Aksomitas v. Commissioner

50 T.C. 679, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1968
DocketDocket No. 252-67
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 50 T.C. 679 (Aksomitas v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aksomitas v. Commissioner, 50 T.C. 679, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90 (tax 1968).

Opinion

Iioxr, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of $1,175.66 against petitioner for the taxable year 1961.1 Two issues are presented for our decision:

(1) Whether petitioner is entitled to a casualty loss deduction under section 165(c) (3), I.R.C. 1954,2 because of damage sustained by his yacht during that year.

(2) Whether petitioner may deduct under section 217, I.R.C. 1954, certain costs incurred in attempting to make the yacht seaworthy and in transporting it under its own power toward Florida, his new place of employment.

The proper amount of petitioner’s medical deduction is also in issue. However, the resolution of this question involves a purely mathematical computation which is based upon whether or not respondent was correct in increasing petitioner’s adjusted gross income in connection with the disallowed casualty loss and moving expense deductions.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated, are found accordingly, and incorporated herein as part of our findings.

Petitioner is William E. Aksomitas, a mechanical engineer. He resides in Juno Beach, Fla. He and his wife filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1964 with the district director of internal revenue, Jacksonville, Fla. However, the wife did not join in the petition and William E. Aksomitas is the sole petitioner.

Petitioner himself moved to Florida in September 1961, when he was reassigned by his employer, the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Co., to its Florida Research and Development Center in West Palm Beach. Prior to the reassignment, petitioner had been employed by Pratt & Whitney in East Hartford, Conn., for a period of 6 years and 3 months. The job transfer to Florida was considered “transitory” since it contemplated in-house training for a subsequent assignment to an undisclosed location as a field project engineer. However, in June of 1962 petitioner was made a permanent assignee at West Palm Beach and he thereafter moved his family to Florida in July of 1962; their household goods were moved in September of that year, approximately 1 year after the commencement of petitioner’s work in Florida.

During July of 1960, more than a year before he was transferred to Florida for in-house training, petitioner purchased a 45-foot diesel-powered yacht, Tradewinds, for $6,000. The yacht was described by petitioner as being an “old boat.” Its big and very heavy diesel engine had never been reoriented or moved from its mountings. In 1962, when petitioner’s family moved from Connecticut to Florida, the boat, which was then in drydock, suffered from sundry defects and conditions which rendered it unseaworthy and unable to negotiate a journey of any distance.

It was petitioner’s desire, after moving liis family to Florida in July of 1962, either to move the yacht to Florida (by means of a hired pilot and crew) or to sell it in Connecticut and invest the proceeds in a new boat in Florida. After the family’s departure from Connecticut, petitioner’s sister, Louise Aksomitas, became his representative to handle arrangements regarding the boat. During a 2-year span of time (July 1962-August 1964), after the family’s move to Florida, several definite plans were formulated to move the yacht to Florida "under its own power, and pilots were actually hired for this purpose. However, petitioner experienced many difficulties in trying to get the yacht ready, and it was not in physical condition to commence the move during this 2-year period; none of the planned voyages ever materialized. During this period, the boat was berthed or in drydock at not less than three shipyards in the Hartford, Conn., coastal area. In the winter of 1962 and the spring of 1963, petitioner realized that without “a major overhaul and a major repair” it would be futile to even attempt to sail the yacht to Florida. It was, in petitioner’s words, in a state of “unwarranted degeneration and depreciation.”

Petitioner would have been willing to sell the boat rather than undertake to have it piloted to Florida and attempts were in fact made to sell it at $6,000, the price which had been paid for it. Petitioner received one “pretty bona fide offer” at this price, but the proposed sale fell through when the prospective buyer was unable to arrange financing. Several lesser, rather indefinite, offers of approximately $4,000 were turned down, but exactly when this occurred does not appear of record.

While the boat was in the various Connecticut shipyards awaiting either movement to Florida or sale, sundry additions, improvements, and repairs were called for if the petitioner should finally decide to keep the boat rather than sell it. As mentioned, pilots were actually signed on, but the boat was not capable of the journey prior to the summer of 1964. The items requiring attention included, inter alia, obtaining a workable radio and lights, new -batteries, an anchor and a dinghy, preventing actual water leakage and seepage through openings in the hull, replacing fittings and canvas, repairing the stuffing box and rear bearing, and, most important, the repair of a bent propeller shaft which caused related damages. Petitioner had been aware of the bent propeller shaft as early as December 1962, when he made a trip back to Connecticut to attend to certain matters relative to the boat. During this visit, which was the last time petitioner personally inspected the boat, petitioner himself observed the defect in the propeller shaft and resulting damages. Thereafter the boat leaked badly whenever it hit the water and the bent shaft caused vibrations and damage to the log and stuffing box.

During the summer of 1964, petitioner and his agents in Connecticut believed that the Tradewinds had been brought to a state of repair which would allow the journey to Florida to be undertaken. In June of 1964 (or perhaps at some earlier time, the record being inexact), the Essex Boat Works repaired, at least to some extent, the propeller shaft, the diesel motor flange, and the stuffing box on the boat, in addition to performing “other sundry work.” Exactly what was done or what the cost of the repair work amounted to does not appear of record; in spite of petitioner’s testimony thait a major overhaul and repair job would be required to correct the shaft problems and to make the boat seaworthy, no evidence was introduced to substantiate that such a major job was in fact performed. At most, from the conflicting evidence of record, it appears that less than $200 was spent to do some repair work in 1964.3

In mid-August of 1964 a pilot and two crewmen were signed on and the Tradewinds left home port in Connecticut on or about August 20 for Florida under her own power. She had progressed as far as the southern tip of Manhattan Island, a distance of about 95 miles from the trip’s point of origin in Essex, Conn., when disaster struck. Here, on August 20, in the East River, the boat was disabled with a broken propeller shaft, with consequent flooding. The New York City Harbor Police rendered assistance by towing the boat back up the East River to Blackwell’s Island. Here the U.S. Coast Guard took over and towed it to the Harlem River, at which point a private boatyard, the Ludlow Marine Corp., was contacted by telephone. The Coast Guard assistance report ascribes the disablement to engine failure.

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Aksomitas v. Commissioner
50 T.C. 679 (U.S. Tax Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
50 T.C. 679, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aksomitas-v-commissioner-tax-1968.