Fluent in English, Spanish & Italian | 888-882-9243

call us toll free: 888-8TAXAID

Twitter & Facebook Make it to Tax Court

Twitter & Facebook Make it to Tax Court

ProcedurallyTaxing.com posted that social media posts discredited the Taxpayer in a recently decided Tax Court case of Brzyski v. Commissioner, T.C. Summary Opinion 2020-25 released on August 27.

The facts in Brzyski  involve Mr. Brzyski claiming the children of his significant other as qualifying children for the dependency exemption. The IRS disallowed the dependency exemption because Mr. Brzyski was not formally married to the children’s mother and without a marriage the children cannot be qualifying stepchildren. 


Mr. Brzyski claims that while not formally married in his home state of California, one night while he and his significant other were in Missouri they crossed the border into Kansas for dinner and declared themselves married. Thus, according to Mr. Brzyski, they were legally common-law married in Kansas and the children met the relationship test. To provide support for this Mr. Brzyski testified to this effect and produced affidavits from family members to the same effect.


At trial social media posts were entered into evidence (presumably by Chief Counsel) that showed Mr. Brzyski referring to his significant other as his fiancée after the date of their alleged common law marriage. This plus a host of other inconsistencies, which were probably enough to carry the day for the respondent without mention of the social media post, were enough to satisfy Judge Copeland that the testimony regarding a Kansas common law marriage was unreliable and not enough for the taxpayer to carry their burden of proof. As a result the dependency deduction was denied.


From a quick search it appears that Brzyski may be the first Tax Court decision in which social media posts are cited to as direct evidence of a taxpayer’s lack of credibility. It also appears to be the first decision where the social media posts introduced into evidence could have only come from Chief Counsel’s office.


To get a sense of just how novel this is, it is worth looking at the totality of social media in Tax Court decisions. Tax Court decisions do not cite to social media frequently. Excluding Brzyski, a keyword search using the Tax Court’s website for even a single mention of “social media” returns six cases. A search using the term “Facebook” as a proxy for social media returns eight cases and of those eight cases two of the “Facebook” cases refer to Facebook’s Taxpayer Bill of Rights litigation. This leaves a grand total of twelve cases that cite to social media.


Of the twelve cases that remain for social media, nine of the cases involve the petitioner introducing social media as evidence of a for profit enterprise or as part of a business plan, one case discusses the business expense of a computer that was also used for work and personal social media usage, one opinion from Judge Holmes mentions the company Facebook to set the stage for discussing a petitioner’s career in technology, and one case memorializes a laundry list of the taxpayer’s grievances including the notion that social media websites were conspiring against his vaporizer business.


One common thread that Brzyski shares with the other nine relevant cases is that each of the social media cases is about mindset. Posts on social media are generally inadmissible hearsay if offered by the declarant for the truth of the matter asserted. 

Now that the Tax Court is on the record giving more weight to a spontaneous social media post that hurts the taxpayer than to the taxpayer’s actual testimony at trial, practitioners should beware that these posts cut both ways. 


As a result of Brzyski, due diligence as to a client’s social media should be conducted if the case relies heavily on the petitioner’s credibly on the witness stand. However, this potentially opens up the Pandora’s box of what to do if practitioner learns prior to trial that the petitioner’s version of events does not match the story social media tells. 


This can lead to conflicts between Model Rule 3.3’s Duty of Candor Towards the Tribunal vs Model Rule 1.6’s Duty of Confidentiality. As with many social media issues today, solving one problem invariably leads to another.


Have IRS Tax Problem?


 Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A. 


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243) 



 

 


Read more at: Tax Times blog

Comments are closed.

Live Help