DocketNumber: Docket No. 2612-84.
Filed Date: 3/15/1988
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
*145 MEMORANDUM OPINION
WRIGHT,
In
*147 The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit determined that our application of the realistic contemplation test exceeded the Congressional objective embodied in section 46(e)(3) to allocate the investment tax credit to the party who bears the economic risks of ownership.
At least in cases involving leasing activity that is not primarily tax motivated, where the stated lease term in a written lease document satisfies the 50 percent requirement, that document should be respected, and unless the Commissioner can demonstrate that the lease is a "sham," i.e., that there has been a real shifting of all economic risk associated with the leased property from the lessor to the lessee, the lessor is entitled to claim an investment tax credit for the property * * * [
Under the test articulated by the Court of Appeals, a "sham" would be manifested by the parties' "fixed intention that the lease will be continuously renewed on the same or substantively identical terms."
This case was remanded to allow us to determine whether petitioners properly took the investment credit with respect to any of the five leases at issue. In our deliberation with respect to this matter, we therefore must determine (1) of both D & B and Roofing had a fixed intention at the time of entering the lease to renew the lease for a period longer than 50 percent of the useful life of the subject property for the same or substantively identical terms, and, if not, (2) whether the section 162 expenses paid or incurred with respect to the subject property exceeded 15 percent of the rental income during the 12 months of operation after the property was transferred to the lessee. We conclude that none of the leases were "shams" and further that the four of the five leases in issue satisfy both prongs of the statutory test of section 46(e)(3)(B).
The findings of fact from
The subject property of the fifth lease which had a stated lease period of less than half of the property's useful life, a Grove crane, was distributed by D & B to the partners six months after it was purchased. They, in turn, contributed it to D & BJ Associates, another partnership comprised of the D & B partners and the brother of one of the partners. D & BJ Associates leased the property to F.J.A. Christiansen Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of Roofing, for a stated term of less than 50 percent of the property's useful life. At the time of trial, there was no evidence that the property was still being leased to F.J.A. Christiansen Corp.
Upon examination of the leases in issue, we find that all five of the leases between D & B and Roofing were*150 for terms of less than 50 percent of the useful life of the subject property. There is no evidence in the record that, at the time of executing the leases, the parties had a fixed intention that the leases would be renewed "on the same or substantively identical terms." In fact, the four leases which were renewed were not renewed on the same terms. Moreover, we previously determined in
The second issue for our consideration is whether the lessor's section 162 expenses, taken with respect to the first 12 months of the operation of the leased asset, exceed 15 percent of the total rental income produced by the property. We determined in
With respect to the Grove crane, there are two*151 separate leases to consider. During the 6-month period when D & B was the lessor (between October 1978 and March 1979), D & B paid section 162 expenses in the amount of $ 1,026 and received total rental income in the amount of $ 20,400. During the subsequent 6 months of operation, from March 1979 until September 1979, in which D & BJ Associates was the lessor, D & BJ Associates incurred, and ultimately paid, section 162 expenses in the amount of $ 5,000 and received total rental income in the amount of $ 18,200. Thus, with respect to D & B, the section 162 expenses failed to exceed 15 percent of rental income and with respect to D & BJ Associates, section 162 expenses did exceed 15 percent of rental income.
Section 46(e)(3) is a technical provision imposing requirements which must be met. As we noted in
In drafting section 46(e)(3)(B) Congress could have chosen a rule based upon the benefits and burdens of ownership in light of all the relevant facts and circumstances. * * * But they did not. Instead, Congress decided to impose two hard-and-fast tests, one of which petitioner herein has failed. In effect, Congress chose a more easily*152 administered approach (which, for taxpayers, provides predictability) and sacrificed some small measure of perfect equity.
In the case before us, we have a single piece of property subject to two leases with two separate lessors during the first 12 months of operation. In respondent's regulations, promulgated under section 46(3)(3), a lease which includes more than one property, and pursuant to
Section 46(e)(3) which extends to noncorporate lessors the privilege and benefits of the investment credit does not protect the taxpayer*153 from the full panoply of requirements and restrictions which are generally attendant on the investment credit.
Therefore, for petitioners to claim the investment credit the property subject to the credit must qualify as new section 38 property in the hands of each lessee. Although two of the individuals were partners in both of the*154 lessee partnerships, the two leases are separate and distinct. Thus, when D & BJ Associates leased the crane in March of 1979 to F.J.A. Christiansen Corp. the crane was not new section 38 property in the hands of the corporation because it had been used by Roofing. The investment credit is not available if the lease fails to comply with technical requirements of section 46(e)(3) and section 48(d). Thus, with respect to the lease between D & B and Roofing for the period between October 1978 and March 1979, D & B failed to sustain section 162 expenses in excess of 15 percent of rental income and the investment tax credit is disallowed. With respect to the lease between D & BJ Associates and F.J.A. Christiansen, the Grove crane was not new section 38 property within the meaning of section 46 in the hands of the lessee. Thus, the investment tax credit is unavailable to both of the lessors with respect to the Grove crane.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that petitioners properly took the investment tax credit with respect to the leased property except with respect to the Grove crane.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. ↩
2. Subsection 46(e)(3) provides in pertinent part:
(3) Noncorporate Lessors. -- A credit shall be allowed by section 38 to a person which is not a corporation with respect to property of which such person is the lessor only if --
(A) the property subject to the lease has been manufactured or produced by the lessor, or
(B) the term of the lease (taking into account options to renew) is less than 50 percent of the useful life of the property, and for the period consisting of the first 12 months after the date on which the property is transferred to the lessee the sum of the deductions with respect to such property) which are allowable to the lessor solely by reason of section 162 (other than rents and reimbursed amounts with respect to such property) exceeds 15 percent of the rental income produced by such property.↩
3.