Dirico v. Comm'r

139 T.C. No. 16, 139 T.C. 396, 2012 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 42
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 13, 2012
DocketDocket No. 16202-09.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 139 T.C. No. 16 (Dirico 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
Dirico v. Comm'r, 139 T.C. No. 16, 139 T.C. 396, 2012 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 42 (tax 2012).

Opinion

Halpern, Judge:

By notice of deficiency respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ Federal income tax liabilities of $69,910 and $216,845 for their 2004 and 2005 taxable, calendar, years (years in issue), respectively.

Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue. All dollar amounts have been rounded to the nearest dollar.

The issues for decision are (1) whether rental income paid to Francis J. Dirico (petitioner), or to one of his wholly owned grantor or nominee trusts, by his wholly owned subchapter S corporation for the use of telecommunication towers and land constituted income from a passive activity (passive activity income) pursuant to section 469(c)(2) or income from a nonpassive activity (non-passive-activity income) pursuant to section 1.469-2(f)(6), Income Tax Regs., (2) whether the rental income involved in deciding the first issue is the net income derived from all of the property leased to petitioner’s wholly owned subchapter S corporation or that derived from the profitable rentals only, (3) whether, in deciding the first issue, we should exclude from consideration petitioner’s income from rentals of land without a tower and treat that income as non-passive-activity income pursuant to section 1.469-2T(f)(3), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 53 Fed. Reg. 5721 (Feb. 25, 1988).1

FINDINGS OF FACT

Residence

At the time the petition was filed, petitioners resided in Key Largo, Florida.

Background

Petitioner attended high school, college, and graduate school in Massachusetts. He earned an undergraduate degree in public health and epidemiology and did graduate-level courses in various technical areas. After completing his schooling, he worked in Boston as a staff engineer in his father’s manufacturing business.

In the early 1970s, he formed what became Industrial Communications & Electronics, Inc. (ice), ice’s business, which petitioner initially conducted out of his home in Pembroke, Massachusetts, was electrical contracting, servicing two-way radios, and, later, performing specialized services for cellular carriers. ICE moved, first to Kingston and then to Marshfield, Massachusetts, where, at the time of the trial, its corporate headquarters had been for the preceding 10 years. ICE also maintains small offices in Miami and Naples, Florida.

Before and during the years in issue, ICE was engaged in a variety of radio-related activities, including construction of and leasing access to telecommunications towers (towers), sales and servicing of Motorola radios, and providing specialized mobile radio services (SMR) for a monthly subscriber fee. It constructed towers both for unrelated parties and for its own use, the latter for rental to customers, including Verizon, T-Mobile, AT&T, paging companies, and government entities.

SMR was a pre-cellular-telephone-technology, push-to-talk radio system with some telephone capabilities. Before the cellular telephone industry matured, SMR was an attractive technology, offering party-line or intercom-like services to such users as security companies, plumbers, electricians, construction companies, and tow-truck and rubbish companies.

By 1997 or 1998, ICE and Nextel each owned half of the SMR frequencies in Boston. ICE used its frequencies in its SMR business, but, by then, Nextel’s use of digital technology on its frequencies resulted in interference that caused ice’s customers to have difficulty in using their SMR radios. The frequencies involved in the SMR business were both 800 and 900 megacycles (megs), and it was Nextel’s use of the former that hurt ice’s customers and led to ice’s loss of some 90% of those customers. As a result, in 1997 or 1998 ICE disposed to Nextel all of its 800 megs frequencies in exchange for cash and Nextel’s 900 megs frequencies. Thereafter, ICE rebuilt its SMR business as a 900 megs business, which continued during the years in issue. ICE mounted the SMR antennas on a small number (perhaps four) of the towers that it leased from petitioner during the years in issue. ICE placed the SMR antennas on what was otherwise free space, i.e., space not already used by lessee antennas.

During the years in issue, ICE was an S corporation (within the meaning of section 1361(a)(1)), and petitioner owned 100% (in 2004, indirectly, through another wholly owned S corporation, and, in 2005, directly) of its stock.

Petitioner’s Ownership and Leasing of Telecommunications Towers and Land to ICE

During the years in issue, either individually or through grantor or nominee trusts, petitioner owned towers and land that he leased to ICE. In all, petitioner leased to ICE 19 properties in 2004 (10 consisting of both a tower and land owned by a nominee trust, 6 consisting of land owned by a nominee trust on which was situated a tower owned by ICE, and 3 consisting of land owned by petitioner with no tower) and 21 properties in 2005 (1 consisting of both a tower and land owned by petitioner, 10 consisting of both a tower and land owned by a nominee trust, 7 consisting of land owned by a nominee trust on which was situated a tower owned by ICE, and 3 consisting of land owned by petitioner with no tower). Those properties were in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Florida. During both years, petitioner incurred net losses with respect to four of the properties leased to ICE, each consisting of tower and land.

Under the typical lease from either petitioner or one of the nominee trusts to ICE, the lessor leased the land, towers, and other property at a specified address to ICE for a five-year initial term with provision for indefinite five-year renewals in consideration of “base rent of 25% of the gross tower rent revenue.” ICE was responsible for payment of utilities and for maintenance of the leased property.

With respect to both the towers it leased from petitioner or a nominee trust and the towers it owned (on land it leased from a nominee trust), ICE leased tower access to unrelated third parties, including mobile telecommunication service providers such as Verizon and Nextel. ice leased tower access to 3 to 20 tenants per tower, and each of those tenants would install up to 30 antennas on a tower. Under the typical tower access lease (entitled “License Agreement for Antenna Site”), the “licensee” is allowed to “install, operate, and maintain” at its “sole expense and risk” specified items of equipment (typically, antennas and transmission lines) in consideration of a “monthly license fee.” The “licensor” is liable for repairs except those “required because of the fault or negligence of * * * [the licensee] or its designated maintenance company”, in which event the “licensee” becomes responsible for the repairs. ICE, as lessor or “licensor”, generally maintained each tower, made sure that it was painted and that the lights were working, picked up papers and other debris, plowed snow, etc.

Petitioner’s Involvement With ICE

Petitioner was immersed in ice’s business operations, working long hours 5% to 6 days every week, at least until the sale of the 800 megs SMR frequencies to Nextel in 1997 or 1998. Shortly after that sale, he and his family moved from Massachusetts to Key Largo, Florida.

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Dirico v. Comm'r
139 T.C. No. 16 (U.S. Tax Court, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
139 T.C. No. 16, 139 T.C. 396, 2012 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dirico-v-commr-tax-2012.