AmeriSouth XXXII, Ltd. v. Comm'r

2012 T.C. Memo. 67, 103 T.C.M. 1324, 2012 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 63
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 12, 2012
DocketDocket No. 21686-07.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2012 T.C. Memo. 67 (AmeriSouth XXXII, Ltd. v. Comm'r) 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
AmeriSouth XXXII, Ltd. v. Comm'r, 2012 T.C. Memo. 67, 103 T.C.M. 1324, 2012 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 63 (tax 2012).

Opinion

AMERISOUTH XXXII, LTD., AMERISOUTH TEXAS III, LLC, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
AmeriSouth XXXII, Ltd. v. Comm'r
Docket No. 21686-07.
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 2012-67; 2012 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 63; 103 T.C.M. (CCH) 1324;
March 12, 2012, Filed
*63

Decision will be entered under Rule 155.

Matthew I. Root and Jennifer S. McGinty, for respondent.
HOLMES, Judge.

HOLMES
MEMORANDUM OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: AmeriSouth XXXII, Ltd. bought an apartment complex in 2003 for $10.25 million. The Commissioner argues that with minor exceptions the apartment complex is one asset that AmeriSouth must depreciate over 27.5 years. AmeriSouth argues that, whatever the apartment complex may look like to an untrained observer, to a tax adept it is not a single asset but a collection of more than 1,000 components depreciable over much shorter periods. It is usually the case that a shorter depreciation period benefits taxpayers. It would certainly benefit AmeriSouth by generating hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of accelerated depreciation deductions. We are tempted to say this is why AmeriSouth throws in everything but the kitchen sink to support its argument—except it actually throws in a few hundred kitchen sinks, urging us to classify them as "special plumbing," depreciable over a much shorter period than apartment buildings.

Background

This story begins with a limited liability company called AmeriSouth Texas III, LLC and its managing member and 100-percent *64 owner, Ruel Hamilton, a real-estate veteran. AmeriSouth Texas is the general partner in "something like" 50 AmeriSouth partnerships dubbed AmeriSouth I through—the record's a bit uncertain—AmeriSouth XLII, plus a few with slightly different names. Each AmeriSouth partnership owns an apartment complex, and over the years AmeriSouth Texas has owned approximately 10,000 apartment units, mostly in Texas. AmeriSouth Management, L.P., which Hamilton also manages, maintains at least some of these apartment complexes.

This case involves only one of the AmeriSouth Texas partnerships, AmeriSouth XXXII, Ltd. AmeriSouth Texas established AmeriSouth XXXII in 2003 to buy the Garden House Apartments (Garden House) in Mesquite, Texas. 1*65 Built in 1970, Garden House sprawls across more than 16 acres of land and includes more than 40 buildings, most of which are two-story apartment buildings averaging nine apartments each. The complex also has some common buildings—three pool cabanas, a storehouse for mechanical equipment, and a leasing office building. Most units are one to three bedrooms, although there are a few four-bedroom units.

Of its 366 units, approximately 70 are fully-furnished "guest apartments." And even unfurnished units contain dishwashers and garbage disposals. Some units have laundry rooms and hookups for washing machines and dryers with their own plumbing and electrical connections. There are also laundry areas with their own plumbing and electrical connections in some of the apartments for renters who either bring their own machines or rent them from AmeriSouth. And for those renters who don't rent or bring their own, an outside company—Coinmach—maintains washers and dryers in seven common laundry rooms. These laundry rooms have floor drains, plumbing, and gas lines.

At least some of Garden House's units sport painted base molding (a strip of wood at the base of the wall where it meets the floor), crown molding (same idea but at the ceiling), and chair rail (somewhere between the floor and ceiling, and in this case usually only in the dining rooms). Besides chair rail, the dining rooms also feature a built-in framed mirror, and some have a ceiling light with a paddle fan. Some kitchens and living rooms *66 have shelving set into the wall and about 80 apartments have hardwood floors instead of carpeting.

Garden House of course has electric and gas lines, water pipes, and sanitary sewers drawing from the main city lines underground, though some electrical lines are overhead. There are public access, utility, and sanitary-sewer easements, running from the public street across AmeriSouth's property to its buildings. Electricity flows into the complex from overhead lines down to an underground transformer on AmeriSouth's property. The transformer, which AmeriSouth doesn't own, reduces the voltage in the wires to a residential level. From there, secondary electric lines carry the current to outdoor light posts and to main electrical panels on each building. The wires split again after hitting the main panel and spider throughout the building behind the walls to panels in each apartment. From there they run throughout each apartment, where they end behind outlets and junction boxes for light fixtures. At least one report shows that many of Garden House's electric panels aren't properly labeled.

Renters plug into the electricity via many outlets scattered throughout the buildings. Each apartment's *67 kitchen has a duplex (two-prong) outlet four feet above the ground behind the refrigerator and a three-prong, 220-volt outlet for the sole purpose of powering the stove. There are also duplex outlets above the countertops, presumably for small kitchen appliances. In apartment units with laundry areas, there is a duplex outlet where the clothes washer may be installed and a three-prong, 220-volt outlet for the clothes dryer. The common laundry rooms have typical electric outlets in areas designed for clothes washers, while the office building has duplex outlets in places convenient for office and exercise equipment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 T.C. Memo. 67, 103 T.C.M. 1324, 2012 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amerisouth-xxxii-ltd-v-commr-tax-2012.