Cincyblogs.com

Sunday, May 31, 2026

If Only

 

It isn’t much. The Tax Court decision itself is scarcely 4 pages long.

Still, it made me laugh.

It also made me think that - if he could pull it off - this might have been best tax planning idea I ever came across.

His name is Kelby Daniel Reyes Barrios (Barrios). He lives in California and he appears to be a gig worker.

He filed a 2022 tax return showing $8,964 of total income.

The IRS was chasing him for $3,842 of additional tax on unreported income of $15,206.

COMMENT: I still don’t see how that is enough money to live on, not to mention … California.

Barrios filed a timely petition with the Tax Court.

Then he disappeared.

The IRS motioned for summary judgement. The Court, to its credit, provided Barrios a final opportunity to respond.

He ghosted.

The only thing the Court had to review in his favor was his declaration on the Court filing:

On his petition he asserted that he did not report the income because the tax ‘forms were mailed to a [previous] address’ and he received them only after filing his return.”

We have probably all heard a version of this logic: no form, no tax.

The IRS held for the IRS, of course. The tax Code asserts that all income is reportable, whether it draws a 1099 or not (granted, the “not” is an increasingly endangered species).

Still, think about it: one could beat the tax man by getting a return in before 1099s are distributed.

If only.

Our case this time was Kelby Daniel Reyes Barrios, T.C. Memo 2026-32.

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