DocketNumber: Docket No. 1844-76.
Filed Date: 5/28/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
DAWSON,
FALK,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated, and those facts are so found.
Petitioners, husband and wife, filed their joint federal income tax return for 1972 with the Internal Revenue Service Center at Andover, Massachusetts. At the time they filed their petition herein, they resided at Corning, New York.
Petitioners purchased an eighty to one hundred year old house in Corning in June or July of 1969 for $ 12,900. A barn of unknown age was on the property. They used the property as their residence. On June 23, 1972, rainwaters from Hurricane Agnes caused a stream to overflow, washing out a bridge on petitioners' property which carried their driveway over the stream and damaging petitioners' automobile beyond repair. Their basement flooded to a depth of approximately 18 inches, damaging or*478 destroying petitioners' personal property located therein. The yard was littered with rocks and debris. Water collected in the barn to a depth of about three feet. Petitioners' garden was destroyed and their well was contaminated. Cribbing on the stream banks washed away and the banks of the stream were eroded. Petitioners expended $ 864 for materials to repair the bridge, for cleaning the stream bed, to replace topsoil for the stream bank, and for materials to replace the roof of the house. Petitioners and their children put in over 250 hours of their own labor into restoring the property. The parties are in agreement as to the loss to petitioners' personalty.
Petitioners received a disaster loan from the Small Business Administration (hereinafter referred to as the SBA) in the amount of $ 1,900, repayment of which was subsequently forgiven. Petitioners now concede that the amount of their casualty loss should be reduced by $ 1,900 by reason of that forgiveness.
The storm reduced the fair market value of petitioners' real property by $ 1,100.
OPINION
Section 165 allows a deduction to individuals for losses not compensated for by insurance or otherwise suffered upon*479 the damage to or destruction of nonbusiness property by reason of fire, storm, shipwreck or other casualty or from theft to the extent that each such loss exceeds $ 100. Sec. 165(c)(3). The proper measure of the loss sustained is the difference between the fair market value of the property immediately before the casualty and its fair market value immediately thereafter, but not to exceed its adjusted basis. See
Respondent does not contest petitioners' claim of the value of their personalty lost in the flood. Petitioners now concede that the amount of the loss should be reduced by $ 1,900, the amount of the SBA loan forgiveness. The only dispute, then, is the amount of the loss to petitioners' realty. The burden of proof rests with petitioners.
To establish the amount of the casualty loss, the relevant fair market values "shall generally be ascertained by competent appraisal."
Petitioner Robert E. Geer testified that the real estate had a fair market value of $ 17,000 to $ 18,000 immediately prior to the flood and $ 10,000 immediately thereafter. His testimony does not reveal that these valuations are based upon any recognized method or methods of appraisal. Rather, they appear to be subjective values based, in the case of the pre-casualty valuation, upon what petitioners put into their property and, in the case of the post-casualty valuation, temporary fluctuation due to the fact of the flood. Accordingly, we find his valuations to be of little probative value. See
The matter is not susceptible of precise determination*482 on this record, but, doing the best we can with the materials before us, see
In accordance with the foregoing,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated. ↩
2. Pursuant to the order of assignment, on the authority of the "otherwise provided" language of
3. Petitioners unsuccessfully attempted to obtain the testimony of both persons. Their failure to appear as witnesses, therefore, is not unexplained and the "absent witness" rule (see