Bryant Trust v. Commissioner

11 T.C. 374, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1948
DocketDocket No. 14508
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 T.C. 374 (Bryant Trust 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
Bryant Trust v. Commissioner, 11 T.C. 374, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79 (tax 1948).

Opinion

OPINION.

Johnson, Judge:

The petitioner trust assails the Commissioner’s determination of gain on its sale of the Security Building property in 1941, charging error (1) in the use of $162,531.89 as basis; (2) in ascribing to the building a 40-year life for computing the depreciation adjustment to basis, and (3) in the allocation of sale proceeds between land and building.

(1) As the trust acquired the property by devise, its basis is, under section 113 (a) (5), Internal Revenue Code, “the fair market value of such property at the time of such acquisition,” which time was April 8, 1920, the date of Harriet M. Bryant’s death. Regulations 103, sec. 19.113 (b) (1). On the estate tax return the property was reported by the executors at the figure which the Commissioner has adopted as basis, and, since under sec. 19.113 (c) fair market value for basis purposes shall be deemed the value at date of death “as appraised for the purpose of the Federal Estate Tax,” respondent argues that such appraisal figure is prima facie evidence, Elizabeth J. Bray, 4 B. T. A. 42, entitled to great weight, and contends that it is independently supported by the terms of the lease contract which permitted the lessee’s retention of rentals until at least 1938 for application to the building’s cost.

While normally true that the accepted valuation of property on an estate tax return is to be taken as its basis to the devisee, the devisee is not estopped to claim a different value. May Rogers, 31 B. T. A. 994; affd. (C. C. A., 2d Cir.), 107 Fed. (2d) 394; cf. United States v. Dickinson (C. C. A., 1st Cir.), 95 Fed. (2d) 65. And that right is here a fortiori available to petitioner because the property was erroneously included in the value of gross estate under the holding in Crooks v. Harrelson, 282 U. S. 55, and further because the details of computation, given on the return, affirmatively indicate that the subject of valuation was not the property itself, but the decedent’s rights in it as modified by a contract requiring the use of income from it for the payment of an obligation. The figure of $162,531.89 used on the return was reached “after carving out a particular estate of 17 years.” This “particular estate” was the lessee’s right to retain rentals for application to cost of the building which the lessors had agreed to pay in this way.

The “property” which decedent devised was not, as respondent puts it, “a bundle of rights,” but leased real estate improved with an eight-story building. By contract decedent was bound to reimburse the lessee for the cost of the building and to pay interest on the unreim-bursed part of such cost by permitting him to retain and apply to cost and interest the monthly installments of rentals, as they came due. At her option she could also make reimbursement in cash, but in fact never elected to do so. Having no direct personal liability to reimburse, decedent was in a position analogous to that of a purchaser of mortgaged property who assumes no personal liability for the mortgage note, and petitioner is in the position of a devisee of property so encumbered. The value of an owner’s interest in such property is commonly thought of as the difference between the fair market value of the property unencumbered and the amount of the debt or obligation which it secures, and in commercial parlance this interest is termed an “equity.”

But such an expression of convenience does not modify the concept of “property” as used in the revenue acts, and the “equity” of a decedent owner in real estate is not the “property” which should be valued for inclusion in gross estate or for basis in the computation of a gain or loss on a subsequent disposition. It is now settled by Crane v. Commissioner, 331 U. S. 1, that the revenue acts preclude:

* * * an equity basis, and the use of it is contrary to certain implicit principles of income tax depreciation, and entails very great administrative difficulties. * * *
* * * the proper basis under § 113 (a) (5) is the value of the property, undiminished by mortgages thereon * * *.

We are of opinion that the cited decision is here controlling. Respondent argues earnestly that the differences between a mortgage and a lease are so fundamental as to deprive the decision of bearing on the issue here. He stresses that “there was no debt which the lessee could have enforced at law against the lessors. His rights were merely those of a lessee — not those of a creditor or mortgagee.” If the contract contained only lease provisions, this argument would be sound. But it contains more. It provides not only for the payment of $461,704.70 with interest to the lessee, but secures that payment by allowing him to retain the rentals. Oppenstein was a creditor as well as a lessee, and, while the debt was not collectible except in the manner specified, that manner effectively secured payment. Significantly, the Supreme Court in the Crane opinion deemed it immaterial whether or not:

* * * the mortgagor is, strictly speaking, a debtor on the mortgage * * *. We are rather concerned with the reality that an owner of property, mortgaged at a figure less than that at which the property will sell, must and will treat the conditions of the mortgage exactly as if they were his personal obligations. If he transfers subject to the mortgage, the benefit to him is as real and substantial as if the mortgage were discharged, or as if a personal debt in an equal amount had been assumed by another.

So here, discharge of the reimbursement obligation conferred upon decedent and thereafter upon petitioner benefits in the form of a releasing of prospective rents as real and as substantial as the discharge of a personal debt.

The “property” subject t,o valuation on April 8, 1920, is not, therefore, an “equity” or difference between the value of the fee and the obligation secured by rentals; it is the land and building. To establish the value of this property petitioner introduced Byron F. Shutz and Willard Bush, two real estate dealers of many years experience in Kansas City, both of whom were familiar with the Security Building and the terms of the lease contract. They agreed that, ,on the basis of sales and leases of similar property, on April 8, 1920, the Security Building property had a value of about a million dollars. But, because the 50-year lease at a stipulated rental fixed the possible income from the property at $26,602 (an average of the graduated rentals), they considered that a willing buyer would adjust his bid by reference to the income factor, and as 5 per cent was then the market return on the highest grade of real estate (and this property was of the highest grade), prospective income was capitalized at 5 per cent and a fair market value of $532,040 was reached by both.

Bespondent attacks the witnesses’ estimate, contending that they incorrectly assumed immediate production of rentals, whereas in fact a buyer would receive nothing under the lease contract for at least 18 years, or, under the lessee’s construction of the terms, for more than 18 years.

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First Nat. Bank of Kansas City v. Nee
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Bryant Trust v. Commissioner
11 T.C. 374 (U.S. Tax Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
11 T.C. 374, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-trust-v-commissioner-tax-1948.