DocketNumber: Docket No. 4099-72
Citation Numbers: 63 T.C. 596, 1975 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185
Judges: Irwin
Filed Date: 3/11/1975
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*185
*596 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' income tax as follows:
Year | Deficiency |
1968 | $ 6,699 |
1969 | 8,436 |
Concessions having been made by both parties,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Most of the facts have been stipulated and these are found accordingly.
Petitioners Ray F. and Betty B. Keefer are husband and wife and resided in Tiburon, Calif., at the time of the filing of their petition herein. For the calendar years 1968 and 1969 joint returns*187 were filed with the district director of internal revenue, San Francisco, Calif.
On January 3, 1968, petitioners purchased an office and storage building in San Francisco at a cost of $ 65,000. The purchase price was allocated $ 49,700 to the building and $ 15,300 to the land.
On December 7, 1968, the building was destroyed by fire. The salvage value of the structure immediately after the fire was *597 $ 2,000. Depreciation allowed on the building from January 3, 1968, to December 7, 1968, amounted to $ 3,728.
Immediately following the fire petitioners filed a claim with their insurance company for $ 28,865.34 and on March 2, 1969, the insurance company paid petitioners $ 28,009 in full settlement of the fire loss. Petitioners expended $ 75,812 to restore the building to a condition similar to that immediately prior to the fire. This amount included expenses incurred to meet newer building code requirements.
On their 1968 return petitioners claimed a casualty of $ 28,765. This represented the amount on the insurance claim less $ 100. On their 1969 return petitioners claimed $ 15,972 as a casualty loss for the same fire. This amount was computed by taking the difference*188 between the adjusted basis of the building destroyed and insurance proceeds in the amount of $ 28,000 plus the salvage value of the building.
OPINION
At issue is the proper computation of petitioners' 1968 casualty loss deduction. Both parties agree that the casualty loss occurred in 1968 and that, therefore, no casualty loss deduction with respect to the 1968 fire is allowable in 1969. The parties also agree that the loss was a business one so that the $ 100 limitation provided in section 165(c)(3) *189 the sale or other disposition) of the property, whichever amount is lesser.
*598 Respondent, relying upon
Petitioners' position is premised upon the contention that subparts (i) and (ii)
While we agree with petitioners that (ii) may in certain circumstances provide more favorable treatment than (i), it does not necessarily follow that (i) is either unreasonable or inconsistent with the statute.
In their attempt to persuade us that the regulation should not be applied, petitioners have misinterpreted some of their cited judicial authority.
The most obvious reason for this tax treatment of business realty is that a building is an exhaustible asset and therefore subject to depreciation under the income tax laws, while land is not. * * * Thus the necessity arises of allocating a part of the cost of a parcel of land with a building upon it to the building in order to fix its basis for computing depreciation. * * * The result is that there is no single "adjusted basis" for the land and building as a unit. The depreciation allowed or allowable on the building reduces the basis of the building only. No depreciation is allowed on the land, and the original basis of the land therefore remains unaffected. The adjusted basis of the building and the basis of the land cannot be combined into a single "adjusted basis" for the property as a whole, for to do so would in effect be reducing the basis of the whole by depreciation allowed or allowable only as against the building, a part. [
Petitioners also rely upon the reasoning in the dissenting opinion of Judge Moore in
Manifestly, the purpose of § 165 is not to allow the taxpayer a full deduction for every loss in market value his property suffers by reason of a casualty. The permissible deduction for such loss is always limited to the taxpayer's basis, or cost, in the property damaged. And the reason for this limitation is clear. Where the taxpayer suffers a loss from a destruction of market value greater than the cost of the property to him, that excess of value destroyed represents unrealized appreciation. And he may not claim a deduction for such loss because he has never recognized or paid a tax on the gain. In the extreme case, where the taxpayer's basis in the property damaged is zero, and its entire market value represents unrealized appreciation, he is entitled to *195 no deduction despite the size of the loss, large as it may be. * * *
* * *
* * * A primary rule in the computation of a casualty loss deduction is that the loss incurred is to be determined "by reference to the single, identifiable property damaged or destroyed." Treas. Reg.
As previously noted, petitioners have not shown any loss to the land resulting from the fire.
The regulation is likewise not inconsistent with
While it is clear that petitioners' cost of rebuilding exceeded their basis in the building, this does not entitle them to a greater deduction. Section 165(b) clearly limits recovery to the adjusted basis of the property destroyed. See
We realize that where the loss (i.e., the difference in fair market value before and after the casualty) exceeds the basis of the building but does not exceed the basis of the building and the land, a larger deduction is allowed if the property is nonbusiness property. In these situations (i.e., those situations involving *601 nonbusiness casualty losses) the basis of the land may be used as part of the limitation even though there has not occurred any damage (i.e., loss in value due to the casualty) to the land. Respondent's regulation on this point (
1. Petitioners have conceded the correctness of respondent's adjustment for the taxable year 1969; respondent has conceded that the $ 100 limitation of sec. 165(c)(3) is inapplicable herein.↩
2. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
3. However, in the case of business property which is completely destroyed, the regulations provide that the amount taken into account for the purposes of sec. 165(a) shall be the adjusted basis of the destroyed property even though the fair market value of the property immediately before the casualty is less.↩
4.
(b)
* * *
(2)
(ii) In determining a casualty loss involving real property and improvements thereon not used in a trade or business or in any transaction entered into for profit, the improvements (such as buildings and ornamental trees and shrubbery) to the property damaged or destroyed shall be considered an integral part of the property, for purposes of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph, and no separate basis need be apportioned to such improvements.↩
Petitioners' | Respondent's | ||
computation | computation | ||
Original cost of land | $ 15,300 | 0 | |
Original cost of building | 49,700 | $ 49,700 | |
Less: Depreciation | (3,728) | (3,728) | |
Adjusted basis | 61,272 | 45,972 | |
Less: Salvage value of building | ($ 2,000) | ||
Insurance recovery | (28,009) | (30,009) | (30,009) |
Deductible loss | 31,263 | 15,963 |
6. Subpart (ii) of
Alcoma Association, Inc. v. United States , 239 F.2d 365 ( 1956 )
Carloate Industries, Inc. v. United States , 354 F.2d 814 ( 1966 )
Helvering v. Owens , 59 S. Ct. 260 ( 1939 )
Fred and Irene Rosenthal v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 416 F.2d 491 ( 1969 )
Commissioner v. South Texas Lumber Co. , 68 S. Ct. 695 ( 1948 )