Coupe v. Comm'r

52 T.C. 394, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 116
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 11, 1969
DocketDocket No. 861-65
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 52 T.C. 394 (Coupe v. Comm'r) 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
Coupe v. Comm'r, 52 T.C. 394, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 116 (tax 1969).

Opinions

OPINION

On June 1,1960, petitioners entered into an agreement with Southern Pacific Co. (S.P.) to sell S.P. their 188.948-acre farm (Elk Grove property) for $2,500 per acre, plus interest. S.P. made an initial $25,000 deposit. Thereafter in two separate escrow transactions (terminating on August 9, 1960, and January 10, 1961, respectively), S.P. paid in the amounts of $111,982.50 and $843,032.73, respectively, with the instruction that such amounts were to be paid to the title holders of the Elk Grove property. The latter amount included $7,657.73 in interest. S.P. thereafter received Elk Grove parcels of 54.793 acres and 134.150 acres in 1960 and 1961, respectively.

Bather than simply transferring title in the Elk Grove property to S.P. and receiving cash, however, petitioners arranged to have it transferred to S.P. after they had entered into certain exchanges for said property, simultaneously with the closing of the two escrows with S.P. After the exchanges were completed they had received title to four parcels of property, called the McEnerney, Sala, Schauer, and Bettencourt properties, respectively. In addition they received cash and a note secured by a deed of trust on the McEnerney property.

On their Federal income tax return for the years 1960 and 1961, petitioners reported their transfers of the Elk Grove property, in part, as tax-free exchanges of property for property of like kind under section 10313 of the Code, in part as a partially tax-free sale of their residence for $20,000, and its replacement by another residence costing $18,000, under section 1034 4 of the Code, and the balance as a currently taxable sale of property to S.P., upon which they reported their gain as shown in the Findings of Fact. Petitioners are now also contending that their transfer of part of the Elk Grove property for the McEnerney deed-of-trust note also constituted a tax-free exchange under section 1031. In his statutory notice of deficiency, respondent determined the amount of petitioners’ capital gains arising from the two transactions and, with the exception of the transfer of 1.936 Elk Grove acres for the McEnerney residence, further determined that the gains constituted currently taxable income to petitioners in 1960 and 1961. Assigning a sales price of $4,840 for the Elk Grove residence (1.936 acres at $2,500 per acre), respondent determined that petitioners’ capital gain from-its sale qualified for nonrecognition treatment under section 1034 of the Code, as petitioners had replaced their residence with one of an equal or greater cost than the $4,840 sales price. Respondent also determined that petitioners received $7,657.73 in interest income in 1961.

In his statutory notice, respondent allowed certain selling expenses to be deducted from the sales price received by petitioner on the determined taxable transactions. In so doing he disallowed certain expenses and reallocated others which petitioner had deducted from the gross sales price of the various parcels in determining their gain.

It is now well settled that when a taxpayer who is holding property for productive use in a trade or business enters into an agreement to sell the property for cash, but before there is substantial implementation of the transaction, arranges to exchange the property for other property of like kind, he receives the nonrecognition benefits of section 1031. Coastal Terminals, Inc. v. United States, 320 F. 2d 333 (C.A. 4, 1963); James Alderson, 38 T.C. 215 (1962), reversed on other grounds 317 F. 2d 790 (C.A. 9, 1963); Carlton v. United States, 385 F. 2d 238 (C.A. 5, 1967). Of crucial importance in such an exchange is the requirement that title to the parcel transferred by the taxpayer in fact be transferred in consideration for property received. See Carlton v. United States, supra. In the instant case, petitioners arranged to have their Elk Grove property exchanged in a variation of a so-called 4-way exchange. Involved in this type of exchange is a taxpayer desiring to exchange property, a prospective purchaser of the taxpayer’s property, a prospective seller of the property the taxpayer wishes to receive in exchange, and a fourth party. In a simultaneously executed transaction (usually done through escrow) the fourth party receives the taxpayer’s property and sells that property to the prospective purchaser. With the funds he receives, he purchases the prospective seller’s property and then transfers that property to the taxpayer. When the smoke has cleared, the taxpayer has exchanged his property in a so-called 1031 transaction, the prospective purchaser has the taxpayer’s property, the prospective seller has cash, and the fourth party, with the exception of agreed compensation, nothing. See Mercantile Trust Co. of Baltimore et al., Executors, 32 B.T.A. 82 (1935).

The instant transactions involved, in addition to petitioners, S.P. as the prospective purchaser of the taxpayer’s property, the owners of the McEnerney, Sala, Bettencourt, and Schauer properties as the prospective sellers, and Polbemus and Brannely as the fourth party. With the exception of the McEnerney property, petitioners transferred Elk Grove property to Polhemus and/or Brannely, who transferred the property to S.P.5 for cash. With the cash Polhemus and/or Brannely purchased the above properties and transferred them to petitioners. In the case of the 1960 McEnerney transaction, petitioners exchanged the Elk Grove property with the McEnerneys for the McEnerney property and the McEnerneys transferred the Elk Grove property to S.P. for cash. Since the net result of the transactions was petitioners’ receipt of property for property of like kind, petitioners contend that they have met the requirements of section 1031.

Respondent contends that the above actions were little more than a transparent attempt on petitioners part to restructure a taxable transaction into a nontaxable one. The fact remains, however, that when it came time to transfer title to the Elk Grove property, petitioners did not transfer it to S.P., but to other individuals, and insofar as the consideration which they received for the transfer constituted title to property of like kind, they had exchanged their property in tax-free exchanges under section 1031. The deed-of-trust note and the cash they received will be discussed infra.

We have not overlooked the fact that with the exception of the McEnerney exchange, the exchanges in issue were with Polhemus and Brannely. Respondent strenuously argues that at all times these men were petitioners’ attorneys. From this he concludes that they were also their agents in all of the transactions. He argues that since title in an agent is the equivalent of title in the principal, there could have been no exchange of property between petitioners and Polhemus and Brannely; and that the sale to S.P. by Polhemus and Brannely as petitioners’ agents was simply a sale by petitioners.

We agree that the exchange would be meaningless for purposes of section 1031 if Polhemus and Brannely were petitioners’ agents for purposes of carrying out the transactions. See Mercantile Trust Co. of Baltimore, et al., Executors, supra at 85. But the undisputed evidence establishes that, for the purpose of carrying out the exchanges, Polhemus and Brannely did not intend to be and were not petitioners’ agents, but were effectively acting as agents for and on behalf of S.P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 T.C. 394, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coupe-v-commr-tax-1969.