DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 7162-78, 7163-78, 7164-78
Judges: Raum
Filed Date: 4/20/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*143
Petitioners are partners in a limited partnership which owns a "total energy plant." The sole business of the plant is to supply domestic hot water and hot and cold water for heating and air-conditioning to an apartment complex owned by KF-IDS, a joint venture in which petitioners have no ownership interest. The total energy plant consists of two principal components owned by the partnership: (1) A concrete block structure containing gas fired boilers, refrigeration equipment, related equipment, pumps, office space for personnel, and space for plant expansion, and (2) buried pipes leading from the plant structure to the apartment buildings. In addition to operating the components of the total energy plant, the partnership also maintains and operates the entire energy distribution system for the KF-IDS apartment complex, including all elements used in the heating and air-conditioning of the apartments. Petitioners claimed investment credits for their proportionate shares of the partnership's investment in the total energy plant. In computing its net losses, and petitioners' distributive shares of such losses, the partnership computed1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*144 depreciation on the total energy plant on the basis of the double declining balance method and also claimed an allowance for additional first year depreciation under
1. The concrete block structure is a building in both function and appearance and therefore is not "tangible personal property" or "other tangible property" qualifying for the investment credit.
2. Since the total energy plant is a structural component of the KF-IDS apartment buildings (
3. The total energy plant is not "tangible personal property" because it is a structural component of a building or other inherently permanent structure.
76 T.C. 609">*610 OPINION
The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioners' income taxes as set forth below:
Year ended | Deficiency | |
James M. and Shirley A. Samis | Dec. 31, 1972 | $ 12,205.00 |
William L., Jr., and Marjorie Howard | Dec. 31, 1972 | 3,003.00 |
Estate of J. Howard Edmondson, deceased, | ||
Jeanette Edmondson, executrix | Feb. 28, 1974 | 1,336.31 |
1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*147 James Samis, William Howard, Jr., and Jeanette Edmondson, executrix, are members of a limited partnership, Whispering Hills Energy, Ltd., which in 1972 acquired a total energy plant to furnish hot and chilled water for an apartment complex constructed by a joint venture in which petitioners have no ownership interest. The issues requiring decision are as follows: (1) Whether the total energy plant qualifies for the investment credit as "tangible personal property" or "other tangible property," or is rather a nonqualifying "building and its structural components,"
At the 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*148 time of the filing of their petitions herein, as well as in 1972, Mr. and Mrs. Samis and Mr. and Mrs. Howard were residents of Oklahoma. Jeanette Edmondson, executrix of the Estate of J. Howard Edmondson, was a resident of Oklahoma at the time the estate's petition was filed. The issues involved herein arise solely from the participation of the husband-petitioners 76 T.C. 609">*611 and the executrix in a limited partnership, and they will hereinafter be referred to as petitioners.
At some time during 1971, a joint venture, consisting of Kavanaugh-Finley Corp. and IDS Mortgage Development Corp. (KF-IDS), was in the process of constructing approximately 440 apartment units on a tract of land it owned in the city of The Village, a suburb of Oklahoma City, Okla. On July 15, 1971, Total Energy, Inc. (Total Energy), entered into an agreement with KF-IDS relating to the planning, financing, installing, operating, and maintaining a combined on-site total energy plant to furnish electrical power, heating hot water and cooling chilled water, and heating of domestic water for the apartment complex being constructed by KF-IDS. Total Energy is a Nevada corporation the stock of which is held in the 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*149 name of Walter M. Spradley, trustee for the beneficial owners, James M. Samis, William L. Howard, Jr., Jeanette Edmondson, executrix of the Estate of J. Howard Edmondson, and N. K. Winston Corp.
Subsequent to the execution of the agreement between Total Energy and KF-IDS, and after construction of the total energy plant had commenced, on January 17, 1972, Total Energy conveyed all its right, title, and interest in the total energy plant, the assets used therewith, and the agreement between KF-IDS and Total Energy to N. K. Winston Corp., James M. Samis, William L. Howard, Jr., and Jeanette Edmondson, executrix of the Estate of J. Howard Edmondson. The purchase price for the property assigned was $ 10 and the buyers' assumption of Total Energy's obligations under the agreement with KF-IDS and its debts and obligations under various financing agreements. Included among the financing agreements assumed was a $ 900,000 first mortgage bond agreement with Mid-Continent Life Insurance Co. and Oklahoma Natural Gas Co., which had supplied the principal financing for construction of the total energy plant and distribution system. Pursuant to the agreement, the buyers acquired various proportionate1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*150 interests in the total energy plant and related assets, as hereinafter described.
By means of a limited partnership agreement and a certificate of formation, both dated January 20, 1972, the buyers formed Whispering Hills Energy, Ltd. (Whispering Hills), a limited partnership, "to acquire, construct, maintain, and operate certain equipment, machinery, and other assets capable of generating 76 T.C. 609">*612 commercial amounts of total energy services * * * and [to] sell such total energy services * * * to the owners of an apartment complex." The partners contributed their respective proportionate interests in the assets constituting the total energy plant and the contract rights related thereto to the partnership; these assets were stated to have a value equal to the debts and liabilities which had been assumed by the partners under the assignment agreement with Total Energy. Under the partnership agreement, the liability of the limited partners for partnership losses was limited to their respective capital contributions. Profits and losses were to be shared in accordance with the partners' capital contributions, which initially reflected their proportionate interests in the property contributed1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*151 to the partnership, as set forth below:
Ownership | |
Partner/class | interest |
James M. Samis (general) | 26.667% |
N. K. Winston Corp. (limited) | 20.000% |
William L. Howard, Jr. (limited) | 26.667% |
Jeanette Edmondson, executrix of the Estate of | |
J. Howard Edmondson, deceased (limited) | 26.666% |
The partnership agreement further provided that "investment tax credits and depreciation deductions allowable on assets of the partnership shall be allocated to each partner on the basis of each such partner's percentage interest" in the partnership capital.
By virtue of the above series of transactions, Whispering Hills became the successor to Total Energy with respect to all rights and obligations arising from the written agreement between Total Energy and KF-IDS. Accordingly, Whispering Hills planned, financed, and installed an on-site energy conversion plant and distribution system to furnish hot and chilled water for heating and air-conditioning, and hot domestic water for the apartment complex constructed by KF-IDS. The costs of the energy plant and distribution system up to the point of entry to the apartments were borne by Whispering Hills, and the cost of the distribution system1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*152 within the apartment buildings was borne by KF-IDS. However, Whispering Hills operates and maintains the entire energy distribution system, including all elements used in the heating and air-conditioning of the apartments.
76 T.C. 609">*613 The on-site energy plant installed by Whispering Hills consists of the following components:
Component | Cost |
Boiler | $ 16,067.20 |
Plant electrical | 25,642.91 |
Refrigeration | 49,494.17 |
Water treatment | 838.20 |
Cooling tower | 22,042.69 |
Building | 119,404.51 |
Pumps and pipe | 334,048.95 |
Total costs | 567,538.63 |
The building is a concrete block structure which houses on the lower floor the gas-fired boilers, refrigeration equipment, and related equipment. Office space for personnel and space for plant expansion is on the second floor. The cooling tower for the plant is located above a portion of the below-grade structure, and adjacent to the second floor structure. The pipes used to circulate (transport) the hot and chilled water are buried from the point of the plant structure to the apartment buildings. The related pumps are mounted inside the plant structure.
Although the agreement between KF-IDS and Total Energy contemplated that Total Energy1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*153 would provide electric power for the apartment buildings, Whispering Hills does not produce or distribute electricity, does not hold a franchise from the city of The Village for the purpose of producing, distributing, or selling electricity, and is not a licensed public utility. Instead, the principal business of Whispering Hills is to manufacture heating and cooling media and to sell the energy contained in the media by transporting the media to the KF-IDS apartment complex. KF-IDS is the sole and exclusive customer for the hot and cold water produced by Whispering Hills, and the energy provided by Whispering Hills through the chilled and heated water can be furnished only to the owners of the apartments within the complex constructed by KF-IDS. Under the contract assumed by Whispering Hills, KF-IDS is required to pay for these services monthly on the basis of a fixed charge per square foot of floor area in the apartments. The agreement provides that the fixed charge is to be raised or lowered for changes in Whispering Hills' costs for labor, taxes, insurance, and fuel. The contract also provides for payment for electricity provided KF-IDS and sharing of the profits from the1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*154 operation of the total energy 76 T.C. 609">*614 plant; these provisions are to be inapplicable if electric power is not supplied to KF-IDS. 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*155 and also has easements for the distribution system.
On its 1972 return of partnership income, Whispering Hills Energy, Ltd., listed a total of $ 567,538.63 as the distributive amount of investments in property having a useful life of 7 or more years; this amount corresponds to the stipulated cost of the energy plant and distribution system. On their 1972 income tax return, both James M. Samis and William L. Howard, Jr., claimed investment credits based upon their respective $ 151,344 proportionate shares of the partnership's investment in the energy plant and distribution system. Mr. Samis and Mr. Howard each claimed a total investment credit of $ 10,594, although Mr. Howard's 1972 credit was limited to $ 2,045, the amount of tax shown on his return. The Estate of J. Howard Edmondson, in its income tax return for its taxable year ended February 28, 1974, claimed an investment credit carryover of $ 1,336.31; this amount represents the remaining balance of the estate's original $ 10,594.05 investment credit after its application to the estate's 1973 and 1972 taxable years, which are not before us. In the notice of deficiency issued to petitioners, the Commissioner determined that1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*156 the investment credit was not allowable because the property acquired by Whispering Hills Energy, Ltd., in 1972 was not qualified property, under
Whispering Hills Energy, Ltd., reported a net loss of $ 124,703.32 on its 1972 return; one of the deductions claimed on the return was depreciation of $ 50,219.83, which reflected 76 T.C. 609">*615 depreciation on the energy plant and distribution system computed under the double declining balance method over a useful life of 22.5 years. The partnership return also claimed a $ 2,000 allowance for additional first year depreciation under
(1)
1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*159 Petitioners contend that the entire energy facility is used in the production of energy, and therefore qualifies as either "tangible personal property" or "other tangible property" within the meaning of
We find that the concrete block structure was not
In determining whether a structure is a "building" and therefore not
In order to fit within the aforementioned exception described 76 T.C. 609">*618 by the regulations, the structure must be little more than a shell for the equipment it houses.
We further find that the partnership's total energy plant and distribution system are integral parts of a "central air conditioning or heating system," and are thus structural components of a building. See
The statute states that the category of "other tangible property" does not include "a building and its structural components."
such parts of a building as walls, partitions, floors, and ceilings, as well as any permanent coverings therefor such as panelling or tiling; windows and doors;
These regulations were issued pursuant to a specific statutory grant of authority, see
As we recently stated in
The total energy plant operates as an essential part of the apartment complex. It supplies hot and chilled water for heating and air-conditioning the apartment buildings, and also supplies hot water for domestic use in the apartment buildings. These services are customarily provided by a landlord and are necessary for the operation of the apartment complex. In the absence of the total energy plant, KF-IDS would have to construct its own central heating and air-conditioning system and facilities to provide hot water for domestic use. There is no indication in the record that such services could be obtained from local public utilities or other sources. Cf.
It is equally clear that the total energy plant is a relatively permanent part of the KF-IDS apartment complex. First of all, the most costly components of the total energy plant, the building and the pumps and pipe, appear to be installations of an inherently permanent nature. Petitioners certainly have not called our attention to any evidence that these items, or the other components of the total energy plant, were readily removable. Furthermore, aside from the obvious difficulties in removing the components of the total energy plant, contractual provisions assured KF-IDS that the total energy plant would be a relatively permanent part of the apartment complex. The term of the contract for operation and maintenance1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*168 of the energy plant is for 30 years, subject to extension by mutual consent, and KF-IDS has the right to purchase the total energy plant for 10 percent of its original cost if the contract is not renewed. KF-IDS retains title to the land on which the plant is located, granting only a leasehold interest in the land to Whispering Hills. In the event that Whispering Hills fails to provide the energy services required by KF-IDS, KF-IDS reserves the right to terminate the contract and succeed to the ownership of the plant and distribution system. In the circumstances, we find that Whispering Hills' total energy plant is an integral and permanent part of the air-conditioning and heating system of the KF-IDS apartment complex, rather than an independent supplier of energy services. Accordingly, despite the separate ownership of the energy plant and the apartment buildings, 76 T.C. 609">*621 the regulations. Since the total energy plant is a structural component of a building, it therefore does not qualify as
1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*170 (2)
(A) personal property, [or]
(B) other property (not including a building or its structural components) * * * which * * * (i) was used as an integral part of manufacturing, production, or extraction or of furnishing transportation, communications, 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 143">*171 electrical energy, gas, water, or sewage disposal services, * * *
(3)
1. Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: William L. Howard, Jr., and Marjorie Howard, docket No. 7163-78; and Estate of J. Howard Edmondson, Deceased, Jeanette Edmondson, Executrix, docket No. 7164-78.↩
2. As previously noted, it was stipulated that Whispering Hills does not supply electric power to KF-IDS and does not have a franchise to supply electricity. It appears that the parties' desire to have Whispering Hills supply electricity to KF-IDS was frustrated as a result of litigation. See
3. (a) (1) In general. -- Except as provided in this subsection, the term " (A) tangible personal property, or (B) other tangible property (not including a building and its structural components) but only if such property -- (i) is used as an integral part of manufacturing, production, or extraction or of furnishing transportation, communications, electrical energy, gas, water, or sewage disposal services, * * * * * * * Such term includes only property with respect to which depreciation (or amortization in lieu of depreciation) is allowable and having a useful life (determined as of the time such property is placed in service) of 3 years or more.↩
4.
(e)
5.
(2) The term "structural components" includes such parts of a building as walls, partitions, floors, and ceilings, as well as any permanent coverings therefor such as panelling or tiling; windows and doors; all components (whether in, on, or adjacent to the building) of a central air conditioning or heating system, including motors, compressors, pipes and ducts; plumbing and plumbing fixtures, such as sinks and bathtubs; electric wiring and lighting fixtures; chimneys; stairs, escalators, and elevators, including all components thereof; sprinkler systems; fire escapes; and other components relating to the operation or maintenance of a building. * * *↩
6. The separate ownership of the energy plant should not obscure the essential matter under consideration. Certainly, if KF-IDS had itself constructed and operated the plant, it would clearly have to be treated as an integral and structural component of the entire apartment complex, and would not qualify for the investment credit. It can hardly be assumed that Congress intended to allow the credit in respect of the identical structure merely because KF-IDS arranged to have it installed and operated pursuant to contract by another entity which engaged in no other business. Bearing in mind the basic objective which Congress sought to achieve by means of the investment credit (see S. Rept. 1881, 87th Cong., 2d Sess. 10-12 (1962), H. Rept. 1447, 87th Cong., 2d Sess. 7-9 (1962)), the separate ownership of the energy plant in the present circumstances is wholly irrelevant.↩
7. Petitioners have not argued that the energy plant might be part of an integrated unit of residential rental property, see