should be entered for Sandra that she has no

deficiency and no addition to tax for any year in issue.     By

amendment to answer, respondent asserts in the alternative to the

deficiencies and additions to tax determined in the notices of

deficiency that, if the Court determines that petitioners’

marriage contract has this effect and Sandra does not have any

liability, then Michael is liable for deficiencies and penalties

as follows:

                                                   Penalties
           Year             Deficiency            Sec. 6663

           1994               $8,966                $6,725
           1995               30,872                23,154

See sec. 6214(a).   Respondent also asserts, in the alternative to

section 6663, additions to tax under section 6662(a).   See sec.

6214(a).
                              - 5 -

     After concessions by both sides,2 the issues for decision3


     2
        Respondent concedes that petitioners are entitled to
deduct as 1995 Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, the $58 paid by
Michael for Louisiana income tax and the $10,133 of mortgage
interest paid. Both petitioners had claimed the standard
deduction for married filing separate on their 1994 and 1995 tax
returns. On brief, petitioners argue that they also are entitled
to deduct the $24.90 paid for real property taxes. On brief,
respondent concedes deductibility of this amount.

     Respondent concedes that petitioners are entitled to deduct
$972 of the $1,871 disallowed Schedule C, Profit or Loss From
Business, telephone expenses for 1994; petitioners concede the
remaining $899. Respondent concedes that petitioners are
entitled to deduct $744 of the $1,618 disallowed Schedule C
telephone expenses for 1995; petitioners concede the remaining
$874.

     Petitioners concede the entire $1,246 inventory adjustment
for 1995.

     Respondent concedes that petitioners are entitled to
additional Schedule C car and truck expense deductions for 1994
and 1995 in the amounts of $2,318 and $1,337, respectively.
Respondent also concedes that petitioners are entitled to an
additional $6,348 depreciation expense deduction for 1995 on the
Ford F250 truck.

     Respondent concedes that petitioners are entitled to deduct
additional Schedule C expenses for 1994 and 1995 in the amounts
of $461 and $530, respectively.

     In the notices of deficiency, respondent disallowed in full
the deductions for Schedule C travel and entertainment expenses.
Petitioners acknowledge on brief that they lack the requisite
documents “to enable these expenses to be deductible.”
Petitioners contend that they “did incur these expenses * * *.
However, Mr. Downing simply did not know that he was required to
keep a detailed log of who he went to lunch with, and what
business they discussed.” We treat this as petitioners’
concession of the adjustment and, in effect, of the applicability
of sec. 6662.

     Petitioners concede that Michael underreported 1995 plumbing
business gross receipts by $5,781. That is, the 1995 tax return
                                                   (continued...)
                               - 6 -

are as follows:

          (1)   Whether each petitioner omitted from gross income

     his or her respective community property law one-half

     interest in the spouse’s earnings.

          (2) Whether petitioners had unreported Schedule C gross

     receipts for the years in issue, and, if so, then in what

     amounts.

          (3)(a) Whether petitioners are liable for the civil

     fraud additions to tax under section 6663, or (b) in the

     alternative, if petitioners’ underpayments (if any) are not

     due to fraud, then whether petitioners are liable for the

     negligence additions to tax under section 6662(a).




     2
      (...continued)
shows gross receipts of $82,721--petitioners acknowledge 1995
plumbing business gross receipts of $88,502.

     On brief, respondent indicates that respondent’s concessions
have the effect of reducing the original deficiency notice
determination by more than one-third as to Michael and by more
than half as to Sandra. Further concessions were made in the
course of certain postbrief proceedings. Infra note 24.
Computations will be required under Rule 155.

     Unless indicated otherwise, all Rule references are to the
Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
     3
        The following adjustments are computational: (1) The
deduction for exemptions, (2) the child care credit, and (3) the
computation of both Michael’s self-employment tax liability and
self-employment tax deduction; their resolution depends on our
determination of the issues for decision.
                                 - 7 -

                         FINDINGS OF FACT

     Some of the facts have been stipulated; the stipulations and

the stipulated exhibits are incorporated herein by this

reference.

     When the petition was filed in the instant case, petitioners

resided in Metairie, Louisiana.    Metairie is in Jefferson Parish.

     Petitioners filed timely calendar year tax returns for the

years in issue, using the filing status “married filing

separate”.4

A.   Michael’s Background

     Michael was born in 1963.    He began working when he was 12.

His jobs included cutting lawns and washing cars; he initially

charged $5 per lawn and about $10 per car.   Michael worked after

school, on weekends, and throughout the summers.   During high

school, Michael continued to cut lawns; he also worked at

Fasullo’s Drug Store.   In addition, as part of his schooling,



     4
        After the notices of deficiency were mailed to
petitioners, petitioners submitted Forms 1040X, Amended U.S.
Individual Income Tax Return, for 1994 and 1995, in which they
changed their filing status from “married filing separate” to
“married filing joint” and claimed the earned income credit.
Sec. 6013(b)(2)(C) prohibits spouses from making a joint return
after they have previously filed separate returns if a notice of
deficiency has been mailed to either spouse with respect to the
tax for that taxable year, and the spouse has filed a petition
with the Tax Court. See Phillips v. Commissioner, 86 T.C. 433
(1986), affd. in part and revd. in part 851 F.2d 1492 (D.C. Cir.
1988). At trial, petitioners conceded that their filing status
is “married filing separate”. Consequently, they are not
entitled to the earned income credit. See sec. 32(d).
                               - 8 -

Michael worked half time at JEDCO for 1 year, where he received

training in plumbing and auto mechanics.   Michael saved the money

that he earned from these jobs; he did not deposit this money

into a bank because he believed that was inconvenient.   Indeed,

he did not open a bank account until March of 1989.

     In 1982, Michael was graduated from high school.    His first

job thereafter was as a courier for Suburban Coastal Corporation.

After he left Suburban Coastal Corporation, he worked at Nature

Tubs and Spas, where he installed and plumbed spas and installed

gas lines.   Toward the end of 1982 and beginning of 1983, Michael

went to work at Lenny’s Plumbing, where he worked until the end

of 1987.

     At the end of 1987, Michael began working at Milliken &

Michaels, Inc., a company owned by his brother-in-law, Michael

Sanderson (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Sanderson).

Before then, Michael had been living at his parents’ house.    When

he began working for Sanderson, he moved into Sanderson’s guest

house.

     At the end of 1989, Michael began operating his own plumbing

business, doing business as Michael Downing Plumbing Co.,

hereinafter sometimes referred to as the plumbing business.

Michael continued to conduct the plumbing business as a sole

proprietor during the years in issue.
                                 - 9 -

     Michael first had Social Security earnings in 1979, in the

amount of $913.   This dropped to $287 in 1980, and zero in 1981.

In 1982 when he was graduated from high school, he had Social

Security earnings of $5,246.    His Social Security earnings

increased each year until 1989, when they reached $21,778.     His

1990 and 1991 Social Security earnings were $1,660 and $5,759,

respectively.   Michael’s Social Security earnings from 1979

through 1991 totaled $114,358.

B.   Sandra’s Background

     Sandra was born in 1960; she was graduated from high school

in 1978.   At some point, she completed a semester of college.     In

1979, Sandra married Gary Rucker, hereinafter sometimes referred

to as Rucker.   They had two children: Rachel, born in 1983, and

Sean, born in 1985.   Sandra and Rucker separated in 1987; their

divorce became final in 1989.    Rucker paid to Sandra $4,200 of

child support in cash in each year in issue.5




     5
        The parties stipulated that these payments were in cash
in 1994 and 1995. On answering brief, petitioners contend that
$2,800 of the 1995 payments was by check. Although petitioners’
contentions are presented in great detail, (1) petitioners do not
direct our attention to any evidence in the record that supports
their contentions (see Rule 143(b)), and (2) petitioners do not
ask to be relieved from the conclusive effect of the parties’
stipulation that the 1995 payments were in cash (see Rule 91(e)).
Our findings are in accord with the parties’ stipulations;
petitioners’ contrary contentions are rejected.
                                - 10 -

     During the years in issue, Sandra worked as a clerk at LCR

Corporation, a plumbing supply house, where she earned $17,877 in

1994 and $17,700 in 1995.

     Sandra had Social Security earnings at least as far back as

1976.     Her Social Security earnings increased from $781 in 1976

and $434 in 1977, to $8,700 in 1982.     Her Social Security

earnings then declined, reaching zero in 1987.       Thereafter,

Sandra’s Social Security earnings varied greatly from one year to

the next.     Sandra’s Social Security earnings for 1976 through

1995 totaled $142,902.

C.   The Marriage Contract

        Sandra and Michael met in December 1988.    On July 14, 1989,

they were married in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana.       Louisiana is

a community property State.

        Before their marriage, Sandra and Michael entered into a

marriage contract (see infra note 16), which made them “separate

in property”.     One of the reasons they did so was, on the advice

of Sandra’s divorce attorney, to prevent Rucker from aggregating

Sandra and Michael’s income in an attempt to reduce or eliminate

Rucker’s child support payment obligations.        Petitioners executed

the marriage contract on July 12, 1989; on July 14, 1989, the

marriage contract was “filed for registry” in the conveyance

records of St. Tammany Parish, where petitioners then resided.

        The marriage contract provides as follows:
                                - 11 -

                                  I.

          The intended husband and wife shall be separate in
     property, therefore, neither of them shall be liable for the
     debts contracted by the other, either before or during their
     marriage;

          The intended wife shall have the free and exclusive
     enjoyment of her separate property, and the full
     administration thereof, without the assistance of her
     husband.


                                  II.

          All property and effects of the said husband and wife,
     whether owned by him or her at the time of the celebration
     of said intended marriage, or acquired during said marriage,
     are hereby declared to be separate property, and that of the
     wife, separate and paraphernal property, and they and each
     of them do hereby expressly reserve to themselves
     individually the entire administration of their respective
     particular movable and immovable property, and the
     respective free enjoyment of each of their revenues.

     On February 2, 2000, the marriage contract was “filed for

registry” in the conveyance records of Jefferson Parish,

Louisiana.

D.   The Plumbing Business

     Michael generally worked alone in the plumbing business.       If

he needed help, then he hired independent contractors.     Sandra

handled all the bookkeeping for the plumbing business.     She wrote

out the invoices and mailed them to customers, paid the bills,

organized the records, did the banking, and submitted figures to

petitioners’ C.P.A. for use in preparing petitioners’ tax

returns.     The plumbing business was on the cash basis for 1994

and 1995.     Sandra computed gross income for the years in issue by
                              - 12 -

adding the invoices for the work that Michael had completed each

month, and then adding the monthly totals.   The invoices totaled

$68,757 for 1994 and $88,502 for 1995.

     On the Schedules C for the plumbing business, Michael

reported 1994 gross receipts of $68,758 and 1995 gross receipts

of $82,721.   On answering brief, petitioners concede that Michael

should have reported 1995 gross receipts of $88,502--$5,781 more

than Michael in fact reported.   Supra note 3.

     Table 1 sets forth the amounts of the Forms 1099 issued to

the plumbing business for 1994 and the amounts of the

corresponding invoices that Sandra prepared.

                              Table 1

Customer                     Form 1099 Amounts   Invoice Amounts

Randy Bolnar                      $1,080               $300
Walter Martinolich                 4,062              2,855
Renard J. Falcon Plumbing          5,492                864
Sizeler Property                   1,010              1,641
Bayona Corp.                       3,960              2,285
Metro Bank                         1,392              1,180
Southern Foods Group               9,283              9,213
Totals:                           26,279             18,338

     Table 2 sets forth the amounts of the Forms 1099 issued to

the plumbing business for 1995 and the amounts of the

corresponding invoices that Sandra prepared.
                               - 13 -

                               Table 2

Customer                  Form 1099 Amounts     Invoice Amounts

Lemaire                        $4,929                $5,576
Southern Foods                 14,396                14,396
R. L. Falcon                    8,983                10,403
Junior League                     684                   684
A-Z Home                        1,185                 1,185
Vino Vino                       1,790                 1,790
Metro Bank                      1,281                 1,281
Sizeler                         1,171                 1,218
Bayona                          1,941                 3,438
Maurice’s                      26,361                26,439
Totals:                        62,721                66,410

E.   Personal Finances

     1.    The Houses

     Michael did not own any realty before he married Sandra.

On October 3, 1991, he bought a house for $65,000 on Newman

Avenue (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the Newman property)

in Metairie, Jefferson Parish.    Michael’s uncle gave $7,000 to

him for a downpayment; Michael financed the remainder through

Sanderson at 12 percent interest.    The monthly payment was

$702.10.    The act of sale for the Newman property states, in

pertinent part, as follows:

     MICHAEL J. DOWNING, a person of the full age of majority and
     resident of the Parish of Jefferson,[6] State of Louisiana,

     6
        The parties do not deal with the question of when
petitioners moved their legal residence from St. Tammany Parish
to Jefferson Parish, except that they stipulate that “During
* * * 1994 and 1995, petitioners were married and residing
                                                   (continued...)
                             - 14 -

     who declared under oath unto me, Notary, that he has been
     married but once and then to Sandra Martinolich Downing with
     whom he lives and resides; from whom he is separate in
     property by virtue of a marriage contract which is recorded
     in the Parish of Jefferson, in the conveyance records; * * *

The marriage contract was attached to the act of sale, which was

filed in the conveyance records of Jefferson Parish on October 8,

1991.7

     Petitioners’ renovation work on the Newman property,

included painting, roof, carpeting, and doors.   On November 15,

1993, Michael sold the Newman property for $93,500.   The check

for the net proceeds from this sale, in the amount of $31,307.06,

was made out solely to Michael.   Petitioners spent $1,600 to

$2,000 of this amount before January 1, 1994 and the remainder of

the $31,307.06 by the end of 1994.

     On March 24, 1995, Michael bought for $180,000 a house on

Metairie Court Parkway (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the

Metairie Court property) in Jefferson Parish.    The Metairie Court

property has been petitioners’ residence since March 1995.

Michael made a downpayment of $5,000 and financed the remainder

initially through Mark Margavio and then through Sanderson at 10



     6
      (...continued)
together in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana”.
     7
        The parties stipulated that this filing was “in the
conveyance records of St. Tammany Parish”. However, on brief the
parties’ statements are to the effect that this Oct. 8, 1991,
filing of the Newman property act of sale, with marriage contract
attached, was in the Jefferson Parish conveyance records. Also,
the Newman property was in Jefferson Parish. Under the
circumstances, we conclude that the parties’ stipulation on this
point was in error and our finding reflects that conclusion
rather than the parties’ stipulation.
                                - 15 -

percent interest.    The mortgage payment was $1,880.56 per month.

The 1995 mortgage payments were made by checks signed by Sandra

drawn on Premier Bank account number 5101023648.    See infra table

5.   The interest portion of these 1995 mortgage payments

aggregated $10,133.     See supra note 2, as to respondent’s

concessions.

     Both the act of sale and the mortgage on the Metairie Court

property were recorded in the Jefferson Parish conveyance records

on March 28, 1995.    Unlike the act of sale for the Newman

property, the Metairie Court property act of sale did not have

attached to it a copy of the marriage contract.    Rather, the

Metairie Court property act of sale states as follows:

     MICHAEL JOSEPH DOWNING, a person of the full age of majority
     and a resident of the Parish of JEFFERSON, State of
     LOUISIANA, who, declared unto me, Notary, that he has been
     married but once and then to Sandra Martinolich, with whom
     he is presently living and residing, and with whom he is
     separate in property by virtue of a marriage contract dated
     July 12, 1989, and annexed to act recorded as Act No. 91-
     44488, in the Parish of Jefferson, Louisiana, [the Newman
     property act of sale]

     Mailing Address:    2117 METAIRIE COURT PARKWAY, METAIRIE, LA
     70001

     here present accepting and purchasing for himself, his heirs
     and assigns, and acknowledging due delivery and possession
     thereof, all and singular the following described property
     to-wit:

The Metairie Court property mortgage includes a similar

reference; the mortgage also does not have attached to it a copy

of the marriage contract.
                                - 16 -

     2.   The Vehicles

     On December 6, 1994, Michael bought a new Ford F250 truck

for the plumbing business.    He paid $2,100 in cash and financed

the remaining $22,261.30 at an interest rate of 9.9 percent, with

monthly payments of $471.83.    In 1995, petitioners made payments

on this loan totaling $5,662.    Of this total, petitioners paid

$1,200 by check and $4,462 in cash.      See supra note 2, as to

respondent’s concessions.    Michael continued to use the truck for

business purposes in 1995.

     On August 15, 1995, Michael bought a 1993 500SL Mercedes-

Benz for $85,311.    He did not make a downpayment.   He financed

the car at an interest rate of 13.25 percent, with monthly

payments of $1,449.73.

     On September 1, 1995, Michael bought a 1994 C2 3.6 Porsche

for $108,630.61.    Again, he did not make a downpayment.   He

financed the car at an interest rate of 13.1 percent, with

monthly payments of $1,775.26.

     A Mercedes-Benz that had been bought by one or both of the

petitioners in 1992 or 1993, was stolen in 1994 or 1995.

     3. Cash Advances

     On May 30, 1994, petitioners withdrew a $2,500 cash advance

from their American Express Optima account.     On August 12, 1994,

petitioners withdrew a $3,000 cash advance from their First USA

Visa account.   On March 21, 1995, petitioners deposited a $5,000
                                - 17 -

convenience check issued by AT&T Universal Gold MasterCard into

one of their personal checking accounts.

F.     Tax Returns

       Petitioners timely filed “married filing separate” income

tax returns for both of the years in issue.       In each of these tax

returns, the respective petitioner correctly showed that

petitioner’s spouse’s name and Social Security number at the

appropriate places.    Their tax returns for 1989 through 1993 also

were “married filing separate”.

       For 1994 and 1995 petitioners reported adjusted gross income

and total tax as shown in table 3.

                               Table 3

                     Michael                      Sandra
Year      Adjusted Gross   Total Tax     Adjusted Gross     Total Tax
              Income                         Income

1994          $8,360         $1,314            $17,877       $1,068
1995           8,926          1,456             17,700          946

       On the 1994 and 1995 Schedules C, Michael reported gross

receipts, cost of goods sold, expenses, and net profit for the

plumbing business as shown in table 4.

                               Table 4

Year     Gross Receipts   Cost of Goods Sold    Expenses   Net Profit
1994        $68,758            $44,780           $14,982       $8,996
1995         82,721             54,141            18,975        9,605

       The tax returns for both petitioners were prepared by Jeanne

S. Duhé (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Duhé), a C.P.A.
                              - 18 -

G.   The Audit

     Revenue Agent Adoraliese Klimkiewicz (hereinafter sometimes

referred to as Klimkiewicz) conducted the examination of

petitioners’ tax returns.   She initially examined only Michael’s

1994 tax return, but about the end of 1996 or the beginning of

1997, she expanded the examination to include Michael’s 1995 tax

return.   Klimkiewicz did not begin to audit Sandra’s tax returns

until sometime between March and May of 1997.

     Klimkiewicz’ first meeting with petitioners or their

representatives was on or about June 19, 1996, when Klimkiewicz

met with Sandra in Duhé’s office.   At Klimkiewicz’ request,

Sandra brought to the meeting both business and personal records,

the major records being the following:   (1) All the 1994 invoices

from the plumbing business that were reported on Michael’s 1994

tax return; (2) adding-machine tapes categorized by month; (3)

Forms 1099; (4) the plumbing business and personal bank account

statements; (5) some credit card statements; and (6) some

automobile insurance documents.   At that meeting, in response to

Klimkiewicz’ question about petitioners’ cash on hand at the

beginning of 1994, Sandra said that they would have had cash on

hand from the sale of the Newman property, and that they probably

had spent all the Newman property proceeds by the end of 1994.

     On July 17, 1997, Klimkiewicz met with both petitioners and

their then representative, Sean Dawson, at Dawson’s office.    Both
                               - 19 -

petitioners told Klimkiewicz that there was a box in which the

proceeds from the Newman property and other cash savings were

kept, and that only Michael had access to this box.     Michael told

Klimkiewicz that he alone had a key to the box, and that he alone

knew the amount of cash in the box.     He also provided to

Klimkiewicz a typed statement he had prepared, indicating that,

as of January 1, 1994, he had accumulated a cash hoard of roughly

$180,000 in the box.   When Klimkiewicz asked petitioners at this

meeting how much cash remained in the box at that time, Michael

told her that, while he did not know the exact amount of cash

remaining in the box, she could determine the amount by

subtracting out--presumably from the roughly $180,000 cash hoard

that he said at this meeting had been in the box at the beginning

of 1994--the amount that she was proposing as an understatement;

the resulting amount would be the amount of cash remaining in the

box as of that date.   At trial, Michael testified that there was

roughly $60,000 to $70,000 in the box at the beginning of 1994,

and that he ran out of money in the box a year after he bought

the Metairie Court property.

     Also at the July 1997 meeting, Michael provided to

Klimkiewicz a written statement in which he indicated that he did

not use any of his cash savings from the time he was 12 until the

beginning of 1994.
                                - 20 -

        By November 1997, Klimkiewicz was no longer on the case,

having been succeeded by Mia Sylve.

H.      Bank Deposits

        Petitioners maintained four bank accounts in two separate

institutions; both petitioners were signatories on each of these

accounts.     Neither petitioner maintained a separate account

(i.e., an account as to which that petitioner, but not the other

petitioner, was a signatory) during the years in issue.

        Table 5 shows petitioners’ aggregate deposits into each

account, by account number, in each year in issue.

                                Table 5
                                                      2
    Account                      1994                  1995

    1225725403                   $8,874               $5,787
    5101046656                   48,335              114,702
    16423248061                   8,207                N/A
    5101023648                   64,936               95,409
       Total Deposits           130,352              215,898
1
    This account was closed in April 1994.
2
  Of the total 1995 deposits in these listed accounts, $200,
$5,000, and $31,475, respectively, were in cash.

The bank accounts listed in table 5 are hereinafter sometimes

referred to collectively as the listed accounts.

        All four of the listed accounts were checking accounts.    The

first and third of the listed accounts were in the Jefferson

Guaranty Bank; the second and fourth were in the Premier Bank.

The first and second of the listed accounts were business
                              - 21 -

accounts entitled “Michael Downing Plumbing Co.”; the third and

fourth were personal accounts.

      Table 6 sets forth the aggregate of the balances in the

listed accounts at the specified dates.

                              Table 6

               Dates               Aggregate Amounts

           Jan. 1, 1994                    $3,584
           Dec. 31, 1994                    2,759
           Dec. 31, 1995                    1,113

I.   Bank Deposits Method Omitted Income

      Tables 7 (for 1994) and 8 (for 1995) set forth our findings

as to the bank deposits method for determining unreported

income.8   The column headed “Respondent” takes into account

respondent’s concessions, by stipulation or otherwise, including

those made in the course of proceedings occurring after the

completion of the briefing process.9    The columns headed “Court--

Fraud” and “Court--Nonfraud” represent, respectively, our

findings based on the clear-and-convincing-evidence burden of



      8
        Although both sides refer to respondent’s analysis as
“the bank deposits method”, it appears that the better term is
“the bank deposits and cash expenditures method”. See generally
United States v. Abodeely, 801 F.2d 1020, 1023-1024 (8th Cir.
1986). For convenience, we follow the parties’ terminology and
refer to it as the bank deposits method.
      9
        In the notices of deficiency respondent determined that
unreported Schedule C gross receipts were $28,857 for 1994 and
$144,369 for 1995. As tables 7 and 8 show, respondent’s position
now is that unreported Schedule C gross receipts were $24,425 for
1994 and $84,085 for 1995.
                                  - 22 -

  proof and our findings based on the preponderance of the

  evidence.

                            Table 7--1994

        Item         Respondent       Court--Fraud     Court--Nonfraud
Total listed
accounts deposits     $130,352             $130,352      $130,352
Nontaxable
transfers              (12,142)             (12,142)      (12,142)
Gifts                     (265)                (265)         (265)
Expense checks
from LCR; rebates         (185)                (185)         (185)
Business
expenditures--cash      25,612               25,612        25,612
Personal living
expenditures--cash       6,154                4,054         4,054
Opening listed
accounts balances       (3,584)              (3,584)       (3,584)
Closing listed
accounts balances        2,759                2,759         2,759
Nontaxable cash        (39,507)             (44,907)      (40,507)
Net wages--Sandra      (16,011)             (16,011)       (16,011)
Correct Sched. C
gross receipts          93,183               85,683        90,083
Reported Sched. C
gross receipts          68,758               68,758         68,758
Unreported Sched.
C gross receipts        24,425               16,925         21,325
                                   - 23 -

                             Table 8--1995

        Item           Respondent       Court--Fraud    Court--Nonfraud
Total listed
accounts deposits       $215,898            $215,898        $215,898
Nontaxable transfers     (35,275)            (35,275)        (35,275)
Returned checks
(NSF)                     (7,132)             (7,132)         (7,132)
Gifts                       (502)               (502)           (502)
Expense checks from
LCR; rebates                (228)               (228)           (228)
Business
expenditures--cash         4,136               4,136           4,136
Personal living
expenditures--cash        11,618               6,900           6,900
Opening listed
accounts balances         (2,759)             (2,759)         (2,759)
Closing listed
accounts balances          1,113               1,113           1,113
Nontaxable cash           (4,200)             (4,200)         (4,200)
Net wages--Sandra        (15,913)            (15,913)        (15,913)
Corrected Sched. C
gross receipts           166,756             162,038         162,038
Reported Sched. C
gross receipts            82,721              82,721          82,721
Unreported Sched. C
gross receipts            84,035              79,317          79,317

        The parties’ disputes about other Schedule C items, and

   about Schedule A items, all have been resolved by stipulations,

   concessions, and deemed concessions.      These resolutions are to be

   given effect in the computations under Rule 155.
                                - 24 -

     Respondent has shown by clear and convincing evidence as to

each year in issue that:    (1) Michael understated his plumbing

business Schedule C gross receipts; (2) this understatement

resulted in an underpayment of tax; and (3) some part of this

underpayment of tax was due to Michael’s fraud.

                               OPINION

                    I.     Summary; Conclusions

     Because of its impact on the rest of the case, we first deal

with the parties’ dispute as to whether each petitioner was

required to report on that petitioner’s separate Federal income

tax return in accordance with the splits ordinarily required by

Louisiana’s community property regime.    We agree with petitioners

that they were not so required.    Respondent conceded that, if we

so held, then Sandra had no deficiencies and no additions to tax;

that concession will be given effect in our decision.10

     We then consider the fraud issue.    We agree with respondent

that respondent has shown by clear and convincing evidence that

Michael has an underpayment of tax for each year and that part of

each year’s underpayment is due to Michael’s fraud.    Our

redeterminations as to amounts agree largely, but not entirely,

with respondent’s determinations as modified by the parties’

stipulations and respondent’s concessions.



     10
        Sandra nevertheless remains a party in the instant case.
DeLucia v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 804 (1986).
                               - 25 -

                    II.   The Marriage Contract

     Respondent contends that, during the years in issue, the

marriage contract was not effective toward third persons because

petitioners failed to properly record it.    Respondent also

contends that, even if the marriage contract was properly

recorded, it was nevertheless not effective because petitioners

did not conduct their financial affairs in accordance with the

contract’s terms.

     Petitioners maintain11 that:   (1) The marriage contract was

properly recorded at all relevant times; and (2) they complied

with the terms of their marriage contract.

     We agree with petitioners that the marriage contract was

properly recorded at all relevant times, and that it was

effective during the years in issue.12


     11
        Petitioners also maintain that respondent is not a third
person protected by the filing requirements of La. Civ. Code Ann.
art. 2332 (West 1985). Because we conclude that petitioners’
marriage contract was properly recorded at all relevant times, we
need not address this contention.
     12
        It was apparent before the trial that petitioners’
contentions on this issue, if successful, would amount to a
victory for Sandra but would expose Michael to the potential of
an increased deficiency. This conflict between the individual
interests of Sandra and Michael was noted before the trial. The
Court discussed this matter with counsel for both sides and both
petitioners, ensemble. On the basis of the discussion in
chambers and the statements on the record, the Court is satisfied
(a) that petitioners’ counsel had previously explained the
conflict to both petitioners and it was again explained in
chambers, (b) that both petitioners previously understood the
matter and that both petitioners understood the matter
                                                   (continued...)
                             - 26 -



     Both questions before us appear to be matters of first

impression, and both sides maintain that our determination as to

the role of the marriage contract depends on Louisiana law.   In

the absence of any Louisiana court opinion resolving these

matters, we make our own analysis of what Louisiana law provides.

See Commissioner v. Estate of Bosch, 387 U.S. 456, 465 (1967).

     We consider first whether a marriage contract, which was

properly filed for registry in the parish in which petitioners

were domiciled at the time of this filing, must also be filed for

registry in a different parish for the marriage contract to be

effective toward third persons as to movables,13 if petitioners

have in the meanwhile become domiciled14 in that different

parish.


     12
      (...continued)
immediately before and during the trial, and (c) that both
petitioners intended that their counsel (1) continue to represent
both of them simultaneously in the instant case and (2) continue
to present in the instant case contentions which exposed Michael
to the potential of increased liabilities. See Rule 24(g)(2).
     13
        Both sides treat the matter before us as being
controlled entirely by the rules as to movables; under the
circumstances, we limit our determinations to the dispute that
the parties present.
     14
        The Louisiana statutory term is “domiciled”. From time
to time we refer to “residing”, or to “moving”. We intend
thereby to deal only with residence that constitutes domicile,
and with moving that constitutes changes of domicile, within the
meaning of that term in art. 2332.

     Unless indicated otherwise, all article references are to
the articles of the Louisiana Civil Code Annotated (West 1985).
                                - 27 -

A.   General Rules; Statutes

      Louisiana law provides that “A matrimonial regime[15] may be

legal, contractual, or partly legal and partly contractual.”

Art. 2326.    Under Louisiana law, “The legal regime of community

of acquets and gains applies to spouses domiciled in this state”

(art. 2334), and “Each spouse owns a present undivided one-half

interest in the community property”, art. 2336.    As a result, a

Louisiana married person under the legal regime is taxable under

Federal law on one-half the earnings of his or her spouse.

United States v. Mitchell, 403 U.S. 190 (1971); see Case of

Hamner, 411 So.2d 567, 568-569 (La. App. 1st Cir. 1982), revd. on

a different issue 427 So.2d 1188 (La. 1983).

      The “legal” regime is commonly referred to as “community

property”.    The “contractual” regime alternative referred to in

article 2326, is authorized in article 2328, as follows:

           A matrimonial agreement is a contract establishing
      a regime of separation of property or modifying or
      terminating the legal regime. Spouses are free to
      establish by matrimonial agreement a regime of
      separation of property or modify the legal regime as
      provided by law. The provisions of the legal regime
      that have not been excluded or modified by agreement
      retain their force and effect.

      Under article 2331--



      15
           Art. 2325 provides the following definition:

           A matrimonial regime is a system of principles and
      rules governing the ownership and management of the
      property of married persons as between themselves and
      toward third persons.
                              - 28 -

           A matrimonial agreement may be executed by the
      spouses before or during marriage. It shall be made by
      authentic act or by an act under private signature duly
      acknowledged by the spouses.

Under article 2336--

      the spouses may, without court approval, voluntarily
      partition the community property in whole or in part.
      In such a case, the things that each spouse acquires
      are separate property. The partition is effective
      toward third persons when filed for registry in the
      manner provided by Article 2332.

Article 2332, entitled “Effect toward third persons”, provides in

entirety as follows:

           A matrimonial agreement, or a judgment
      establishing a regime of separation of property is
      effective toward third persons as to immovable
      property, when filed for registry in the conveyance
      records of the parish in which the property is situated
      and as to movables when filed for registry in the
      parish or parishes in which the spouses are domiciled.

B.   Effect of the Marriage Contract

      The parties initially dispute whether the marriage

contract,16 which concededly was “filed for registry” in St.

Tammany Parish on July 14, 1989, also had to be “filed for

registry” in Jefferson parish at some point before the years in




      16
        Both sides use the term “marriage contract”, rather than
the statutory term “matrimonial agreement”. For convenience, we
will follow the parties’ terminology.
                              - 29 -

issue,17 in order to be effective toward third persons as to

movables during the years in issue.18

     The parties agree that this is a matter of first impression

under Louisiana law and present this matter to us for decision in

the instant case.   Both sides direct our attention to 16 Spaht &

Hargrave, Louisiana Civil Law Treatise, Matrimonial Regimes (West

2d ed. 1997), hereinafter sometimes referred to as 16 Spaht &

Hargrave.19




     17
        Both sides agree that the marriage contract was “filed
for registry” in Jefferson Parish on Feb. 2, 2000, but this
filing is not effective toward third persons for the years in
issue.
     18
        The instant case does not present any question or
contention as to whether--

          (1) the marriage contract resulted in a matrimonial
     regime that was partly legal and partly contractual (art.
     2326);

          (2) the marriage contract involved matters prohibited
     by public policy (art. 2329);

          (3) the marriage contract violated any of the limits of
     contractual freedom set forth in art. 2330 or established
     under any other Louisiana law;

          (4) the marriage contract violated any of the
     requirements as to form set forth in art. 2331 or
     established under any other Louisiana law; or

          (5) Sandra’s efforts on behalf of the plumbing business
     result in a recognition of some amount of income to Sandra
     because of the operation of art. 2368.
     19
        Petitioners’ citations are to the 1989 edition; the
texts and section numbers of the matters petitioners referred to
appear to be unchanged in the 1997 edition, but the page numbers
are different.
                              - 30 -

     Article 2332 on its face requires that the filing be in the

parish of the property’s situs as to immovables and in the parish

or parishes of the spouses’ domicile as to movables.   The 1989

filing in St. Tammany Parish complied with the requirements as to

movables in 1989.   Although Louisiana law permits a filing of a

marriage contract that applies to some movables but not to

others, the marriage contract involved in the instant case

applied by its terms to all future acquired movables and to the

fruits of all their separate properties.   Thus, respondent has

not suggested that any later filings would have been required

under article 2332 merely because of the passage of time or

because the movables relevant to 1994 and 1995 did not exist at

the time of the 1989 St. Tammany Parish filing.   See, e.g.,

article 2339, relating to fruits of movables.

     The statute does not provide, in terms, that a change in

domicile requires a change in filing situs as to movables, where

there already has been a properly sited filing.   Article 2332

does refer to “the parish or parishes in which the spouses are

domiciled.”   (Emphasis added.)   However, comment (b) to article

2332 suggests that the words “or parishes” merely reflects a

recognition that spouses might be domiciled in separate parishes,

as a result of the repeal of Louisiana law which had provided

that “A married woman has no other domicile than that of her
                               - 31 -

husband.”    16 Spaht & Hargrave, sec. 8.5, n.9 and associated

text.

     We have not been directed to, and our research has not

disclosed, anything in the legislative history of the enactment

of article 2332 that suggests that the words “or parishes” were

intended to require new filings in the circumstances of the

instant case.20

     Respondent raises the concern that a ruling in favor of

petitioners--

     would mean that third parties would have to search the
     conveyance records of each of the 64 parishes in the State
     of Louisiana in order to assure themselves that the parties
     had not filed a matrimonial agreement that would affect the
     third parties’ right as to petitioners’ movables. * * *
     Respondent submits that this result would be completely
     contradictory to the purpose of La. Civ. Code art. 2332
     (West 1985), which provides in a clear and straightforward


        20
        Spaht and Hargrave note as follows (16 Spaht & Hargrave,
sec. 8.5):

     Indeed, when the legislation was drafted, central statewide
     registry of matrimonial agreements was part of the proposal,
     rendering unnecessary a continuing registration as spouses
     moved about the state. That proposal was defeated,
     however.10 The result is that in a mobile society, third
     persons are not well protected with respect to matrimonial
     agreements that were contracted when the spouses were
     domiciled elsewhere. In a crucial situation, a search of
     the records in 64 parishes would be required to ascertain
     with certainty that no such agreement was recorded in the
     state.
     10
        K. Spaht and C. Samuel, Equal Management Revisited: 1979
     Legislative Modifications of the 1978 Matrimonial Regimes
     Law, 40 La. L. Rev. 84, 106; La. H.B. No. 802, 5th Reg.
     Sess. (1979).
                               - 32 -

     fashion that with respect to movables, to be effective as to
     third parties, the agreement must be filed in the parish or
     parishes where the spouses are domiciled. The most sensible
     reading of this article is that third parties are not
     required to research the records of all 64 parishes, but
     rather are entitled to rely on what is or is not filed for
     registry in the records of the parish where the spouses are
     domiciled.

     However, respondent overlooks the burdens that respondent’s

rule might impose on spouses who move.   Would respondent’s rule

require that a refiling be accomplished before or on the date of

domicile change, or would there be a standard grace period after

the domicile change?   Who is better able to negotiate their

respective burdens, third parties who look to assets to satisfy

existing debts or to assure payments of prospective advances of

funds or credit, or spouses who may not be represented by counsel

and may be surprised to learn that a filing they had thought was

good-until-revoked-or-modified, had in fact been rendered

ineffective.   In this regard, the same increase in mobility that

creates the danger of imposing more burdens on third persons also

creates the danger of removing more protections from

unsophisticated spouses.

     We do not mean to make light of the concerns respondent

describes.   We suggest that the weighing of these and contrary

concerns are properly within the province of Louisiana’s

lawmaking structure.   We decline to go further than what the

statute in terms prescribes.   We conclude that, under art. 2332,
                                - 33 -

the marriage contract was properly recorded and that it was

effective during the years in issue.

     We must note, however, that the foregoing discussion, in

response to the parties’ focus, deals with the rights of third

persons, as against the spouses’ movables.   However, the question

that we must ultimately rule on is not a matter of what assets

respondent may look to in order to satisfy the liabilities of

either or both petitioners, but rather whether each petitioner

has a present undivided interest in the earnings of the other

spouse, for it is that present undivided interest that is the

foundation of the community property Federal income tax rules.

United States v. Mitchell, 403 U.S. 190 (1971).   In that light,

we conclude that Spaht’s and Hargrave’s analysis which closes the

cited section in their treatise (16 Spaht & Hargrave, sec. 8.5)

is particularly illuminating.

         Under Civil Code Article 2332, matrimonial agreements
    do not have to be recorded to be valid. It may well suit a
    couple to deal with third persons as though they were under
    the legal community regime, especially as to contracting
    debts and alienating assets, but to have a different regime
    as between themselves. Some persons may simply want to keep
    such matters private. Whatever the reason, there is nothing
    to require them to make such agreements public so long as
    third persons are not injured in the process.21 Their
    heirs, of course, would not qualify as protected third
    persons because they would be successors.22 It is required,
    however, that the agreement be in writing and that it be
    either “made by authentic act or by an act under private
    signature duly acknowledged by the spouses.”23
    ___________________
    21
       Comment, Marital Property Agreements--Being Creative
    with the New Legislation, 43 La. L. Rev. 159 (1982).
                                - 34 -

      22
         La. Civ. Code arts. 880 et seq., 3506(28); La. R.S.
      9:2722.
      23
           La. Civ. Code art. 2331.

      The existence of the marriage contract has been conclusively

established.    The text of the marriage contract has been

conclusively established.    On the basis of the record in the

instant case, we conclude that respondent has not been injured.

C.   Failure To Conform With the Contract’s Terms

      Respondent contends in the alternative that petitioners’

failure to conform to the terms of their marriage contract

rendered the contract ineffective.

      Respondent has not directed our attention to any Louisiana

law, or to any other authority for that matter, that specifically

addresses this issue.    In fact, respondent acknowledges on brief

that respondent was unable to find any case that directly

addresses this issue.    In our own search, we likewise have been

unable to find any authority that supports respondent’s

contention.    Nevertheless, we need not decide whether in the

abstract spouses’ failure to conform to the terms of their

marriage contract can render it ineffective because, even if

respondent is correct, we conclude that petitioners substantially

conformed to the terms of their marriage contract.

      In evaluating the evidence in the instant case, we are

mindful that “‘agreements legally entered into have the effect of

laws on those who form them.    R.C.C. Art. 1901 * * * Arkansas
                               - 35 -

Fuel Oil Corporation v. Puccio, 141 So. 2d 516, [520 (La App.

1962)]’”.   Morgavi v. Mumme, 270 So. 2d 540, 543 (La. 1972)

(quoting Succession of Caine v. Tanho Land and Cattle Co., 198

So. 2d 439, 444 (La. App. 1967)).    “[C]ourts are bound to give

effect to all contracts according to the true intent of the

parties when the language is clear and leads to no absurd

consequences.”    Stack v. De Soto Properties, Inc., 59 So. 2d 428,

430 (La. 1952).

     Respondent asserts on opening brief that a court may

consider

     evidence on the extent to which the parties to the
     matrimonial agreement are fulfilling the stipulations of the
     contract, i.e., whether or not and to what extent the two
     actually share income notwithstanding the existence of the
     matrimonial agreement. Knoepfler v. Knoepfler, 553 So.2d
     1031, 1032 (La. App. 1989).

Respondent argues that the evidence in the instant case clearly

shows that petitioners did not comply with the terms of their

marriage contract because (1) petitioners commingled all their

income into four joint checking accounts, (2) petitioners had

signature authority on all bank accounts, (3) petitioners

transferred funds between the business and personal checking

accounts; and (4) petitioners paid business expenses from

personal accounts, and vice versa.

     Petitioners reply that they “merely pooled their resources

to provide for the expenses of the marriage”.    They point to the

fact that they filed separate tax returns for each year in issue
                               - 36 -

and that they bought “all their [large] property and other

assets” separately as evidence that they did, indeed, conform to

the terms of their marriage contract.

     We agree with petitioners’ conclusions for the following

reasons.

     Firstly, because respondent relies on Knoepfler v.

Knoepfler, supra, and that case has some surface similarities to

the instant case, it may be appropriate to examine more deeply

the setting of Knoepfler and the expressed rationale of the

Louisiana courts.    Knoepfler v. Knoepfler, supra, was a dispute

about the level of required child support obligations, the

parents having divorced each other and each having married a new

spouse.    The father had been ordered to pay child support.   The

father moved to decrease the amount of child support; the mother

responded with a petition to increase the amount of child

support.   At the trial court hearing, the father:

     introduced into evidence the matrimonial agreement in which
     Mr. Knoepfler and his second spouse established a separation
     of property regime. The [trial] court disallowed testimony
     as to the intent behind the agreement. The court stated
     that he was “not considering the [second] wife’s income.”
     553 So. 2d at 1032.

     The trial court decreased the amount of child support.     The

mother appealed, assigning as error (1) the trial court’s refusal

to consider the income of the father’s second spouse and (2) the

trial court’s conclusion that the evidence showed a change in

circumstances which could justify the reduction.     553 So. 2d at
                                - 37 -

1032-1033.   The appellate court reversed the reduction of child

support, agreeing with the mother on the second assignment of

error, relating to changes in circumstances.    553 So. 2d at 1033.

However, the appellate court upheld the trial court’s refusal to

take into account the income of the father’s second spouse, based

on the evidence in the record.    The appellate court stated as

follows (553 So. 2d at 1032):

          We note, however, that our decision in Alt [v. Alt, 453
     So. 2d 400, 402 (La. App. 4th Cir. 1983),] does not in any
     way preclude the taking of evidence on the extent to which
     the parties to the matrimonial agreement are fulfilling the
     stipulations of the contract, i.e., whether or not and to
     what extent the two actually share income notwithstanding
     the existence of the matrimonial agreement. To rule
     otherwise would enable a parent to circumvent his child
     support obligation by executing, but never giving effect to,
     a marriage contract establishing a separation of property
     regime.

     The appellate court explained the suggestion permitting

inquiry into “the extent to which the parties to the matrimonial

agreement are fulfilling the stipulations of the contract” as

being necessary in order to stop a parent from circumventing his

child support obligation.   The appellate court did not take the

position that such inquiries are proper to test all marriage

contracts.   In the instant case there is not any contention that

the marriage contract circumvents any obligation that either

petitioner may have toward respondent or any other person that

respondent seeks to protect.
                              - 38 -

     The appellate court in Knoepfler did not describe the

inquiry in terms of the validity of the marriage contract (i.e.,

whether the spouse owns a present undivided interest in the

earnings of the other spouse), but only whether the other

spouse’s income ought to be taken into account in applying

Louisiana’s child support laws.   553 So. 2d 1032-1033.   In the

instant case, the only inquiry is as to the validity of the

marriage contract in order to decide whether Sandra and Michael

each had a present undivided interest in the earnings of the

other.

     Secondly, all of the opinions cited by respondent discuss

commingling in terms of mixing separate property with community

property, not separate property with separate property.    See,

e.g., Thibodaux v. Thibodaux, 577 So. 2d 758 (La. App. 1st Cir.

1991).   Even so, those cases hold that depositing separate funds

and community funds into the same bank account does not

necessarily “extinguish the separate character of either the

husband’s or the wife’s separate funds; only indiscriminate

commingling, so that one cannot identify or differentiate among

the funds, results in the account being deemed community.”

McMorris v. McMorris, 654 So. 2d 742, 746 (La. App. 1st Cir.

1995).   Thus, even when separate funds are mixed with community

funds, it is only when those funds are “indiscriminately
                              - 39 -

commingled” such that they cannot be traced to their separate

source that they are deemed community.   Curtis v. Curtis, 403 So.

2d 56, 59 (La. 1981).   Such treatment is consistent with the

presumption of community property in Louisiana.   See La. Civ.

Code Ann. art. 2340 (West 1985).

     Applying those holdings to the instant case, respondent

argues that it is impossible to trace the funds petitioners used

from their joint accounts back to the separate funds of either

spouse because petitioners did not “make any effort to track

payments on allegedly separate assets, * * * in order to

establish what was paid for with separate funds.”     It is unclear

from the record, however, whether petitioners were asked or even

attempted to track the payments.   Moreover, we do not think such

tracking is required.   Unlike in the cases cited above, the legal

presumption that the spouses are living in community does not

apply in the instant case because, as we concluded, supra,

petitioners’ marriage contract was properly recorded during the

years in issue.   See 16 Spaht & Hargrave sec. 4.7.   Further, we

are not deciding the character of the funds petitioners deposited

into their joint accounts, but rather, we are deciding whether

petitioners’ asserted indiscriminate commingling of separate

funds with other separate funds invalidates petitioners’ marriage

contract.   We do not think it does.

     Thirdly, the documents relating to the Newman property and

the Metairie Court property list only Michael as the owner of
                              - 40 -

those properties.   While it is true, as respondent argues, that

the fact that “property is in the name of only one spouse and

there is a statement of paraphernality in the act of sale does

not change” the presumption that “all property acquired during

marriage is presumed to belong to the community”, Cheramie v. St.

Pierre, 382 So. 2d 1003, 1006 (La. App. 1st Cir. 1980), it is

also true that “If the spouses are living under a separate

property regime, the presumption does not apply.”   16 Spaht &

Hargrave, sec. 4.7.   Because we found, supra, that petitioners

properly recorded their marriage contract, there is no applicable

presumption that petitioners’ property is community property.

Thus, the facts that (1) only Michael’s name was on the documents

relating to petitioners’ residences and (2) the documents of sale

recite that Michael was “separate in property” from his wife

support petitioners’ contention that they were complying with the

terms of their marriage contract.

     Fourthly, we note that petitioners filed separate tax

returns for the years in issue, using the filing status “married

filing separate”.   Respondent argues that the mere fact that

petitioners filed separate tax returns does not prove that

petitioners were separate in property under Louisiana law.   We

agree.   This fact, however, is evidence that petitioners viewed

and treated their respective earnings as their separate property.
                                - 41 -

     In concluding that Louisiana property law determines

ownership for purposes of Federal income taxation in the instant

case, we are aware of our prior decisions holding that in some

circumstances we would ignore State law as to property ownership.

For example, we have held that a trust, valid under State law,

may be treated as a nullity for Federal income tax purposes if it

lacks economic reality.   See Markosian v. Commissioner, 73 T.C.

1235, 1241 (1980); Furman v. Commissioner, 45 T.C. 360, 364

(1966), affd. 381 F.2d 22 (5th Cir. 1967); see also Audano v.

United States, 428 F.2d 251, 257-259 (5th Cir. 1970).      In those

cases, we looked at whether there were any economic changes to

the donors other than changes to their Federal income tax

liability.   In Furman, we indicated that it was the “extreme

case” where we would disregard for Federal income tax purposes

the existence of a trust valid under State law.      Furman v.

Commissioner, 45 T.C. at 366.

     In the instant case, petitioners entered into the marriage

contract, among other reasons, to prevent Rucker from aggregating

petitioners’ incomes in an attempt to reduce or eliminate his

child support obligations.   Comparisons of Sandra’s and Michael’s

Federal income tax returns plainly show that they are not under a

community property marriage regime.      This is not one of those

“extreme cases” that calls for us to disregard a contract valid

under State law for Federal income tax purposes.
                                - 42 -

     We conclude that petitioners’ marriage contract was

effective during the years in issue.

     We hold for petitioners on this issue.

                             III.   Fraud

     Respondent contends (1) that Michael underpaid his taxes for

each year in issue, and (2) that all or part of his underpayments

are due to fraud, and, thus, Michael is liable for the fraud

penalties under section 6663.

     Petitioners acknowledge that Michael may have underpaid his

taxes for each year in issue, but maintain that any underpayment

was not due to fraud because Michael lacked the requisite

fraudulent intent.

     We agree with respondent.

     When respondent seeks to impose the penalty under section

6663,21   respondent has the burden of proof.   To carry this



     21
          SEC. 6663.   IMPOSITION OF FRAUD PENALTY

          (a) Imposition of Penalty.-- If any part of any
     underpayment of tax required to be shown on a return is due
     to fraud, there shall be added to the tax an amount equal to
     75 percent of the portion of the underpayment which is
     attributable to fraud.

          (b) Determination of Portion Attributable to Fraud.--
     If the Secretary establishes that any portion of an
     underpayment is attributable to fraud, the entire
     underpayment shall be treated as attributable to fraud,
     except with respect to any portion of the underpayment which
     the taxpayer establishes (by a preponderance of the
     evidence) is not attributable to fraud.
                                 - 43 -

burden for a year, respondent must prove two elements, as

follows:    (1) That Michael has an underpayment of tax for that

year, and (2) that some part of the underpayment is due to fraud.

See sec. 7454(a);22 Rule 142(b); see, e.g., Carter v. Campbell,

264 F.2d 930, 936 (5th Cir. 1959); Stone v. Commissioner, 56 T.C.

213, 220 (1971); Otsuki v. Commissioner, 53 T.C. 96, 105-106

(1969).23    Each of the elements must be proven by clear and

convincing evidence.     See DiLeo v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. 858, 873

(1991), affd. 959 F.2d 16 (2d Cir. 1992); Parks v. Commissioner,

94 T.C. 654, 663-664 (1990).

     For this purpose, respondent need not prove the precise

amount of the underpayment resulting from fraud, but only that

there is some underpayment and that some part of it is

attributable to fraud.     See, e.g., Lee v. United States, 466 F.2d

11, 16-17 (5th Cir. 1972);     Plunkett v. Commissioner, 465 F.2d

299, 303 (7th Cir. 1972), affg. T.C. Memo. 1970-274.     In carrying

this burden, respondent may not rely on petitioners’ failure to


     22
           SEC. 7454.   BURDEN OF PROOF IN FRAUD, FOUNDATION
                         MANAGER, AND TRANSFEREE CASES.

          (a) Fraud.-- In any proceeding involving the issue
     whether the petitioner has been guilty of fraud with intent
     to evade tax, the burden of proof in respect of such issue
     shall be upon the Secretary.
     23
        The elements of fraud under sec. 6663 are essentially
the same as those we considered under sec. 6653(b) of prior law.
See also Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 533,
547-548 (2000); Clayton v. Commissioner, 102 T.C. 632, 652-653
(1994); Houser v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. 184, 185 n.1 (1991).
                                - 44 -

meet their burden of proving error in respondent’s determinations

as to the deficiencies.   See, e.g., Petzoldt v. Commissioner, 92

T.C. 661, 700 (1989); Habersham-Bey v. Commissioner, 78 T.C. 304,

312 (1982), and cases cited therein.

     Where fraud is determined for each of several years,

respondent’s burden applies separately for each of the years.

See Estate of Stein v. Commissioner, 25 T.C. 940, 959-963 (1956),

affd. sub nom. Levine v. Commissioner, 250 F.2d 798 (2d Cir.

1958); McLaughlin v. Commissioner, 29 B.T.A. 247, 249 (1933).     A

mere understatement of income does not establish fraud.     See

Estate of Mazzoni v. Commissioner, 451 F.2d 197, 202 (3d Cir.

1971), affg. T.C. Memos. 1970-144 & 1970-37; Otsuki v.

Commissioner, 53 T.C. at 108.

     In order to establish fraud as to Michael, respondent must

show that Michael intended to evade taxes which Michael knew or

believed were owed, by conduct intended to conceal, mislead, or

otherwise prevent the collection of taxes.   See, e.g., Grossman

v. Commissioner, 182 F.3d 275, 277 (4th Cir. 1999), affg. T.C.

Memo. 1996-452; Powell v. Granquist, 252 F.2d 56, 60 (9th Cir.

1958); Danenberg v. Commissioner, 73 T.C. 370, 393 (1979); McGee

v. Commissioner, 61 T.C. 249, 256-257 (1973), affd. 519 F.2d 1121

(5th Cir. 1975).   This intent may be inferred from circumstantial

evidence, see Powell v. Granquist, 252 F.2d at 61; Gajewski v.

Commissioner, 67 T.C. 181, 200 (1976), affd. without published
                                - 45 -

opinion 578 F.2d 1383 (8th Cir. 1978), including the

implausibility of petitioners’ explanations.     See Bradford v.

Commissioner, 796 F.2d 303, 307 (9th Cir. 1986)(and cases cited

therein), affg. T.C. Memo. 1984-601; Boyett v. Commissioner, 204

F.2d 205, 208 (5th Cir. 1953), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this

Court dated March 14, 1951.

A.   Underpayment

     Respondent used the bank deposits method to determine

Michael’s income for the years in issue.     Supra note 8.    It is

well settled that bank deposits are evidence of income where the

deposits were made by the party charged with the income or to an

account controlled by the party charged with the income.

Tokarski v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 74, 77 (1986).     The premise

underlying the bank deposits method of income reconstruction is

that, absent some explanation, a taxpayer’s bank deposits

represent income subject to income tax.     DiLeo v. Commissioner,

96 T.C. at 868.     The use of the bank deposits method of income

reconstruction has long been sanctioned by the courts.       In using

this method, respondent must take into account any nontaxable

deposits or deductible expenses of which respondent has

knowledge.   Id.

     We have held that, where respondent has the burden of proof

in a bank deposits case, e.g., where respondent has determined

that a taxpayer has committed tax fraud, then--
                                - 46 -

          Respondent can satisfy * * * [the] burden of proving
     the first prong of the fraud test, i.e., an underpayment,
     when the allegations of fraud are intertwined with
     unreported and indirectly reconstructed income in one of two
     ways. Parks v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. at 661. Respondent
     may prove an underpayment by proving a likely source of the
     unreported income. Holland v. United States, 348 U.S. 121
     (1954); Parks v. Commissioner, supra at 661; Nicholas v.
     Commissioner, 70 T.C. * * * [1057,] 1066 [(1978)].
     Alternatively, where the taxpayer alleges a nontaxable
     source, respondent may satisfy * * * [the] burden by
     disproving the nontaxable source so alleged. United States
     v. Massei, 335 U.S. 595 (1958); Parks v. Commissioner, supra
     at 661. [DiLeo v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. at 873.]

     In the notices of deficiency, respondent determined that, in

essence, every element of each year’s underpayment was due to

fraud.     On brief, respondent’s fraud contentions focus entirely

on the unreported Schedule C receipts.

     We consider the elements of the bank deposit analysis (supra

tables 7 and 8), in order to determine whether, as to each year

in issue, respondent has shown by clear and convincing evidence

that there was unreported Schedule C income and that this

produced an underpayment of tax.

     (1)    Total Listed Accounts Deposits

     The parties stipulated that the total bank deposits were

$130,352 in 1994 and $215,898 in 1995.

     (2)    Nontaxable Transfers

     The parties stipulated that the nontaxable transfers were

$12,142 in 1994 and not less than $35,275 in 1995.24


     24
           Of this 1995 total, $29,275 was stipulated before trial,
                                                      (continued...)
                              - 47 -

Petitioners’ only contentions as to the 1995 nontaxable transfers

were among the items respondent conceded in the postbrief actions

referred to supra note 24.   The parties’ postbriefs concessions

are taken into account in tables 7 and 8, supra.

     (3)   Returned Checks (NSF)

     The parties stipulated that returned checks (insufficient

funds) were not less than $7,132 in 1995.25   Petitioners’ only

contention as to the 1995 returned checks (insufficient funds)

was among the items respondent conceded in the postbriefs actions

referred to supra note 24.

     (4)   Gifts

     The parties stipulated petitioners received as gifts from

relatives checks and cash that were deposited totaling “no less

than” $265 in 1994 and “no less than” $502 in 1995.26

     On opening brief, petitioners contend that Sandra

“calculated” that petitioners’ bank deposits included cash gifts

from relatives in the amounts of “about” $2,490 in 1994 and

“about” $5,235 in 1995.   On answering brief, petitioners contend


     24
      (...continued)
and $6,000 was agreed to in proceedings under a motion to reopen
the record after the answering briefs were filed.
     25
         Of this 1995 total, $7,082 was stipulated before trial
and $50 was agreed to in the postbriefs actions referred to supra
note 24.
     26
        Of this 1995 total, $402 was stipulated before the trial
and $100 was agreed to in the postbriefs actions referred to
supra note 24.
                              - 48 -

that the correct total amounts of cash and checks are $3,208 in

1994 (an increase of $2,943 from the stipulation) and $3,276 in

1995 (an increase of $2,874 from the stipulation).    On answering

brief, petitioners contend that $1,000 cash was deposited into

the Premier Bank personal account.     Although petitioners have not

directed our attention to evidence of record, our examination

shows that this deposit is listed on Exhibit 40-J (p.1).    On

answering brief, petitioners further state that this $1,000 was

“for Mrs. Downing’s birthday”.   Petitioners have not directed our

attention to evidence of record on this latter point, which we

gather to be an implicit assertion that the $1,000 was a gift,

and we have not found any such evidence.    Respondent has the

burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that there is

an underpayment, but respondent cannot properly be charged with

negativing theoretical possibilities first asserted on answering

brief without foundation in the evidentiary record.

     We are satisfied that the stipulated gift deposits are all

that should be allowed (except for the $100 discussed in note 26,

supra), for the following reasons:

     (a)   On neither opening nor answering brief have petitioners

directed our attention to any evidence in the record that

supports the numbers for which they contend, or any other amounts

that exceed the stipulated minima.
                              - 49 -

     (b)   Petitioners do not explain the differences between

their contended-for amounts in their opening and answering

briefs.

     (c)   Sandra testified that her mother typically bought

savings bonds for Rachel and Sean, and that her mother kept the

bonds until well after the years in issue.   Clearly, those gifts

(whatever their amounts) would not have been deposited in any of

the listed accounts in 1994 or 1995, or otherwise spent by

petitioners in those years, and so no adjustment should be made

on account of those 1994 gifts or 1995 gifts.

     (d)   On answering brief, petitioners explain their lack of

evidence on this issue by stating “that Petitioners were

unsuccessful in persuading any of the relatives to attend the

trial as a witness despite numerous efforts.”   However, although

petitioners’ witness list includes four close relatives, none of

these relatives was to testify about gifts from them (or from any

other relatives they were aware of) in 1994 or 1995.

     Under these circumstances we conclude that the reason

petitioners did not have evidence of additional gifts that were

deposited is that there were not any such additional gifts.     We

hold that respondent has established by clear and convincing

evidence the correctness of the table 7 and 8 adjustments on

account of gifts.
                                - 50 -

     (5)    Expense Checks From LCR; Rebates

     Petitioners do not dispute the adjustments on account of

expense reimbursement checks from LCR (Sandra’s employer) and

rebate checks, as shown in tables 7 and 8, supra.

     (6)    Business Expenditures--Cash

     Respondent contends that, to the extent petitioners made

business expenditures in cash that did not go through bank

accounts, petitioners had sources of income in addition to the

amounts they deposited into the bank accounts.      Petitioners

contend (a) they had nontaxable sources of cash, chiefly family

gifts (discussed supra) and the cash hoard (discussed infra), and

(b) their business cash expenditures amounted to less than the

amounts for which respondent contends.

     (a)     1994.--Respondent contends petitioners made $25,612

business expenditures in cash in 1994.      Petitioners contend on

answering brief the correct amount is only $18,308.      Both sides

calculate the cash expenditures by starting with “total

expenditures reported” of $64,070.       Both sides subtract from this

amount, $4,100 telephone expenses and $624 insurance expenses.

Respondent further subtracts $29,969 (business checks) and $3,765

(credit cards), totaling $33,734.    Petitioners contend that

$41,038 business expenditures were made by check and credit

cards.     Thus, the difference between the parties on this matter

is accounted for entirely by the differences in their contentions
                              - 51 -

as to business expenditures made by check and business

expenditures made by credit card.

     Respondent’s numbers on these two items are the numbers that

the parties stipulated.   Petitioners’ numbers are contrary to the

stipulations.   The stipulations are binding, unless the parties

agree otherwise or the Court relieves a party from the binding

effect “where justice requires.”    Rule 91(e).   Petitioners have

not asked to be relieved from these stipulation, and nothing has

been brought to the Court’s attention that leads us to conclude

that justice so requires.   Elec. Arts, Inc. v. Commissioner, 118

T.C. 226, 253 (2002).

     We hold that respondent has established by clear and

convincing evidence the correctness of the 1994 adjustment (supra

table 7) on account of business expenditures made by cash.

     (b) 1995.--Respondent contends petitioners made $4,136

business expenditures in cash in 1995.27   Petitioners contend on

answering brief the correct amount is zero.    Both sides calculate

the cash expenditures by starting with “total expenditures

reported” of $80,615.   Both sides subtract from this amount,

$4,600 telephone expenses and $1,250 insurance expenses.


     27
        Respondent’s contention on brief was $5,534. However,
in the postbriefs proceedings (supra note 24) respondent conceded
that three checks for Ford F250 truck payments (total $1,200) and
one check for truck insurance ($198) should be added to the
stipulated business expenditures made by check. This concession
reduces pro tanto respondent’s contention as to cash business
expenditures.
                              - 52 -

Respondent further subtracts $66,412 (business checks--$65,014

plus $1,200 plus $198) and $4,217 (credit cards), totaling

$70,629.   Petitioners contend that $82,576 business expenditures

was made by checks and credit cards.   Thus, the difference

between the parties on this matter is accounted for entirely by

the differences in their contentions as to business expenditures

made by check and business expenditures made by credit card.

     Respondent’s numbers on these two items are the numbers that

the parties stipulated, adjusted to include respondent’s

postbriefs concessions.   Supra note 24.   As we noted in

discussing the 1994 cash business expenditures, the parties are

bound by their stipulations, and we hold that respondent has

established by clear and convincing evidence the correctness of

the 1995 adjustment (supra table 8) on account of business

expenditures made by cash.

     (7)   Personal Living Expenditures--Cash

     Respondent contends that, to the extent petitioners made

personal living expenditures in cash that did not go through the

bank accounts, petitioners had sources of income in addition to

the amounts they deposited into the bank accounts.   Petitioners

contend (1) respondent included certain cash expenditures in this

category that are not personal living expenditures, and (2)

respondent included certain expenditures in this category that

are not cash expenditures.
                              - 53 -

     (a) 1994.--Respondent contends that petitioners made $6,154

personal living expenditures in cash in 1994.   Petitioners

contend the correct amount is only $1,216.

     Respondent treats as a personal cash expenditure the $2,100

cash downpayment petitioners made for the Ford F250 truck.    We

agree with petitioners that the $2,100 is a business cash

expenditure, and that it should not be included in the personal

expenditure category.   The $2,100 is a part of the $25,612

business cash expenditures that we have upheld, supra.

     The remaining $4,054 consists of groceries expenditures made

by cash.   Petitioners seem to agree that $4,054 is the correct

starting number, but “propose” that that be reduced by 70 percent

on the ground that that percentage “be deemed to be paid by

credit card based on Mrs. Downing’s testimony (R.75) that she

typically deposited the cash savings into the bank accounts and

then paid the personal bills from there.”

     Sandra’s testimony reflected on the cited trial transcript

page explains as follows:

          A. [Sandra] The cash that was deposited into the joint
     personal checking account that belonged to Michael and I
     [sic] came from savings that Michael had accumulated over
     the years and gifts from relatives on his side of the family
     and mine.

          Q [Ponseti] Why was this cash deposited into the joint
     personal account?

          A The money was deposited into the checking account to
     supplement income in order to pay bills.
                               - 54 -

          Q Why were these cash deposits not added into the
     gross income for 1994 and 1995?

          A Because it wasn’t gross income that was earned
     during those two tax years.

Thus, the cited testimony deals with amounts deposited into the

bank accounts, and does not tell us anything about cash

expenditures that bypassed the bank accounts.

     The parties stipulated that during 1994 “petitioners spent

no less than $85 per week on personal grocery expenses, for a

total of $4,420.”    Respondent does not contend petitioners spent

more than $4,420 on personal grocery expenses.    Petitioners do

not contend they spent less.    The parties’ stipulated listing of

1994 “personal living expenses which petitioner paid by check”

shows only three such payments, totaling $366, under the category

“Food”.    Total personal grocery expenses of $4,420, less $366

food expenses paid by check, leaves $4,054 grocery expenses paid

by cash.    In light of the irrelevance of the only evidence

petitioners rely on for their objection, we conclude that the

foregoing constitutes clear and convincing evidence of the

correctness of the 1994 adjustment (supra table 7) on account of

personal living expenditures made by cash.

     (b) 1995.--Respondent contends for an adjustment of $11,618;

petitioners for an adjustment of $5,600.    Both sides agree that

petitioners’ $5,000 cash house downpayment should be included in

this adjustment.    For the same reasons we expressed as to 1994,
                                - 55 -

we agree with petitioners and reject respondent’s proposal to

include $4,718 truck payments.     For the same reasons we express

as to 1994, we agree with respondent and reject petitioners’

proposal to reduce the $1,900 groceries to $600.     We conclude

that the foregoing constitutes clear and convincing evidence of

the correctness of the 1995 adjustment (supra table 8) on account

of personal living expenditures by cash.

       (8)   Bank Balances

       The parties have stipulated the opening and closing listed

accounts balance totals shown in tables 7 and 8.

       (9)   Nontaxable Cash

       As noted supra (items (6) and (7)), cash expenditures (i.e.,

expenditures made by cash that did not go through the bank

accounts) are added to bank deposits in order to determine the

amount of potentially taxable receipts that must be accounted

for.    One way to account for cash expenditures as not having a

taxable source in that taxable year is to determine the amount of

cash petitioners had available to them that came from nontaxable

sources.     In the instant cases, respondent agrees that

petitioners had a substantial amount of cash available to them
                               - 56 -

from nontaxable sources.28   We consider seriatim the components

of the category of cash from nontaxable sources.

     (a)   The Newman Property.--Michael sold the Newman property

on November 15, 1993.   The net proceeds were $31,307.06.

Respondent, relying on Klimkiewicz’s testimony based on her notes

as to what Sandra said at a meeting during the audit, contends

that petitioners spent $2,000 of these net proceeds in 1993, had

$29,307 left at the beginning of 1994, and spent all this $29,307

in 1994.   Petitioners deny the correctness of Klimkiewicz’s notes

on this matter and “suggest that at most $1,600 * * * was spent

during 1993. * * * For the sake of computing numbers only, the

Petitioners will assume the amount of $1,600.”   As a result,

petitioners contend that the correct amount for this component is

$29,707.   Both sides agree that, by the end of 1994, petitioners

spent all that remained of the Newman property proceeds.

     Taking into account the conflicting testimony, and the fact

that this testimonial conflict is solely as to what Sandra said

to Klimkiewicz in 1996 as to Sandra’s 1996 estimate of what

petitioners spent out of this source in 1993, we conclude (and we


     28
        Respondent refers to this category of items as
“nontaxable undeposited cash”. (Emphasis supplied.) Yet, for
1994 respondent would allow $39,507 to be subtracted, even though
respondent would have included only $31,766 of cash expenditures.
Thus, respondent appears to have implicitly accepted petitioners’
contentions (and Sandra’s testimony) that, at least in 1994,
petitioners took money from some cash storage and, at least to
the extent of $7,741 ($39,507 minus $31,766), deposited that
money into the bank accounts.
                              - 57 -

have found--tables 7 and 8) that respondent has shown by clear

and convincing evidence that not more than $29,707 of

petitioners’ 1994 expenditures came from the Newman property net

proceeds, and that none of petitioners’ 1995 expenditures came

from this source.

     (b) Credit Card Advances.--Both sides agree that petitioners

received two credit card cash advances, totaling $5,500, in 1994.

Petitioners contend on answering brief that they received two

additional cash advances, of $1,942 and $2,113, in 1994.

However, in the postbriefs actions referred to supra note 24,

petitioners concede that “the credit card amount of $2113.15 is

really just a transfer and not a Cash Advance and * * * the

$1,942 amount was used to pay off a credit card debt.   As such,

it should not be counted as a credit card advance for 1994.”

Respondent does not allow, and petitioners do not contend for,

1995 credit card advances.   Thus, the allowance of $5,500 credit

card advances for 1994 and nothing for 1995 is agreed to by both

sides.

     (c)   Child Support.--The parties stipulated that petitioners

received $4,200 in cash child support payments for Rachel and

Sean in each year, 1994 and 1995.   Supra note 5.

     (d)   Refund of Deposit on House.--The parties stipulated

that in 1994 petitioners received a refund of a $500 deposit on a

house.
                               - 58 -

     (e)   Michael’s Accumulated Savings.--Originally, Michael

told respondent’s revenue agent that, at the beginning of 1994,

he had a cash hoard of $180,000, which he had accumulated over

the years.    At trial, Michael testified that he had “Roughly

* * * around 60 to 70,000" in the cash box at the beginning of

1994 and that he “ran out of money a year after I bought the

Metairie Court house”, which he bought on March 24, 1995.

Respondent allowed as a starting 1994 cash hoard only the

remaining net proceeds of the sale of the Newman property,

together with the credit card advances, 1994 child support, and

deposit refund, and treated the entire allowed amount as having

been spent in 1994; respondent has not allowed any starting 1995

cash hoard.    Petitioners do not appear to have taken any position

as to how much of their claimed cash hoard was spent in 1994

(except for Sandra’s testimony that she had told Klimkiewicz that

all the remaining net proceeds of the sale of the Newman property

had been spent by the end of 1994), how much was spent in 1995,

and how much was spent (consistent with Michael’s above-quoted

testimony) in early 1996.    On brief, petitioners appear to have

abandoned Michael’s $180,000 contention and instead adopted as

their position Michael’s above-quoted trial testimony.

     (i)   For Cash Hoard

     Considerations pointing toward cash hoard include the

following:    (1) Respondent has already accepted the idea that
                                  - 59 -

petitioners kept a large amount of cash someplace (not

necessarily in a box) for some period of time--viz the $29,000-

plus remainder of the Newman property proceeds, which was used

from time to time during 1994.      (2) Respondent has already

accepted the idea that petitioners on occasion deposited

nontaxable cash receipts into the bank accounts.      As noted supra,

respondent agrees that for 1994 petitioners should be allowed to

subtract more in nontaxable cash than petitioners’ 1994 cash

expenditures.

     (ii)    Against Cash Hoard

     Considerations pointing against cash hoard include the

following:    (1) Petitioners’ claim of cash hoard, even if

accepted in entirety, would explain only a small fraction of the

otherwise-unexplained omitted income; in the context of clear and

convincing evidence of substantial omitted income in 1995 on the

record herein, it is difficult to credit Michael’s testimony as

to any specific amount.    (2) Michael’s testimony as to the cash

hoard, especially in light of his acknowledged earlier

statements, seems to be tailored to his time-to-time perceptions

of what suits his purposes, rather than his best recollection of

the actual events.    Michael’s written statement to Klimkiewicz at

the July 1997 meeting was specific in describing why he estimated
                                - 60 -

he had a January 1, 1994, cash hoard of $180,000.29        At trial, he



     29
          On cross-examination, Michael testified as follows:

           Q [Canavello] Mr. Downing, is this a typewritten
     statement that you provided to the revenue agent at the July
     meeting in 1997? Not the handwritten part, just the typing
     part.

           A   (Perusing documents.)     Oh. Yes, it is.

          Q Thank you. I’d like you to read this sentence right
     here to me, please, at the beginning of this -- this little
     paragraph here.

           A   “I did not use any of my savings until 1994.” That?

          Q Yes. Thank you. And on the second page, would you
     read for me, please -- would you read me the numbers -- this
     part of it, please, from here to here?

          A “Approximate 1974 through 1981 estimated savings,
     40,000. Approximate between 1982 and 1987, estimated annual
     savings, 15,600.”

           Q   Yes.

          A “Times five years equals 78,000. Approximate 1988
     through 1989 estimated savings while employed at Millican
     [Milliken] & Michaels, 31,000. Sale of house in 1993 profit
     approximately 31,000. Total of 180,000.”

          Q So now these would be the items that you listed in
     your statement that you just identified, this statement here
     that you brought to that meeting, as being the amounts that
     added up to what was in the cash box?

           A   Approximately.   A rough estimate.

           Q   Thank you very much.

          So then, when you prepared that statement, your
     estimate of what was in the cash box as at the beginning of
     1994 was $180,000?

           A   I was speculating -- or estimate.
                                - 61 -

explained the $180,000 as a rough estimate.    At trial, he

testified that the correct January 1, 1994, amount was roughly

$60,000 to $70,000.     He did not explain in his testimony why his

rough estimates at trial differed from his rough estimate to

Klimkiewicz by about $110,000 to $120,000.    Nor did petitioners

clarify this substantial difference on brief.    (3) On numerous

occasions Michael borrowed--sometimes from family and sometimes

from business lenders--amounts for short terms and for long

terms.   In the case of borrowings from business lenders Michael

incurred substantial interest expenses.    Michael incurred these

expenses without seeking to earn income on what he contended were

large amounts in his cash hoard.    Because he neither earned on

his claimed cash hoard nor used his cash hoard to reduce

borrowings when opportunities were presented, it is evident that

Michael’s actions were not significantly affected by any

evaluation of opportunity cost.

     (iii)   Analysis

     In DeVenney v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 927, 933 (1985), we

stated that--

     we cannot fail to note that the existence of a cash
     hoard is endlessly claimed by taxpayers to explain the
     existence of otherwise unexplained sources of funds.
     It is rare indeed that a taxpayer successfully proves
     this contention.

In DeVenney, the taxpayers’ evidence prevailed completely; not

only did it overcome the Commissioner’s fraud contentions, but it
                                - 62 -

also resulted in our holding that the taxpayers had no

deficiencies.    Id. at 928.   The record in the instant case is far

different from that in DeVenney.

       Although we are not willing to conclude that respondent has

shown by clear and convincing evidence that petitioners had no

cash hoard (other than the items respondent specifically

allowed), we are satisfied that (1) any such cash hoard carryover

into 1994 was not sufficient to substantially affect the amount

of 1994 unreported income and (2) there was not any cash hoard

carryover into 1995.

       Our findings in tables 7 and 8, supra, incorporate these

conclusions, on the lines labeled “Nontaxable Cash”.

(10) Net Wages--Sandra

       The parties have agreed that Sandra’s net wages (i.e., Form

W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, wages less withheld taxes) are as

shown supra in tables 7 and 8.

(11)    Conclusions

       We conclude and we have found that respondent has shown by

clear and convincing evidence that Michael understated his

plumbing business Schedule C gross receipts by the amounts set

forth in tables 7 and 8, supra, in the columns headed “Court--

Fraud”--about $17,000 for 1994 and about $80,000 for 1995--and

that these understatements of receipts resulted in
                               - 63 -

understatements of income, which in turn resulted in

underpayments of tax for each year.

       We hold for respondent on this issue.

B.    Fraudulent Intent

       Respondent contends that the following indicia of fraud are

present in the instant case:    (1) Petitioners failed to report

substantial amounts of income; (2) petitioners failed to keep

adequate books and records; and (3) petitioners made inconsistent

and implausible explanations regarding the alleged nontaxable

sources of deposits to their bank accounts during 1994 and 1995.

       Petitioners maintain that:   (1) Michael had no intention to

underreport income; (2) Michael provided the records he had to

respondent throughout the administrative process; and (3) the

alleged inconsistent statements “make no sense at all”.

       Courts have identified numerous factors, sometimes referred

to as indicia of fraud, or badges of fraud, which may be

persuasive circumstantial evidence of fraud.    See, e.g.,

Niedringhaus v. Commissioner, 99 T.C. 202, 211 (1992).       We focus

on those indicia that appear to be most significant in the

context of the record in the instant case.

(1)    Failure To Report Substantial Amounts of Income

       “Although mere understatement of income alone is not

sufficient to prove fraud, the consistent and substantial

understatement of income is, by itself, strong evidence of
                               - 64 -

fraud.”   Truesdell v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. 1280, 1302 (1987);

Marcus v. Commissioner, 70 T.C. 562, 577 (1978), affd. without

published opinion 621 F.2d 439 (5th Cir. 1980).

      For 1994, Michael reported $68,758 of Schedule C gross

receipts from the plumbing business.     Respondent has shown by

clear and convincing evidence that Michael should have reported

at least $85,683.    Supra table 7.   We conclude that the $16,925

difference is a substantial underreporting.

      For 1995, Michael reported $82,721 of Schedule C gross

receipts from the plumbing business.     Respondent has shown by

clear and convincing evidence that Michael should have reported

at least $162,038.   Supra table 8.     We conclude that the $79,317

difference is a substantial underreporting.

      For the 2 years in issue, Michael failed to report an

aggregate of about 40 percent of his Schedule C gross receipts

from the plumbing business.

(2)   Failure To Keep Adequate Books and Records

      Taxpayers are required to maintain books and records

sufficient to show their tax liabilities.     See sec. 6001.

Failure to do so is another indicium of fraudulent intent.     See

Bradford v. Commissioner, 796 F.2d at 307.

      Respondent contends that petitioners’ records for the

plumbing business were incomplete and inconsistent.     For 1995,

respondent points to the fact that the total amount of the adding
                                - 65 -

machine tape--the amount Michael purportedly reported on the

Schedule C for that year--was $5,781 more than the amount

actually reported on the Schedule C.     Respondent also points to

the fact that Sandra omitted from four of the invoices $8,683

when she was calculating the monthly totals.    For 1994,

respondent points to the fact that seven of the Forms 1099 issued

to the plumbing business exceeded by $7,941 the amounts listed on

their corresponding invoices.    Thus, respondent concludes:

“Petitioners   obviously were not concerned with having an

accurate record of the income from the plumbing business.      Their

method of record keeping, or lack thereof, is another badge of

fraud for 1994 and 1995.

     Petitioners reply, on answering brief, as follows:

     The volume of records, checks, invoices, bank statement
     [sic], bank deposit slips, the purchase agreements, the sale
     agreements, the mortgages, the amortization schedule, the
     social security statement, the marriage agreement, etc. are
     a silent testimony as to the efforts that Petitioners have
     made to accurately determine and substantiate the tax return
     that was filed.

Petitioners concede that Michael understated gross receipts for

the plumbing business by $5,781 in 1995; they attribute this

understatement to a computational error that occurred when Sandra

added together the invoices.    Petitioners argue, however, that

because Michael was a cash basis taxpayer, and because they did

not receive in 1995 the $8,683 that was listed on the invoices

but not included on the adding machine tape, they did not have to
                               - 66 -

report that income for that year.    (This seems to be inconsistent

with petitioners’ $5,781 concession.)     Petitioners further argue

that, for 1994, the discrepancies between the amounts reported on

the Forms 1099 and the amounts listed on the corresponding

invoices were simply due to timing considerations.

     We are somewhat puzzled by some of the assertions by both

sides.   Firstly, petitioners were cash basis taxpayers.    The

Schedules C for both years show that the plumbing business was on

the cash basis.   Respondent’s reconstruction of income and

Michael’s self-employment tax are cash-basis determinations.

Accordingly, Michael was required to report gross income from the

plumbing business when it was received, not when the work was

completed.   Sec. 451(a).   Sandra testified, however, that she

computed gross income for the years in issue by adding together

the invoices for the work Michael had done each month, and then

adding together the monthly totals.     In addition, the parties

stipulated, in relevant part, as follows:

     Attached as Exhibit 39-J are copies of adding machine tapes
     which petitioner Sandra Downing provided with the invoices
     she identified to respondent’s revenue agent as gross
     receipts reported on the 1995 Schedule C for Michael Downing
     Plumbing Company.

Thus, it appears that Sandra calculated gross receipts from the

plumbing business as if Michael were an accrual basis taxpayer.

If this is so, then the adding machine tape totals for the years

in issue were not the proper amounts to report on the Schedules C
                                - 67 -

as gross receipts because those totals reflect the amounts due

for work done, not the amounts received for the work.    As such,

Sandra’s computational error in adding together the invoices for

1995 is irrelevant to the determination of the amount that should

have been reported on the Schedule C.    Nevertheless, this error

in bookkeeping suggests that petitioners’ records for the years

in issue are insufficient to show Michael’s tax liabilities.

     Secondly, petitioners, for the first time on answering

brief, appear to argue that the adding machine tape totals

represent the amounts received by the plumbing business, not the

total amount of the invoices.    In response to respondent’s

proposed finding of fact that Sandra understated, by a total of

$8,683, the amounts of four invoices shown on the adding machine

tapes, petitioners claim that they did not have to report that

$8,683 because they did not receive it.    If petitioners did not

receive the $8,683 in 1995, then they are correct that Michael

was not required to report that amount on the Schedule C.

However, as stated above, Sandra testified that she calculated

gross receipts by adding together the invoices, not the receipts.

And the parties stipulated that Sandra provided to the revenue

agent copies of the adding machine tapes along with the invoices

used to calculate gross receipts for the plumbing business.    We

do not know whether petitioners did not realize until answering
                              - 68 -

brief that they calculated gross receipts incorrectly or whether

they incorrectly described their method of calculation.

      Lastly, because petitioners were cash basis taxpayers, it

would not be surprising to find that the amount reported on a

Form 1099 is different from the total amount of the corresponding

invoices.   The Form 1099 amount may be less in situations where

the customer paid only part or some of the invoices.   The Form

1099 amount may be greater than the total amount of the

corresponding invoices in situations where the customer paid for

services rendered in prior years.   Thus, it is possible, as

petitioners contend, that the discrepancies are due to “timing

considerations”.   Petitioners, however, have not provided us with

any records from which we can ascertain the actual relationships

between the Form 1099 amounts and Michael’s plumbing business

receipts for the years in issue.

      Accordingly, based on the record as a whole, we conclude

that Michael’s books and records are sufficiently confused so

that they do not reliably show the gross receipts from the

plumbing business, and consequently, Michael’s tax liabilities,

for the years in issue.

(3)   Inconsistent and Implausible Explanations

      Petitioners attribute a significant portion of their bank

deposits for the years in issue to Michael’s cash hoard.

Respondent maintains that petitioners’ explanations and behavior
                              - 69 -

do not support petitioners’ contention.   Petitioners contend that

the “inconsistent statements” were due to the selective hearing

of Klimkiewicz.   Petitioners sum up their contentions as follows:

          The Alleged Inconsistent Statements are discussed
     throughout this reply brief and there is no need to repeat
     these same arguments. It should also be mentioned that all
     of these alleged inconsistent statements are also arguably
     the self-serving testimony of the Revenue Agent * * *.

     We agree with respondent.

     Firstly, Michael’s testimony at trial is inconsistent with

the written statement Michael provided to Klimkiewicz regarding

the amount of cash remaining in the box at the beginning of 1994.

At trial, Michael testified that there was roughly $60,000 to

$70,000 cash in the box at the beginning of 1994.   During the

July 1997 meeting, however, Michael provided to Klimkiewicz a

prepared, detailed statement in which he declared that he had a

total of $180,000 in cash at the beginning of 1994.    At trial,

Michael acknowledged that he prepared this written statement and

that he presented it to Klimkiewicz at their July 1997 meeting.

When questioned at trial about this substantial discrepancy,

Michael replied that when he prepared the written statement in

1997, he “was speculating”.   This conflict is not attributable to

any asserted “selective hearing” by Klimkiewicz.

     We also note that Michael testified that he ran out of cash

a year after he bought the Metairie Court property.    Michael

bought the Metairie Court property in March of 1995.    At the July
                               - 70 -

1997 meeting, when Klimkiewicz asked Michael how much remained in

the box at the time of the meeting, Michael told her to subtract

out from the alleged $180,000 that existed at the beginning of

1994 the amount she was proposing as a deficiency, and that would

be the amount remaining in the box at that time.    On brief,

petitioners state that they do not dispute that, at that meeting,

Michael did make this statement.    Petitioners do not contend that

Klimkiewicz’s “selective hearing” was incorrect as to this point.

 This statement to Klimkiewicz was made more than 2 years after

Michael bought the Metairie Court property, and more than a year

after all of the cash from the box had been spent, according to

Michael’s trial testimony.

     As we indicated supra (part A(9)(e)(ii) of this opinion),

Michael’s trial testimony and his oral and written statements to

respondent’s agent during the audit, seem to be tailored to his

shifting perceptions of what suits his purposes, rather than to

his best recollections of actual events.

     Secondly, it has long been established that a taxpayer’s

“recurring need to borrow money is inconsistent with the claim to

a secret hoard.   Boyett v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 1953, 204 F.2d

205.”   Cefalu v. Commissioner, 276 F.2d 122, 127 (5th Cir. 1960),

affg. T.C. Memo. 1958-37.    Respondent points to petitioners’

extensive borrowing–-a total of $391,615, respondent says (our

calculations are slightly less), with interest rates ranging from
                               - 71 -

9.9 percent to 13.25 percent–-as being inconsistent with having a

cash hoard.

     When asked why he financed the cars, Michael replied:

     The reason why I finance everything is because,
     listening to Mike Sanderson that’s so successful was –-
     his big thing was use other people’s money and put down
     as little as possible or nothing, and that’s what I was
     doing.

On answering brief, petitioners assert that “This strategy is not

an uncommon one as many ‘financial gurus’ explain at seminars

that this is one way to make money.”    While we do not doubt that

“this is one way to make money”, we strongly doubt Michael

intended to do so by paying high interest rates while earning no

interest income on the alleged cash hoard.   Moreover, in response

to the Court’s question whether Michael had noticed that, during

the early 1980s, banks were advertising interest rates of 10

percent or higher on savings deposits, Michael stated:   “I’ve

never been one to look at anything like that to –- no concern.”

We cannot reconcile this statement with Michael’s alleged desire

to make money in the manner that Sanderson allegedly did.    We

believe Michael’s testimony on this point was incredible.

Michael’s incredible explanations of his behavior constitute an

additional “badge of fraud”.   Bradford v. Commissioner, 796 F.2d

at 307; Boyett v. Commissioner, 204 F.2d at 208.

     In addition, between May 30, 1994, and March 21, 1995,

petitioners took a total of $10,500 in cash advances.
                                 - 72 -

Petitioners paid an annual percentage rate of 18.13 percent on at

least $5,000 of that amount.     All of the cash advances were taken

before Michael bought the Metairie Court property, when,

according to Michael’s testimony, he had cash remaining in the

box.    Petitioners have not provided, and we cannot discern, any

reasonable explanation for their willingness to pay high interest

rates on cash advances when they allegedly had a substantial cash

hoard.

       Based on the foregoing indicia of fraud, we conclude that

respondent has proved by clear and convincing evidence that some

or all of the underpayments of tax that result from Michael’s

failure to report all of his plumbing business Schedule C gross

receipts were due to Michael’s fraud.     We have so found.

       We hold for respondent on this issue.

C.   Amounts; Burdens of Proof

       In parts II-A and II-B of this opinion, respondent had the

burden of proving, by clear and convincing evidence, that there

were underpayments of tax, some part of which was due to

Michael’s fraud; respondent carried this burden for each year in

issue.

       (1)   Under section 6663(b), the entire underpayment of tax

for each year is treated as attributable to fraud, “except with

respect to any portion of the underpayment which the taxpayer
                                - 73 -

establishes (by a preponderance of the evidence) is not

attributable to fraud.”

     As we noted, supra, in the notices of deficiency, respondent

determined that, in essence, every element of each year’s

underpayment was due to fraud.     On brief, respondent’s fraud

contentions focus entirely on the unreported Schedule C gross

receipts.     We treat this as respondent’s concession that the

fraud penalty applies only to so much of the underpayment as

results from the unreported Schedule C receipts.     On the basis of

the preponderance of the evidence, we conclude that for each year

in issue the fraud penalty applies to all of the underpayment

that results from the unreported Schedule C receipts.

     (2) In general, petitioners have the burden of proving, by a

preponderance of the evidence, that the deficiencies30 are less

than the amounts respondent determined in the notices of

deficiency.    See Rule 142(a)(1); Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S.

111, 115 (1933).31    However, respondent has the burden of proof




     30
        For purposes of the instant case, “deficiency” is the
same as “underpayment”. Compare sec. 6211(a) with sec. 6664(a).
     31
        Sec. 7491, which shifts the burden of proof to the
Commissioner if the taxpayer meets certain conditions, does not
apply in the instant case because the examination of petitioners’
tax returns began in 1996 or 1997, before the July 22, 1998,
effective date of sec. 7491. Internal Revenue Service
Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Pub. L. 105-206, sec.
3001(a), 112 Stat. 726.
                                  - 74 -

with respect to “new matter”, including increased deficiencies.

Rule 142(a)(1).

     Because all of our redeterminations except fraud have been

made on the basis of the preponderance of the evidence, it is not

necessary to decide which side has the burden of proof as to any

item.     See, e.g., Romann v. Commissioner, 111 T.C. 273, 285

(1998); Martin Ice Cream Co. v. Commissioner, 110 T.C. 189, 210

n.16 (1998), and cases cited therein.

        Our preponderance-of-the-evidence findings as to omitted

Schedule C receipts are shown in the right-most columns of tables

7 and 8, supra.     All other adjustments, whether related to

adjustments in the notices of deficiency or other matters, have

been resolved by way of concessions or stipulations.

        These redeterminations, stipulations, and concessions are to

be given effect in the Rule 155 computations and will govern

whether any part of the deficiency for either of the years in

issue is not due to fraud.

        To the extent that any part of the deficiency for either of

the years in issue is not due to fraud, see part IV of this

opinion.

                            IV.   Negligence

        In the notices of deficiency, respondent determined, in the

alternative to the fraud penalties under section 6663, that

Michael is liable for the negligence penalties under section
                                - 75 -

6662(a).     Respondent contends that Michael’s “substantial

omissions of income and other factors set forth above [e.g.,

Michael’s failure to keep adequate books and records]” clearly

show that the negligence penalties apply in the instant case.

Petitioners do not appear to contest this.32

     Accordingly, we conclude that section 6662(a) applies for

each year in issue to that portion, if any, of Michael’s

underpayments determined in the Rule 155 computation to be

attributable to items other than the unreported Schedule C gross

receipts.

     To take account of the parties’ concessions and the

foregoing,

                                           Decision will be entered

                                      under Rule 155.




     32
        Petitioners argued that reasonable cause excused their
failure to report one-half of their respective spouse’s income on
their separate tax returns. Because we concluded that
petitioners properly filed for registry their marriage contract
so as to keep their respective incomes the separate property of
the income-earning spouse, we need not address this defense to
the negligence penalty.
