Blackstone Realty Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

398 F.2d 991, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5156, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6124
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1968
Docket24381_1
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 398 F.2d 991 (Blackstone Realty Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackstone Realty Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 398 F.2d 991, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5156, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6124 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

This appeal presents the question of whether the Commissioner of Internal Revenue is bound by a taxpayer’s unilateral valuations of the component parts of a sale. The taxpayer, having sold a leasehold and appurtenant improvements to a buyer concerned only with the aggregate price, seeks to establish its own fragmented valuations in order to receive the tax benefits granted to installment sales through Section 453 of the Code. The Commissioner and the Tax Court rejected such valuations and refused to allow the tax benefits. We affirm.

The factual nature of this case compels us to approach the ultimate contract of sale through a smidgen of transactional history. On April 5, 1949, Manuel Vellianitis leased a four-story building known as the Greystone Building, 1 located in the downtown commercial district of Mobile, Alabama. The lease was to run for a continuous term from November 1, 1949, to October 31, 1960, with provisions granting the lessee the option to renew the lease for two additional ten-year terms.

The upper three floors of the Grey-stone Building were not air-conditioned. Vellianitis believed that an air-conditioning apparatus should be installed prior to any efforts to sublease or sell his interest in the premises, and on February 17, 1950, he entered into an agreement with the lessor whereby the latter agreed to install air-conditioning equipment in return for a specific monthly compensation. The agreement also provided that upon receipt of the final payment, which was due on the same day as the termination date of the original lease, title to part of the equipment would pass from the lessor to the lessee.

In 1958 Vellianitis and his wife, Penelope, organized the taxpayer, Blackstone Realty Company, to manage and operate their real estate investments. Vellianitis assigned to Blackstone Realty his leasehold in the Greystone .Building in exchange for all of the outstanding stock in the corporation.

A new lease for the Greystone Building was signed soon after the creation of the company. This document superseded the original lease and its supplement. As part of the negotiated lease agreement, Blackstone Realty became obligated to make and pay for certain repairs and improvements to the premises. 2 In order to pay for the repairs and improvements, the lessor agreed to lend Blackstone Realty $25,000. This entire sum plus additional funds of Blackstone Realty were spent remodeling the building.

In 1959 Blackstone Realty employed a real estate broker to find a purchaser for its leasehold interest in the Grey-stone Building and whatever interest it had in the leasehold improvements. The *993 broker contacted D. R. Coley, Jr., an attorney, who was the chairman of the board of directors of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Mobile, Alabama. Coley expressed interest in the building, and the parties began negotiations for a sale. During the negotiations Blackstone Realty insisted upon separate consideration for the leasehold and the improvements. After several proposals and counter-proposals, Blackstone Realty accepted the bank’s conditional offer of March 15, 1960, which provided in part:

$100,000 cash to be allocated to the cost of fixtures, equipment, air-conditioning, elevator, etc., installed by Blackstone Realty Company, Inc., in the building;
$1,000 per month for a period of twenty years, or a total of 240 months, the first payment to be due and payable thirty days from the closing of the transaction.

This deal was never consummated because the bank was unable to reach agreement with the lessor to extend the lease to ninety-nine years, a necessary condition of the offer.

On July 1, 1960, the lessor reconsidered and agreed to the extension. The bank and the taxpayer then executed a new “lease and agreement” whereby Blackstone Realty assigned all of its rights in the Greystone Building to First Federal. The consideration was the same in amount and terms of payment as contained in the bank’s offer of March 15, 1960: $340,000 total, $100,000 in cash and $1,000 per month for 240 months. No specific reference, however, was made to the distinct separation of monies allocated for payment of the leasehold and the improvements. 3

First Federal paid Blackstone Realty $100,000 in cash in Blackstone’s taxable year ending May 31, 1961, and during such year also paid the company ten $1,000 monthly payments. From the proceeds the lessor was then paid the remaining balance of the amount which it had advanced for the making of improvements to the leasehold premises.

First Federal found that the building could be adequately remodeled, and that it would be necessary to do so for the purposes which it contemplated for the building. It installed a different type of air-conditioning and did not use the air-conditioning units which had been installed previously by Vellianitis. Nor did it use in the building the window *994 units which Vellianitis had installed. It did use a considerable portion of the paneling which had been installed previously by Vellianitis.

On its books First Federal set up the $100,000 cash payment as an asset, prepaid lease expense, and amortized it over a 47y2-year period. It treated the $1,000 monthly payments as rentals. It did not set up on its books any account with respect to any fixtures or improvements obtained under the agreement of July 1, 1960.

In contrast, Blaekstone Realty, in its income tax return for the taxable year ending May 31, 1961, treated the $100,-000 cash payment as proceeds solely from the sale of “leasehold improvements.” Valuing the improvements at an adjusted basis of $56,007.33, and allocating $1,286.77 of the total commission expense to the sale of improvements, it reported a gain of $42,705.90. It treated the balance of the selling price as proceeds from the sale of a leasehold, reporting a gain of $236,786.77. 4 Blaekstone Realty elected to report the sale of the leasehold on the installment method by utilizing Section 453 of the Internal Revenue Code, 5 and it reported as a long-term capital gain $9,866.11 of the $10,-000.00 actually received in monthly rentals during the taxable year. The 1961 return thus showed a taxable gain on the sale of the lease of $52,572.01 ($42,-705.90 + $9,866.11).

The tax return filed by Blaekstone Realty was rejected by the Commissioner as not reflective of the true nature of the sale. In a Notice of Deficiency the Commissioner treated the sale in the aggregate, combining the gain from the leasehold and improvements and placing them within the one-year period. The Commissioner thus determined that the transaction with First Federal had resulted in the receipt by Blaekstone Realty of a single long-term gain of $204,-671.56 in the taxable year ending May 31, 1961, a transaction which, under the 30% rule of Section 453, could not be reported on the installment basis. This determination resulted in an increase of $152,099.55 in taxable income over what had been reported and a tax deficiency of $43,684.93.

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Bluebook (online)
398 F.2d 991, 22 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5156, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 6124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackstone-realty-company-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1968.