Master Seventh Circuit reversed the Tax Court and held that weekend farmers had an actual and honest profit objective, so their farm losses were deductible and not limited by the hobby loss rule under IRC § 183. with this comprehensive case brief.
Nickerson v. Commissioner is a leading federal income tax case on the boundary between business activities and hobbies under Internal Revenue Code § 183. It addresses whether taxpayers who operate a side activity that consistently generates losses may still claim ordinary and necessary business deductions when they maintain an actual and honest objective of making a profit. By engaging the multi-factor analysis of Treasury Regulation § 1.183-2(b), the Seventh Circuit clarified the distinction between subjective intent and objective indicia of a profit-seeking enterprise.
The decision is particularly significant for practitioners and students because it rejects overreliance on two commonly misunderstood considerations: (1) the presence of sustained losses and (2) the taxpayers' ability to offset substantial wage or professional income with those losses. Nickerson emphasizes that profit motive does not require a reasonable expectation of profit and that adverse circumstances and start-up phases may explain losses without converting a bona fide business into a hobby. The case remains a staple citation for the proposition that § 183 turns on an "actual and honest profit objective" assessed through objective facts, not on hindsight judgments about profitability.
700 F.2d 402 (7th Cir. 1983)
The taxpayers (the Nickersons) lived and worked full-time in the Chicago area but purchased and operated a working farm in a nearby state as a separate venture. They devoted weekends and vacations to the farm, personally performing labor and also hiring help during critical periods. From the outset they treated the operation in a businesslike manner: they maintained separate books and accounts, prepared budgets, consulted county extension agents and other agricultural experts, changed methods when results were poor, invested in improvements and equipment, sought to develop profitable crops and markets, and pursued strategies to increase yield and reduce costs. Despite these efforts, the farm generated losses for several consecutive years, due in part to adverse weather, pests, and the ordinary difficulties of establishing a new agricultural operation. On their federal income tax returns, the Nickersons deducted the farm expenses against their wage and professional income under § 162 (and related provisions). The Commissioner disallowed the deductions under § 183 (the hobby loss rule), asserting the farm was not engaged in for profit. The Tax Court agreed with the Commissioner, largely emphasizing the history of losses and the taxpayers' substantial non-farm income. The Nickersons appealed to the Seventh Circuit.
Whether the taxpayers' farming operation was an activity engaged in for profit within the meaning of IRC § 183, such that their losses were deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses rather than limited by the hobby loss rule.
Under IRC § 183, deductions attributable to an activity not engaged in for profit are limited to the income from that activity. An activity is engaged in for profit if the taxpayer has an actual and honest objective of making a profit. This determination is based on objective facts and circumstances, commonly evaluated using the nonexclusive factors in Treas. Reg. § 1.183-2(b), including: (1) the manner in which the activity is carried on; (2) the expertise of the taxpayer or their advisers; (3) the time and effort expended; (4) the expectation that assets may appreciate; (5) the success of the taxpayer in similar or dissimilar activities; (6) the activity's history of income or losses; (7) the amount of occasional profits; (8) the taxpayer's financial status; and (9) the presence of personal pleasure or recreation. No single factor is controlling, and a reasonable expectation of profit is not required.
Reversing the Tax Court, the Seventh Circuit held that the Nickersons engaged in their farming activity with an actual and honest profit objective. Accordingly, their farm expenses were deductible as business expenses and were not limited by § 183.
The Seventh Circuit concluded that the Tax Court gave undue weight to the taxpayers' sustained losses and other income while discounting multiple objective indicators of a bona fide business. Applying the regulatory factors, the court emphasized that the Nickersons carried on the farm in a businesslike manner: they kept accurate books and separate accounts, developed budgets and plans, obtained expert advice, and modified operations in response to poor outcomes. Their time and effort—spending weekends, vacations, and hiring help at peak times—were consistent with a profit-seeking enterprise given their full-time employment elsewhere. The record also reflected capital investments and operational changes designed to move toward profitability, and the possibility that farmland and improvements could appreciate supported an overall profit objective. The court acknowledged the string of losses but found them explainable by start-up realities and adverse external conditions such as weather and pests, none of which, by themselves, negate profit motive. While the taxpayers had substantial non-farm income, the court reiterated that financial capacity to absorb losses—or even derive tax benefits—does not transform a genuine business into a hobby. Nor does the fact that the taxpayers may have derived some personal satisfaction from farming; the presence of hard, time-consuming labor and the absence of recreational amenities weighed against a hobby characterization. In short, viewing the objective facts as a whole, the taxpayers' conduct evidenced an actual and honest profit objective. The Tax Court's contrary conclusion rested on an improper emphasis and was clearly erroneous.
Nickerson is a cornerstone case on § 183. It clarifies that the relevant inquiry is not whether profitability is likely or reasonable, but whether the taxpayer actually and honestly seeks profit as evidenced by objective, businesslike conduct. The decision guides courts and practitioners to apply the nine regulatory factors holistically and cautions against equating persistent losses, alternative sources of income, or incidental personal enjoyment with a lack of profit motive. For law students, the case provides a model application of the § 183 framework and a reminder that start-up struggles and adverse events can coexist with genuine business intent.
It means the taxpayer truly aims to earn a profit from the activity, as demonstrated by objective conduct—businesslike recordkeeping, expert consultation, adaptive decision-making, marketing efforts, investment in efficiency, and rational plans for profitability. The standard does not require a reasonable expectation of profit; instead, it asks whether the taxpayer's behavior reflects a bona fide profit motive.
The court recognized the losses but viewed them in context: start-up phases often involve losses, and external factors like weather and pests can produce nonrecurring setbacks. Persistent losses are relevant but not dispositive. When counterbalanced by strong business indicia—planning, recordkeeping, operational changes, and investment—losses alone do not negate profit motive.
No, not by itself. While substantial outside income can create opportunities to shelter income, it is only one factor and does not defeat a bona fide business. The key is whether the activity is run like a business. In Nickerson, the presence of outside income did not outweigh the many objective signs of a profit-seeking enterprise.
Personal enjoyment is considered but rarely decisive. Many people enjoy their work; enjoyment does not make it a hobby. The focus is whether the activity includes recreational elements inconsistent with profit-seeking. In Nickerson, the labor-intensive nature of the farm and the taxpayers' businesslike approach undercut the idea that the farm was a recreational pastime.
The court emphasized the manner of carrying on the activity (separate books, budgets, and changes to improve results), the time and effort invested (weekends, vacations, and hired help), reliance on expertise (advice from agricultural experts), and the plausibility of asset appreciation. Together, these outweighed the negative factor of sustained losses and the neutral factor of outside income.
Maintain separate accounts and accurate records, create and follow a written business plan, seek and implement expert advice, adjust operations when results are poor, devote meaningful time and resources, document marketing and sales efforts, and consider the role of asset appreciation in overall profitability. These actions align with the regulatory factors and reflect an actual and honest profit objective.
Nickerson v. Commissioner underscores that the hobby loss rule is not a blunt instrument for disallowing losses whenever a side venture struggles. The decision insists on a nuanced, factor-based analysis that respects the realities of entrepreneurship, start-up phases, and adverse contingencies. When objective facts show businesslike behavior and adaptive decision-making, § 183 should not be used to recharacterize a bona fide enterprise.
For law students, Nickerson is an essential study in applying regulatory factors to real-world facts and in understanding how appellate courts police the Tax Court's weighing of evidence. The case remains a persuasive authority for taxpayers operating legitimate but loss-making ventures and a reminder that the profit-motive inquiry is holistic, not outcome-driven.
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