DocketNumber: Docket No. 18584-11
Judges: MARVEL
Filed Date: 6/24/2013
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
Decision will be entered for respondent.
MARVEL, This case was submitted fully stipulated under During and before the year in issue VIP's Industries, Inc. (VIP's Industries) & Subsidiaries *161 (collectively, petitioner) operated several wholly owned and majority-owned entities in the hotel, motel, restaurant, hospitality, and real estate industries. VIP's Industries' wholly owned subsidiaries include, among others, the following subchapter C corporations: Phoenix Hotels, Inc., and VIP's Hotels, Inc. Before June 7, 2002, VIP's Hotels was named VIP's Motor Inns, Inc. Phoenix Hotels owns 100% of Inns Management, Inc., also a C corporation. Inns *159 Management and VIP's Hotels own 1% and 99%, respectively, of Phoenix Inns, LLC, a limited liability company that is treated as a partnership for tax purposes. Before March 30, 2006, Phoenix Inns operated motels under the brand name "Phoenix Inns Suites", with locations in South Salem, Lake Oswego, Eugene, Tigard, and Beaverton, Oregon, and in Vancouver, Washington. On December 3, 1993, VIP's Motor Inns executed a ground lease with respect to real property at 850 Franklin Boulevard, Eugene, Oregon (Eugene property), with Northwest Christian College. The ground lease was a nonrenewable and nonextendable lease with a term of 33 years from the lease commencement date. The lease commencement date *162 was August 1, 1994. The ground lease provided that the lessee would build and operate a motel facility with no fewer than 90 rooms on the Eugene property. Paragraph 12 of the ground lease provided that all improvements and appurtenances to, and all personal property placed upon, the Eugene property remained the property of the lessee until the expiration or sooner termination of the ground lease. Under the ground lease the lessee was responsible for the costs of all improvements made on the Eugene property. The ground lease was never amended. *160 By November 1994 VIP's Motor Inns had constructed a motel on the Eugene property at a cost of $2,509,398. VIP's Motor Inns, and its successor, Phoenix Inns, operated a motel under the brand name of Phoenix Inn Suites on the Eugene property until March 30, 2006. While operating the Phoenix Inn Suites motel, VIP's Motor Inns, and later Phoenix Inns, was responsible for all utility and operating expenses, personal and real property taxes, and casualty and liability insurance expenses for the Eugene property and the motel. On March 30, 2006, petitioner, through Phoenix Inns, sold its leasehold interest in the Eugene *163 property to a Wall Street investment firm and deposited the proceeds with a qualified intermediary (QI), *161 In exchange for its leasehold interest in the Eugene property, Phoenix Inns received $1,719,609 in cash, sustained sale expenses of $75,663, and was relieved of the balance of its existing loan on the Eugene property of $1,710,686. On March 30, 2006, Phoenix Inns had an adjusted basis in its leasehold interest in the Eugene property of $2,103,719. Phoenix Inns used the sale proceeds deposited with the QI to purchase fee interests in the following two real properties with a combined fair market value of $4,319,705: (1) a property at 17993 SW Lower *164 Boones Ferry Road, Tigard, Oregon (Bridgeport property), with an existing motel; and (2) a property at 210 Liberty Street, SE, Salem, Oregon (Salem property), with an existing office building. On April 19, 2006, Phoenix Inns received a statutory warranty deed from Krishna Enterprises, LLC, for a fee interest in the Bridgeport property, and Phoenix Inns assumed a loan of $1.25 million on the Bridgeport property. On June 23, 2006, petitioner received a statutory warranty deed from the Gwynn Building, LLC, for a fee interest in the Salem property. After April 19 and June 23, 2006, Phoenix Inns held the Bridgeport property and the Salem property, respectively, for productive use in its trade or business. Petitioner filed a consolidated Federal income tax return for its TYE September 30, 2006, on a Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return. *162 Through Phoenix Inns, petitioner realized gain of $4,320,618 from the exchange of the leasehold interest in the Eugene property. On its consolidated return petitioner claimed that it recognized $2,104,632, and did not recognize the remaining $2,215,986, of the realized gain pursuant to On March 16, 2011, respondent issued to petitioner *165 a notice of deficiency for its TYE September 30, 2006. In the notice of deficiency respondent determined that petitioner was required to recognize additional gain of $2,215,986 from the exchange of the leasehold interest in the Eugene property because the exchange did not qualify for nonrecognition under Generally, the Commissioner's determination of a deficiency is presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving that the determination is improper. The parties do not address the assignment of the burden of proof in the stipulations or on brief. However, because we decide this case on the preponderance of the evidence, the burden of proof is irrelevant. Generally, gain or loss realized from the sale or exchange of property is recognized. The rationale for nonrecognition of gain or loss on the exchange of like-kind property is that the taxpayer's economic situation after the exchange is fundamentally the same as it was before the transaction occurred. In determining whether property is exchanged *168 for property of a like kind within the meaning of With respect to real property, The parties disagree (1) whether petitioner's leasehold interest in the Eugene property was of like kind to the fee interests in the Bridgeport and Salem properties; and (2) even if the leasehold interest *170 in the Eugene property was not of like kind to the fee interests in the Bridgeport and Salem properties, whether petitioner's motel improvements on the Eugene property were of like kind to those fee interests. Petitioner contends that its leasehold interest in the Eugene property was of like kind to the fee interests in the Bridgeport and Salem properties because (1) Petitioner exchanged its leasehold interest in the Eugene property with a remaining term of 21 years and 4 months for fee interests in the Bridgeport and Salem properties. We *171 previously have held that leasehold interests with similar or even longer terms than the one at issue here are not equivalent to fee interests. In *168 Petitioner's leasehold interest in the Eugene property with a term of 21 years and 4 months remaining is closer in nature to the leasehold interests that we characterized as not equivalent to a fee interest, *169 Because we decide this case in accordance with our existing precedent, we need not decide whether Petitioner contends that even if its leasehold in the Eugene property was not of like kind to the fee interests in the Bridgeport and Salem properties, the exchange also covered the motel improvements on the Eugene property and those *170 improvements, which petitioner contends constituted 85% of the value of the property, were of like kind to the Bridgeport and Salem properties. See *171 We have considered all other arguments made by the parties, and to the extent not discussed above, find those arguments to be irrelevant, moot, or without merit. To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) as amended and in effect for the year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. All monetary amounts have been rounded to the nearest dollar.↩
2. Pursuant to regulations issued under
3. "'Credible evidence is the quality of evidence which, after critical analysis, the court would find sufficient upon which to base a decision on the issue if no contrary evidence were submitted (without regard to the judicial presumption of IRS correctness).'"
4. The term "Secretary" means the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate.
5. Petitioner contends that
Petitioner further contends that
6. In reaching this conclusion we note that a short-term real property interest is not of like kind with a long-term real property interest irrespective of whether the short-term real property interest is a real property interest under State law.
7. Petitioner relies on
Century Electric Co. v. Commissioner ( 1950 )
HIGBEE v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE ( 2001 )
alan-s-davis-m-l-randolph-fred-e-trotter-and-h-c-eichelberger ( 1979 )
Davis v. United States ( 1976 )
Diane S. Blodgett v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 2005 )
SMALLEY v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE ( 2001 )
Century Electric Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1951 )
Jordan Marsh Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1959 )