Estate of Bartberger v. Commissioner

1988 T.C. Memo. 21, 54 T.C.M. 1550, 1988 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 24
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1988
DocketDocket No. 36710-85.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1988 T.C. Memo. 21 (Estate of Bartberger 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.

Bluebook
Estate of Bartberger v. Commissioner, 1988 T.C. Memo. 21, 54 T.C.M. 1550, 1988 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 24 (tax 1988).

Opinion

ESTATE OF MARTHA P. BARTBERGER, DECEASED; FROST NATIONAL BANK, INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Estate of Bartberger v. Commissioner
Docket No. 36710-85.
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 1988-21; 1988 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 24; 54 T.C.M. (CCH) 1550; T.C.M. (RIA) 88021;
January 19, 1988; As amended January 20, 1988
Elwood Cluck, for petitioner.
Barbara Cavanaugh, for the respondent.

WILLIAMS

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

WILLIAMS, Judge: The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal estate tax in the amount of $ 1,465,823.00.

The issues the Court must decide are: (1) whether certain real estate is includible decedent's estate, (2) if so, the value of that property, (3) whether special use valuation, section 2032A, 1 may be used to value other includible real estate, (4) whether certain attorneys fees are deductible pursuant to section 2053, and (5) whether unearned oil, gas and mineral delay-rental payments and unearned grazing rental payments plus associated interest, attorney's fees and court costs are deductible pursuant to section 2053.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts are stipulated and are so found. The executor for petitioner is a national banking association*26 having its offices and principal place of business in San Antonio, Texas. Martha Petersen Bartberger died testate in a nursing home in San Antonio, Texas on April 10, 1981 at the age of 101. On the date of her death decedent held record title to the Bart Ranch, which included 7,898.8 acres of land, and to 7,346.97 acres of real estate leased to the Petersen Ranch. Both ranches were located in Southwest Texas. The decedent also owned other assets that have an agreed value of $ 638,836.81.

In 1928 N. P. Petersen, decedent's father, owned a partnership interest in Petersen and Company located in Brackettville, Texas. N. P. Petersen also owned the First State Bank in Brackettville.

In 1928 Brackettville was the only town in Kinney County, Texas, a ranching community of approximately 1,800 people located near the Mexican border in West Texas. The primary occupation of the community was ranching, and the only big business in town was Petersen and Company.

Petersen and Company was a partnership that conducted a general [Text Deleted by Court Emendation] mercantile business whose motto was "supplies from the cradle to the grave." N. P. Petersen owned two of the four partnership*27 shares; R. C. Ballantyne and Adolph A. Bitter each owned one share.

The Petersen Ranch included 19,300 acres of land located 7 miles northeast of Brackettville. There were no improvements on the ranch but a portion of the perimeter had been fenced. In 1931, N. P. Petersen, being dissatisfied with the operation of the ranch, fired his manager and hired O. D. "Buster" Dooley as the new ranch manager. He made improvements, raised wool and mohair and counseled Petersen on when the sheep, cows and goats should be sold. Dooley operated the Petersen Ranch as a cattle ranch continuously until his death.

Late in 1935, after roundup and shipment of the cattle to market, Dooley came to the office of Petersen and Company to discuss the ranching business with Petersen. Present at that meeting, besides Petersen and Dooley, were Willie Jo Bitter, who married Dooley in 1971 after she was widowed, Willie Jo's husband, Clarence Bitter, the bookkeeper and general manager of Petersen and Company and R. C. Ballantyne, Petersen's business partner and trusted advisor.

At this meeting Petersen told Dooley that he approved of his management of the ranch and offered to enter into a partnership with*28 Dooley for the operation of the ranch. Dooley was to stop taking a salary and would pay half of the operating costs of the ranch and receive half of any profits. If Mr. and Mrs. Petersen and their daughter, the decedent, had sufficient funds during their lives, the Petersen Ranch would become Dooley's on the death of decedent. When the meeting concluded, Petersen and Dooley shook hands. The terms of this agreement were never reduced to writing.

Dooley made many improvements to the Petersen Ranch including fencing and crossfencing, working pens and shearing sheds, a feed storage barn, an equipment storage building, six wells, windmills, submergible pumps, branch roads, a well house, a two-car garage, a stone house, television reception disc and two concrete block tenant house. These improvements were paid for jointly, under the terms of the 1935 oral agreement.

During the 45 years prior to decedent's death, Dooley visibly occupied and was in actual, apparent, visible and exclusive physical possession of the ranch house and related barns, sheds, outbuildings, pens and corrals and all of the pasture land encompassed within the comprising the Petersen Ranch. During this time decedent*29 did not visibly occupy or have actual or apparent possession of the Petersen Ranch.

N. P. Petersen died in 1949, and he devised the Petersen Ranch, which at that time included 19,300 acres of improved land, to decedent. Prior to his death, he had given the Bart Ranch to decedent, his only child. On April 24, 1950 the decedent as executrix of her father's estate stated in an Inheritance Tax Affidavit in Kinney County, Texas that "N. P. Petersen had made no gift, grant or conveyance of any property, real or personal * * * to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death."

In 1950, the decedent, her husband A. E. Bartberger, her cousin Martin Petersen and Dooley entered into a partnership doing business as the Petersen Ranch Company to operate the Petersen Ranch and raise and sell livestock on the ranch. The term of the partnership was five years, renewable upon the agreement of the parties.

The fifth article of the partnership agreement, signed by Dooley without objection, recited that the decedent was the fee simple owner of 19,300 acres of the real estate of the Petersen Ranch.

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Related

Estate of Landers v. Commissioner
38 T.C. 828 (U.S. Tax Court, 1962)
Porter v. Commissioner
49 T.C. 207 (U.S. Tax Court, 1967)
Estate of Reilly v. Commissioner
76 T.C. 369 (U.S. Tax Court, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
1988 T.C. Memo. 21, 54 T.C.M. 1550, 1988 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bartberger-v-commissioner-tax-1988.