Fenderson v. Comm'r ( 2007 )


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  •                   T.C. Summary Opinion 2007-191
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    CAROLYN D. FENDERSON, Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 18961-05S.            Filed November 13, 2007.
    Thomas I. Hausman and Patricia M. Ritzert, for petitioner.
    Anita A. Gill, for respondent.
    CARLUZZO, Special Trial Judge:   This case was heard
    pursuant to the provisions of section 7463.1    Pursuant to section
    7463(b), the decision to be entered is not reviewable by any
    other court, and this opinion shall not be treated as precedent
    for any other case.
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the
    Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, in effect for the
    relevant period.
    - 2 -
    Respondent determined a $22,584 deficiency in petitioner’s
    2002 Federal income tax.   The issue for decision is whether
    petitioner is entitled to a deduction for a loss from her real
    estate activities.    The resolution of the issue depends, in part,
    upon whether section 469(c)(7) applies to petitioner for the year
    in issue.
    Background
    Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.    At
    the time the petition was filed in this case, petitioner resided
    in Ohio.
    In January 2000, petitioner started employment as an account
    manager for Symantec Corporation, a company that markets a
    popular computer security software program (Symantec).   She was
    so employed during 2002, and although expected to develop new
    business, she was primarily responsible for servicing eight
    existing customers.   To that end, she regularly kept in contact
    with those customers and was always available to them in order to
    ensure that any problems or concerns any might have would be
    properly and promptly resolved.   If the customer’s problem were
    of a technical nature, petitioner would arrange for one or more
    Symantec software engineers to get involved.
    During the first year of her employment with Symantec,
    petitioner frequently traveled to customers and potential
    - 3 -
    customers in Cleveland and Pittsburgh.    She spent at least 50
    hours a week doing so.
    Petitioner’s compensation from Symantec was composed of a
    base salary, stock options, and sales commissions based on sales
    of software licenses.    Depending on the size and nature of the
    sale transaction, a series of licenses involved in a single sale
    might be “rolled out” over a period of years following the year
    of the sale.   Her commissions were paid when the “roll out”
    occurred.   As a result, petitioner received commissions in one
    year that related to sales made during a previous year or years.
    In 2002 petitioner’s compensation from Symantec totaled
    $186,487.   Some of the commissions included in that amount relate
    to sales of software licenses made in years prior to 2002.
    According to petitioner, she spent about 15 hours a week working
    for Symantec during 2002.    She maintained a calendar that tracked
    her activities and appointments in connection with her employment
    at Symantec, which ended during 2003.
    As of the close of 2002 petitioner owned several parcels of
    residential real estate that she held for rent, or rented during
    that year (collectively, the rental units).    Some of the rental
    units were leased in accordance with Federal or State programs
    that provided rent subsidies to the tenant(s)/lessee(s) (the rent
    subsidy programs).   On her timely filed 2002 Federal income tax
    - 4 -
    return, the rental units are identified by addresses, as follows:
    (1) East 149th St.; (2) Euclid Hgts. Blvd.; (3) Wickford Rd.;
    (4) Continental; (5) E. 97th; (6) Parkhill; (7) E. 131st St.;
    (8) Parkgate; (9) Graham; and (10) Endura.2
    For the most part, and generally speaking, petitioner was
    responsible for renting and managing the rental units.   She
    advertised when a unit was available.    She conducted and attended
    open houses showing the units.    She arranged for utilities to be
    turned on when necessary.   She requested and reviewed credit
    reports with respect to prospective tenants.   She painted and
    cleaned the units when necessary, and she arranged for repairs to
    be made in those situations when she was not competent to make
    the repairs herself.
    In addition to activities related to a specific rental unit,
    petitioner attended real estate auctions and reviewed listings of
    real estate for sale by Government authorities and private
    sellers.   From time to time, she also met with officials from the
    Federal or State Government agencies that administered the rent
    subsidy programs.
    Separate and apart from the calendar that petitioner kept in
    connection with her employment at Symantec, petitioner maintained
    2
    At trial petitioner explained that the Graham and Endura
    rental units were actually owned by her brother.
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    a calendar in which she recorded her activities related to the
    rental units (petitioner’s calendar).   Some of the entries made
    in the calendar relate specifically to one or another of the
    rental units; many entries merely show the words “auction”, or
    “sheriff’s listings”.   Some of the entries appear to be
    reminders, or relate to upcoming events, rather than a record of
    an event that actually occurred.   For example, on those days when
    the word “auction” is noted, it cannot be determined whether
    petitioner actually attended an auction, or merely marked her
    calendar to show that the event was scheduled on that date.
    Similarly, many notations show a 4-hour period for “gas” or
    “electric” with respect to one or another of the rental units.
    Again, it cannot be determined whether petitioner actually spent
    4 hours on that date waiting for someone from one utility company
    or another, or whether petitioner merely noted the date and time
    frame when the utility company employee was scheduled to arrive.
    Some of the entries contained in petitioner’s calendar are
    clearly personal in nature.   For example, on July 4, petitioner
    noted “Carol’s house, take salad and merlot”.   On other dates, a
    person’s name is listed, but the relevance of that person’s
    involvement, if any, with a particular rental unit cannot be
    determined from the entry on the calendar.
    - 6 -
    Petitioner’s 2002 tax return includes five Schedules E,
    Supplemental Income and Loss, on which the rental income and
    expenses of the rental units are reported (the Schedules E).3
    Taking into account that income and those expenses, the Schedules
    E show an aggregate loss of $57,906 (the rental loss) which is
    deducted from the other income shown on petitioner’s return.
    In February 2005, prior to the completion of the examination
    of petitioner’s 2002 return, petitioner submitted a second 2002
    return.   This second return, which was not processed by
    respondent, included a Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business,
    but no Schedule E.   The income and expenses originally reported
    on the Schedules E are shown on the Schedule C.   Otherwise, there
    is no difference between the two returns.   In a letter dated
    February 10, 2005, to respondent, petitioner stated that she
    wanted to “amend” her 2002 return, and further that she “[wished]
    to utilize the affirmative election” of section 469(c)(7)(A).    It
    is not clear whether the letter and the second return, which was
    not processed by respondent, were submitted together.
    In the notice of deficiency that forms the basis for this
    case, the rental loss deduction was disallowed because, according
    to an explanation contained in the notice, “rental activities of
    any kind, regardless of material participation, are considered
    3
    On one of the Schedules E petitioner aggregated the
    amounts shown on the other four.
    - 7 -
    passive activities unless the requirements of section 469(c)(7)
    * * * are met”.    Other adjustments made in the notice of
    deficiency are not in dispute.
    Discussion
    In general and as relevant here, an individual is not
    entitled to a deduction for a passive activity loss incurred
    during the taxable year.    Sec. 469(a).     A passive activity loss
    is defined as the excess of the aggregate losses from all passive
    activities for the taxable year over the aggregate income from
    all passive activities for that year.       Sec. 469(d)(1).    A passive
    activity is any activity which involves the conduct of any trade
    or business and in which the taxpayer does not materially
    participate.    Sec. 469(c)(1).   For this purpose, a “trade or
    business” is generally defined as any activity in connection with
    a trade or business or any activity for the production of income
    under section 212.    Sec. 469(c)(6).
    In general, a rental activity is treated as a passive
    activity regardless of whether the taxpayer materially
    participates.    Sec. 469(c)(2),(4).      If a taxpayer is described in
    section 469(c)(7), section 469(c)(2) does not apply, and the
    taxpayer’s rental activity, if conducted as a trade or business
    or for the production of income, is a passive activity unless
    the taxpayer materially participates in the activity.         Sec.
    - 8 -
    469(c)(1); Fowler v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-223; sec.
    1.469-9(e), Income Tax Regs.
    The parties disagree on a number of different points
    concerning the application and relevance of section 469 to
    petitioner’s rental activities.   Among those disagreements, they
    dispute whether section 469(c)(7) applies.   Petitioner claims
    that section 469(c)(7) applies to her for the year in issue, and
    therefore section 469(c)(2) does not apply for that year;
    respondent disagrees.   Under the circumstances, if section
    469(c)(7) does not apply to petitioner for 2002, then she is
    subject to section 469(c)(2) for that year, which means that the
    rental loss is a passive activity loss and she is not entitled to
    the rental loss deduction here in dispute.
    Section 469(c)(7) does not apply to a taxpayer unless, in
    addition to another requirement, “more than one-half of the
    personal services performed in trades or businesses by the
    taxpayer during such taxable year are performed in real property
    trades or businesses in which the taxpayer materially
    participates”.   Sec. 469(c)(7)(B)(i).   In this case, the equation
    contemplated by the statute requires that we measure the extent
    of the personal services that petitioner performed as an employee
    of Symantec against the personal services petitioner performed in
    real estate trades or businesses in which she materially
    participated.
    - 9 -
    The parties proceeded as though the extent of personal
    services performed in a trade or business is measured by hours.
    We do likewise and start with petitioner’s trade or business as
    an employee of Symantec.    According to petitioner, she spent
    approximately 15 hours per week working for Symantec.    She
    described in general terms how that time was spent, but she
    provided little in the way of specifics.    Although she maintained
    a written record regarding her activities as an employee of
    Symantec, the written record was not made available to the Court.
    Petitioner’s compensation from Symantec, the lack of any
    written evidence corroborating her testimony on time she claims
    to have spent performing personal services for Symantec during
    2002, the extent of her obligations to her customers as an
    account manager of Symantec, and the amount of hours she spent
    working for Symantec in previous years strongly suggest that she
    spent more than 15 hours per week performing personal services
    for Symantec during 2002, but the suggestion is no substitute for
    evidence.   As it stands, the only evidence on the point is
    petitioner’s testimony.    Assuming, without finding, that
    petitioner’s estimate is accurate, we proceed as though
    petitioner spent 780 hours (15 hours per week x 52 weeks)
    performing services as an employee of Symantec during the year in
    issue.
    - 10 -
    Next we turn to the personal services performed by
    petitioner in real estate trades or businesses in which she
    materially participated.
    For purposes of section 469, a taxpayer materially
    participates in an activity only if the taxpayer is involved in
    the operation of the activity on a basis which is regular,
    continuous, and substantial.4    Sec. 469(h)(1).   We are satisfied
    that with respect to each real estate activity involving a rental
    unit, petitioner’s “participation in the activity for the taxable
    year constitutes substantially all of the participation in such
    activity of all individuals (including individuals who are not
    owners of interests in the activity) for such year”.     Sec. 1.469-
    5T(a)(2), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 53 Fed. Reg. 5725 (Feb. 25,
    1988).   Consequently, for purposes of section 469, petitioner may
    be treated as having materially participated in the operation of
    each of the rental units, and we proceed as though she did.5
    4
    Circumstances that, in and of themselves, establish
    material participation in a given activity can be found in sec.
    1.469-5T(a), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 53 Fed. Reg. 5725 (Feb.
    25, 1988).
    5
    Argument could be made that for purposes of sec. 469, a
    taxpayer’s participation in an activity is not treated as
    “regular, continuous, and substantial” during any year if the
    individual participates in the activity for 100 hours or less
    during that year. See Oberle v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1998-
    156; sec. 1.469-5T(b)(2)(iii), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 53
    Fed. Reg. 5726 (Feb. 25, 1988). Under the circumstances we need
    not decide the point.
    - 11 -
    According to petitioner, she performed more than 100 hours
    of personal services in connection with each of the rental units.
    In support of her claim in this regard, she submitted a schedule
    of the hours spent on each unit (Exhibit 3-J).   Exhibit 3-J shows
    a total of 1,062.18 hours spent on all rental units.   The exhibit
    itself is a summary of a document that shows the date, nature of
    the activity, and time spent on a property-by-property basis
    (Exhibit 4-P).   Exhibit 4-P, in turn, is, according to
    petitioner, based upon items listed in petitioner’s calendar.
    Although the calendar was prepared contemporaneously with the
    events recorded in it, Exhibit 3-J and Exhibit 4-P were prepared
    years later during either the examination of petitioner’s 2002
    return or in preparation for this proceeding.
    In reliance on her calendar and the above-referenced
    exhibits, petitioner argues that more than one-half of her time
    spent in performing personal services in trades or businesses
    during 2002 was spent in performing personal services in real
    estate trades or businesses (1,062.18 hours performing personal
    services in her real estate trades or businesses versus 780 hours
    performing personal services as an employee of Symantec). As
    petitioner views the matter, she has satisfied the requirements
    of section 469(c)(7)(B), and therefore section 469(c)(2) does not
    apply.   Sec. 469(c)(7)(A).
    - 12 -
    Petitioner’s view, however, presupposes that the amounts of
    hours shown on Exhibits 3-J and 4-P are supported by entries made
    in her calendar.   This does not appear to be the case.
    A number of inconsistencies between items shown on
    petitioner’s 2002 return, her calendar, and the exhibits were
    brought out during petitioner’s cross-examination at trial.
    Furthermore, upon careful review of those documents, we are
    unable to reconcile estimates of time shown on Exhibits 3-J and
    4-P with entries made in petitioner’s calendar.   On many dates,
    the estimate of time spent on a particular activity exceeds
    the amount of time shown on that calendar for that date.   For
    example, on Exhibit 4-P petitioner shows more than 9 hours spent
    performing various types of services at Parkgate on January 3,
    2002.   The hours presumably are incorporated in the total hours
    shown for that property on Exhibit 3-J.   Entries on her calendar
    for that date, however, do not support the number of hours or the
    type of activities described in Exhibit 3-J.
    A taxpayer can establish personal services performed in an
    activity by any reasonable means.   Reasonable means “may include
    but are not limited to the identification of services performed
    over a period of time and the approximate number of hours spent
    performing such services during such period, based on appointment
    books, calendars, or narrative summaries.”   Sec. 1.469-5T(f)(4),
    Temporary Income Tax Regs., 53 Fed. Reg. 5727 (Feb. 25, 1988).
    - 13 -
    Among Exhibit 3-J, Exhibit 4-P, and petitioner’s calendar, we
    find petitioner’s calendar to be the only record that complies
    with the above regulation.6   For purposes of that regulation,
    “ballpark [guesstimates]” contained in postevent records, such as
    Exhibits 3-J and 4-P are entitled to little, if any, weight in
    determining the extent of a taxpayer’s participation in an
    activity.   Bailey v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2001-296; Carlstedt
    v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-331; Speer v. Commissioner, T.C.
    Memo. 1996-323; Goshorn v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1993-578.
    We have carefully and repeatedly reviewed petitioner’s
    calendar.   After doing so, we find that the estimates of time
    spent on specific properties shown in Exhibits 3-J and 4-P are
    overstated, at least to the extent as follows:
    6
    This is not to suggest that petitioner’s calendar is not
    without problems. Petitioner explained that some entries made in
    the calendar were made before the activity occurred, and she did
    not adjust the entries later to reflect the actual duration of
    the activity. See, e.g., Fowler v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
    2002-223.
    Furthermore, although the calendar contains many entries
    related to petitioner’s rental activities, such as evictions,
    collecting rent, inspections, meeting with contractors,
    mediation, auctions, credit checks, listing reviews, screening of
    prospective applicants, etc., there is nothing to connect these
    activities to a specific rental unit or rental activity.
    Similarly, the calendar contains numerous entries that do not, in
    and of themselves, show how the activity was related to a rental
    activity. For example, some entries on the calendar show only
    the name of an individual and a phone number. Other entries
    simply show the address of a rental unit. Some entries are
    obviously not related to any rental activity. Finally, there are
    some entries that are illegible.
    - 14 -
    Rental Unit              Hours per Exhibits    Hours per calendar
    3-J and 4-P            (maximum)
    East 149th St.                119.57                 110
    Euclid Hgts Blvd.             120.81                  80
    Wickford Rd.                  101.03                  45
    Continental                   153.53                 117
    E. 97th                       115.57                  80
    Parkhill                      106.95                 110
    E. 131st                      133.73                  60
    Parkgate                      103.49                  60
    Woodstock                     107.50                  97
    Total hours               1,062.18                 759
    Relying upon the entries in petitioner’s calendar, we find
    that petitioner spent 759 hours performing personal services in
    connection with her real estate trades or businesses in which she
    materially participated during 2002.7         Because petitioner spent
    at least 780 hours performing personal services as an employee of
    Symantec during 2002 she does not qualify for the provisions of
    section 469(c)(7).       This means that section 469(c)(2) operates to
    treat all of petitioner’s real estate activities as passive
    activities regardless of whether she materially participated in
    any of them.
    It follows that under the provisions of section 469(a)
    petitioner is not entitled to the rental loss deduction, and
    respondent’s disallowance of that deduction is sustained.
    7
    Whether the hours listed for Woodstock, a property not
    included on any of the Schedules E, should be taken into account
    in the analysis is a moot question. The outcome remains the same
    whether hours are included or ignored.
    - 15 -
    To reflect the foregoing,
    Decision will be entered
    for respondent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: No. 18961-05S

Judges: "Carluzzo, Lewis R."

Filed Date: 11/13/2007

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/20/2020