Brice v. Department of Revenue

6 Or. Tax 548
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 Or. Tax 548 (Brice v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brice v. Department of Revenue, 6 Or. Tax 548 (Or. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

Plaintiffs appealed from the defendant’s Order No. 1-75-22, dated June 19, 1975, in which the defendant denied an income tax deduction taken by plaintiffs on their 1970 personal income tax return of the value of an alleged gift of land to a municipal corporation.

The plaintiff husband, Robert M. Brice, of Lincoln City, and his partner, David Boland, a resident of Portland, have for many years engaged in real estate developments, building construction, and property management. The testimony shows that 67 acres of unimproved property, partially located in the SW % of the SE y4 of Sec. 5, T 10 S, R 11 W, WM, in Lincoln County, was purchased by them in 1964 from a Mr. Salway, a Portland attorney. As purchasers, the partners took title subject to a lease for years held by Mr. Victor Dollar, a friend of Mr. Salway. Mr. Salway advised the partners that the Beverly Beach Water District had placed a pump house, water pump *550 and tank on a portion of the land, apparently with the permission of the lessee, and he made clear that the purchasers must take the land as they found it; i.e., if they wished to oust the water district, the burden would fall upon them. Thereafter, Mr. Dollar quitclaimed all his interest in the property to the purchasers (by a transfer to Mr. and Mrs. Boland). The title record shows no rights whatsoever vested in the water district.

The court visited the site of the subject property in company with counsel, plaintiffs and witnesses. The 0.94 acre contains a deep ravine, many feet below the elevation of “old” U.S. Highway No. 101 and of Marine Drive South. A part of the ravine contains a stream on which the water district depends and as to which, apparently, it has water rights. The pump and tank, situated near the stream, utilize only a small portion of ground.

The testimony showed that a part, if not all, of the water district’s improvements above described were originally located on the old U.S. Highway No. 101 right-of-way which marks the westerly boundary of the 0.94 acre here in question; the improvements were moved onto the subject property during the period of Mr. Dollar’s lease, with his permission, and prior to the sale to the plaintiffs.

Two or three years after the acquisition of the property by the partners, they began development and sale of lots in the westerly 25 to 30 acres of their purchase, lying north of the subject property. Their plat was filed in 1968 (naming the development “Finisterre”). The southerly boundary of Finisterre is a street, 50 feet in width, named Marine Drive South, which, at the point where it leaves old U.S. Highway No. 101, constitutes part of the northern boundary of the subject property. A waterline was run by the part *551 ners to the platted parcels from the area of the water district’s pump and the water district personnel attached the line to the pump.

One of the plaintiffs, Mr. Brice, testified that in order to obtain approval of the subdivision plat, he had to obtain assurance from the water district that water would be provided to the subdivision. Although the subdivision was not located within the boundaries of the water district at that time, this assurance was obtained and the Lincoln County Planning Commission approved the plat.

The testimony shows many contacts between plaintiffs and the water district. For example, because the partners had installed all necessary water pipelines and connecting fixtures in the subdivision, the water district was not required to perform any additional work to serve lot purchasers. The water district board agreed to rebate to the partnership half of the normal hookup fee (then $200), received from subdivision purchasers, because it had no additional work to do before beginning service. Plaintiff stated that he and his partner had received some payments from the water district under this agreement but that the practice had been discontinued for approximately five years.

In 1970, plaintiff and his partner deeded the 0.94 acre which was occupied by the pump house to the water district. The fair market value of the property on the date of the gift was determined by a professional appraiser to be $20,000. The value is not contested in this proceeding. On their 1970 tax return, the plaintiffs deducted their partnership interest in the property, $10,000, as a charitable contribution. (The partnership’s cost basis was $132.)

The defendant pleaded that there could have been no donative intent in the plaintiffs because (a) the *552 plaintiffs were required to transfer the property to the water district in furtherance of their business of subdividing and selling platted land; and (b) the subject property had actually been acquired by the water district through adverse possession prior to the sale by Mr. Salway to plaintiffs. Alternatively, de-. fendant contends that if a donative intent were found, the dollar amount of the plaintiffs’ allowable income tax deduction was limited by IRC (1954), § 170(e), to $66, the plaintiffs’ allocated cost basis in the property given to the water district.

Under the provisions of Oregon’s Personal Income Tax Act of 1969, particularly ORS 316.007 and 316.062, the pertinent parts of IRC (1954), § 170 (allowing deductions for charitable contributions), are applicable herein. Subsection (c) (1) provides for deduction of the value of a contribution to a municipal corporation. The parties agreed that the Beverly Beach Water District qualified as such. See ORS chapter 264.

The significance of the “donative intent” required for deduction of a gift for income tax purposes has been well stated in the trial brief of defendant’s counsel, citing Commissioner v. Duberstein, 363 US 278, 80 S Ct 1190, 4 L Ed2d 1218, 60-2 USTC ¶ 9515, 5 AFTR2d 1626 (1960). In a factual situation requiring a determination of a receipt as gift or income, the case lays down the rule as follows: The value of a gift may be excluded from gross income only if the gift proceeds from a “detached and disinterested generosity” or “out of affection, respect, admiration, charity or like impulses” and must be included as income if the claimed gift proceeds primarily from “the constraining force of any moral or legal duty” or from the “incentive of anticipated benefit, of an economic *553 nature.” Such criteria are also applicable to a charitable deduction under IRC (1954), § 170. (See Straumfjord v. Commission, 3 OTR 69, 74 (1967).)

Defendant quotes from Larry G. Sutton, 57 TC 239, 243 (1971), where the court decided whether a conveyance of an easement was a charitable contribution:

“Determining a taxpayer’s incentive, motive, or purpose in making a gift is a factual problem. The inquiry, however, does more than probe the subjective attitude of the donor and the extent to which public-spirited and charitable benevolence prompted the transfer.

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6 Or. Tax 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brice-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1976.