DocketNumber: Docket No. 10117-82.
Filed Date: 3/1/1984
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
KORNER,
On December 21, 1979, petitioners purchased a single family residence located at 8042 Camino Tranquilo in San Diego, California for a total consideration of $116,806. This property was acquired and held by petitioners for use as a residential rental property, and, as of the trial in this matter, it continued to be held as such. Petitioners first rented the property in January 1980.
Petitioners' depreciable basis in the Camino Transquilo property as of the end of taxable year 1979, was $77,871, consisting of the following components: (1) Building - $73,188; (2) appliances *576 for in
On their Federal income tax return for taxable year ended December 31, 1979, petitioners utilized straight-line depreciation over a 25-year composite useful life for the Camino Tranquilo property. Treating their account for such property as a "multiple asset account," within the meaning of
Absent use of the averaging convention, the depreciation allowable to petitioners in 1979 with respect to these assets, using the same cost bases and composite rate and based upon eleven days of ownership, would have been $94.
By timely notice of deficiency, respondent disallowed the entirety of the depreciation deduction claimed by petitioners for 1979 with respect to the Camino Tranquilo property, citing the following, in pertinent part, *578 The use by petitioners of the averaging convention in 1979 with respect to the Camino Tranquilo property substantially distorted the depreciation allowance for that year. OPINION Pursuant to We have found that petitioners purchased the Camino Tranquilo property in issue on December 21, 1979. There is no dispute that this property was held by petitioners for the production of rental income as of the date they acquired it, even though it was not actually rented until January 1980. Accordingly, since petitioners placed their Camino Tranquilo rental property in service on December 21, 1979, they were entitled to depreciate it, at least as of that date. Petitioners, claiming for 1979 not just eleven days, but the equivalent of six months of straight-line depreciation for their Camino Tranquilo property, rely upon the use of an averaging convention provided for in However, Contending that they combined the building, appliances, and carpets and drapes at their Camino Tranquilo property into a qualifying "multiple asset account," petitioners claimed a depreciation deduction therefor in 1979 in the amount of $1,557, computed as the average of their asset balance at the beginning of 1979, which was zero, and their asset balance at the end of that year, which was $77,871, spread over a 25-year "composite" useful life. In opposition to petitioners' utilization of this averaging convention, respondent contends, first, that the Camino Tranquilo property purchased*581 by petitioners could not qualify as a multiple asset account, and second, that the use of the averaging convention to compute first-year depreciation on such property substantially distorted the depreciation allowance for taxable year 1979. Petitioners herein identify their Camino Tranquilo account as a multiple asset account of the composite type, wherein multiple assets were grouped without regard to their character or useful lives. Respondent concedes that a rental residence, like the Camino Tranquilo property, can be categorized as a composite asset consisting of disparate components, and that a grouping of personal property and real property in one account, as elected by petitioners, may constitute a composite account. Respondent challenges petitioners' assertion, however, that the Camino Tranquilo composite account constituted a "multiple asset*583 account," eligible as such to use the averaging conventions provided for in Upon examination of the regulatory provisions involved, we are persuaded that a composite account is, by definition, a type of multiple asset account. A composite account, as we have found, is one way of "combining two or more assets in a single account." That such a combination gives rise to a "multiple asset account" is suggested, not only by the manifest meaning of the terms, but also by the reference in Respondent suggests additionally, however, that the Camino Tranquilo account could not*584 be a multiple asset account because petitioners failed to show that they had made or intended to make additions to the account. We cannot agree. For their tax year 1979, petitioners established the subject account, concurrently adding to it during that year the building, appliances and the carpets and drapes at their Camino Tranquilo property. We believe that whether such assets were added to petitioners' account simultaneously or sequentially is irrelevant to our determination of whether a multiple asset account was established. *585 The final issue for determination herein is whether the averaging convention utilized by petitioners resulted in a substantial distortion of the depreciation allowance for their taxable year ending December 31, 1979, within the meaning of For*586 taxable year 1979, (a) General Rule.--In the case of The regulations under In view of the absence of a regulatory definition of "substantial distortion," within the meaning of In contrast to a fixed relative term, such as twenty percent, expressing the same proportional relationship in every context, "substantial" my indicate a certain proportion in one instance, a different proportion in another.To ascertain its meaning in any particular context one must examine the frame of reference and the purpose intended by use of the term. As acknowledged by both parties herein, it is the purpose of the regulatory averaging conventions to simplify depreciation accounting where multiple assets are acquired or disposed of during the taxable year. Since a taxpayer may aggregate multiple assets into a group, classified or composite account with or without electing use of an averaging convention, We have already found that petitioners claimed depreciation for their Camino Tranquilo account with reference to an averaging convention which resulted in a straight-line depreciation allowance for 1979, in the amount of $1,557. We have also found that, but for their use of said averaging convention, petitioners were entitled to depreciate the assets in their Camino Tranquilo account only as of the date they were placed in service, or as of December 21, 1979, for a total depreciation otherwise allowable (applying the same depreciation rate to an eleven-day period) of $94. A comparison of these figures clearly demonstrates that the averaging convention utilized by petitioners resulted in a substantial distortion of their depreciation allowance for the Camino Tranquilo property for 1979. *593 on December 21, 1979, and was placed in service by petitioners on that day, however, we hold that petitioners were entitled to a depreciation deduction for that eleven-day period of $94. To reflect the foregoing,
Additional first-year depreciation under
1. All statutory references herein are to sections of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect for the year in issue, and all references to Rules are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise stated.↩
2. Neither the number nor the nature of such appliances is disclosed on this record.↩
3. The deficiency notice additionally adjusted the allocation between land and building of the purchase price of the Camino Tranquilo property, as reflected on petitioners' return. By stipulation of the parties, however, this issue was conceded by respondent. Other adjustments in the notice of deficiency relating to a separate property in another account, owned by petitioners and located at 10565 El Comal Drive, were settled by agreement of the parties prior to the trial in this matter. A medical expense adjustment also determined by respondent will be determined as an automatic adjustment under sec. 213 when the remaining issue for 1979 is resolved herein.↩
4. In addition, respondent contends that petitioners did not compute the composite life of the assets correctly. This issue was first raised by respondent on brief, is manifestly unfair to petitioners, and we will not consider it.
5. Indeed, faced with a taxpayer who simultaneously placed into service in a purported multiple asset account, a "large unusual purchase" of several units of machinery, respondent disallowed use of an averaging convention on the grounds that it resulted in a substantial distortion of the taxpayer's depreciation allowance for the taxable year in issue, and
6. Petitioner testified, and argued on brief, that, in addition to his belief that use of the averaging convention precluded an election under
7. To decide otherwise on this question might allow a taxpayer using straight-line depreciation, like petitioners, to claim that a chosen averaging convention failed to substantially distort the depreciation allowance which might have been available to him if he had chosen some accelerated depreciation method instead. See
8. Since petitioners were free to use a composite account, regardless of their election to use an averaging convention, their observation that "the computation of depreciation for one account is about three times easier than the computation for three accounts," has little to do with such election.↩
9. Compare