Murfam Enterprises LLC, Wendell Murphy, Jr., Tax Matters Partner ( 2023 )


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  •                  United States Tax Court
    
    T.C. Memo. 2023-73
    MURFAM ENTERPRISES LLC,
    WENDELL MURPHY, JR., TAX MATTERS PARTNER,
    Petitioner
    v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent
    —————
    Docket No. 8039-16.                                  Filed June 15, 2023.
    —————
    M, a TEFRA partnership, owned a rural,
    undeveloped tract of land (“Tract”) that had been granted
    certificates by State authorizing hog-farming activities.
    Rather than using these certificates to construct and
    operate a hog farm, M donated by deed in 2010 a perpetual
    conservation easement (constituting a “qualified real
    property interest” under I.R.C. § 170(h)(1)(A)) on Tract to
    T (a “qualified organization” under I.R.C. § 170(h)(1)(B)) for
    “conservation purposes” under I.R.C. § 170(h)(1)(C).
    Relying on an appraisal, M claimed a charitable
    contribution deduction of $5,744,600 for a “qualified
    conservation contribution” under I.R.C. § 170(h) on its tax
    return, prepared by competent professionals who were
    given all the information they requested. M’s expert
    valued its deduction on the basis of the forgone value of the
    hog-farming certificates attached to the Tract that were
    rendered useless under the easement deed. Attached to the
    return was an incomplete Form 8283, “Noncash Charitable
    Contributions”, that did not report M’s basis in the Tract
    and other information.
    R examined M’s return and issued a Notice of Final
    Partnership    Administrative    Adjustment      (“FPAA”)
    determining to reduce the deduction (but not to disallow it
    Served 06/15/23
    2
    [*2]   altogether). The FPAA asserted that the easement should
    be valued according to the Tract’s use as timberland,
    because it determined that the value of the hog-farming
    certificates was zero. The FPAA did not assert any
    penalties. M filed a petition in this Court challenging the
    FPAA.
    In his amended answer, R asserted (for the first
    time, i.e., as “new matter”) accuracy-related penalties
    under I.R.C. § 6662. Before trial, R also asserted (again, as
    “new matter”) that M’s charitable contribution deduction
    should be entirely disallowed for failure to comply with the
    substantiation and reporting requirements for charitable
    contribution deductions under I.R.C. § 170(f)(11). R agrees
    he has the burden of proof as to “new matter”.
    The issues for decision are (1) whether M failed to
    comply with the substantiation and reporting
    requirements of I.R.C. § 170(f)(11), and if so, whether that
    failure is excusable for reasonable cause under I.R.C.
    § 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II); (2) the value of the easement granted
    on the Tract; and (3) whether any penalty under I.R.C.
    § 6662 is applicable.
    Held: M failed to comply (strictly or substantially)
    with the substantiation and reporting requirements of
    I.R.C. § 170(f)(11), but that failure was due to reasonable
    cause because R failed to carry his burden to disprove
    reasonable cause.
    Held, further, the value of the easement granted on
    the Tract is $5,637,207 (about $107,000 less than M
    claimed)—which constitutes the forgone value of the hog-
    farming certificates.
    Held, further, to the extent applicable, any accuracy-
    related penalty under I.R.C. § 6662 is excused by
    reasonable cause under I.R.C. § 6664(c).
    —————
    3
    [*3] David D. Aughtry, John W. Hackney, and Kristen S. Lowther, for
    petitioners.
    Amy Dyar Seals, Olivia Hyatt Rembach, Corey R. Clapper, and Ashley
    M. Bender, for respondent.
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION ..................... 4
    FINDINGS OF FACT .............................................................................. 6
    The Murphy family ........................................................................... 6
    Murfam and the Rose Tract ............................................................. 6
    Murfam’s Rose Tract easement donation ........................................ 7
    Valuing the Rose Tract easement .................................................... 8
    Reporting the easement donation on Murfam’s 2010 return ......... 8
    Examination, FPAA, and Tax Court proceedings ........................... 9
    IRS examination and FPAA ..................................................... 9
    Petition and answer ................................................................ 10
    Trial of this case ...................................................................... 10
    The value of the Rose Tract easement ........................................... 10
    OPINION ................................................................................................ 11
    I.    Burden of proof ............................................................................... 11
    A.     The general rule ...................................................................... 11
    B.     The “new matter” exception.................................................... 11
    1.     The nature of “new matter” ............................................. 12
    2.     The “reasonable cause” defense as to “new matter”
    penalty ............................................................................. 12
    4
    [*4]         3.     The “reasonable cause” defense as to a “new matter”
    substantiation issue under section 170(f)(11)(A)(i) ........ 13
    II.    Charitable contribution deduction under section 170 for
    donation of a conservation easement ............................................. 15
    A.    Whether Murfam made a “qualified conservation
    contribution” under section 170(h)(1)..................................... 15
    B.    Whether Murfam satisfied the substantiation
    requirements of section 170(f)(11) and Treasury
    Regulation § 1.170A-13(c) ....................................................... 16
    1.     A description of the requirements .................................. 16
    2.     Murfam’s noncompliance and reasonable cause ............ 17
    C.    The value of Murfam’s easement donation ............................ 24
    1.     The method of valuing the conservation easement ........ 24
    2.     The valuation of the Rose Tract easement ..................... 26
    III. Penalties under section 6662 ......................................................... 31
    A.    Penalty principles ................................................................... 31
    B.    Section 6662 penalties with respect to Murfam .................... 32
    1.     Valuation misstatement penalty .................................... 32
    2.     Other accuracy-related penalty ...................................... 32
    IV. Conclusion ....................................................................................... 34
    MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
    GUSTAFSON, Judge: At issue is a charitable contribution
    deduction for the donation in 2010 of a conservation easement by a
    TEFRA partnership, 1 Murfam Enterprises, LLC (“Murfam”), to the
    1 Before its repeal, see Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, 
    Pub. L. No. 114-74, § 1101
    (a), 
    129 Stat. 584
    , 625, the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982
    (“TEFRA”), 
    Pub. L. No. 97-248, §§ 401
    –406, 
    96 Stat. 324
    , 648–71, governed the tax
    5
    [*5] North American Land Trust (“NALT”). Pursuant to section
    6223(a)(2), 2 the IRS issued to Murfam an FPAA determining to reduce
    from $5,744,600 to $446,000 the amount of the deduction claimed on
    Murfam’s Form 1065, “U.S. Return of Partnership Income”, for the tax
    year ending on January 1, 2011. 3 Wendell (“Dell”) Murphy, Jr., as tax
    matters partner (“TMP”) of Murfam and thus as petitioner in this case,
    timely filed a Petition for Readjustment of Partnership Items in this
    Court challenging the determination.
    After concessions, the remaining issues for decision are:
    (1) whether Murfam’s tax return satisfied the substantiation and
    reporting requirements of section 170(f)(11) for claiming the deduction;
    (2) the fair market value of the easement; and (3) whether any accuracy-
    related penalties under section 6662 are applicable. We hold (1) that
    Murfam did not satisfy the reporting requirements of section 170(f)(11),
    but that its failure to do so was for reasonable cause; (2) that the value
    of the easement donated by Murfam was $5,637,207 (i.e., about $107,000
    less than Murfam claimed on its return); and (3) that reasonable cause
    exists under section 6664(c)(1) to excuse any section 6662 penalty.
    treatment and audit procedures for many partnerships—including Murfam. TEFRA
    partnerships are subject to special tax and audit rules. See I.R.C. §§ 6221–6234.
    TEFRA requires the uniform treatment of all “partnership item[s]”—a term defined by
    section 6231(a)(3)—and its general goal is to have a single point of adjustment for the
    Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) rather than having it make separate partnership-
    item adjustments on each partner’s individual return. See H.R. Rep. No. 97-760,
    at 599–601 (1982) (Conf. Rep.), as reprinted in 1982-
    2 C.B. 600
    , 662–63. If the IRS
    decides to adjust any partnership items on a partnership return, it must notify the
    individual partners of the adjustment by issuing a Notice of Final Partnership
    Administrative Adjustment (“FPAA”). § 6223(a).
    2  Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to the Internal Revenue
    Code, Title 26 U.S.C., as in effect at the relevant times, regulation references are to
    the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 26 (Treas. Reg.), as in effect at the relevant
    times, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Some
    dollar amounts are rounded. A citation of a “Doc.” in this Opinion refers to a document
    as numbered in the Tax Court docket record of this case, and a pinpoint citation therein
    refers to the pagination as generated in the digital file.
    3 Murfam reports its taxes according to a fiscal year ending on a Saturday,
    which results in some years having more than 365 days and other years having fewer
    than 365 days.
    6
    [*6]                         FINDINGS OF FACT
    When its petition was filed, Murfam’s principal place of business
    was in North Carolina. 4
    The Murphy family
    The Murphy family is a multi-generation farming family from
    Bladen County, North Carolina, which has operations throughout the
    country. The Murphy family is well known for its success and
    innovation in the hog-farming industry, and Wendell Murphy, Sr. (the
    patriarch of the family), helped develop various processes that became
    industry-standard practices in hog farming. One such process is known
    as ISO wean, or three-site production, in which farmers use separate
    facilities during the various stages of hog farming (birth, growth, and
    slaughter) to separate the animals and reduce the transmittal of
    bacteria and potential diseases which affect swine differently depending
    on their ages and immune systems. Wendell Murphy also taught
    agriculture classes to high school students and was active in various
    environmental projects and policy proposals submitted to the North
    Carolina state legislature. Wendell remained actively involved in the
    Murphys’ business until sometime around 2010, when he retired to
    Florida. By that time his son, Dell Murphy, was managing the Murphys’
    business, which included 50 hog-farming facilities as well as various real
    estate projects and investments in North Carolina.
    Murfam and the Rose Tract
    The Murphy family formed Murfam in December 1999, and in
    January 2000 Murfam obtained ownership of the “Rose Tract”—6,171
    acres of undeveloped, rural land in Bladen County, North Carolina,
    which is mostly covered with trees and has a few dirt roads. The State
    of North Carolina granted certificates permitting 1,115 acres (i.e., about
    18% of the area) of the Rose Tract to be used for hog farming. These
    hog-farming certificates covered eight specific sites (i.e., fixed locations)
    on the Rose Tract and regulated the extent of allowable hog farming (to
    limit the volume of waste on the property), which it stated in terms of
    the number of hogs to be permitted for a given stage of production. The
    hog-farming certificates were “attached” to the Rose Tract, meaning that
    the hog-farming rights they authorized passed to future grantees of the
    4 Under section 7482(b)(1), venue for an appeal in this case would be the U.S.
    Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
    7
    [*7] Rose Tract and could not be exercised on any other property. The
    hog-farming certificates that were attached to the Rose Tract authorized
    a 58,752-swine “feeder-to-finish” facility, but (important to the valuation
    of the Rose Tract) could have been converted to a “farrow-to-wean”
    facility. 5 If the hog-farming certificates had been converted to a “farrow-
    to-wean” operation, the total number of sows permissible would have
    been 19,538.
    After 2007 (i.e., at the time of the donation at issue here), new
    hog-farming certificates were no longer available to properties in North
    Carolina, because of a state-imposed moratorium under which no new
    certificates would be issued but existing certificates remained valid,
    thus making the Rose Tract valuable for its possible use as a hog farm.
    However, to use the hog-farming certificates, the owner would need to
    prepare the Rose Tract by clearing trees, constructing various facilities,
    and digging a lagoon for waste treatment. Although the Murphy family
    could have taken the steps to construct and operate a hog farm on the
    Rose Tract, they left it undeveloped and used it for recreational purposes
    such as hunting.
    Murfam’s Rose Tract easement donation
    In 2010 the Murphy family donated five conservation
    easements—one of which is the subject of this Opinion 6—to NALT, a
    section 501(c)(3) charitable organization that is a “qualified
    organization” for the purposes of section 170(h)(1)(B). The Murphys
    donated the easement at issue (located on the Rose Tract) through
    Murfam.
    On December 27, 2010, ten years after it had first acquired the
    Rose Tract, Murfam granted to NALT a deed of easement titled
    “Conservation Easement and Declaration of Restrictions and
    5The various stages of hog farming include “farrow-to-wean” (the stage from
    the sow’s giving birth to a litter of piglets until that litter is weaned after six to eight
    weeks) and “feeder-to-finish” (the stage during which a weaned pig grows to finished
    weight).
    6 The Commissioner initially challenged the deductibility of all five of the
    conservation easements donated by the Murphy family, but he has since conceded that
    the Murphys are entitled to charitable contribution deductions for two of them
    (referred to by the parties as “Magnolia #3” and “Magnolia #4”). Two other
    conservation easement donations are at issue in related cases (Docket Nos. 14536-16
    and 14541-16) that were previously consolidated with the instant case for trial but now
    are severed, to be addressed in a separate opinion.
    8
    [*8] Covenants” covering 1,115 acres of the Rose Tract. (We refer to this
    deed as the “Rose Tract easement deed” and to the resulting easement
    as the “Rose Tract easement”.) The Rose Tract easement covers the
    same portions of the Rose Tract as the hog-farming certificates. The
    Rose Tract easement deed was recorded with the State of North
    Carolina, County of Duplin, on December 30, 2010. The Rose Tract
    easement deed specifically prohibits any agricultural activities on the
    Rose Tract pursuant to the hog-farming certificates. The deed required
    the Murphy family to “proceed immediately to extinguish” the
    certificates, and further provided that the certificates could not be
    “transferred to any real property owned by Owner or other real property
    in Bladen County.” The donation of the Rose Tract easement therefore
    prevented the Murphy family (or its transferees) from ever using the
    Rose Tract as a hog farm, thereby rendering the hog-farming certificates
    useless.
    Valuing the Rose Tract easement
    Before making the conveyance, Murfam engaged Andrew Piner,
    of Moore & Piner, LLC, to appraise the Rose Tract easement, and
    Mr. Piner’s appraisal considered the value of the forgone rights under
    the hog-farming certificates. As of Murfam’s contribution on December
    27, 2010, the hog-farming certificates had not been (though they could
    have been) converted from “feeder-to-finish” to “farrow-to-wean”.
    Furthermore, the Murphy family had not constructed any hog farm
    facilities on the Rose Tract, although the hog-farming certificates had
    permitted the construction of such facilities on the Rose Tract without
    an additional building permit.
    Mr. Piner appraised the Rose Tract as of December 27, 2010,
    using a “before and after” valuation method. He determined that the
    highest and best use of the Rose Tract before the easement donation
    would have been to convert the hog-farming certificates to a farrow-to-
    wean facility, to construct the necessary facilities, and to grow timber
    on the remaining acreage. On these assumptions, Mr. Piner ultimately
    determined the value of the Rose Tract before donation of the easement
    to be $10.5 million, computed the after value to be $4.8 million, and
    reasoned that the easement therefore had a value of $5.7 million.
    Reporting the easement donation on Murfam’s 2010 return
    The Murphy family engaged Dixon Hughes Goodman (“Dixon
    Hughes”)—one of the largest certified public accountancy (“CPA”) firms
    9
    [*9] in North Carolina—to prepare Murfam’s tax return for its tax year
    ending January 1, 2011. Dixon Hughes requested from the Murphy
    family all the information it deemed necessary to prepare Murfam’s
    return, and the Murphy family provided to Dixon Hughes all the
    information that the firm had requested. Dixon Hughes prepared
    Murfam’s Form 1065 on the basis of the information received from the
    Murphy family, and Murfam’s return was filed as it was prepared by
    Dixon Hughes. Murfam’s return reported the donation of the Rose Tract
    easement and claimed a corresponding charitable contribution
    deduction of $5,744,600 (i.e., the value of the Rose Tract easement as
    appraised by Mr. Piner).
    Murfam’s return included Form 8283, “Noncash Charitable
    Contributions”. The Form 8283 was signed by the appraiser, Mr. Piner;
    it included the cover letter of his appraisal; and it was also signed by
    Andrew L. Johnson, the president of NALT, the donee organization.
    However, certain portions of the Form 8283 were either missing or
    incomplete: Page 1 was not included. On Page 2, Part 1 of Section B did
    not report the date or the manner in which the donor acquired the
    property, the donor’s cost or adjusted basis in the property, or whether
    the contribution was made as part of a bargain sale.
    Examination, FPAA, and Tax Court proceedings
    IRS examination and FPAA
    The IRS examined Murfam’s 2010 return, and on December 21,
    2015, the IRS issued to Dell Murphy, as Murfam’s TMP, an FPAA
    determining to reduce Murfam’s charitable contributions by $5,298,600.
    The FPAA included Form 886–A, “Explanation of Adjustments”, which
    stated:
    It has not been established that the value of the noncash
    charitable contribution of a Qualified Conservation
    Easement deducted on your return was $5,744,600. It is
    determined that the value of the charitable contribution
    attributable to the Qualified Conservation Easement is
    $446,000; therefore, the charitable contribution is
    decreased by $5,298,600 for the taxable year ended
    January 01, 2011.
    The FPAA issued to Murfam did not assert liability for any penalty, nor
    did it determine to deny the charitable contribution deduction on the
    basis of Murfam’s failure to fully complete Form 8283 (and thereby to
    10
    [*10] satisfy the substantiation and reporting requirements of section
    170(f)(11)).
    Petition and answer
    Dell Murphy, as TMP, timely filed in the Tax Court a petition to
    challenge the adjustment in the FPAA.              In his answer, the
    Commissioner asserted—for the first time—a gross valuation
    misstatement penalty under section 6662(e) or (h) or, in the alternative,
    an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a). Like the FPAA, the
    Commissioner’s answer did not allege noncompliance with the
    requirements of section 170(f)(11) to report in the return and attach to
    the return certain information with respect to the taxpayer’s basis in the
    donated property and the appraisal thereof. Rather, the Commissioner
    first made this contention in his pretrial memorandum.
    Trial of this case
    This case was consolidated for trial with cases at Docket
    Nos. 14536-16 and 14541-16 (pertaining to two other conservation
    easements donated by the Murphy family through an S corporation in
    2010), during which the parties offered expert reports and testimony
    regarding the values of the Rose Tract easement. Additionally, the
    Murphy family testified regarding their businesses and the preparation
    of the tax returns in these cases.
    The value of the Rose Tract easement
    The parties agree, in principle, that the value of the Rose Tract
    easement is in effect the value of the hog-farming certificates. Murfam
    forfeited that value when it made the donation of the easement; but the
    parties disagree about what that value is. In preparation for trial,
    Murfam again engaged Mr. Piner to value the Rose Tract easement, and
    the Commissioner engaged Matthew Hawk to value it. After due
    consideration of the expert reports and testimony offered by both
    parties, and for the reasons explained below in Part II.C.2, we find that
    the highest and best use of the Rose Tract before the easement donation
    was (as Murfam contends) operating a hog farm after converting the
    hog-farming certificates for use as a farrow-to-wean facility (with timber
    growing on the remaining acreage), and that the corresponding value of
    the Rose Tract before the easement donation was $11,438,207. We find
    that the highest and best use of the Rose Tract after the easement
    11
    [*11] donation was to grow timber, 7 and the parties agree that the value
    of the Rose Tract after the easement donation was $5,801,000.
    Therefore, we find that the fair market value of the Rose Tract easement
    was $11,438,207 minus $5,801,000, or $5,637,207.
    OPINION
    I.     Burden of proof
    A.      The general rule
    Rule 142(a) provides that “[t]he burden of proof[8] shall be upon
    the petitioner, except as otherwise provided by statute or determined by
    the Court”. Generally, the IRS’s adjustments in an FPAA are presumed
    to be correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving them wrong.
    See Welch v. Helvering, 
    290 U.S. 111
    , 115 (1933). Petitioner thus
    generally bears the burden of proving Murfam’s entitlement to the
    charitable deduction for qualified conservation contributions under the
    applicable provisions of section 170. However, in this case the
    Commissioner concedes that “[t]he Rose Tract conservation easement
    contribution satisfies the requirements of Internal Revenue Code
    section 170(h)(1)(C)” and that “[t]here is no issue in concern to the
    conservation purpose of the Rose Tract donation by Murfam
    Enterprises, LLC.” Consequently, petitioner bears only the remaining
    burden of proving the value of the Rose Tract conservation easement.
    B.      The “new matter” exception
    The general rule that the taxpayer bears the burden of proof is
    subject to an exception that affects the outcome of some issues in this
    case: Not the taxpayer but the Commissioner bears the burden of proof
    7 The value of timber on the Rose Tract before easement donation was the same
    as the timber value after the easement donation, therefore not affecting the valuation
    of the Rose Tract easement.
    8 As to burden of production, section 7491(c) provides that the Commissioner
    “shall have the burden of production in any court proceeding with respect to the
    liability of any individual for any penalty, addition to tax, or additional amount”.
    (Emphasis added.) However, section 7491(c) does not apply to TEFRA partnership-
    level proceedings (such as this case).        See Dynamo Holdings Ltd. P’ship v.
    Commissioner, 
    150 T.C. 224
    , 234 (2018). Consequently, as a general rule, in a TEFRA
    partnership case the petitioner has not only the burden proof but also the burden of
    production, even as to any penalty.
    12
    [*12] “in respect of any new matter, increases in deficiency, and
    affirmative defenses, pleaded in the answer”. Rule 142(a).
    1.       The nature of “new matter”
    “A new theory that is presented to sustain a deficiency is treated
    as a new matter when it either [1] alters the original deficiency or
    [2] requires the presentation of different evidence. A new theory which
    merely clarifies or develops the original determination is not a new
    matter in respect of which respondent bears the burden of proof.” Wayne
    Bolt & Nut Co. v. Commissioner, 
    93 T.C. 500
    , 507 (1989) (citations
    omitted).
    2.       The “reasonable cause” defense as to “new matter”
    penalty
    Under section 6664(c)(1), “No penalty shall be imposed under
    section 6662 or 6663 with respect to any portion of an underpayment if
    it is shown that there was a reasonable cause[9] for such portion and that
    the taxpayer acted in good faith with respect to such portion.”
    (Emphasis added.) Where the Commissioner asserts a penalty for the
    first time as “new matter” in his answer and reasonable cause is at issue,
    the Commissioner’s burden of proof on the imposition of that penalty
    includes showing the absence of “reasonable cause”. See, e.g., RERI
    Holdings I, LLC v. Commissioner, 
    149 T.C. 1
    , 38–40 (2017), aff’d sub
    nom. Blau v. Commissioner, 
    924 F.3d 1261
     (D.C. Cir. 2019); Rader v.
    Commissioner, 
    143 T.C. 376
    , 389 (2014), aff’d in part, appeal dismissed
    in part, 
    616 F. App’x 391
     (10th Cir. 2015); Arnold v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2003-259
    , 
    86 T.C.M. (CCH) 341
    , 344; Collins v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 1994-409
    , 
    68 T.C.M. (CCH) 484
    , 488; Taylor v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1989-201
    , 
    57 T.C.M. (CCH) 276
    , 279–80;
    Pickett v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1975-33
    , 
    34 T.C.M. (CCH) 213
    , 224;
    Bruner Woolen Co. v. Commissioner, 
    6 B.T.A. 881
    , 882 (1927).
    In this case, the FPAA included no penalty determination.
    Rather, the Commissioner first asserted penalties in an amended
    answer to the petition that pleaded liability for gross valuation
    9 In addition to the “reasonable cause” exception of section 6664(c), a
    “reasonable basis” provision built into the very definition of a penalty-incurring
    “substantial understatement” in section 6662(d)(2)(B)(ii)(II) states that “[t]he amount
    of the understatement . . . shall be reduced by that portion of the understatement which
    is attributable to . . . any item if . . . there is a reasonable basis for the tax treatment
    of such item by the taxpayer.” (Emphasis added.)
    13
    [*13] misstatement penalties under section 6662(e) and (h), or in the
    alternative, accuracy-related penalties under section 6662(a). Because
    the penalties asserted by the Commissioner in his amended answer
    would increase the liability determined in the FPAA issued to Murfam,
    they are “new matter” for which the Commissioner bears the overall
    burden of proof. That burden includes the burden to prove the absence
    of “reasonable cause”. See Rader, 
    143 T.C. at 389
    ; Arnold, 86 T.C.M.
    (CCH) at 344; Bruner Woolen Co., 
    6 B.T.A. at 882
    .
    3.     The “reasonable cause” defense as to a “new matter”
    substantiation issue under section 170(f)(11)(A)(i)
    A second “reasonable cause” provision is also significant in this
    case. As is explained below in greater detail in Part II.B, the Code has
    a demanding regime for substantiating charitable contribution
    deductions like the ones at issue here. Section 170(f)(11) and Treasury
    Regulation § 1.170A-13(c)(2)(i)(B) require that the taxpayer “[a]ttach a
    fully completed appraisal summary” (emphasis added) to his return, and
    that appraisal summary is to include “[t]he cost or other basis of the
    property”. Id. subpara. (4)(ii)(E). If a donor fails to meet these
    requirements, then section 170(f)(11)(A)(i) provides that “no deduction
    shall be allowed”.
    However, there is an exception to this disallowance.
    Section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II) provides that the taxpayer’s deduction will
    not be disallowed “if it is shown that the failure to meet such
    requirements is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect”; and
    “reasonable cause” is, of course, the same phrase we mentioned in
    Part I.B.2 above in connection with penalties, where we showed that a
    shift in the burden of proof as to a penalty affects the burden of proof as
    to a “reasonable cause” defense to that penalty. This Court has not
    previously addressed explicitly the question of the burden of proof on the
    “reasonable cause” defense when the Commissioner raises the issue of
    noncompliance with section 170(f)(11) as “new matter” in litigation and
    reasonable cause for the noncompliance is at issue. But in Belair Woods
    we considered the relatedness of the section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II)
    “reasonable cause” defense to the “reasonable cause” defense in the
    penalty context, and we concluded that the same standard—“ordinary
    business care and prudence”, United States v. Boyle, 
    469 U.S. 241
    , 246
    (1985) (quoting 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.6651-1
    (c)(1))—should apply in both
    instances, see Belair Woods, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2018-
    159, at *22–23 (first citing Alli v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2014-15
    ,
    14
    [*14] at *60–61; and then citing Crimi v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2013-51
    , at *98–99).
    Consistent with that conclusion in Belair Woods that penalty
    principles properly inform our construction of “reasonable cause” under
    the substantiation provisions of section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II), we hold that
    the determination of which party bears the burden of proof on
    reasonable cause under the substantiation provisions depends (as it
    does for penalty liability) on whether the Commissioner’s contention of
    noncompliance with the substantiation provisions is new matter. If the
    Commissioner’s      contention    about    noncompliance         with    the
    substantiation requirements of section 170(f)(11) is new matter, then he
    bears the burden on that contention and on the “reasonable cause”
    defense to it—i.e., the Commissioner must prove the absence of
    reasonable cause.
    This shift in the burden of proof occurs here. As we discuss below
    in Part II.B.2, the Commissioner argues that Murfam’s charitable
    contribution deduction should be entirely disallowed because of
    Murfam’s failure to comply with the substantiation requirements of
    section 170(f)(11)(C) and Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c)(2) and (4),
    since Murfam did not attach a “fully completed appraisal summary” on
    Form 8283 to its tax return; and the Commissioner denies the existence
    of    “reasonable      cause”    for     that    noncompliance      under
    section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II).  The Commissioner first made this
    contention not in the FPAA, not in his answer to the petition nor in his
    amended answer, but rather in his pretrial memorandum. We conclude
    that compliance with the appraisal summary requirement of
    section 170(f)(11)(C) and Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c)(2) and (4)
    was “new matter” at the trial of this case; and we further conclude,
    guided by our penalty jurisprudence as we construe and apply the
    section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II) reasonable cause defense, that the
    Commissioner’s burden includes showing that the failure to fully
    complete the appraisal summary was not due to reasonable cause or was
    due to willful neglect. See Belair Woods, LLC, 
    T.C. Memo. 2018-159
    ,
    at *22–23; Alli, 
    T.C. Memo. 2014-15
    , at *60–61; Crimi, 
    T.C. Memo. 2013-51
    , at *98–99.
    The FPAA issued to Murfam, quoted above at page 9, determined
    that a deduction under section 170(h) is allowable, but for a significantly
    lesser amount than what Murfam claimed on its return. The FPAA
    therefore states the grounds for its determination as valuation, and (as
    15
    [*15] stated above) Murfam bears the burden to prove the value of the
    charitable contribution deduction claimed on its return.
    However, the Commissioner’s appraisal summary theory, if
    correct, would deny the charitable contribution deduction entirely, see
    § 170(f)(11)(A)(i), would accordingly increase the deficiency beyond the
    determination in the FPAA, and would require different evidence (to
    prove reasonable cause for the noncompliance). For this reason, the
    Commissioner’s appraisal summary theory is new matter for which he
    bears the overall burden of proof, including showing a lack of reasonable
    cause for Murfam’s noncompliance.
    II.   Charitable contribution deduction under section 170 for donation
    of a conservation easement
    To show its entitlement to the charitable contribution deduction
    at issue, Murfam must (a) show that it made a qualifying contribution,
    (b) show that it satisfied (or is excused from) the substantiation
    requirements for such a contribution, and (c) prove the value of the
    contribution. We discuss each of these issues in turn.
    A.     Whether Murfam made a “qualified               conservation
    contribution” under section 170(h)(1)
    Section 170(a)(1) allows a deduction for any charitable
    contribution made within the taxable year. The Code generally restricts
    a taxpayer’s charitable contribution deduction for donations of “an
    interest in property which consists of less than the taxpayer’s entire
    interest in such property”. § 170(f)(3)(A). That is, if someone owns
    property and donates to charity only a partial interest in that property,
    he may not claim a charitable contribution deduction for that donation.
    However, the statute provides an exception—and allows a deduction—
    for a “qualified conservation contribution”. § 170(f)(3)(B)(iii). Section
    170(h)(1) defines a “qualified conservation contribution” to be (1) the
    contribution of a “qualified real property interest,” (2) to a “qualified
    organization,” (3) “exclusively for conservation purposes.” In this case
    there is no dispute that the Rose Tract easement contribution meets
    these three requirements.
    16
    [*16] B.       Whether Murfam satisfied the substantiation requirements
    of   section   170(f)(11) and     Treasury    Regulation
    § 1.170A-13(c)
    1.      A description of the requirements
    “A charitable contribution shall be allowable as a deduction only
    if verified under regulations prescribed by the Secretary.” § 170(a)(1).
    Section 170(f)(11) imposes, for charitable contribution deductions,
    heightened substantiation requirements on taxpayers depending on the
    value of the contribution. 10 Section 170(f)(11)(A)(i) provides that “no
    deduction shall be allowed . . . for any contribution of property for which
    a deduction of more than $500 is claimed unless such person meets the
    requirements of subparagraphs (B) [for deductions greater than $500],
    (C) [for deductions greater than $5,000], and (D) [for deductions greater
    than $500,000], as the case may be, with respect to such contribution.”
    For contributions of $500 or more, a taxpayer must attach “a description
    of such property and such other information as the Secretary may
    require”. § 170(f)(11)(B). For contributions of $5,000 or more, a
    taxpayer must also obtain “a qualified appraisal of such property” and
    attach to the return “such information regarding such property and such
    appraisal as the Secretary may require”. § 170(f)(11)(C). Accordingly,
    Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c)(2)(i) provides:
    10  In the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 (DEFRA), 
    Pub. L. No. 98-369, § 155
    (a)(1)
    and (2), 
    98 Stat. 494
    , 691—an off-Code statutory provision—Congress directed the
    Secretary to issue regulations under section 170(a)(1) “which require any individual,
    closely held corporation, or personal service corporation claiming a deduction under
    section 170” greater than $5,000 to “obtain a qualified appraisal for the property
    contributed,” “attach an appraisal summary to the return on which such deduction is
    first claimed for such contribution,” and “include on such return such additional
    information (including the cost basis and acquisition date of the contributed property)
    as the Secretary may prescribe in such regulations.” In response to DEFRA’s directive,
    the Secretary added paragraph (c) to Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13. But in the
    American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, 
    Pub. L. No. 108-357, § 883
    (a), 
    118 Stat. 1418
    ,
    1631, Congress added paragraph (11) to subsection (f) of section 170 to “extend[] to all
    C corporations the present and prior law requirement, applicable to an individual,
    closely-held corporation, personal service corporation, partnership, or S corporation,
    that the donor must obtain a qualified appraisal of the property if the amount of the
    deduction claimed exceeds $5,000.” Staff of J. Comm. On Taxation, 108th Cong.,
    General Explanation of Tax Legislation Enacted in the 108th Congress, at 462 (Comm.
    Print 2005). “The Act also provide[d] that if the amount of the contribution of property
    . . . exceeds $500,000, then the donor (whether an individual, partnership, or
    corporation) must attach the qualified appraisal to the donor’s tax return.” Id.
    17
    [*17] [A] donor who claims or reports a deduction with respect to
    a charitable contribution to which this paragraph (c)
    [entitled “Deductions in excess of $5,000 for certain
    charitable contributions of property made after
    December 31, 1984”] applies must comply with the
    following three requirements:
    (A) Obtain a qualified appraisal (as defined in
    paragraph (c)(3) of this section) for such property
    contributed. If the contributed property is a partial
    interest, the appraisal shall be of the partial
    interest.
    (B) Attach a fully completed appraisal
    summary (as defined in paragraph (c)(4) of this
    section) to the tax return (or, in the case of a donor
    that is a partnership or S corporation, the
    information return) on which the deduction for the
    contribution is first claimed (or reported) by the
    donor.
    (C) Maintain records containing the
    information required by paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this
    section.
    Under Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c)(4)(ii), the required appraisal
    summary must include, among other things, the following information:
    (1) the date the donor acquired the property; (2) the cost or other basis
    of the property; and (3) the date the donee received the property. 
    Treas. Reg. § 1
    .170A-13(c)(4)(ii)(D), (E), (G). For contributions of $500,000 or
    more, a taxpayer must also attach the “qualified appraisal of such
    property” to the return. § 170(f)(11)(D). However, as is explained above
    in Part I.B.3, a taxpayer’s deduction will not be disallowed for failure to
    comply with the heightened substantiation requirements of section
    170(f)(11) “if it is shown that the failure to meet such requirements is
    due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.” § 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II).
    2.     Murfam’s noncompliance and reasonable cause
    Because section 170(f)(11)(A)(i) entirely disallows a claimed
    charitable contribution deduction unless a taxpayer complies with its
    substantiation rules, we consider first whether Murfam met the
    substantiation requirements with respect to the easement donation at
    issue. We conclude that Murfam did not satisfy the substantiation
    requirements of section 170(f)(11) either strictly or substantially, but
    that their failure to do so should be excused for reasonable cause
    18
    [*18] because the Commissioner failed to prove an absence of reasonable
    cause.
    a.     Strict compliance
    Although Murfam acknowledges that it did not report its cost
    basis in the donated easement on the Form 8283 attached to its return,
    as required by Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c)(4)(ii)(E), it
    nonetheless insists that it strictly complied with section 170(f)(11)(C)
    because it provided its cost basis elsewhere (but nonetheless) “on such
    return” (quoting DEFRA § 155(a)(1)(C)). Specifically, Murfam asserts
    that the IRS could have deduced its cost basis in the donated easements
    either by looking on Schedule L, “Balance Sheet per Books”, at line 12,
    “Land (net of any amortization)”, and subtracting the beginning of year
    amount from the end of year amount, or alternatively by looking at
    statement 11 from Schedule M–1, “Reconciliation of Income (Loss) per
    Books With Income (Loss) per Return”, and subtracting its reported
    values from the claimed charitable contribution amounts on Form 8283.
    We rejected a similar argument in Belair Woods, LLC, 
    T.C. Memo. 2018-159
    , at *19–20 (citations omitted), in which we held:
    The regulations require that “an appraisal summary shall
    include” information concerning basis.         The explicit
    disclosure of basis on Form 8283 is essential in alerting the
    Commissioner as to whether (and to what extent) further
    investigation is needed.
    The IRS reviews millions of returns each year for
    audit potential, and the disclosure of cost basis on the
    Form 8283 itself is necessary to make this process
    manageable. Revenue agents cannot be required to sift
    through dozens or hundreds of pages of complex returns
    looking for clues about what the taxpayer’s cost basis might
    be.
    Because     section     170(f)(11)(C)    and    Treasury     Regulation
    § 1.170A-13(c)(4)(i)(A) and (ii)(E) require that a donor’s cost basis be
    reported on Form 8283, and Murfam’s Form 8283 left the donor’s basis
    box blank, Murfam did not strictly comply with the reporting
    requirements of section 170(f)(11).
    19
    [*19]                b.    Substantial compliance
    Thirty years ago we held in Bond v. Commissioner, 
    100 T.C. 32
    ,
    41–42 (1993), that some of the reporting requirements of Treasury
    Regulation § 1.170A-13(c) are “directory and not mandatory”, so that a
    donor’s failure to comply strictly with those requirements may be
    excused if the donor nonetheless demonstrates “substantial
    compliance”. To determine whether a taxpayer has substantially
    complied with the reporting requirements of Treasury Regulation
    § 1.170A-13(c), we “consider whether [the taxpayers] provided sufficient
    information to permit [the IRS] to evaluate their reported contributions,
    as intended by Congress.” Smith v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2007-
    368, 
    94 T.C.M. (CCH) 574
    , 586 (first citing Bond, 
    100 T.C. 32
    ; and then
    citing Hewitt v. Commissioner, 
    109 T.C. 258
     (1997), aff’d per curiam
    without published opinion, 
    166 F.3d 332
     (4th Cir. 1998)), aff’d, 
    364 F. App’x 317
     (9th Cir. 2009).
    However, we observed in RERI Holdings I, 149 T.C. at 16–17:
    [B]ecause RERI’s omission of its basis . . . from the Form
    8283 it attached to its 2003 return prevented the appraisal
    summary from achieving its intended purpose, RERI’s
    failure    to    meet     the   requirement     of   section
    1.170A-13(c)(4)(ii)(E), Income Tax Regs., cannot be excused
    by substantial compliance. As explained above, Congress
    directed the Secretary to adopt stricter substantiation
    requirements for charitable contributions to alert the
    Commissioner, in advance of audit, of potential
    overvaluations of contributed property and thereby deter
    taxpayers from claiming excessive deductions in the hope
    that they would not be audited. S. Rpt. No. 98-169 (Vol. 1),
    supra at 444; 1984 Blue Book, supra at 503–504; see also
    Hewitt v. Commissioner, 109 T.C. at 264. . . . Because
    RERI failed to provide sufficient information on its
    Form 8283 to permit respondent to evaluate its reported
    contribution, cf. Smith v. Commissioner, 
    2007 WL 4410771
    ,
    at *19, we cannot excuse on substantial compliance
    grounds RERI’s omission from that form of its basis . . . .
    Therefore, RERI did not “[a]ttach a fully completed
    appraisal summary” to its 2003 return as required by
    section 1.170A-13(c)(2)(i)(B), Income Tax Regs. Because
    RERI did not meet the substantiation requirements
    provided in section 1.170A-13(c)(2), Income Tax Regs., it is
    20
    [*20] not entitled to any deduction under section 170 . . . . See
    sec. 170(a)(1); sec. 1.170A-13(c)(1), Income Tax Regs.
    To the same effect, we followed RERI Holdings I in Belair Woods, LLC,
    
    T.C. Memo. 2018-159
    , at *17, and determined:
    The requirement to disclose “cost or adjusted basis,”
    when that information is reasonably obtainable, is
    necessary to facilitate the Commissioner’s efficient
    identification of overvalued property. . . . Unless the
    taxpayer complies with the regulatory requirement that he
    disclose his cost basis and the date and manner of
    acquiring the property, the Commissioner will be deprived
    of an essential tool that Congress intended him to have.
    Therefore, under the reasoning set forth in Belair Woods, LLC,
    
    T.C. Memo. 2018-159
    , at *17–19, and RERI Holdings I, 149 T.C.
    at 16–17, there can be no substantial compliance with Treasury
    Regulation § 1.170A-13(c) where—as here—the taxpayer fails to
    disclose its cost or adjusted basis in the contributed property on Form
    8283. Because Murfam’s Form 8283 did not report its cost basis in the
    contributed property, it failed to substantially comply with the reporting
    requirements of Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c), and its charitable
    contribution deduction must be disallowed unless its failure was “due to
    reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.” See § 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II).
    c.      Reasonable cause for noncompliance
    Section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II) provides that the taxpayer’s deduction
    will not be disallowed “if it is shown that the failure to meet such
    requirements is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.” 11 As
    11  As we explained in Belair Woods, LLC, 
    T.C. Memo. 2018-159
    , at *22–23, the
    statutory reasonable cause defense under section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II) is broader than
    the regulatory reasonable cause defense under Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-
    13(c)(4)(iv)(C)(1), which provides:
    If a taxpayer has reasonable cause for being unable to provide the
    information required by paragraph (c)(4)(ii)(D) and (E) of this section
    (relating to the manner of acquisition and basis of the contributed
    property), an appropriate explanation should be attached to the
    appraisal summary. The taxpayer’s deduction will not be disallowed
    simply because of the inability (for reasonable cause) to provide these
    items of information.
    21
    [*21] is noted above, we concluded in Belair Woods, LLC, 
    T.C. Memo. 2018-159
    , at *22–23, that the same standard—“ordinary business care
    and prudence”, Boyle, 
    469 U.S. at 246
     (quoting 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.6651
    -
    1(c)(1))—should apply to both the reasonable cause defense in the
    penalty context, see § 6664(c)(1); 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.6664-4
    , and the
    reasonable cause defense of section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II). On the basis of
    our allocation of the burden of proof above in Part I.B.3, the
    Commissioner must show that Murfam’s failure to report cost basis in
    the donated properties on its Forms 8283 was not due to reasonable
    cause.
    A frequent ground for claiming “reasonable cause”—and the
    ground under consideration here—is reliance on professional advice.
    “Reliance on . . . professional advice . . . constitutes reasonable cause and
    good faith if, under all the circumstances, such reliance was reasonable
    and the taxpayer acted in good faith.” 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.6664-4
    (b)(1).
    Instructed by Treasury Regulation § 1.6664-4(c), we have held that
    reasonable cause is based on reliance on an advisor where (1) the advisor
    was a competent professional who had sufficient expertise to justify
    reliance, (2) the taxpayer provided necessary and accurate information
    to the advisor, and (3) the taxpayer actually relied in good faith on the
    advisor’s judgment. Neonatology Assocs., P.A. v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 43
    , 99 (2000), aff’d, 
    299 F.3d 221
     (3d Cir. 2002). We now follow this
    penalty-context analysis in determining reasonable cause under section
    170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II); and we look to see whether the Commissioner—
    given his burden of proof on this new matter, see supra Part I.B.3—has
    shown that Murfam’s omission of basis from Form 8283 is not excused
    by its reliance on its advisors.
    The straightforward and unchallenged trial testimony of Rebecca
    Welker (the Dixon Hughes CPA who prepared Murfam’s Form 1065)
    established that Dixon Hughes was a well-known firm with a good
    reputation in North Carolina, that Murfam retained Dixon Hughes to
    prepare all of its returns during a three-year period and relied on it to
    do so, that Dixon Hughes requested all the information it thought
    necessary for preparing Murfam’s returns, that Dixon Hughes received
    all the information that it had requested from Murfam, that Dixon
    Murfam did not attach to its appraisal summaries any explanations for its failure to
    report cost basis nor does it assert reasonable cause under Treasury Regulation
    § 1.170A-13(c)(4)(iv)(C)(1). Accordingly, we do not address reasonable cause under
    Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c)(4)(iv)(C)(1) in this Opinion, and instead we
    consider     only     the      statutory  “reasonable   cause”    defense     under
    section 170(f)(11)(A)(ii)(II).
    22
    [*22] Hughes prepared the returns in accordance with that information,
    and that Murfam filed the returns as they had been prepared by Dixon
    Hughes.
    That testimony seems to check all the boxes prescribed in
    Neonatology Associates. However, Treasury Regulation § 1.6664-4(b)(1)
    provides that “[r]eliance on . . . the advice of a professional tax advisor
    or an appraiser does not necessarily demonstrate reasonable cause and
    good faith.” Paragraph (c)(1) further explains:
    In no event will a taxpayer be considered to have
    reasonably relied in good faith on advice (including an
    opinion) unless the requirements of this paragraph (c)(1)
    are satisfied. The fact that these requirements are
    satisfied, however, will not necessarily establish that the
    taxpayer reasonably relied on the advice (including the
    opinion of a tax advisor) in good faith.
    The subdivisions of paragraph (c)(1) thereafter provide the following
    requirements:
    (i) All facts and circumstances considered. The
    advice [upon which the taxpayer relies] must be based
    upon all pertinent facts and circumstances and the law as
    it relates to those facts and circumstances. . . . In addition,
    the requirements of this paragraph (c)(1) are not satisfied
    if the taxpayer fails to disclose a fact that it knows, or
    reasonably should know, to be relevant to the proper tax
    treatment of an item.
    (ii) No unreasonable assumptions. The advice must
    not be based on unreasonable factual or legal assumptions
    (including assumptions as to future events) and must not
    unreasonably rely on the representations, statements,
    findings, or agreements of the taxpayer or any other
    person. For example, the advice must not be based upon a
    representation or assumption which the taxpayer knows,
    or has reason to know, is unlikely to be true . . . .
    (iii) Reliance on the invalidity of a regulation. A
    taxpayer may not rely on an opinion or advice that a
    regulation is invalid to establish that the taxpayer acted
    with reasonable cause and good faith unless the taxpayer
    adequately disclosed, in accordance with § 1.6662-3(c)(2),
    the position that the regulation in question is invalid.
    23
    [*23] Absence of reasonable cause could be demonstrated,
    notwithstanding reliance on an advisor, by showing that the taxpayer
    failed to comply with one or more of those requirements. We turn to the
    Commissioner’s submissions to see whether he made such a showing.
    In his pretrial memorandum (Doc. 57) and in his opening post-
    trial brief (Doc. 128), the Commissioner pointed out the failure of
    Murfam’s Form 8283 to state the donor’s basis in the contributed
    property, but he made no allegation disputing “reasonable cause” for
    that failure.    In his post-trial answering brief (Doc. 136), the
    Commissioner’s position about lack of “reasonable cause” is stated as
    follows:
    The partial Form 8283 attached to Murfam TMP’s return
    . . . did not contain [a] fully completed appraisal summar[y]
    because [it] lacked sufficient information in Section B, Part
    1 of the Form[]. . . . Dixon Hughes prepared [Murfam’s
    return] in accordance with the records provided to Dixon
    Hughes by petitioners. See Tr. 877:10-14.[12] The tax
    return preparers could not report the correct information
    on the Forms 8283 because the correct information was not
    provided to them by petitioners. . . . Petitioners were in the
    best and perhaps only position to provide this information
    to their preparers. Petitioners have yet to indicate basis
    for each property separately. Entire record.
    That is, the Commissioner argues that the Form 8283 lacked the basis
    information not because the advisors had advised that it could or should
    be omitted but because Murfam declined to provide it to those advisors.
    The cited evidence does not make this showing. There is simply
    no evidence as to whether the advisors asked for basis information.
    There is no evidence as to whether Murfam provided basis information.
    To the extent there was basis information not provided by Murfam,
    there is no evidence to show why it was not provided. The reason that
    there is no such evidence is that the Commissioner did not cross-
    12 The cited transcript states the question: “From your conversations with the
    Murphys, what was your perception, as to whether the Murphys genuinely relied upon
    you and your firm to properly prepare these returns?” Mr. Robbins answered, “Well, I
    mean, we prepared their return entirely. I mean, it was—we would have reviewed their
    return just to make sure that it looks like that we had—there were no omissions, or
    whatever, but yes, they would have relied on us to take the data provided and prepare
    the return.”
    24
    [*24] examine the witnesses on the point. Direct examination by
    Murfam’s counsel included this exchange (Tr. 874):
    Q       . . . In your dealings with the Murphys,
    through the preparation of the earlier returns and these
    returns, how responsive were they to providing you
    whatever information you and your firm requested?
    A       They were very responsive. They had a very
    good staff there.
    The Commissioner did not pursue the point—neither with the witnesses
    from the accounting firm nor with the Murphys. He now effectively asks
    us to draw a negative inference that Murfam deliberately withheld basis
    information from its advisors. Especially since the Commissioner bears
    the burden of proof on this issue, we decline to do draw such an inference
    against Murfam.
    The record thus lacks explicit evidence on whether the blank
    basis boxes on Forms 8283 were the result of Dixon Hughes’ advice or
    were instead due to Murfam’s willful neglect. If Murfam bore the
    burden to prove reasonable cause, then that lack of evidence might
    warrant the conclusion that their omission was not due to reasonable
    cause, because there is no evidence of any advice or judgment by the
    CPAs to omit cost basis in the donated property. However, in this case
    the burden of proof is on the Commissioner to show a lack of reasonable
    cause for omission of cost basis on Murfam’s Form 8283, because he
    raised this issue as new matter; and he must accordingly suffer the
    consequences of any gap in the record. Therefore, we hold that the
    Commissioner has failed to carry his burden to show a lack of reasonable
    cause, and that Murfam’s omission of its cost basis in the donated
    property on Form 8283 will accordingly be excused for reasonable cause,
    so that we will not entirely disallow its charitable contribution
    deductions for failure to comply with the reporting requirements of
    section 170(f)(11) and Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-13(c). We will
    instead now proceed to determine whether Murfam has proved the value
    of its charitable contribution deduction for its donation of the Rose Tract
    easement.
    C.     The value of Murfam’s easement donation
    1.     The method of valuing the conservation easement
    Generally, the amount of a charitable contribution deduction
    under section 170(a) for a donation of property is the “fair market value”
    25
    [*25] of the property at the time of the donation. 
    Treas. Reg. § 1
    .170A-
    1(c)(1). Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-1(c)(2) defines fair market value
    to be “the price at which the property would change hands between a
    willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion
    to buy or sell and both having reasonable knowledge of relevant facts.”
    With respect to valuing a donation of a partial interest in property,
    Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-7(c) provides that “[e]xcept as provided in
    § 1.170A-14, the amount of the deduction under section 170 . . . is the
    fair market value of the partial interest at the time of the contribution.”
    And Treasury Regulation § 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i) in turn sets forth the
    following method for valuing a perpetual conservation restriction:
    [Sentence 2:] If there is a substantial record of sales of
    easements comparable to the donated easement (such as
    purchases pursuant to a governmental program), the fair
    market value of the donated easement is based on the sales
    prices of such comparable easements. [Sentence 3:] If no
    substantial record of market-place sales is available to use
    as a meaningful or valid comparison, as a general rule (but
    not necessarily in all cases) the fair market value of a
    perpetual conservation restriction is equal to the difference
    between the fair market value of the property it encumbers
    before the granting of the restriction and the fair market
    value of the encumbered property after the granting of the
    restriction. [Sentence 4:] The amount of the deduction in
    the case of a charitable contribution of a perpetual
    conservation restriction covering a portion of the
    contiguous property owned by a donor and the donor’s
    family . . . is the difference between the fair market value
    of the entire contiguous parcel of property before and after
    the granting of the restriction.
    The fair market value of property on a given date is a question of
    fact to be resolved on the basis of the entire record. McGuire v.
    Commissioner, 
    44 T.C. 801
    , 806–07 (1965); see, e.g., Kaplan v.
    Commissioner, 
    43 T.C. 663
    , 665 (1965). In this case, we do not have “a
    substantial record of sales of easements comparable to the donated
    easement”, and we will therefore base our valuation on the before and
    after method. 
    Treas. Reg. § 1
    .170A-14(h)(3)(i). To do so—
    If before and after valuation is used, the fair market value
    of the property before the contribution of the conservation
    restriction must take into account not only the current use
    26
    [*26] of the property but also an objective assessment of how
    immediate or remote the likelihood is that the property,
    absent the restriction, would in fact be developed, as well
    as any effect from zoning, conservation, or historic
    preservation laws that already restrict the property’s
    potential highest and best use.
    
    Id.
     subdiv. (ii); see also Stanley Works & Subs. v. Commissioner, 
    87 T.C. 389
    , 400 (1986). A property’s highest and best use is the “highest and
    most profitable use for which the property is adaptable and needed or
    likely to be needed in the reasonably near future”. Olson v. United
    States, 
    292 U.S. 246
    , 255 (1934).
    To show the value of the conservation easement in this case, as
    well as the property’s highest and best use, the parties have offered the
    reports and testimonies of expert witnesses. See Rule 143(g). “Opinion
    testimony of an expert is admissible if and because it will assist the trier
    of fact to understand the evidence that will determine a fact in issue”,
    and we evaluate expert opinions “in light of the demonstrated
    qualifications of the expert and all other evidence of value.” Parker v.
    Commissioner, 
    86 T.C. 547
    , 561 (1986) (citing Fed. R. Evid. 702). Where
    experts offer competing estimates of fair market value, we decide how to
    weigh those estimates by, inter alia, examining the factors they
    considered in reaching their conclusions. See Casey v. Commissioner, 
    38 T.C. 357
    , 381 (1962). We are not bound by the opinion of any expert
    witness, and we may accept or reject expert testimony in the exercise of
    our sound judgment. Helvering v. Nat’l Grocery Co., 
    304 U.S. 282
    ,
    294–95 (1938); Estate of Newhouse v. Commissioner, 
    94 T.C. 193
    , 217
    (1990). We may also reach a decision as to the value of property that is
    based on our own examination of the evidence in the record. See
    Silverman v. Commissioner, 
    538 F.2d 927
    , 933 (2d Cir. 1976), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1974-285
    .
    Having established the subject and method of valuation, as well
    as the scope of evidence with which to do so, we will now explain the
    basis of our valuation of the Rose Tract easement at issue as stated
    above in the findings of fact.
    2.     The valuation of the Rose Tract easement
    The parties have stipulated that “the after-value of the Rose Tract
    real property (excluding timber) on December 27, 2010, was $5,801,000.
    The parties also agree that the before-value of the Rose Tract real
    27
    [*27] property (excluding timber) on December 27, 2010, was $5,801,000
    with the impact of the swine Certificates of Coverage beyond that as the
    remaining valuation issue.” The parties further stipulated that the
    Certificates could have been converted to use in a farrow-to-wean
    facility. The parties disagree as to the value of the forfeited Certificates
    and the resulting impact, if any, on the value of the Rose Tract
    easement.
    Murfam relies on the expert report of Andy E. Piner 13 to assert
    that the highest and best use of the Rose Tract before donation of the
    conservation easement was to operate a farrow-to-wean 14 hog-farming
    facility (with growth of timber on the remaining acreage) and that the
    value attributable to the conservation easement is $5,669,793. 15 We
    found him qualified, competent, and persuasive. The Commissioner
    disputes Mr. Piner’s qualifications to appraise a conservation easement
    and a farm, his use of the direct cost to construct a farrow-to-wean
    facility supplied by the Murphys, and his capitalization rate used to
    value the farrow-to-wean operation. The Commissioner instead offers
    the expert report of Matthew Hawk, who valued the Rose Tract for use
    as a feeder-to-finish facility but ultimately concluded that the cost of
    Mr. Piner’s expert report is a complete copy of the qualified appraisal that
    13
    he prepared for Murfam and that was attached to Murfam’s return.
    14  The Commissioner questions Mr. Piner’s conclusion that the pre-
    contribution highest and best use of the Rose Tract was a farrow-to-wean facility
    because the cover letter of his appraisal report states that “there are approximately
    1,100–1,200 acres that could be utilized with a finishing farm facility that has been
    permitted by the State of North Carolina.” However, despite this misstatement on the
    cover letter and again in the “Purpose and Intended Use of the Appraisal” section of
    the appraisal report, the body of the report and the substantive discussion of highest
    and best use consistently value the Rose Tract on the basis of the Certificates being
    converted for use as a farrow-to-wean facility. Furthermore, in valuing the Rose
    Tract’s highest and best use, Mr. Piner (or any appraiser) is required to consider the
    “most profitable use”, and the record in this case establishes that “farrow-to-wean” is
    a more profitable use than “feeder-to-finish”. Ultimately, the parties stipulated that
    the Certificates “can be converted from a feeder-to-finish facility to a farrow-to-wean
    facility”. Consequently, this discrepancy in Mr. Piner’s report is immaterial, and it
    therefore does not impact our view of Mr. Piner’s credibility as a valuation expert or
    the determinations made in his report.
    15 At trial Mr. Piner reduced his valuation of the Certificates (and therefore his
    valuation of the conservation easement) to $5,669,793 from the $5,744,600 stated in
    his original appraisal report. This reduction of $74,807 in the claimed value of the
    Rose Tract easement is the net effect of increasing the number of sows that a farrow-
    to-wean facility could accommodate from 18,317 to 19,538 (and thereby increasing the
    value of the certificates) but also increasing the post-contribution value of Rose Tract
    to the stipulated figure of $5,801,000 (which reduces the value of the contribution).
    28
    [*28] constructing such a facility exceeded its resulting value and was
    therefore financially unfeasible. Mr. Hawk accordingly determined that
    the highest and best use of the Rose Tract both before and after donation
    of the conservation easement was to grow timber (valued at $5,801,000)
    and that the value of the conservation easement was therefore zero.
    However, Mr. Hawk did not consider the effect of (and at the time
    he made his valuation was apparently not aware of the possibility of)
    converting the Certificates to a farrow-to-wean facility on the value of
    the Rose Tract easement, and the Commissioner later stipulated that
    the Certificates could be so converted. Mr. Piner’s valuation of the Rose
    Tract as a farrow-to-wean farm is thus largely unanswered. For
    example, neither the Commissioner nor Mr. Hawk presented alternative
    figures to counter Mr. Piner’s assertions that a farrow-to-wean facility
    on the Rose Tract could accommodate 19,538 sows which would then
    birth an average of 21 pigs per sow, which would be sold at $13.50 per
    pig (yielding potential annual gross income of approximately
    $5,539,023), that operating expenses for a farrow-to-wean facility would
    be approximately 48% of gross income ($2,658,731), and that the total
    development cost to construct a farrow-to-wean facility would be
    $20,045,667. In fact, the Commissioner presumes these figures (albeit
    begrudgingly) in his own attempt to value the Rose Tract as a farrow-
    to-wean facility in his post-trial brief.
    The only one of Mr. Piner’s figures that the Commissioner directly
    disputes in that attempt is Mr. Piner’s applied capitalization rate of
    10.25%, and the Commissioner argues that the capitalization rate
    should instead be 13.35%. The Commissioner purports to derive his
    asserted capitalization rate of 13.35% from six sales of allegedly
    comparable farrow-to-wean facilities, and he argues that “[d]eriving
    capitalization rates from comparable sales is the preferred technique
    when sufficient information about sales of similar, competitive
    properties is available.”
    Murfam and Mr. Piner point out, however, that the six sales
    offered by the Commissioner are in fact not sales of comparable
    properties but rather are sales of farrow-to-wean facilities that are a
    decade or more old and that had a capacity of less than 3,000 sows,
    whereas Murfam and Mr. Piner valued the highest and best use of the
    Rose Tract on the basis of a farrow-to-wean facility that was brand new
    and that had a capacity of 19,538 sows. According to Mr. Piner’s
    testimony, the Commissioner’s attempt to derive a capitalization rate
    for the prospective farrow-to-wean facility on the Rose Tract is “taking
    29
    [*29] capitalization rates from 15 to 25-year-old buildings and apply[ing
    them] to a brand-new structure, which is totally inappropriate” without
    adjusting the capitalization rate accordingly.
    Another flaw in the Commissioner’s asserted use of these six sales
    to derive a less favorable capitalization rate for valuing the Rose Tract
    as a farrow-to-wean facility is the methodology of computing the
    capitalization rate.     For each of the six sales offered by the
    Commissioner, he computes the respective capitalization rate by
    dividing the facility’s net annual income by the overall sale price.
    Mr. Piner determined his capitalization rate using the mortgage-equity
    method, “which produces a weighted average cost of capital based on the
    cost of debt and equity financing for the subject property.” LeFrak v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1993-526
    , 
    66 T.C.M. (CCH) 1297
    , 1302.
    Considering that the highest and best use of the Rose Tract before
    donation of the conservation easement was to build a new high-capacity
    farrow-to-wean facility, we view the mortgage-equity method of
    calculating the capitalization rate as the more credible method.
    We note that the Commissioner challenges neither Mr. Piner’s
    use of the mortgage-equity method nor his application of the
    capitalization rate to determine the value of the Certificates but
    challenges only the inputs used by Mr. Piner to determine the
    capitalization rate itself. The Commissioner argues that Mr. Piner’s
    report “lacks support for many of his conclusions because he either relies
    on information that lacks a verifiable source or utilizes figures that are
    not explained or derived from any meaningful analysis.”               The
    Commissioner specifically criticizes Mr. Piner’s lack of stated market
    data to support a 4.5% interest rate, a 15-year financing term, a 90%
    loan-to-value ratio, and a 20% equity capitalization rate.
    However, Mr. Piner testified that he based the input figures in
    his report on contemporaneous discussions with market lenders. We
    view his testimony as credible, and it is undisputed. The Commissioner
    does not offer alternative figures for the interest rate, financing term,
    loan-to-value ratio, or equity capitalization rate, nor did he cross-
    examine Mr. Piner on the correctness of his input figures. 16 The
    16 We take judicial notice that the applicable federal rate in December 2010 for
    long-term debt instruments, compounding annually, was 3.53%. Rev. Rul. 2010-29,
    2010-
    50 I.R.B. 818
    , 819. It appears, therefore, that Mr. Piner used a more
    conservative, higher rate of 4.5%—evidently on the basis of his consultations with
    market participants—than he could have used at the time of his appraisal, and that
    doing so was disadvantageous to Murfam.
    30
    [*30] Commissioner merely complains that the input figures are not
    explained in Mr. Piner’s report. But despite Mr. Piner’s imperfect
    explanation, he is a credible valuation expert who used a satisfactory
    method to determine a capitalization rate, and the Commissioner’s only
    response is a capitalization rate based on sales of properties that are not
    comparable to the Rose Tract’s proposed use as a new farrow-to-wean
    facility.   We therefore adopt the mortgage-equity method for
    determining the capitalization rate, as well as the input figures used in
    Mr. Piner’s report, with one correction: Mr. Piner calculated the
    capitalization rate to be 10.2619%, and then for reasons he did not
    explain rounded it down to 10.25%. However, even a minor reduction in
    the capitalization rate would increase the valuation of the Rose Tract (to
    the advantage of Murfam), and we therefore hold that the proper
    capitalization rate is Mr. Piner’s true calculated figure of 10.2619%.
    The Commissioner also criticizes as self-serving Mr. Piner’s use
    of the direct cost to construct a farrow-to-wean facility as supplied by
    the Murphys. However, we do not accept this criticism. As we have
    found, the Murphy family is a multi-generational hog-farming family
    with substantial expertise in their industry. We conclude they were able
    to provide credible data on the cost to construct a large farrow-to-wean
    facility. At the time of Mr. Piner’s appraisal, the Murphys were the top
    hog farmers in North Carolina and had previously constructed two
    farrow-to-wean facilities with capacities of 4,400. Mr. Piner also
    corroborated the cost data given to him by the Murphys with other
    neutral developers of large swine farm facilities. 17
    Altogether, we adopt Murfam’s method of valuing the highest and
    best use of the Rose Tract as a farrow-to-wean facility with a capacity
    for 19,538 sows, based on an average of 21 pigs per sow per year at a
    price of $13.50 per pig, yielding a projected annual gross income of
    approximately $5,539,023, and net operating income of $2,880,292.
    Using the capitalization rate of 10.2619% yields an overall value of
    $28,067,824, from which we deduct the total development cost of
    $21,381,899 (i.e., the $20,045,667 cost of constructing an 18,317-
    capacity facility (as in Mr. Piner’s original valuation) plus additional
    costs of $1,336,232 (as in his revised determination and trial testimony),
    17 Murfam’s direct cost data is the only reliable figure in our record. The
    Commissioner did not engage a valuation expert to estimate the cost of constructing a
    large farrow-to-wean facility, although since the filing of the petition Murfam has
    asserted that highest and best use of the Rose Tract before donation was to operate a
    high-capacity farrow-to-wean facility, and the Commissioner has been well aware of
    the method by which Murfam valued that use.
    31
    [*31] for a difference of $6,685,925 as the value of the farrow-to-wean
    hog-farming facility. We then add the value (based on stipulated facts)
    of the timber on the remaining acreage of the Rose Tract—$4,752,282—
    to the value of the farrow-to-wean hog-farming facility to compute the
    total value of the Rose Tract before the easement donation—
    $11,438,207. We then subtract the agreed-to value of the Rose Tract
    after the easement donation—$5,801,000—to arrive at $5,637,207 as
    the value attributable to the forgone use of the hog-farming certificates,
    and therefore the value of the Rose Tract easement.
    III.   Penalties under section 6662
    The Commissioner asserts that Murfam’s deduction of the Rose
    Tract easement is subject to the gross valuation misstatement penalty
    under section 6662(h), or, in the alternative, the penalty for substantial
    valuation misstatement under section 6662(e), for substantial
    understatement of income tax under section 6662(d), or for negligence
    under section 6662(c). For the reasons explained below, we hold that
    because of reasonable cause, Murfam is not subject to any penalty under
    section 6662.
    A.     Penalty principles
    Section 6662(a) imposes an accuracy-related penalty “equal to
    20 percent of the portion of the underpayment to which this section
    applies” upon a taxpayer who underpays his tax because of, inter alia,
    “[n]egligence or disregard of rules or regulations”, a “substantial
    understatement of income tax”, or a “substantial valuation
    misstatement”. § 6662(b)(1)–(3). An understatement of income tax is
    substantial if it exceeds the greater of “10 percent of the tax required to
    be shown on the return for the taxable year” or $5,000. § 6662(d)(1)(A).
    For 2010, the year at issue, a substantial valuation misstatement exists
    if “the value of any property . . . claimed on any return . . . is 150 percent
    or more of the amount determined to be the correct amount of such
    valuation”. § 6662(e)(1)(A). None of these penalties will be imposed
    where the taxpayer had “reasonable cause”. § 6664(c)(1).
    In the case of a “gross valuation misstatement”—i.e., where the
    value of property claimed on the return is 200% or more of the amount
    determined to be the correct valuation—the rate of the accuracy-related
    penalty is increased to 40%. § 6662(h)(1) and (2)(A)(i). There is no
    reasonable cause defense available under section 6664(c) to a gross
    valuation misstatement. § 6664(c)(3).
    32
    [*32] On the basis of these principles, the record in this case, and the
    valuation we determined above in Part II.C.2, we will now determine
    which penalties, if any, are applicable with respect to Murfam’s donation
    of the Rose Tract easement.
    B.     Section 6662 penalties with respect to Murfam
    Section 6221, as in effect at the relevant time, provided generally
    that, in a TEFRA partnership case, “the applicability of any penalty . . .
    which relates to an adjustment to a partnership item . . . shall be
    determined at the partnership level.” Section 6226(f) likewise states
    that our jurisdiction in TEFRA partnership cases is limited to “the
    applicability of any penalty . . . which relates to an adjustment to a
    partnership item.”      Treasury Regulation § 301.6221-1(c) further
    provides that “[p]artnership-level determinations include all the legal
    and factual determinations that underlie the determination of any
    penalty . . . other than partner-level defenses”. And Treasury
    Regulation § 301.6226(f)-1(a) provides that “the court has jurisdiction in
    the partnership-level proceeding to determine any penalty . . . that
    relates to an adjustment to a partnership item. However, the court does
    not have jurisdiction in the partnership-level proceeding to consider any
    partner-level defenses to any penalty . . . that relates to an adjustment
    to a partnership item.” Accordingly, within our jurisdiction in this
    TEFRA case is the ability to determine the applicability of any section
    6662 penalty; but to the extent that defenses (such as reasonable cause)
    to any penalties determined depend on the particular aspects of a
    partner-level return, we do not have jurisdiction in this TEFRA case to
    consider them.
    1.     Valuation misstatement penalty
    Murfam originally claimed on its partnership return a charitable
    contribution deduction of $5,744,600 for its donation of the Rose Tract
    easement, and above in Part II.C.2 we determined the correct deduction
    to be $5,637,207. Murfam therefore overstated on its return the value
    of the Rose Tract easement not by 200% or 150% but by approximately
    2%. Accordingly no section 6662 penalty founded on a substantial or
    gross valuation misstatement is applicable.        See § 6662(e)(1)(A),
    (h)(2)(A)(i).
    2.     Other accuracy-related penalty
    Having held the valuation penalties inapplicable, we are left with
    the 20% penalty attributable to an underpayment due to a substantial
    33
    [*33] understatement of income tax or to negligence or disregard of
    rules or regulations applies.
    a.     Substantial understatement
    Whether a TEFRA partnership adjustment results in a
    “substantial underpayment” by a given partner is an issue that must be
    determined at the partner level, so in this partnership-level action we
    do not have jurisdiction to determine “whether any applicable threshold
    underpayment of tax has been met with respect to the partner”. 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.6221-1
    (d). Rather, we “determine the applicability of the
    understatement . . . penalty, at the partnership level”. VisionMonitor
    Software, LLC v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2014-182
    , at *16; see also
    Triumph Mixed Use Invs. III, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2018-
    65, at *49–52. The Murfam partnership did overstate its charitable
    contribution deduction, so insofar as the partnership is involved, there
    is an “understatement of income tax” for purposes of section 6662(b)(2),
    and the penalty is “applicable”—subject to partnership-level defenses,
    such as the “reasonable cause” defense based on reliance on professional
    advice, under the principles of Neonatology Associates discussed above
    in Part II.B.2.c.
    We hold that the partnership-level reasonable cause defense
    overcomes any resulting penalty, because the Commissioner did not
    carry his burden to show an absence of reasonable cause for any
    substantial understatement. Rather, the evidence shows that Murfam
    engaged a competent appraiser who valued the Rose Tract easement
    using a credible method, and that the valuation was within 2% of the
    amount we have determined to be the correct value. Furthermore,
    Murfam hired professional, reputable accountants to prepare all the
    returns associated with the easement donation, and Murfam provided
    all information necessary to prepare the returns that was requested of
    it. These facts demonstrate that Murfam acted in good faith with
    respect to its valuation and reporting of the Rose Tract easement
    donation, and that any substantial understatement that results in the
    liability of a partner should be excused for reasonable cause, on the basis
    of the advice of professional tax advisors and return preparers. See
    § 6664(c); see also 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.6664-4
    (b).
    b.     Negligence
    The same facts (discussed immediately above) that support a
    partnership-level reasonable cause defense as to a substantial
    34
    [*34] understatement penalty also support a defense against the charge
    of negligence by the partnership.
    In his post-trial brief, the Commissioner supports his contention
    of negligence by making a twofold criticism of Murfam’s motives:
    “Murfam TMP’s grant of the easement was not a ‘contribution or gift,’
    but a strategy [1] to reduce Murfam TMP’s tax liability and [2] to keep
    the Rose Tract for personal recreational use, as it had always been.”
    Doc. 128, at 339. Neither of these criticisms has merit. First, Murfam’s
    tax avoidance motive does not affect its entitlement to the charitable
    contribution deduction for its donation of a qualified conservation
    contribution pursuant to section 170(h). It is quite true that Murfam’s
    donation involved “a strategy to reduce . . . tax liability”; but the very
    purpose of section 170(h) is to incentivize such contributions by offering
    a tax deduction. The Code does not induce such contributions by offering
    the deduction only to deny the deduction because the taxpayer
    responded to the incentive. Second, it is true, for some charitable
    contribution deductions, that a finding that the donor retained some
    benefit to himself would contradict the claim of a gift and would defeat
    the deduction, since the donor might thereby have failed to give his
    “entire interest in such property”, contrary to section 170(f)(3). But
    Congress’s enactment of the deduction for qualified conservation
    contributions (including an easement granted in perpetuity, 
    Treas. Reg. § 1
    .170A-14(b)(2)) expressly permits a deduction for a partial interest,
    see § 170(f)(3)(B)(iii), and consequently a donation of a conservation
    easement will almost always involve the donor’s retaining an interest in
    the property. What the donor permissibly retains he may licitly enjoy,
    provided his use does not contradict the conservation purpose of the
    easement for which he claimed a deduction.
    IV.   Conclusion
    We hold that Murfam did not satisfy the appraisal summary
    requirements of section 170(f)(11) in connection with the claimed
    charitable contribution deduction at issue, but that its failure to do so is
    excused for reasonable cause because the Commissioner, in raising this
    issue as new matter in this litigation, failed to carry his burden to show
    an absence of reasonable cause. The parties have stipulated that
    Murfam’s donation of the Rose Tract easement satisfies the
    requirements of section 170(h) to be a “qualified conservation
    contribution” for which a charitable contribution is permitted, but
    disagree as to the value of the easement and the amount of the
    associated deduction. Having considered all evidence presented by the
    35
    [*35] parties, we find the value of the Rose Tract easement to be
    $5,637,207. Finally, we hold that no penalties apply with respect to
    Murfam’s donation of the Rose Tract easement on account of reasonable
    cause.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    Decision will be entered under Rule 155.