COPPLE, District Judge:
This appeal from the United States Tax Court presents a question involving the interpretation of statutes governing deductibility of expenses incurred in the rental of a vacation home. Dorance and Helen Bolton (taxpayers) owned a vacation home in Palm Springs, California. In 1976, taxpayers rented the unit for 91 days, used it personally for 80 days, and left it unoccupied for 244 days. During that year, taxpayers made interest payments totalling $2,854 and paid property taxes of $621. In addition, taxpayers incurred $2,693 in maintenance expenses (excluding taxes and interest). Taxpayers received $2,700 gross rents from the unit in 1976.
I.R.C. § 280A, enacted in 1976, limits a taxpayer’s business deductions for expenses incurred with respect to a dwelling unit if that unit was used as a personal residence during the tax year.
If § 280A applies, as it does in this case, a general rule is invoked that no business deductions are allowable with respect to the unit.
The statute, however, provides several exceptions. Section 280A(b) provides that non-business expenditures otherwise deductible (i.e. taxes, interest, and casualty losses) are not barred by the statute.
Further, § 280A(c)(3) allows
a deduction for “any item attributable to rental of the unit” (i.e. maintenance expenses).
But this latter exception to the general rule is limited. In computing deductible maintenance expenses, the taxpayer must first comply with § 280A(e) and § 280A(c)(5), respectively.
Section 280A(e) requires that a preliminary computation be undertaken to determine the unit’s maintenance expenses which are attributable to rental and thus can be deducted.
The statute provides that the following ratio be used in making this calculation:
Number of days the unit is actually rented Total number of days during the year the unit is used.
The figure obtained through use of this ratio is then multiplied against the total maintenance expenses of the unit to arrive at a tentative deduction figure. This formula, as applied to the above facts, generates the following calculation: The figure $2,020, then, is the tentative amount of maintenance expenses deductible as attributable to rental.
121 (#^days^used)^ = ^ (total maintenance expenses) = $2,020,
Having arrived at a tentative maintenance deduction figure, there remains § 280A(c)(5) to be complied with.
This section provides first that deductions allowed for expenses attributed to rental of the unit (i.e. deductions of any kind — maintenance, taxes, interest) cannot exceed an amount equal to the amount of gross rental income received from the property for that year ($2,700 on the instant facts). Second, this section requires that deductions allowable whether or not the unit was used as a rental (i.e. interest and taxes in this case) be allocated between rental and non-rental use. The amount of otherwise deductible interest and taxes allocated to rental use of the property is then to be counted toward the gross rentals maximum deduction ceiling ($2,700). The statute, however, provides no formula for allocating such “al
ways deductible” expenses (taxes and interest) between rental and non-rental use of the unit.
The primary issue in this case concerns the method by which this latter allocation is to be achieved. Taxpayers contend, and the tax court agreed, that the allocation be based on a ratio of number days rented/number days in a year. The percentage figure derived from this ratio would be the percentage of taxes and interest paid which is allocable to rental use of the unit, and in turn applied toward the gross rentals deduction limit. The Commissioner, on the other, hand, takes the position that interest and taxes should be allocated to rental use by using the same fraction as that used for maintenance expenses under § 280A(e). The ratio to use under this method would accordingly be number days rented/number days the property was
actually
used. The percentage derived from this ratio would be the percent of taxes and interest which, in the Commissioner’s view, would be applied toward the rental use deduction limit.
The United States Tax Court, in
Bolton v. Commissioner,
77 T.C. 104 (1981), held that the deduction for interest and real estate taxes attributable to the rental unit is to be computed as per the taxpayer’s method, i.e. the ratio to use for the § 280A allocation for taxes and interest is number days unit rented/number days in a year. One basis for the tax court’s decision was the premise that interest and property taxes, unlike maintenance-type expenses, are expenses that continue on a daily basis throughout the year. The tax court recognized that a computation based on the period the unit was
actually
used (121 days in this case) is useful in determining the amount of otherwise nondeductible maintenance expenses, ordinarily associated with actual use of the property, which are to be attributed to rental use. Interest and property taxes, however, accrue ratably over the entire year. The tax court accordingly found that the annual nature of tax and interest expenses as well as the legislative intent shown both by the legislative history and the language of § 280A supported the taxpayer’s interpretation rather than that of the Commissioner. Despite the tax court’s decision, the Commissioner’s position in this matter is currently the subject of a Proposed Treasury Regulation, § 1.280A-3(d).
This Court is essentially faced with deciding whether to give deference to the Commissioner’s interpretation of the statutes in question or to affirm the tax court in finding the Commissioner’s position unreasonable. The United States Supreme Court has recently set forth the approach to follow in such a situation. In
United States v. Vogel Fertilizer Co.,
455 U.S. 16, 102 S.Ct. 821, 70 L.Ed.2d 792 (1982), the Court stated with regard to Treasury Regulations that:
Deference is ordinarily owing to the agency construction if we can conclude that the regulation “implements the congressional mandate in some reasonable manner.” But this general principle of deference, while fundamental, only sets “the framework for judicial analysis; it does not displace it.”
The framework for analysis is refined by consideration of the source of authority to promulgate the regulation at issue. The Commissioner has promulgated Treas.Reg. 1.1563-l(a)(3) interpreting this statute only under his general authority to “prescribe all needful rules and regulations.” 26 U.S.C. § 7805(a).
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COPPLE, District Judge:
This appeal from the United States Tax Court presents a question involving the interpretation of statutes governing deductibility of expenses incurred in the rental of a vacation home. Dorance and Helen Bolton (taxpayers) owned a vacation home in Palm Springs, California. In 1976, taxpayers rented the unit for 91 days, used it personally for 80 days, and left it unoccupied for 244 days. During that year, taxpayers made interest payments totalling $2,854 and paid property taxes of $621. In addition, taxpayers incurred $2,693 in maintenance expenses (excluding taxes and interest). Taxpayers received $2,700 gross rents from the unit in 1976.
I.R.C. § 280A, enacted in 1976, limits a taxpayer’s business deductions for expenses incurred with respect to a dwelling unit if that unit was used as a personal residence during the tax year.
If § 280A applies, as it does in this case, a general rule is invoked that no business deductions are allowable with respect to the unit.
The statute, however, provides several exceptions. Section 280A(b) provides that non-business expenditures otherwise deductible (i.e. taxes, interest, and casualty losses) are not barred by the statute.
Further, § 280A(c)(3) allows
a deduction for “any item attributable to rental of the unit” (i.e. maintenance expenses).
But this latter exception to the general rule is limited. In computing deductible maintenance expenses, the taxpayer must first comply with § 280A(e) and § 280A(c)(5), respectively.
Section 280A(e) requires that a preliminary computation be undertaken to determine the unit’s maintenance expenses which are attributable to rental and thus can be deducted.
The statute provides that the following ratio be used in making this calculation:
Number of days the unit is actually rented Total number of days during the year the unit is used.
The figure obtained through use of this ratio is then multiplied against the total maintenance expenses of the unit to arrive at a tentative deduction figure. This formula, as applied to the above facts, generates the following calculation: The figure $2,020, then, is the tentative amount of maintenance expenses deductible as attributable to rental.
121 (#^days^used)^ = ^ (total maintenance expenses) = $2,020,
Having arrived at a tentative maintenance deduction figure, there remains § 280A(c)(5) to be complied with.
This section provides first that deductions allowed for expenses attributed to rental of the unit (i.e. deductions of any kind — maintenance, taxes, interest) cannot exceed an amount equal to the amount of gross rental income received from the property for that year ($2,700 on the instant facts). Second, this section requires that deductions allowable whether or not the unit was used as a rental (i.e. interest and taxes in this case) be allocated between rental and non-rental use. The amount of otherwise deductible interest and taxes allocated to rental use of the property is then to be counted toward the gross rentals maximum deduction ceiling ($2,700). The statute, however, provides no formula for allocating such “al
ways deductible” expenses (taxes and interest) between rental and non-rental use of the unit.
The primary issue in this case concerns the method by which this latter allocation is to be achieved. Taxpayers contend, and the tax court agreed, that the allocation be based on a ratio of number days rented/number days in a year. The percentage figure derived from this ratio would be the percentage of taxes and interest paid which is allocable to rental use of the unit, and in turn applied toward the gross rentals deduction limit. The Commissioner, on the other, hand, takes the position that interest and taxes should be allocated to rental use by using the same fraction as that used for maintenance expenses under § 280A(e). The ratio to use under this method would accordingly be number days rented/number days the property was
actually
used. The percentage derived from this ratio would be the percent of taxes and interest which, in the Commissioner’s view, would be applied toward the rental use deduction limit.
The United States Tax Court, in
Bolton v. Commissioner,
77 T.C. 104 (1981), held that the deduction for interest and real estate taxes attributable to the rental unit is to be computed as per the taxpayer’s method, i.e. the ratio to use for the § 280A allocation for taxes and interest is number days unit rented/number days in a year. One basis for the tax court’s decision was the premise that interest and property taxes, unlike maintenance-type expenses, are expenses that continue on a daily basis throughout the year. The tax court recognized that a computation based on the period the unit was
actually
used (121 days in this case) is useful in determining the amount of otherwise nondeductible maintenance expenses, ordinarily associated with actual use of the property, which are to be attributed to rental use. Interest and property taxes, however, accrue ratably over the entire year. The tax court accordingly found that the annual nature of tax and interest expenses as well as the legislative intent shown both by the legislative history and the language of § 280A supported the taxpayer’s interpretation rather than that of the Commissioner. Despite the tax court’s decision, the Commissioner’s position in this matter is currently the subject of a Proposed Treasury Regulation, § 1.280A-3(d).
This Court is essentially faced with deciding whether to give deference to the Commissioner’s interpretation of the statutes in question or to affirm the tax court in finding the Commissioner’s position unreasonable. The United States Supreme Court has recently set forth the approach to follow in such a situation. In
United States v. Vogel Fertilizer Co.,
455 U.S. 16, 102 S.Ct. 821, 70 L.Ed.2d 792 (1982), the Court stated with regard to Treasury Regulations that:
Deference is ordinarily owing to the agency construction if we can conclude that the regulation “implements the congressional mandate in some reasonable manner.” But this general principle of deference, while fundamental, only sets “the framework for judicial analysis; it does not displace it.”
The framework for analysis is refined by consideration of the source of authority to promulgate the regulation at issue. The Commissioner has promulgated Treas.Reg. 1.1563-l(a)(3) interpreting this statute only under his general authority to “prescribe all needful rules and regulations.” 26 U.S.C. § 7805(a). Accordingly, “we owe the interpretation less deference than a regulation issued under a specific grant of authority to define a statutory term or prescribe a method of executing a statutory provision .... ”
United States
v.
Vogel Fertilizer Co., supra,
at 455 U.S. at 24, 102 S.Ct. at 827 (citations omitted).
The approach taken by the
Vogel
Court is applicable to the situation faced by this Court even as to the source of the Commissioner’s power to propose the regulation involved in this case.
This Court must
therefore consider the reasonableness of the Commissioner’s interpretation of § 280A as applied to taxpayers and as put forth in the Proposed Regulation. Consideration must first be made of whether the Commissioner’s interpretation “harmonizes with the statutory language.”
United States v. Vogel Fertilizer Co., supra,
455 U.S. at 25, 102 S.Ct. at 827;
National Muffler Dealers Assn. v. United States,
440 U.S. 472, 477, 99 S.Ct. 1304, 1307, 59 L.Ed.2d 519 (1979). The legislative history and purpose behind the statute are also to be considered in determining whether the Commissioner has acted reasonably.
See United States v. Vogel Fertilizer Co., supra,
455 U.S. at 26, 102 S.Ct. at 828. Should the Commissioner’s as well as the taxpayer’s interpretation of the statute be seen as reasonable, the rule in such a situation is that “[t]he choice among reasonable interpretations is for the Commissioner, not the courts.”
National Muffler Dealers Assn. v. United States, supra,
440 U.S. at 488, 99 S.Ct. at 1312. For the reasons outlined below, however, we conclude that the Commissioner overstepped the bounds of reasonableness in this case, and that the decision of the tax court should therefore be affirmed.
I.
The Statutory Language.
The Commissioner’s position is to allocate interest and taxes to gross rental receipts through use of the same fraction as that used for maintenance expenses specified in § 280A(e)(l): number of days rented/total number of days used. Yet subsection (e)(2) of § 280A continues:
(2) Exception for Deductions Otherwise Allowable. This subsection shall not apply with respect to deductions which would be allowable under this chapter for the taxable year whether or not such unit ... was rented.
On the very face of the statute, then, it is apparent that the “number of days rented/total number of days used” fraction is not appropriate for allocating expenses such as interest and property taxes. The Commissioner argues, on the other hand, that the meaning of subsection (e)(2) is not plain, and that other interpretations are possible.
Thus, the Commissioner argues, the IRS interpretation should be accepted.
There is a major difficulty with the Commissioner’s argument, however. Even if it is accepted that this subsection is subject to some different interpretation, the one fact that is clear is that subsection (e)(2) is not, from the face of the statute, subject to an interpretation along the lines of that sought by the Commissioner. Since this Court’s task in the first instance is to determine the reasonableness of the Commissioner’s interpretation, the Commissioner’s argument as to the existence of other possible interpretations misses the focus of the analysis. The question is whether the
Commissioner’s
interpretation is reasonable in the context of the language, legislative history and purpose of the statute. When solely the language on the face of the statute is considered, the Commissioner’s interpretation cannot be upheld as reasonable.
II.
The Legislative History.
The legislative history behind the statutory provisions at issue in this appeal does not
adequately address the problem of the proper way to allocate interest and tax expenses. Indeed, both parties in their briefs admit that the legislative history is unclear on this point. The Commissioner nevertheless makes several arguments based on legislative history to support his position. He first argues that certain extracts of the committee reports discussing § 280A support the IRS interpretation of the statute. These extracts, however, are at best inconclusive, and do not support the Commissioner’s position.
The Commissioner also relies on legislative history in pointing out that prior to the enactment of § 280A, deductions for vacation homes were computed under the general guidelines for the “hobby loss” provisions of § 183. Thus, the Commissioner argues, § 183 and its regulations should be applicable to determining the interest and tax deductions under § 280A, and that these regulations support the Commissioner’s method for making the § 280A allocation. This argument, however, is also faulty in that it ignores the language found in § 280A(f) which states that § 183 is not to apply at all to a unit if § 280A is applicable.
Moreover, such a position ignores the fact that § 280A was enacted in the first instance because § 183 was not working with respect to § 280A-type rental units. H.R.Rep. No. 94r-658,94th Cong., 2d Sess. at 162-64 (1976),
reprinted
in U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 3056-58. The § 183 “hobby
loss” provisions are thus inapplicable to the issues in this appeal.
The legislative history of § 280A as reflected in the committee reports demonstrates, if anything, a lack of support for the Commissioner’s position. Both the Senate Finance Committee and House Ways and Means Committee state that the fraction, number days rented/total number of days used, is the proper way to allocate maintenance expenses. Both reports then add:
However, the limitation (referring to the fraction) upon allocable expenses would not apply to expenses such as interest or taxes which are allocable even if not attributable to the rental activity. H.R. Rep. No. 94-658, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. at 166 (1976); Sen.Rep. No. 94-938, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. at 154 (1976);
both reprinted
in U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News at 3060, 3587.
Thus, while the committee reports provide no guidance as to the specific method of allocating interest and taxes, they nevertheless show that the intent of Congress is contrary to the position taken by the Commissioner, and that use of the fraction found in subsection (e)(1) is not appropriate for allocating interest and taxes. This parallels the apparent intent of the facial language of § 280A(e)(2). In sum, neither the language on the face of § 280A nor its legislative history supports the Commissioner’s position with regard to interest and tax allocation under § 280A.
III.
Harmony with the Legisiative Purpose: Tax Court v. Commissioner.
The Commissioner finally argues that the tax court’s method of computing the interest and tax allocation actually rewards the taxpayer with a higher deduction the less the unit is used for any purpose. As an example, the Commissioner points out that in the instant case, the taxpayers rented the unit for 91 days, or 25% of the time in 1976. He then contends that under the tax court’s computation, taxpayers would be allowed to deduct a higher amount of maintenance expenses than they would have been allowed if the unit were rented for 120 days, or 33% of the year. The Commissioner maintains that this result would be counter to the congressional purpose behind § 280A that taxpayers not be allowed to convert personal expenses, such as maintenance and utilities, into deductible business items.
The Commissioner’s argument, however, fails to consider the fact that if the unit were rented an additional 30 days as in his example, the gross rental figure for the unit, and likewise the ceiling on maximum deductions, would be higher. Thus, 33% of the interest and taxes (allocable to rental under the tax court’s approach) would be taken from a
higher
gross rentals limit, not the same limit as the Commissioner’s example assumes. The amount of allowed deductions for maintenance and depreciation expenses under the deduction limit would therefore increase in proportion to the in
crease in days the unit is rented.
Accordingly, taxpayers are not, as the Commissioner contends, rewarded with higher deductions for letting their unit stand idle. The Commissioner’s argument as to legislative purpose is consequently misplaced. The argument further fails to consider that maintenance and utility expenses are first allotted between deductible rental/business and nondeductible personal expenses as per the fraction in § 280A(e)(l) prior to taking into account interest and taxes under the deduction limit. Any maintenance expenses deductible after allocated interest and taxes are accounted for therefore have already been deemed potentially deductible business expenses. Personal expenses are not converted into business expenses under the tax court’s formula.
As pointed out earlier, neither the statute itself nor its legislative history address the issue of the proper approach to follow in making the § 280A interest and tax allocation. The only clear point to be derived from these sources is the incorrectness of the Commissioner’s interpretation. The tax court’s approach, however, is consistent with the legislative purpose of setting up a scheme whereby personal expenses are separated from the business expenses of rental homes. Following the Commissioner’s approach, the facts in this case would allow a deduction of only $94 of maintenance expenses for three months’ worth of rental expenses, when the maintenance expenses on the unit for the year were $2,693. The tax court’s approach more evenly makes the allocation by determining that maintenance expenses, which tend to vary with occupancy rate, be allocated in accordance with occupancy
(see
§ 280A(e)(l)) whereas those expenses which are allowable without regard to whether they are personal or not be allocated giving due regard to the method in which they accrue — in this case, taxes and interest accrue on a daily basis, regardless of property use. At least one commentator feels that the allocation of taxes and interest over the entire year may have been so obvious to Congress that Congress did not believe it needed stating.
See
W. Lath-en,
Bolton: IRS “Bizarre” On Section 280A(e),
60
Taxes
237, 239 (1982). In summary, the Commissioner’s interpretation of the statute is at odds with the language, history and legislative purpose behind § 280A. “[A] challenged regulation is not a reasonable statutory interpretation unless it harmonizes with the statute’s ‘origin and purpose’.”
United States v. Vogel Fertilizer Co.,
supra,- U.S. at-, 102 S.Ct. at 828,
quoting National Muffler Dealer’s
Assn. v. United States, supra,
440 U.S. at 477, 99 S.Ct. at 1307. The approach of the tax court, on the other hand, is reasonable and consistent with the purpose and history behind the statute and the language of the statute itself. The Commissioner’s interpretation must accordingly be rejected, and the approach of the tax court given deference.
The decision of the tax court is therefore affirmed.
AFFIRMED.