CAMPBELL v. COMMISSIONER
This text of 2002 T.C. Summary Opinion 117 (CAMPBELL 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.
Opinion
*119 PURSUANT TO INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 7463(b), THIS OPINION MAY NOT BE TREATED AS PRECEDENT FOR ANY OTHER CASE.
PAJAK, Special Trial Judge: This case was heard pursuant to the provisions of
Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's 1998 Federal income tax in the amount of $ 3,334. After concessions by respondent and petitioner, the sole issue this Court must decide is whether petitioner is entitled to deduct the cost of removing and replacing the roof-covering material on her residential rental house.
Some of the facts in this case have been stipulated and are so found. Petitioner resided in Compton, California, at the time she filed her petition.
During*120 1998, petitioner, an employee of the United States Postal Service, owned a residential rental house in Long Beach, California (rental house). The rental house was a one-story building with 2 bedrooms and a den.
The house had been rented to the then tenant for about 4 years when the roof began leaking and moisture began seeping through the walls into the main bedroom of the house. The tenant complained to petitioner and, as petitioner put it in lay person's terms: "So we had to get it repaired." She could not have continued to rent the house if the roof had continued to leak.
Petitioner contacted TEAM DK Contractors (the contractors), who gave petitioner an estimate. She "went with them" and paid the contractors with funds she had to borrow. One of the partners of the contractors testified at trial that "we did repairs on the roof." The work done on the rental house by the contractors also included interior repairs and drywall installation, the cost of which respondent has conceded.
The contractors removed the existing top layers of the roof and recovered it with fiberglass sheets and hot asphalt. They made no structural changes to the roof. The $ 8,000 cost of removing and replacing*121 the roof-covering material on the roof of the rental house is the amount in issue. Petitioner claims it is a deductible expense; respondent argues it is a capital expense.
The issue in this case has been considered previously by this
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2002 T.C. Summary Opinion 117, 2002 Tax Ct. Summary LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-commissioner-tax-2002.