Albert W. Turner and Therese L. Turner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Albert W. Turner and Therese L. Turner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

540 F.2d 1249, 38 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5741, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 7086
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 1976
Docket75-2137, 75-2138
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 540 F.2d 1249 (Albert W. Turner and Therese L. Turner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Albert W. Turner and Therese L. Turner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albert W. Turner and Therese L. Turner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Albert W. Turner and Therese L. Turner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 540 F.2d 1249, 38 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5741, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 7086 (4th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge:

After having owned a farm for a number of years, the taxpayer sold it to a related development company. On his income tax return he claimed the profit as a capital gain, but the Tax Court held it to be ordinary income, concluding, also, that in earlier real estate transactions he had acted as a dealer. On appeal, the taxpayer does not contest the Tax Court’s conclusions with respect to the earlier transactions, but he does contend that the Tax Court improperly concluded that the 1965 transaction was not the sale of a capital asset. We conclude that the farm was held as a capital asset and that the Tax Court erroneously denied capital gain treatment of the profit.

In 1937, Turner began a small unincorporated construction business in which he was both manager and laborer. The business grew, and, by 1949, its operations had expanded to such an extent that Turner and an employee organized a corporation, Modern Construction Company, Inc., the name of which was later changed to Maryland Community Developers, Inc., through which to operate the business. Since 1949, Maryland Community Developers has been engaged generally in the development of residential housing projects in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C. Before 1965, there were four such major projects, and it is out of three of them that this tax controversy arose.

In 1949 Turner individually acquired one hundred and seven acres of unimproved land in Prince Georges County, Maryland. He planned a subdivision of it, named it “Hollywood,” and transferred four hundred and eighty five lots to MCD. Some of these lots were transferred through outright sales, while, in the transfer of others, redeemable ground leases were employed. Between 1949 and 1955, MCD constructed five hundred and fifty five homes in the Hollywood subdivision.

In 1951, Turner purchased 337 acres of undeveloped land, most of which he subsequently sold to MCD for development as the Carrollton subdivision. Later, MCD acquired adjacent land, some of it through *1251 Turner, for incorporation in the Carrollton subdivision. By 1962, MCD had constructed two thousand houses in Carrollton, completing construction in the subdivision. Two hundred and seventy of the five hundred and eighty two acres in the subdivision had been acquired by MCD from Turner.

Hollywood and Carrollton are involved in the tax years 1962-1965, because in those years Turner was still receiving installment payments and funds from the redemption of ground leases. He claimed capital gain treatment for those receipts, but his acquiescence in the Tax Court’s determination that he was not entitled to that treatment was clearly warranted. When those lots were acquired by Turner, MCD was in its infancy. It could not afford investment in large tracts of land for development and house construction in planned subdivisions. Turner seems clearly to have been using his own financial resources to provide MCD’s inventory of lots and, in each instance, his initial acquisition of the land appears to have been solely for the purpose of its development by MCD.

As early as 1958, however, Turner was interested in buying two farms near Largo, Maryland. He thought that, ultimately, urban expansion would reach them. They were zoned for rural residential use; there were no water or sewer lines in the area, and, apparently, none were then contemplated.

In 1961 the Calvert Farm became available for purchase, and Turner bought it for $524,000. He had a boundary survey run on the farm, but did nothing to develop plans for its subdivision. He added no improvements to it. For a few years after his purchase of the Calvert Farm, he rented some of the land to share croppers for the cultivation of tobacco.

In 1964, Seton Belt Farm, adjoining Calvert, became available for purchase. The owner made a public solicitation for sealed bids, and the five hundred and seventy four acre farm was sold to MCD for $4,550 per acre.

In 1964, the advent of municipal water and sewerage in the area of the Calvert and Seton Belt Farms appeared imminent, although, according to Turner, this development occurred much sooner than he anticipated in 1961 when he had purchased the Calvert Farm. Thus, after MCD’s acquisition of the Seton Belt Farm, Turner and the other officers of MCD discussed the possibility of a joint development of the two farms as a planned community. These discussions led to an agreement that MCD would purchase the Calvert Farm from Turner for $4,000 per acre payable by an assumption of Turner’s two mortgages on the farm, a conveyance to Turner of seventy-five specific acres of the Seton Belt Farm which they thought could be developed for commercial use, together with some cash and a promissory note for the balance. This transaction was consummated in 1965, except, by agreement, there was no formal conveyance of the seventy-five acres from the Seton Belt Farm to Turner. This was because no development could proceed until there was a general rezoning of all of the land involved, and it was thought that such rezoning could be more readily achieved if one comprehensive development plan were presented by one registered owner.

The necessary rezoning of the Calvert and Seton Belt Farms was not obtained until August 1967. In October of that year, Turner received a deed to the seventy-five Seton Belt Farm acres which MCD had agreed to convey to him for possible commercial development.

On his 1965 tax return, Turner reported the sale of the Calvert Farm as a long term capital gain. 1 He also elected to report his Calvert Farm gain on the installment method. 2

The Tax Court concluded that Turner had been a “joint participant” with. MCD in the Calvert Farm acquisition and development as with the earlier Hollywood and Carroll-ton subdivisions. It concluded that he was in the business of buying and selling real *1252 estate for subdivision and development and that he had acquired Calvert Farm in his capacity as a dealer. With respect to the seventy-five acres of Seton Belt that MCD had agreed to convey to Turner, the Tax Court assigned to it a value of $4,000 per acre for the purpose of § 453 installment sale computations, but it did not include the value of those seventy-five acres in Turner’s taxable income for 1965 because he had not acquired the legal title to them until 1967.

In accordance with the then position of the Commissioner, this court has held that whether property is primarily held for sale in the ordinary course of business for purposes of § 1221(1) is a factual question subject to the clearly erroneous rule. See, e. g. Industrial Life Insurance Company v. United States, 4 Cir., 481 F.2d 609; Tidwell v. Commissioner, 4 Cir., 298 F.2d 864. Now the Commissioner has reversed himself; he now urges that we treat the question as one of law, reviewable without the restrictions of the clearly erroneous standard. This approach has been adopted by the Third and Fifth Circuits, Pennroad v. Commissioner,

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Bluebook (online)
540 F.2d 1249, 38 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5741, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 7086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albert-w-turner-and-therese-l-turner-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca4-1976.