Court Opinion

ID: 4597332
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:18:58.002109+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:51:46.272654
License: Public Domain

Frederick J. and June M. Barry, Petitioners v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentBarry v. CommissionerDocket No. 1420-69SCUnited States Tax Court54 T.C. 1210; 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 122; June 8, 1970, Filed *122 Decision will be entered for the respondent.  The petitioner made 1-day business trips requiring 16 to 19 hours, during which he generally rested once or twice briefly in his automobile.  He always returned home at night. Held, the cost of meals consumed during these long workdays are not deductible. Frederick J. Barry, pro se.William T. Hayes, for the respondent.  Simpson, Judge.  SIMPSON*1210  The respondent determined a deficiency of $ 332.55 in the income tax of the petitioners for the taxable year 1966.  Of this amount, $ 301.25 is in dispute. *123  The issue for decision is whether the petitioners may deduct amounts spent by Mr. Barry for meals consumed on 1-day business trips of 16 to 19 hours, during which he rested briefly in his car.FINDINGS OF FACTSome of the facts have been stipulated, and those facts are so found.The petitioners, Frederick J. Barry and June M. Barry, are husband and wife, who maintained their legal residence in Rollinsford, N.H., at the time the petition was filed in this case.  For the taxable year 1966, they filed their joint Federal income tax return, using the cash method of accounting, with the district director of internal revenue, Portsmouth, N.H.  Mr. Barry will be referred to as the petitioner.The petitioner is a consulting management engineer, who maintains his office in his home in Rollinsford.  He works alone.  His work requires him to study and analyze the functioning of his client-companies with respect to production, purchasing, marketing, engineering, and accounting, with the objective of advising them how to perform these functions more efficiently and economically.  In return for such services, the petitioner charges a fixed fee, which constitutes his total compensation for the *124  work.During 1966, the petitioner had clients with places of business in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.  He serviced these clients by making 1-day trips to their respective places of business.  On no occasion during 1966 was he away from home overnight on a business trip. He generally scheduled his visits to each client on alternate days, so that in most cases it would not have been helpful to him to stay away from home overnight. Another motive for returning home at night was to minimize expenses.  He spent no money for rest or lodging facilities on any of these trips.The petitioner made about 235 such business trips in 1966.  Approximately 84 percent of these trips were to Massachusetts.  Each trip to *1211 Massachusetts covered an average distance of 75 miles one way and required about 1 1/2 hours.  Approximately 15 percent of the trips were to Connecticut, with an average distance of 200 miles one way and a driving time of 3 to 4 hours.  The remainder of the trips, to Rhode Island, had an average distance of about 150 miles one way and a driving time of 2 1/2 hours.The petitioner typically left his home at about 6:30 a.m., if his destination was in Massachusetts, *125  or an hour earlier, if his destination was Connecticut.  He usually arrived home around midnight, with 10:30 p.m. being the earliest time of arrival.  Because he charged each client a fixed price for the job, he worked long days in order to finish the work as soon as possible.He occasionally ate breakfast on the road during the morning trip, and he always ate lunch and usually ate dinner near the client's place of business. Generally, he returned to the client's place of business after dinner, so that he could have access to company files when the employees were not using them.  Sometimes, he had dinner after finishing his work at the client's place of business, and started the trip home after dinner. On these occasions, he did not wait until arriving home to eat dinner because he felt that 11:30 p.m. or midnight was not a reasonable hour to eat dinner at home.Almost always, the petitioner stopped at a rest area alongside the highway on the return trip and rested for a period which was generally 15 to 20 minutes, but sometimes longer.  Occasionally, he took similar rests during his morning journeys. He kept a blanket and throw pillow in his car for this purpose.  On his trips*126  home from Massachusetts, the petitioner generally rested at a spot located 5 to 15 miles from his client's place of business. Sometimes he slept and sometimes he didn't, but the period of rest with his eyes closed refreshed the petitioner enough so that he could drive the remaining distance. The petitioner felt that his highway rests, particularly those at night, were necessary for his safety, as they helped to keep him awake while driving.The petitioner kept a careful and detailed record of amounts he spent for meals. On his 1-day business trips during 1966, the petitioner spent $ 3,348.47 for meals. Of this amount, $ 1,535.26 was allowed as a deductible entertainment expense, but the respondent disallowed a deduction for the remaining $ 1,813.21 on the ground that such amount was spent for personal meals.OPINIONIn this case, we meet again the respondent's "overnight rule," under which he holds that a taxpayer is not away from home for tax purposes *1212  unless his trip requires a period for sleep or rest.  Here, the petitioner seeks to deduct the cost of meals consumed while on 1-day business trips of 16 to 19 hours, during which he rested briefly in his automobile. *127 Ordinarily, meals are nondeductible under section 262 of the Internal Revenue Code of 19541 as "personal, living, and family expenses." Jerome Mortrud, 44 T.C. 208 (1965). For the meals to be deductible as traveling expenses, the petitioner must prove that the meals were eaten while he was traveling away from home in pursuance of a trade or business under section 162(a)(2).  The respondent takes the position that a taxpayer is not away from home, except when he is on a trip that requires sleep or rest, and that interpretation of the statute was upheld by the Supreme Court in United States v. Correll, 389 U.S. 299 (1967). The Court found that it was a reasonable interpretation of the statute and that since it was a longstanding administrative interpretation, it had in effect been approved by the reenactment of the statute.The petitioner argues that his case is distinguishable from*128 Correll and not governed by it.  He points out that his workday was longer, and that he did stop for a necessary rest period. Though there are some factual differences, we have concluded that they are not sufficient to distinguish Correll and that this case is governed by Correll.Correll involved a traveling salesman who left home each day at about 5 a.m. and ate breakfast and lunch on the road, but arrived home in time for dinner. He seldom traveled farther than 55 miles from his home, but he ordinarily drove a total of 150 to 175 miles per day.  Despite these factual differences, the rationale given by the Supreme Court for its conclusion indicates that it would reach the same result in the case before us.  The Supreme Court said in Correll that it thought that the respondent's sleep-or-rest rule achieved a "substantial fairness" because it "places all one-day travelers on a similar tax footing, rather than discriminating against intracity travelers and commuters, who of course cannot deduct the cost of meals they eat on the road." (389 U.S. at 303. Emphasis supplied.) It found that the respondent was justified in denying a deduction*129  for meals when no lodging was secured, and although it recognized that the overnight rule does cause some questionable distinctions, it thought the rule justifiable as a reasonable rule for distinguishing between the deductible and nondeductible traveling expenses.  When those considerations are applied to the facts before us, including the greater length of the petitioner's workday, we find that the factual differences are immaterial and that the petitioner was not away from home within the established meaning of the statute.Moreover, the petitioner's case is not distinguishable on the ground that he generally took a short rest during his return trip, because we *1213  think that the term "sleep or rest" as used in Correll was meant to signify something more than the type of rest that Mr. Barry enjoyed.  The Supreme Court, in explaining its understanding of the respondent's rule which it was upholding in Correll, said at 389 U.S. 304-305:Ordinarily, at least, only the taxpayer who finds it necessary to stop for sleep or rest incurs significantly higher living expenses as a direct result of his business travel, n18 and Congress might well*130  have thought that only taxpayers in that category should be permitted to deduct their living expenses while on the road.  n19 * * * [Footnotes omitted.]The type of sleep or rest in which Mr. Barry habitually indulged is not the type that would ordinarily add to expenses.  Rather, it is the sort of rest that anyone can, at any time, without special arrangement and without special expense, take in his own automobile or office.Prior to the Supreme Court's decision in Correll, the deduction for meals was allowed to a railroad conductor who, during his 6-hour layover period in the middle of a workday spanning 17 to 18 hours, regularly rented a room in a hotel near the railroad station.  At the hotel, he ate lunch and dinner, rested, slept, and bathed before beginning his return journey. Williams v. Patterson, 286 F. 2d 333 (C.A. 5, 1961).  In that case, the "rest" involved was substantial in time, and special provision was made for it; his rest was not confined to a mere pause in the daily work routine.  The respondent by ruling had held that the expenses of meals and lodging were deductible under such circumstances, and he announced his intention*131  to follow the Williams decision.  I.T. 3395, 1940-2 C.B. 64; Rev. Rul. 61-221, 1961-2 C.B. 34. It seems clear that the rest period which is contemplated in the respondent's overnight rule, and which was approved by the Supreme Court in Correll, is the type illustrated by Williams, and not the brief rest period taken by the petitioner.In Commissioner v. Bagley, 374 F. 2d 204 (C.A. 1, 1967), remanding 46 T.C. 176 (1966), certiorari denied 389 U.S. 1046 (1968), the taxpayer, whose occupation was much like that of the present petitioner, made 1-day business trips which spanned 16 hours.  Usually, his one-way driving distance was between 70 and 75 miles. He ate all three meals during the course of the workday, with breakfast and dinner being consumed during the morning and evening journeys. Most of the trips involved in Bagley were strikingly similar to the petitioner's trips to Massachusetts in both distance traveled and amount of time consumed between leaving home in the morning and arriving home at night. In*132 Bagley, there is no indication that the taxpayer was required to stop for sleep or rest.  The First Circuit vacated our decision for the taxpayer and approved the respondent's overnight rule.  It found that "travel away from home" did not include "a diurnal round starting and ending at home." Thus, the First Circuit also held that when a taxpayer *1214  made a 1-day trip, even one about as long as the petitioner's, he was not away from home within the meaning of section 162(a)(2).The petitioner seeks to distinguish his case from Bagley on the additional ground that the taxpayer in that case lived alone and generally would not have eaten at home even if he had not been traveling, whereas the petitioner had a family and would have eaten dinner with them if he had reached home in time.  This subtle difference does not remove this case from the applicability of the Correll and Bagley holdings.  In part, the overnight rule was approved by the Supreme Court in Correll because it was simple to administer and provided a definite and easily ascertained answer in each case.  United States v. Correll, supra at 302-303. Similarly, in*133 Bagley, the First Circuit accepted the respondent's overnight rule as the most workable rule of thumb to be applied in these cases.  It is altogether clear in Bagley that the existence of the petitioner's family and his desire to eat with them when possible would make no difference in the holding of the court.The petitioner also argues that his expenditures for meals are deductible under section 162(a), independently of section 162(a)(2).  That part of section 162(a) which precedes the numbered paragraphs allows a deduction for all the "ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business." However, the petitioner points to no authority supporting the deductibility of his meals under the ordinary-and-necessary provision of section 162(a), and we know of no such authority.  Section 162(a)(2) expressly deals with the expenses of traveling, including the expenses of meals and lodging while traveling away from home, and after considerable litigation, the Supreme Court has now restricted the deduction for meals to trips which require a sleep or rest period. There is nothing to indicate that the ordinary-and-necessary provision*134  should be construed so as to achieve a more liberal rule.  See Bulova Watch Co. v. United States, 365 U.S. 753 (1961); Central Commercial Co. v. Commissioner, 337 F. 2d 387 (C.A. 7, 1964), affirming 40 T.C. 901 (1963); Hudson City Savings Bank, 53 T.C. 70, 75 (1969). Cf. United States v. Correll, supra.Whatever may have been the view of this Court in the past, the Supreme Court has settled the issue by its decision in Correll, and we believe that the case before us is indistinguishable from Correll.  Accordingly, we hold that the petitioner was not away from home within the meaning of section 162(a)(2) when he made his 1-day business trips during 1966.Decision will be entered for the respondent.  Footnotes1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.↩