Master Fifth Circuit adopts an objective adaptability test to deny deductions for fashionable work clothing under IRC § 162 in light of § 262's bar on personal expenses. with this comprehensive case brief.
Pevsner v. Commissioner is a leading federal income tax case on when the cost of clothing required by an employer is deductible as an ordinary and necessary business expense. The decision sits at the fault line between IRC § 162 (allowing business expense deductions) and § 262 (disallowing personal, living, and family expenses). Because clothing can serve both professional and personal functions, courts have long struggled to craft an administrable rule that distinguishes deductible "uniforms" from nondeductible ordinary apparel.
In Pevsner, the Fifth Circuit rejected a taxpayer-specific, subjective approach and adopted an objective "adaptability to general use" test. Even though the taxpayer wore expensive designer clothing solely while working at a high-fashion boutique and was required to wear it by her employer, the court held the clothing nondeductible because such apparel is inherently suitable for everyday wear. The case is significant for its doctrinal clarity, administrative practicality, and enduring influence in tax law courses and on exams dealing with the § 162/§ 262 boundary.
628 F.2d 467 (5th Cir. 1980)
The taxpayer, an employee and later manager of an Yves Saint Laurent (YSL) Rive Gauche boutique, was required by her employer to purchase and wear current-season YSL clothing while on duty to model the merchandise and present a consistent brand image. She purchased the clothing (often at an employee discount), wore it exclusively at work, and refrained from using it off-duty because of its expense and conspicuousness. On her tax return, she claimed deductions under IRC § 162 for the cost and maintenance (including cleaning) of these garments as ordinary and necessary trade or business expenses. The Commissioner disallowed the deductions, asserting that the clothing costs were personal expenses under IRC § 262. The Tax Court sided with the taxpayer, focusing in part on her actual nonuse of the clothing outside of work. The Commissioner appealed to the Fifth Circuit.
Are the costs of employer-required designer clothing deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses under IRC § 162 when the clothing is not worn off-duty, or are they nondeductible personal expenses under IRC § 262 because the garments are objectively suitable for general wear?
Under IRC § 162 and Treas. Reg. § 1.262-1(b)(8), clothing expenses are deductible only if: (1) the clothing is specifically required as a condition of employment; (2) it is not suitable for general or personal wear (i.e., it is not adaptable to use as ordinary clothing); and (3) it is not worn for general or personal purposes. The suitability criterion is determined by an objective test that looks to the inherent adaptability of the clothing to general wear, not the taxpayer's actual practices or personal preferences.
No. The costs are not deductible. The Fifth Circuit adopted an objective test for the "not suitable for general wear" prong and held that fashionable YSL clothing is inherently adaptable to ordinary use. Therefore, even though the employer required the clothing and the taxpayer did not wear it off-duty, the expenses are personal and nondeductible under § 262.
The court emphasized the primacy of Treas. Reg. § 1.262-1(b)(8), which bars deductions for clothing adaptable to general use. Interpreting "suitable" through a subjective lens—based on a particular taxpayer's habits, taste, or lifestyle—would undermine administrability, create inconsistent outcomes among similarly situated taxpayers, and invite manipulation. Two employees wearing identical clothes could receive disparate tax treatment depending solely on how they chose to use the garments off-duty, a result the court deemed inequitable and unworkable. By contrast, an objective "adaptability" standard asks whether the clothing, by its nature, is the type commonly worn as ordinary apparel. Police uniforms, theatrical costumes, or protective gear typically fail the adaptability test and may be deductible if other prongs are met. Designer clothing, however, is intended for streetwear. The employer's requirement to wear the clothing does not convert inherently personal apparel into a business uniform within the meaning of the regulation, nor does a taxpayer's decision to avoid wearing the items outside work alter their intrinsic character. Because YSL garments are objectively suitable for general use, the second prong is not satisfied, rendering the expenses nondeductible regardless of the employer mandate or the taxpayer's actual off-duty nonuse. Finally, the court noted that a clear, objective rule reduces administrative burdens and preserves the integrity of § 262's personal expense prohibition. Allowing deductions whenever employers require fashionable attire would open the door to widespread deductions for ordinary clothing across many service and sales industries, contrary to the statutory scheme and regulatory guidance.
Pevsner crystallizes the three-prong clothing deduction test and, crucially, cements the objective adaptability standard for the "suitability" element. The case is widely cited in tax law to illustrate the tension between business and personal consumption and the judiciary's preference for administrable, uniform rules over subjective, taxpayer-specific tests. For students, it provides a framework for analyzing clothing, grooming, and similar boundary expenses; it also highlights the interpretive interplay of statutes and regulations and the policy concerns that drive courts toward objective standards.
Clothing expenses are deductible only if: (1) the clothing is specifically required as a condition of employment, (2) it is not suitable for general or personal wear (i.e., not adaptable to ordinary use), and (3) it is not actually worn for general or personal purposes. Failure of any one prong defeats the deduction.
An objective test promotes uniformity and administrability by focusing on the inherent nature of the clothing, not the taxpayer's habits or preferences. A subjective test would produce inconsistent outcomes, enable manipulation, and erode § 262's bar on personal expenses, since many employees could claim they never wear work clothes off-duty.
Not by itself. Employer requirement satisfies only the first prong. The clothing must also be objectively not suitable for general wear and not actually worn off-duty. Fashionable or conventional attire (e.g., suits, dresses, designer apparel) typically fails the suitability prong and remains nondeductible.
Items that are inherently not adaptable to everyday wear, such as police or military uniforms, theatrical costumes, protective gear (e.g., steel-toed boots, safety vests), and specialized work apparel with distinctive logos or features that render them unsuitable for streetwear, may qualify if all prongs are met.
Pevsner exemplifies the boundary-policing function of § 262 in preventing personal consumption from migrating into business deductions. Even where employment imposes real costs that arguably aid the business, the tax law denies deductions for inherently personal items to preserve administrability and prevent leakage from the tax base.
Potentially. If the clothing's design or markings made it objectively unsuitable for general wear (e.g., highly distinctive uniforms or conspicuous logos), the suitability prong could be satisfied. But mere brand prestige or high cost does not render clothing unsuitable; what matters is objective adaptability to ordinary wear.
Pevsner v. Commissioner draws a bright line for clothing deductions: even if an employer requires stylish or conventional apparel and the employee chooses never to wear it outside work, such clothing remains a personal expense if it is objectively adaptable to everyday wear. By privileging an objective standard rooted in regulatory text, the decision advances uniform tax administration and limits the incursion of personal consumption into deductible business expenses.
For students and practitioners, the case is a durable guide to analyzing wardrobe and grooming expenses at the § 162/§ 262 border. On exams, apply the three-prong test in order, emphasize the objective suitability analysis, and resist conflating employer necessity or actual nonuse with deductibility. Pevsner's lesson is that the tax law treats most ordinary apparel—no matter how expensive or professionally useful—as nondeductible personal consumption.
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