Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Moore. Moore v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

207 F.2d 265
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1953
Docket13125_1
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 207 F.2d 265 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Moore. Moore v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Moore. Moore v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 207 F.2d 265 (9th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

*267 POPE, Circuit Judge.

For consideration here are petitions by both the above named parties for review of two decisions of the Tax Court relating to claimed deficiencies in the income taxes of the taxpayer Mary Young Moore for the years 1943, 1944 and 1945. The Tax Court upheld taxpayer’s claim of a right to make deductions from gross income on account of depreciation attributable to a half interest in a building located in Los Angeles, but rejected her contention that additional deductions should be allowed through amortization of a lease upon the lot where the building was located.

Taxpayer and her mother, Mrs. Mary C. Young, were the owners of the lot of land mentioned, when, on October 1, 1924, they executed a 99 year lease to Sun Realty Company as lessee. The lease required the lessee to demolish a building then on the premises and to construct at its own expense a new building thereon to cost not less than $2,000,000. Rental was to be $10,000 per month until June 30, 1926, and $20,000 per month thereafter for the entire remainder of the term. Lessee agreed to pay all taxes and other levies and charges on the property. The lease contemplated the making of a sub-lease to Barker Bros. Corporation, and such a lease, for a term of 35 years, was executed with the approval of the original lessors, on October 30, 1924. The building called for in the original lease was completed January 1, 1926.

The mother died November 3, 1938, and by will left her half interest in the property to her daughter. The latter, as executrix, filed a Federal Estate Tax return, and by compromise with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the value of the estate’s half interest in the property was fixed at $1,533,100. The estate tax proceedings made no segregation or itemization of the elements considered in making up that valuation.

There was no testimony (manifestly there could have been none), as to how the agreed figure of $1,533,100 was arrived at. However, expert witnesses for the taxpayer gave their opinions as to the values of the land, and the building, as of November 3, 1938. In substance they testified that on that date the building was worth $1,605,000. This they arrived at by computing reconstruction cost on that date, and deducting therefrom depreciation at 2 percent per year from the date of construction to 1938. They gave their estimate of the then value of the land alone as $800,000, and noted a difference between the totals of these two figures and twice the agreed figure of $1,533,100, or $3,066,200, and attributed this difference of $661,200 to “the favorable lease”.

Two expert witnesses were likewise called by the Commissioner. One of them, who testified that a half interest in the land was worth $660,000 and a like interest in the building was worth $873,-100 on November 3, 1938, (the two figures totaling the agreed sum of $1,533,-100), expressed the opinion that the lease, when made, was at “the going rate” ; that it at no time had a “bonus value”, and he found no value attributable to a “favorable lease”. The other witness, whose values for the half interest were $750,000 for the land and $783,-000 for the building, was of the opinion that the lease produced substantially higher rentals than other rentals in the general area, and that the existence of the favorable lease was responsible for half of his $750,000 figure for the land.

In upholding taxpayer’s claim to an allowance by way of depreciation on account of the building, the Tax Court followed and restated the rule announced by it in Currier v. Commissioner, 7 T.C. 980, and Pearson v. Commissioner, 13 T. C. 851. After referring to the proposition that during the life of taxpayer's mother, neither of the lessors could deduct depreciation “for the reason that (they had) no investment or cost therein which is subject to exhaustion”, the court expressed its ruling as to the half interest which taxpayer inherited from her mother by quoting from its decision in the Currier case as follows: “The basis of inherited property is accordingly not *268 cost, as it was in the Detroit Edison [Detroit Edison Co. v. Commissioner, 319 U.S. 98, 63 S.Ct. 902, 87 L.Ed. 1286] and Reisinger [Reisinger v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 144 F.2d 475] cases, and to say that a property cost the taxpayer nothing makes no contribution to the solution of the present question. As opposed to cost, the basis of property acquired by devise is categorically fixed by statute as fair market value on the date of acquisition. Internal Revenue Code, sec. 113(a) (5), 26 U.S.C.A. § 113(a) (5). Hence, if we can discover the fair market value of the property in question at the date of decedent's death, Augustus v. Commissioner, 6 Cir., 118 F.2d 88 [38] (or the figure at which it was returned for estate tax purposes, which is recognized as the equivalent, Regulations 103, sec. 19.113(a) (5)) the upshot would ordinarily be its basis for depreciation in petitioner’s hands, without any reference to its ‘cost’. Having acquired a basis by the incident of the estate tax, the gradually disappearing value of a wasting asset can not be replaced except by periodic depreciation adjustments.” Holding that the taxpayer “will suffer some loss due to depreciation”, the court found that the fair market value of taxpayer’s one-half of the building at the date of the mother’s death, November 3, 1938, was $800,000, and that it had a 50 year life.

In attacking these conclusions the Commissioner says that they overlook important facts bearing on the real interest of the taxpayer. He points to the fact that because of the long term lease, taxpayer’s interest in the building gives her no more than the prospect of possessing it in the year 2023, long after the building’s useful life will have terminated and its value have been exhausted. This, says the Commissioner, is an interest “completely devoid of value”. He argues that the essential error in the Tax Court’s decision is that it arrived at a conclusion as to depreciable values in complete disregard of the lease, with its 99 year term extending beyond the useful life of the building.

We think the Commissioner’s point is well taken. True it is that Internal Revenue Code, sec. 113(a) (5) provides: “If the property was acquired by bequest, devise, or inheritance * * * the basis shall be the fair market value of such property at the time of such acquisition.” But “such property” is not the steel frame, brick and terra cotta loft and store building on the corner ■ of Figueroa, Seventh and Flower Streets in the City of Los Angeles, — it is the taxpayer’s interest in that property. 1 And her interest is a limited one, not only because it is a fractional part, but also because it is subject to the lease. As the Tax Court said, dealing with another point in this case: “What petitioner inherited from her mother was an undivided half interest in the land under the Barker Bros, building and a rever-sionary interest in the building.” (Emphasis added.)

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Bluebook (online)
207 F.2d 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-moore-moore-v-commissioner-of-ca9-1953.