Estate of Sherrod v. Commissioner

82 T.C. No. 40, 82 T.C. 523, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1984
DocketDocket No. 5531-82
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 82 T.C. No. 40 (Estate of Sherrod 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 Sherrod v. Commissioner, 82 T.C. No. 40, 82 T.C. 523, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89 (tax 1984).

Opinion

Shields, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency of $170,693.08 in the Federal estate tax due from the Estate of H. Floyd Sherrod. After concessions, the issues remaining for decision are: (1) Does the estate qualify for special use valuation under section 2032A1 for certain land; (2) does the Tax Court have jurisdiction to review respondent’s determination that the estate does not qualify to pay the estate tax in installments as provided in sections 6166 and 6166A; and (3) if the Tax Court has such jurisdiction, does the estate so qualify?

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by reference.

H. Floyd Sherrod, a citizen and resident of the United States, died on December 1,1977. At his death, he was the sole beneficiary of a revocable trust which he had created on October 20, 1972, and with respect to which his two children and only surviving heirs were the trustees. After Mr. Sher-rod’s death, the children, H. Floyd Sherrod, Jr., and Estalee Sherrod Sandlin, qualified as the executors of his estate.

Subsequently, the executors filed a Federal estate tax return on which they reported that the estate included cash, life insurance, notes receivable, miscellaneous personal items, and 13 groupings of real property, including 1,478 acres of land on which special use valuation was claimed pursuant to section 2032A. On the return, the executors also made a timely election to pay the estate tax including any deficiency in installments under sections 6166 and 6166A.

After an audit, the respondent issued a deficiency notice in which he determined, among other things, that the special valuation provisions of section 2032A were not applicable to any part of the 1,478 acres of land and that the estate did not qualify for installment payment of the estate tax. The executors, H. Floyd Sherrod, Jr., and Estalee Sherrod Sandlin, who were then residents of Alabama and Virginia, respectively, filed a timely petition for a review of the determinations made by the respondent.

Part of the 1,478 acres of land on which special use valuation was claimed was located in Colbert County, Ala. It consisted of two noncontiguous tracts, one of 258 acres and the other of 700 acres. The balance of the land on which the special valuation was claimed consisted of a single tract containing 520 acres located in Madison County, Ala., at a distance of about 100 miles from the Colbert County property.

At the death of Mr. Sherrod, the 700-acre tract in Colbert County was all in timber, mostly hardwoods, but with some pine and other softwoods. Of the 258-acre tract, 48 acres were in the same kind of timber, and the balance of 210 acres was in row crops (170 acres) and pasture (40 acres).

At Mr. Sherrod’s death, all of the timberland in Colbert County had been in a state of natural forestation for at least 80 years. The last cutting of this timber prior to his death occurred in 1940 or 1941. This was a selective cutting and therefore the age of the timber on the land at his death in 1977 was about 45 to 50 years.

For at least 8 years prior to Mr. Sherrod’s death, all of the cropland in Colbert County had been rented to an unrelated party under annual oral agreements for a fixed rent which was not dependent upon production. During the same period, the pasture land had not been put to any use.

The parties have stipulated that the timber on the Colbert County property at the death of the decedent had a fair market value of $43,200 and that such timber does not qualify for special use valuation under section 2032A. The parties have also stipulated that the fair market values and the special use values under section 2032A, if applicable, of the Colbert County land were as follows on the date of the decedent’s death:

Description Acres Fair market value Special use value
Cropland 170 $188,579 $50,678
Pasture land 40 44,371 4,916
Timberland 748 151.280 36.688
Totals 958 384,230 . 92,282

At the death of Mr. Sherrod, 360 ácres of the 520-acre tract in Madison County were also in timber, mostly hardwoods. This land had been in a state of natural forestation for 40 or 50 years at its acquisition by the decedent in 1952. The age of the timber on the land at the date of his death was about 15 to 20 years, since the property had been subjected to a selective cutting in about 1960 or 1961.2

The balance of the 520 acres was in row crops (100 acres) and pasture (60 acres). From 1972 until the death of Mr. Sherrod in 1977, all of the cropland and 32 acres of the pasture land had been rented to Robert Spears, an unrelated party, under annual oral agreements for a fixed rent which was not dependent upon production. During these 5 years, Mr. Spears rotated corn and soybeans on the cropland and used the 32 acres of pasture land which he rented for access between the 100 acres of cropland and his adjoining farm. During this period, the remaining 28 acres of pasture land was not put to any use. For at least 5 years prior to 1972, all of the cropland and pasture land was rented to a Mr. Jones and a Mr. Bell for use in their cattle operations. The rental agreements with Mr. Jones and Mr. Bell were similar to those with Mr. Spears in that they were annual agreements for a fixed rent which was not dependent upon production.

Here, again, the parties have stipulated that the timber on the Madison County property had a fair market value of $14,800 on the date of Mr. Sherrod’s death, and that such timber does not qualify for special use valuation under section 2032A. The parties have also stipulated that the fair market values and the special use values under section 2032A, if applicable, of the Madison County land on the date of death were as follows:

Description Acres Fair market value Special use value
Cropland Pasture land (rented) 100 32 $83,655 $34,304
Pasture land (other) 28 17,745 3,560
Timberland Totals 360 520 78.800 180,200 18.459 56,323

As previously stated, H. Floyd Sherrod, Sr., was a citizen and resident of the ’United States. He was also a lifelong resident of Colbert County, Ala. He was born there in 1890 and grew up on a farm owned by this father who was a successful full-time farmer.

In 1917, Mr. Sherrod inherited part of the Colbert County land from his father’s estate. He acquired the balance of the Colbert County property from other members of his family at different times between 1917 and 1949. He bought the Madison County property in a single transaction in 1952.

Mr. Sherrod completed the local college for teachers and thereafter taught school and served as a school principal until 1940. During this period, he also farmed on a part-time basis. His farming at this time consisted of the raising of some cattle, row crops, and timber on all or a part of the Colbert County property.

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Bluebook (online)
82 T.C. No. 40, 82 T.C. 523, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-sherrod-v-commissioner-tax-1984.