DocketNumber: Docket No. 5539-11S
Citation Numbers: 2012 T.C. Summary Opinion 82, 2012 Tax Ct. Summary LEXIS 78
Judges: CHIECHI
Filed Date: 8/22/2012
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
PURSUANT TO
Decision will be entered for respondent.
CHIECHI,
Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal income tax for his taxable year 2008 of $7,500.
We must decide whether petitioner is entitled to the first-time homebuyer credit under section 36(a). We hold that he is not.
Virtually all of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
Petitioner resided in Iowa at the time he filed the petition.
On February 21, 2007, petitioner and Amber J. Reeves (Ms. Reeves), as buyers, and Matthew P. Johnson and Lynn M. Johnson (Johnsons), as sellers, executed a document titled "Real *79 Estate Contract" (contract). On February 27, 2007, the contract was recorded with the recorder for Polk County, Iowa.
Pursuant to the contract, the Johnsons agreed to sell to petitioner and Ms. Reeves, and petitioner and Ms. Reeves agreed to purchase from the Johnsons, for $156,000 the real property at 3613 E. 43rd Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50317 (real property in question). Petitioner and Ms. Reeves in effect obtained a loan from the Johnsons in order to finance payment of the purchase price of the real property in question. The terms of that loan were set forth in paragraph 1 of the contract as follows:
Provided that petitioner and Ms. Reeves timely performed all of their obligations under the contract, the contract required that possession of the real property in question be delivered to them on February 21, 2007, the date on which the parties to the contract executed it. In that event, "any adjustments of rent, insurance, taxes, interest, and all charges attributable to the Sellers' [Johnsons'] possession" were to be made as of the date of possession.
In addition to the provisions in paragraph 1.c. and d. of the contract relating to real estate taxes on the real property in question (quoted above), the contract provided as follows with respect to real estate taxes: Sellers shall not pay real estate taxes prorated to the date of closing and any unpaid taxes thereon payable in prior years. Buyers shall pay any taxes not assumed by Sellers and all subsequent taxes before same become delinquent. Whoever *82 may be responsible for the payment of said taxes, and the special assessments, if any, each year, shall furnish to the other parties evidence of payment of such items not later than July 15th of each year.
The contract also provided in pertinent part as follows: ****
On February 21, 2007, petitioner started living in the house on the real property in question and treated it as his home. Thereafter, as required by the contract, petitioner paid all the expenses associated with the real property in question, including real property taxes, premiums for insurance on that property, utility expenses, and any repair expenses.
Sometime in 2008, petitioner obtained a loan from a person other than the Johnsons in order to finance payment to the Johnsons of the remaining unpaid purchase price of the real property in question. *87 with the recorder for Polk County, Iowa. That special warranty deed stated that it was "given in full and complete satisfaction of one certain real estate contract dated February 21, 2007 and filed February 27, 2007 * * * in the office of the Polk County Recorder."
In Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return (return), that petitioner filed around February 9, 2008, for his taxable year 2007 (2007 return), he showed his home address as the address for the real property in question. In his 2007 return, petitioner claimed deductions for real property taxes and home mortgage interest with respect to the real property in question of $3,614 and $10,127, respectively.
In the return that petitioner filed on February 7, 2009, for his taxable year 2008 (2008 return), the year at issue, he showed his home address as the address for the real property in question. In his 2008 return, petitioner claimed deductions for real property taxes and home mortgage interest with *88 respect to the real property in question of $2,954 and $10,199, respectively. Discussion Petitioner bears the burden of proving that respondent's determination in the notice is wrong. An individual taxpayer who is a first-time homebuyer of a principal residence in the United States is entitled to a credit in an amount equal to 10 percent of the purchase price of the principal residence, sec. 36(a), but such amount is not to exceed $7,500, sec. 36(b)(1)(A). *89 principal residence on or after April 9, 2008, and before July 1, 2009. Sec. 36(h). The term "first-time homebuyer" is defined in section 36(c)(1) to mean "any individual if such individual * * * had no present ownership interest in a principal residence during the 3-year period ending on the date of the purchase of the principal residence to which this section [36] applies." As pertinent here, the term "purchase" is defined in section 36(c)(3) to mean "any acquisition". The parties agree that petitioner It is petitioner's position that for purposes of section *90 36 he "purchased" the real property in question on June 24, 2008. In support of that position, petitioner argues that June 24, 2008, is the date on which he "took ownership" of that property because that is the date on which the Johnsons executed a special warranty deed in which they conveyed to him and Ms. Reeves the real property in question. Respondent counters that for purposes of section 36 petitioner "purchased" the real property in question in 2007, and thus not after April 9, 2008, *91 In resolving the dispute between the parties, we are guided by the principles summarized in Case law * * * sets forth the standard for determining when a sale is complete for tax purposes. With respect to real property, a sale and transfer of ownership is complete upon the earlier of the passage of legal title or the practical assumption of the benefits and burdens of ownership. See In determining whether passage either of title or of benefits and burdens has occurred, we look to State law. It is State law that creates, and governs the nature of, interests in property, with Federal law then controlling the manner in which such interests are taxed. See Among the factors which this and other courts have cited as indicative of the benefits and burdens of ownership are: A right to possession; an obligation to pay *93 taxes, assessments, and charges against the property; a responsibility for insuring the property; a duty to maintain the property; a right to improve the property without the seller's consent; a bearing of the risk of loss; and a right to obtain legal title at any time by paying the balance of the full purchase price. See In As required by We hold that under Iowa law petitioner (and Ms. Reeves) became the equitable owners of the *95 real property in question as of February 21, 2007, the effective date of the contract in question. That contract was a financing arrangement between the Johnsons, as sellers, and petitioner and Ms. Reeves, as buyers, of the real property in question under which the Johnsons made a loan to petitioner and Ms. Reeves in order to finance their purchase of that property. Consistent with Iowa law, which treated petitioner (and Ms. Reeves) as the equitable owners of the real property in question as of February 21, 2007 (the effective date of the contract), on that date and under that contract petitioner started living in the house on that property and treated it as his home. Thereafter, as required by the contract, petitioner paid all the expenses associated with the real property in question, including real property taxes, premiums for insurance on that property, utility expenses, and any repair expenses. Moreover, in petitioner's 2007 return petitioner showed his home address as the address for the real property in question. In that return, petitioner claimed deductions for real property taxes and home mortgage interest with respect to the real property in question of $3,614 and $10,127, *96 respectively. On the record before us, we find that for purposes of section 36 petitioner "purchased" the real property in question on February 21, 2007, and thus not after April 9, 2008, as required by section 36(h). On that record, we hold that petitioner is not entitled to the first-time homebuyer credit under section 36(a) for his taxable year 2008. To reflect the foregoing,
1. Hereinafter, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year at issue. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The record does not establish whether both petitioner and Ms. Reeves obtained a loan from a person other than the Johnsons to finance payment to the Johnsons of the remaining unpaid purchase price of the real property in question.↩
3. In his 2008 return, petitioner also claimed "Qualified mortgage interest premiums" of $2,312.↩
4. In effect, the first-time homebuyer credit is a non-interest-bearing loan from the Government that must be repaid over a 15-year period.
5. Although under the contract Ms. Reeves and petitioner were the buyers of the real property in question, for convenience we generally shall refer hereinafter only to petitioner who claimed in his 2008 amended return the entire amount of the credit allowed by sec. 36.↩
6. The date on which the Johnsons, as sellers, agreed to sell, and petitioner and Ms. Reeves, as buyers, agreed to purchase, the real property in question was February 21, 2007. That was also the date on which petitioner started living in the house on that property and treated it as his home.↩
7. Respondent advances an alternative argument in support of respondent's position that petitioner is not entitled to the credit under sec. 36(a). We need not address that alternative argument. That is because, as discussed below, we agree with respondent's argument that for purposes of sec. 36 petitioner "purchased" the real property in question in 2007.
Estate of Johnston v. Commissioner , 51 T.C. 290 ( 1968 )
Baird v. Commissioner , 68 T.C. 115 ( 1977 )
Margaret v. Dettmers, Estate of Herrick L. Johnston, ... , 430 F.2d 1019 ( 1970 )
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Union Pac. R. Co. , 86 F.2d 637 ( 1936 )
HL Munn Lumber Company v. City of Ames , 176 N.W.2d 813 ( 1970 )
Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner , 77 T.C. 1221 ( 1981 )
Major Realty Corporation and Subsidiaries v. Commissioner ... , 749 F.2d 1483 ( 1985 )
Fellmer v. Gruber , 1978 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1173 ( 1978 )