Estate of Klosterman v. Commissioner

99 T.C. No. 16, 99 T.C. 313, 1992 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 71
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1992
DocketDocket No. 27652-89
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 99 T.C. No. 16 (Estate of Klosterman 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 Klosterman v. Commissioner, 99 T.C. No. 16, 99 T.C. 313, 1992 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 71 (tax 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

Raum, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioner’s estate tax in the amount of $18,015. At the time the petition in this case was filed, petitioner’s personal representatives resided in the State of Idaho. The case was submitted on the basis of a stipulation of facts and exhibits pursuant to our Rule 122.1 As a result of concessions by petitioner, the main issue remaining for our decision involves the valuation, pursuant to section 2032A(e)(7)(A), of certain farmland owned by Walter F. Klosterman (decedent) at the time of his death. In addition, petitioner has asked us to decide whether it is entitled to recover litigation costs pursuant to section 7430.

On the date of his death, February 17, 1986, decedent owned 369 acres of agricultural land in Idaho. There is insufficient rainfall to allow any of these lands to be farmed without irrigation. Decedent’s farms are all located within the confines of either the Minidoka Irrigation District (Minidoka) or the A&B Irrigation District (A&B). Both Minidoka and A&B are quasi-municipal corporations formed and existing under title 43, chapters 1 through 24, of the Idaho Code. They were formed to assume operation of irrigation projects of the Bureau of Reclamation of the U.S. Department of the Interior. The Minidoka Irrigation District was formed in 1905 and the A&B Irrigation District was formed in 1966. There is no other source of irrigation water available for any of decedent’s lands besides Minidoka and A&B.

The irrigation districts have the power to levy and collect assessments for operation and maintenance under chapter 7 of title 43 of the Idaho Code, including the issuance of tax deeds and the sale of property under tax deed to collect assessments. The districts levy annual operation and maintenance charges (sometimes referred to as O&M charges) on all irrigable land within their boundaries whether or not any water is used on the land during the irrigating season. Nonirrigable land within the irrigation district is not subject to the O&M charges. The parties have stipulated that “The operation and maintenance charges are separate from construction charges which are to repay the cost of construction of the systems. Construction charges are not in issue in this case.”

The irrigation district charges are assessed on a per-acre basis and are not based on the amount of water consumed. A basic water right entitles the property owner to a fixed volume of water per acre, whether or not the water is used. In the A&B district, excess water charges are assessed if the normal allotment is exceeded, but the parties have stipulated that “that matter is not in issue in this case.”

Any person owning land within the Minidoka or A&B districts may file a petition requesting the exclusion of the land owned by that person from the irrigation district. See Idaho Code sec. 43-1101 (1990). The parties have stipulated that pursuant to Idaho Code sec. 43-1102, there are four grounds for being excluded from an irrigation district:2

1. The lands are too high to be watered without plumbing [sic] by the owners;
2. The owners of the lands have installed a good and sufficient water system independent of the water system of such irrigation district for the irrigation of the lands because the district does not own a sufficient water right to furnish an adequate water supply for those lands;
3. The lands in their present condition are not agricultural lands; or
4. Prior to acquisition of the land by the petitioner owners, and without their knowledge or consent, the ditch or other transmission facility extending from the delivery point to the district to the lands has been rendered permanently incapable of carrying water to the lands, but this ground for exclusion shall only apply to parcels less than five (5) acres in size.

Decedent’s 369 acres did not qualify for exclusion from either irrigation district under any of those grounds on the date of his death. He was required to pay annual O&M charges for all 369 irrigable acres of land to the irrigation district in which the respective portion of the 369 acres was located. These annual charges averaged $23 per acre for all 369 irrigable acres of land.

The Minidoka Irrigation District levies water assessments at the end of the irrigation season. The assessments are due and payable by March 1 of the following year. If the assessments are not paid by the due date, water will not be supplied for the coming irrigation season. The A&B Irrigation District collects annual water assessments in advance before water will be provided for the irrigation season.

Landowners in the Minidoka Irrigation District need to assure themselves that the irrigation charges will be paid when they rent their farms on a cash rental basis. Therefore, they include the amount of the operation and maintenance assessment in the cash rent charged to the tenant, and pay this assessment to the Minidoka Irrigation District. By tradition, this method of including the water charges in cash rental has been carried over in the A&B Irrigation District. If the landowner did not pay the irrigation district O&M charges, but instead required the tenant to pay them, the cash rental figures would be reduced by the amount of the irrigation district O&M charges. The average annual cash rental value of decedent’s 369 acres of land, including the portion of the rent allocable to the irrigation district O&M charges, was $36,430, or $98.73 per acre.

On its estate tax return, petitioner’s personal representatives elected to value the 369 acres of land described above pursuant to section 2032A. Congress enacted section 2032A in order to encourage the continued use of property for farming and other small business purposes.3 The House Ways and Means Committee stated in connection with the enactment of section 2032A that:

Valuation on the basis of highest and best use, rather than actual use, may result in the imposition of substantially higher estate taxes. In some cases, the greater estate tax burden makes continuation of farming * * * not feasible because the income potential from these activities is insufficient to service extended tax payments or loans obtained to pay the tax. Thus, the heirs may be forced to sell the land for development purposes. [H. Rept. 94-1380 (1976), 1976-3 C.B. (Part 3) 735, 756.]

To prevent these events from occurring, Congress allowed property that was included in the decedent’s estate and devoted to farming to be valued on the basis of the property’s value as a farm, rather than its fair market value as determined on the basis of its highest and best use. Id. at 756.

In general, the value of a farm for farming purposes is determined under section 2032A(e)(7)(A),4 and it is undisputed that the value of the 369 acres here in issue is to be determined pursuant to that provision. Section 2032A(e)(7)(A) provides as follows:

(7) Method of valuing farms.—

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Bluebook (online)
99 T.C. No. 16, 99 T.C. 313, 1992 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-klosterman-v-commissioner-tax-1992.