DocketNumber: Docket No. 11694-09.
Judges: DAWSON,COLVIN,COHEN,VASQUEZ,THORNTON,MARVEL,GUSTAFSON,MORRISON,PARIS,KERRIGAN,GALE,HALPERN,FOLEY,GOEKE,WHERRY,KROUPA,HOLMES
Filed Date: 6/27/2012
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
An appropriate order will be issued, and decision will be entered under
At the end of May 2006, Ps purchased property in Vienna, Virginia (Vienna property), with the intention to demolish the house situated thereon (house) and construct a new one on the site. Their realtor told them about the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department (FCFRD) Acquired Structures Program, where a property owner allows FCFRD to conduct live fire training exercises on his or her property. As part of the exercises, FCFRD destroys, by burning, the designated building on the owner's property. Within a few weeks of purchasing the Vienna property, Ps contacted FCFRD and obtained information about the requirements for participating in the program. After Ps obtained a demolition permit and completed all of the other requirements, they executed documents granting FCFRD the right to conduct training exercises on the Vienna property and to destroy the house by burning during the exercises. During October 2006, FCFRD, along with six other fire departments, used the Vienna property to conduct live fire training exercises, during which the house was destroyed. On their 2006 Federal income tax return, Ps reported *25 a noncash charitable contribution of $339,504 on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, for the donation of the house to FCFRD. R disallowed the deduction Ps claimed for 2006 and asserts that Ps' donation to FCFRD was a contribution of a partial interest in property, a deduction for which is denied by
*396 DAWSON,
Although the parties have not stipulated any of the facts in this case, they agree there are no disputes as to genuine issues of material facts. On the basis of our review of the record, we are satisfied that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that judgment may be rendered as a matter of law.
*397 After *28 concessions by respondent,
Petitioners resided in Virginia when their petition was filed. In 2006 petitioners resided in Haymarket, Virginia. On May 31, 2006, they purchased property in Vienna, Virginia (Vienna property), for $625,000 and acquired the fee simple interest therein. The Vienna property consisted of a 1,221-square-foot brick house (house) situated on a 22,786-square-foot lot. Petitioners purchased the Vienna property with the intent to demolish the house, which had been built in 1960, and build a *29 new one to their specifications. Petitioners never resided in the house, nor did they reside on any part of the Vienna property during 2006. In May 2006, before closing on the Vienna property, petitioners engaged Atlantic Coast Inspection Services, LLC, to complete a home inspection of the house that included an asbestos report. They also obtained an appraisal dated May 14, 2006, from William Fluharty of Reliable Appraisal Service. Mr. Fluharty valued the entire property (including the house and land) at $625,000. Petitioners subsequently obtained a second appraisal from Mr. Fluharty, dated September 1, 2006, that valued the entire property at $660,000.
Petitioners learned of the FCFRD Acquired Structures Program from the realtor who represented them in their purchase of the Vienna property. The program was designed to provide "real life" training for emergency personnel by using structures for training exercises. Under the program the property owner allows the FCFRD to conduct live fire training exercises on his or her property. As part of the exercises, FCFRD destroys, by burning, the designated building on the *398 owner's property. In June 2006, petitioners contacted the FCFRD about *30 its program. On June 12, 2006, FCFRD acknowledged petitioners' interest in participating in the program and sent them a Standard Property Owner Package.
In order to participate in the program, petitioners were required to (1) permit FCFRD to inspect the house to determine its training value; (2) have the house inspected and remove any asbestos found as a result of such inspection; (3) obtain a demolition permit; (4) sign certificates of authorization and temporary release forms; (5) disconnect and/or remove any utilities from the house; and (6) provide all required documentation to FCFRD at least two weeks before the planned demolition.
Petitioners hired MW Construction in Alexandria, Virginia, to construct a new house on the Vienna property after the old house was demolished. As part of the contract, MW Construction was to remove the debris from the burning of the house after the fire training exercises were completed.
On or about July 20, 2006, petitioners requested a demolition permit for the Vienna property from Fairfax County. The application for the permit required petitioners to provide the name, address, telephone number, State contractor's license number, and Fairfax County business *31 license number of the licensed contractor that would perform the work. Because the May 2006 home inspection report indicated that asbestos was present in the house in the basement floor tile and baseboard, petitioners hired Young Environmental to remove the asbestos. Young Environmental removed the materials containing asbestos on or about July 24, 2006, and sent a letter of completion to petitioners, along with an invoice for its services. On August 25, 2006, petitioners obtained a construction mortgage loan of $943,575 from Suntrust Mortgage, Inc. They used a portion of the loan to pay off a mortgage from *399 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., and a home equity *32 loan from National City. On September 14, 2006, petitioners executed two forms required by FCFRD for participation in the program: (1) the Live Fire Training Exercise Certificate of Authorization Form (authorization form), and (2) the Certificate of Authorization/Temporary Liability Release Form (release form). On the authorization form petitioners certified that they were the true owners of the Vienna property and granted FCFRD permission to use the Vienna property as follows: This is to certify that: Permission is herby [sic] granted to the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department to utilize for training such building(s) designated on the above describe property. In return, Fairfax County agrees not to bring suit to exercise its right of subrogation under Signed: Property Owner or Authorized Representative Signed: Fairfax County Representative On the release form petitioners certified that they were the owners of the Vienna property and that they had obtained a permit to demolish the house on the Vienna property and granted FCFRD permission to use the house for training as follows: This is to certify that I, I further certify that a Demolition Permit has been secured from the Department of Environmental Management, Permit Branch, and is described as Permit # I herby [sic] grant permission to the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department to conduct a training exercise on the above premises and to destroy, by burning, such building(s) as designed on the above described property. I agree to remove any remaining hazardous conditions including but not limited to open *34 pits, basements and wells, standing walls and *400 chimney, and burned and unburned debris after the completion of the training exercise. I understand that the designated building(s) may not be destroyed or may only be partially destroyed by the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department if circumstances beyond the control of the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department should arise. It is agreed that I will not hold Fairfax County or the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department or any of its officers, agents, or employees liable for any damage to the above described property. In return, Fairfax County agrees not to bring suit to exercise its right or subrogation under Signed: Property Owner or Authorized Representative Signed: Fairfax County Representative On September 29, 2006, petitioners sent to FCFRD all of *35 the documents necessary to participate in the program. None of the documents purport to transfer title to the house or the Vienna property or any ownership interest therein to Fairfax County or FCFRD. During October 2006, FCFRD, along with six other fire departments, used the Vienna property to conduct live fire training exercises. The house was demolished by fire during the training exercises. On October 23, 2006, FCFRD sent petitioners an acknowledgment letter thanking them for their donation and expressing their appreciation for petitioners' allowing them to use the Vienna property for the training exercises. On October 23, 2006, MW Construction was given access to the Vienna property to remove the debris and begin construction of the new house. The construction was completed in July 2007. Petitioners subsequently obtained a residential use permit and moved into the new house, where they currently reside. On their 2006 Federal income tax return, petitioners reported a noncash charitable contribution of $339,504 on Schedule A. The contribution of $339,504 consisted of only the claimed donation of the house on the Vienna property. In accordance with the limitations of Before 1969 a taxpayer could deduct contributions to charitable organizations of partial interests in the taxpayer's property, including income and remainder interests and the right to use the property. Congress became concerned that the amount of a charitable contribution deduction for a partial interest in property might not correspond to the value of the benefit ultimately received by the charity and that taxpayers were receiving a double benefit from donations of the use of property for a period of time. (3) Denial of deduction in case of certain contributions of partial interests in property.-- (A) In general.--In the case of a contribution (not made by a transfer in trust) of an interest in property which consists of less than the taxpayer's entire interest in such property, a deduction shall be allowed under this section only to the extent that the value of the interest contributed would be allowable as a deduction under this section if such interest had been transferred in trust. For purposes of this subparagraph, a contribution by a taxpayer of the right to use property shall be treated as a contribution of less than the taxpayer's entire interest in such property. (B) Exceptions.--Subparagraph (A) shall not apply to-- (i) a contribution of a remainder interest in a personal residence or farm, (ii) a contribution of an undivided portion of the taxpayer's *40 entire interest in property, and (iii) a qualified conservation contribution. Respondent contends that petitioners donated *41 to FCFRD merely the right to use the Vienna property. Respondent argues alternatively that if petitioners transferred an ownership interest in the house to FCFRD, they nonetheless retained substantial interest in the Vienna property and the house. Respondent concludes therefore that petitioners contributed a partial interest in the property, a deduction for which is prohibited under Petitioners assert that their granting FCFRD the right to destroy the house by burning conveyed to FCFRD all of their rights, title, and interest in the house and not merely the use of the Vienna property.*42 They assert that there is no requirement that the land be transferred with the house and, therefore, they are entitled to a charitable contribution deduction for the value of the house. Whether petitioners' contribution to the FCFRD constitutes a transfer of a partial interest in property for the purposes of "A common idiom describes property as a 'bundle of sticks'--a collection of individual rights which, in certain combinations, constitute property." Accordingly, we first look to Virginia law to determine what property rights petitioners had in the house and what property rights in the house were given to FCFRD. In looking to State law, we consider the substance of the property rights State law provides, including the benefits and burdens of such rights, not merely the labels the State gives these rights or the conclusions it draws from them. In Virginia the common law continues in full force except as altered by the General Assembly of Virginia. Land includes everything belonging or attached to it, above and below the surface. It includes the minerals buried in its depths, or which crop out of its surface. It equally includes the woods and trees growing upon it. Rooted and standing in the soil, and drawing their support from it, they are regarded as an integral part of the land, just as the coal, the iron, the gypsum, and the building stone which enter so largely into the business of commerce. Attached to the soil, they pass with the land, as a part of it. * * * The definition of land under Virginia law, as interpreted by the Virginia Court, is the widely recognized ordinary legal definition of land that derives from the common law. *406 Where a taxpayer contributes to a charity an interest in a building that is part of the land under State law but retains all title to and interest in the remaining land, the taxpayer has donated less than his entire interest in the land. The taxpayer will not be allowed a charitable contribution deduction unless the donated interest falls within the exceptions of In the case at hand, the house was attached to the land and was conveyed to petitioners along with the land when they purchased the Vienna property. Under the common law and the laws of Virginia, the house was part of the land that is the real estate we refer to as the Vienna property. Petitioners' purported contribution of the house to FCFRD was a contribution of less than their entire interest in the Vienna property. Pursuant to Pursuant to (1) If a donor *49 contributes some of the rights in the property and retains other substantial rights, the donated rights in *407 the property are not an undivided portion of the entire interest. The substantiality of the donor's interest in the retained property is determinative. In The term "undivided" in its common usage means "not separated out into parts or shares." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 2492 (1986). We are most familiar with the concept of undivided interests in the context of a tenancy in common, which is "[a] tenancy by two or more persons, in equal or unequal undivided shares, each person having an equal right to possess the whole property." Black's Law Dictionary 1478 (17th [sic] ed. 1999). "'The *50 central characteristic of a tenancy in common is simply that each tenant is deemed to own by himself, with most of the attributes of independent ownership, a physically undivided part of the entire parcel.'" The "bundle of sticks" that constitutes land situated in Virginia includes the rights with respect to the surface of the land, the minerals in the land, the timber growing on the land, structures attached to the land, and the air space over the land. An undivided portion of a donor's entire interest in the land must consist of a fraction or percentage of each and *408 every one of those "sticks" and must extend over the entire term of the donor's interest in such property. Thus, a charitable contribution of an interest in the land does not constitute a contribution of an undivided portion of the donor's entire interest if the donor transfers some sticks and retains substantial rights in others. We observe that while some of the sticks, e.g., minerals *52 buried in the land and soil covering the surface of the land, extend over the entire property, others such as fixtures attach to one specific location; e.g., a building occupies only the land immediately under its footprint. A landowner can convey by metes and bounds any part of the land or to convey all or a portion of his interest in the minerals, the timber, or the structures, severing the transferred interest in the land from the interest retained, creating separate estates in the land.See, e.g., When a taxpayer transfers a fee interest in land to a charitable organization while retaining substantial mineral rights, he does not transfer an undivided interest in the land. Hypothetically, because the regulations treat a division of land into separate lots as an undivided interest, a taxpayer could donate just the land under the building's footprint, including the building, to a charitable organization. If local law permitted a landowner to divide his land into two such separate lots, the donation of an interest in the building alone would be an undivided interest in the land if the retained rights in the building and the land immediately under its footprint were insubstantial. Under the common law, a fixture that is attached to the land, including a building, is regarded as part of the land unless and until it is severed from the land. Granting a fire department the right to destroy the building while conducting training exercises on the property does not *58 transfer to the fire department all the benefits and burdens of ownership and title to the building. The fire department does not have the right to keep and use the building in its current condition with ingress and egress over the land retained by the landowner, to sell the building with all the rights attached thereto, or to construct a new building on the site of the destroyed building. The landowner retains those substantial rights. Indeed, petitioners granted FCFRD the right to burn the house so that they could exercise those rights. Nor does the contribution transfer the burdens of ownership of the building. The landowner must make the building suitable for use in the training exercises; e.g., by removing any asbestos present in the building, obtaining any permits required by local government, and disconnecting *411 utilities. The landowner is also responsible for safeguarding the public from hazardous conditions remaining after the training exercises are completed, such as open pits, basements and wells, standing walls and chimney, and burned and unburned debris. If the landowner conveys the building and retains the land with the intent that the building be detached and removed from *59 the land, the easements by necessity are not granted to the building. Severance of the building from the land may be actual, by detachment of the building from the land, or it may be constructive, by express or implied agreement that it will be detached. To effect a constructive severance of a building from land, the transfer ordinarily must be in a writing in a form sufficient for a Granting a fire department the right to destroy the building while conducting training exercises on the property is not a conveyance *60 of ownership, title, or possession of the building or any other property interest in the building or the Vienna property. Rather it is a mere license to use the property. A license is a right, given by some competent authority, to do an act which without such authority would be illegal, a tort, or a trespass. The *61 Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia has established a well-marked dividing line between the class of agreements that constitute revocable licenses and those that grant either an estate or easement in land. In In Granting a fire department the right to conduct training exercises on one's property and destroy a building thereon by fire grants the fire department the right "to do an act which *413 without such authority would be illegal, a tort, or a trespass". The fire department does not acquire the right to eject the landowner from the building and cannot force the landowner to allow the destruction of the building should he change his mind before the house has been destroyed. The fire department *63 has acquired a mere revocable license that does not vest any property interest in the fire department.*64 retained all the burdens of ownership of the house, except for liability for any injury to a fireman incurred during the training exercises. Petitioners as owners of the house obtained the demolition permit from the county. They were responsible for safeguarding the public from hazardous conditions created by the destruction of the house including any open pits, standing walls and chimneys, and debris remaining after the training exercises were completed. They retained a substantial ownership interest in the house in the form of their liability for any injury that might be caused by the hazardous conditions of the remnants of the building remaining after FCFRD completed its exercises. Petitioners assert that under the holding of We hold that petitioners did not contribute the house or an undivided interest in the Vienna property to the FCFRD. A remainder is a future interest in property "limited in favor of a transferee in such manner that it can become a present interest upon the expiration of all prior interests simultaneously created". 2 Additionally, in the case at hand, petitioners never used the house as their personal residence before FCFRD destroyed *415 it while conducting its training exercises. We hold that petitioners did not contribute a remainder *67 interest in a personal residence to FCFRD. A qualified conservation contribution is a contribution of a qualified real property interest to a qualified organization exclusively for conservation purposes. We hold that petitioners did not make a qualified conservation contribution to FCFRD. As with this case, taxpayers usually grant a fire department license to destroy a building on their land because they wish to have it removed from the land, either to increase the value of the land ( Respondent determined that petitioners are liable for an accuracy-related penalty under When petitioners filed their return, the legal issues raised by their charitable contribution deduction claim were not settled. Importantly, in Given all the facts and circumstances, including the uncertain state of the law, we find that petitioners acted with reasonable cause and in good faith. Therefore, we hold that they are not liable for any penalty under *418 Accordingly, Reviewed by the Court. COLVIN, COHEN, VASQUEZ, THORNTON, MARVEL, GUSTAFSON, and MORRISON, PARIS, KERRIGAN, The following cases show that fixtures are considered part of the land under the common law in all 50 States: The following cases indicate that, consistent with the common law in Virginia as set forth in
GALE,
Here, the fire department's destruction of the house severed it from the land (as the opinion of the Court concedes, see op. Ct. p. 31) pursuant to petitioners' written permission *80 and thus rendered the structure personal property.
An exception to disallowance under *422 An undivided portion of a donor's entire interest in property must consist of a fraction or percentage of each and every
Once the fire department destroyed the structure as contemplated, petitioners retained no substantial interest in it that would trigger the
The contention of the opinion of the Court that petitioners merely gave a license also does not account fully for applicable Virginia property law. The opinion of the Court contends that petitioners never transferred any property interest in the house to the fire department but instead granted only a revocable license to use it. The opinion of the Court cites
Virginia has by statute modified the common law of property with respect to structures to be removed from realty, adopting the Uniform Commercial Code provision that deems a contract for the sale of such a structure to be one for the sale of *85 goods where the structure is to be severed by the seller.
On the basis of
While the opinion of the Court concedes that the destruction of the house severed it from the land (which rendered it personalty), the opinion of the Court does not consider whether this severance itself effected a transfer of property interests analogous to the transfer of an interest in ore or timber that occurs when the licensee *87 severs either pursuant to his license. However, by virtue of the fire department's severance and destruction of the house, petitioners in substance ceded all substantial property interests they held in the structure to the department. Once severed, the structure *425 was personal property. Petitioners retained no substantial interest in that personal property; they were left only with the debris into which it was converted.
Petitioners gave more than the use of their house and retained no substantial interest therein by virtue of their grant of permission to destroy. "Where the interest retained by the taxpayer is so insubstantial that he has, in substance, transferred his entire interest in the property, the tax treatment should so reflect. Such a taxpayer satisfies the original congressional purpose behind
While
HALPERN, FOLEY, GOEKE, WHERRY, KROUPA, and HOLMES,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue as amended, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Respondent has conceded that petitioners are entitled to deductions claimed on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, for taxes of $18,074 and mortgage interest of $37,428 for 2006. These amounts will be allowed and reflected in the
3. Under Virginia law contracting without the proper license or certificate to remove improvements on real property owned, controlled, or leased by another person is a class 1 misdemeanor and a violation of the Virginia Consumer Protection Act.
4. The remaining $246,639 of the reported contribution for 2006 has been carried forward by petitioners under
5. Petitioners assert that had they given FCFRD only the use of the house, they would have expected FCFRD to return it in essentially the same state as it was before the use. We do not think that such an expectation is particularly relevant where a donor intends to make improvements to his real property that require the destruction of the existing building situated on the land. Allowing FCFRD to burn the house during its training exercises so that petitioners might construct a new house on the site is consistent with and necessary for petitioners' intended use of the Vienna property.
6.
7. "The word 'tenement' means either an estate or holding of land, or a house or other building used as a residence."
8. "The term 'hereditament,' in general, signifies any interest in real property that may be inherited by an owner's heirs."
9. A chattel interest is an interest that is less than a freehold such as a lease for a year or term of years.
10. A fixture is an article of personal property that "by being affixed to the realty, became accessory to it and parcel of it."
11. Movable buildings and fixtures that have never been attached to the land never become a part of the land and remain personal property.
12. The common law definition of land is recognized in all 50 States. See, e.g., cases listed
13.
14. If a landowner who owns a 100-acre parcel of land conveys 50 acres to a charitable organization, the conveyance severs the 50 acres from 50 acres retained by the landowner and creates two separate lots. The example provided in the regulations treats the 50 acres as an undivided interest in the 100 acres.
15. In Virginia, an interest in land must be conveyed by deed or will.
16. "'"A man may have an inheritance in an upper chamber, though the lower buildings and soile be in another, and seeing it is an inheritance corporeall it shall passe by livery."'"
17. In It is well settled that the right to support for land from the adjacent and subjacent soil is a natural right, analogous to the flow of a natural river or of air. It stands on natural justice, and is not dependant upon grant; * * *. But the right is confined to the soil in its natural condition. It does not extend to buildings or other artificial burdens thereon, increasing the downward and lateral pressure. * * * The right to support for artificial burdens on land is an easement, and can be acquired only by grant, express or implied. * * * * * * * * * * The right [to subjacent support] is also implied where property, consisting of a house and unimproved land, is severed by sale. And the right to support, thus granted and reserved, is transmitted to the successors in title of the parties respectively. * * *
18. An easement is the privilege to use the land of another in a particular manner and for a particular purpose.
19. Cases cited
20. In Virginia, land must be conveyed by deed or will.
21. This is consistent with the following explanation in Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Acquired Structure Powerpoint published on the Internet at When a property owner loans their property to the program for training, they are performing a valuable service to their community. * * * Each property that is offered to the program must meet extensive requirements prior to acceptance and utilization (e.g. acquiring the appropriate permits, the structural stability assessment, asbestos free inspection, and confirmation that utilities have been disconnected). For live burn training,
22. In
23. We have found only two other cases involving the contribution of a building to a fire department for training purposes made after the amendment to
1. The opinion of the Court appears to suggest that petitioners' donation to the fire department was of a partial interest in property for purposes of
2. The Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has noted that the Official Comments concerning the Uniform Commercial Code "are frequently helpful in discerning legislative intent".
Beeler v. C. C. Mercantile Co. ( 1902 )
Baker v. Jim Walter Homes, Inc. ( 2006 )
Morgan v. Commissioner ( 1940 )
United States v. Craft ( 2002 )
Campbell Brown & Co. v. ELKING ( 1956 )
One Dupont Centre, LLC v. Dupont Auburn, LLC ( 2004 )
Cook v. University Plaza ( 1981 )
Brown County Agricultural Society, Inc. v. Brown County ... ( 2003 )
Sherburne Corporation v. Town of Sherburne ( 1965 )
United States v. Mitchell ( 1971 )
Vernon Molbreak v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1975 )
Ohio Cellular Rsa Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Public Works ( 1996 )
Rolfs v. Commissioner ( 2012 )
Herigstad v. Hardrock Oil Co. ( 1935 )