Everhart v. Commissioner

61 T.C. No. 35, 61 T.C. 328, 1973 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1973
DocketDocket No. 1127-72
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 61 T.C. No. 35 (Everhart 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
Everhart v. Commissioner, 61 T.C. No. 35, 61 T.C. 328, 1973 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11 (tax 1973).

Opinion

opinion

Irwin, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency of $1,856.93 in the income tax of petitioners for the calendar year 1968. The sole issue for our determination is whether a sewage disposal system purchased and installed underground by petitioners qualified as “section 38 property” 1 eligible for the investment credit.2

All of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, are found accordingly.

Petitioners C. C. Everhart and Clara Everhart, husband and wife, resided in Mosheim, Tenn., at the time of the filing of the petition herein. For the taxable year 1968 they filed their joint Federal income tax return with the Southeast Service Center, Chamblee, Ga.

During 1968 and for several years prior thereto, petitioners owned a small shopping center located in Mosheim, Tenn. The shopping center consisted of two buildings, one of which contained a laundromat and a restaurant, and the other a grocery store, a barber shop, and a beauty shop.

During this period petitioners owned and operated the grocery business. A partnership in which petitioner C. C. Everhart held a 50-percent interest leased the laundromat from petitioners. The remaining stores were leased to other parties. Petitioners reported the rental income received from the leases on their joint income tax returns.

Prior to 1968, the sewage generated by the shopping center, with the exception of the laundromat water, was handled by several septic tanks. The laundromat water was dumped into an open ditch. In 1968 the Greene County Department of Health advised petitioners that the emptying of untreated sewage into an open ditch constituted a health hazard and that an adequate sewage system would be required to eliminate the pollution problem. As a result, petitioners engaged an engineering firm (John Coleman Hayes, Jr. & Associates, Nashville, Term.) to design a sewage treatment facility to treat the sewage generated not only by the laundromat, but also that of the entire shopping center and petitioners’ nearby residence.

Pursuant to the approved plan, a complete sewage disposal system was installed at the shopping center. The basic element of the system was a sewage treatment unit developed by AER-O-FLO Corp., Florence, Ky. (Model No. S-60-33-B). The unit consisted of a prefabricated 8,’877-pound steel tank measuring 8 feet wide, 12 feet long, and 9 feet high, designed to handle 6,000 gallons of sewage per day. Sewage would be pumped into the tank at one end, chemically processed within the tank in a process known as an “activated sludge” operation, and then discharged at the other end of the tank as a nonpollutant. All of the components of the system were contained within the tank with the exception of a wall extension of 2 feet which was welded to the tank and certain pumps, blowers, and electrical controls located in two metal housings which were mounted on the top of the tank.

The tank was transported by truck to the installation site located approximately 40 feet from the building containing the restaurant and laundromat and approximately 160 feet from the other building, and was installed by a contractor. The installation consisted of excavation of an area large enough to contain the tank, at the bottom of which a concrete foundation pad was laid. The tank was lowered into the site and anchored to the foundation pad with turnbuckles. The site was then refilled so that the entire tank, with the exception of the pump housings and a chlorinator, was underground. A chain link fence was constructed to enclose the area. Underground pipes ran from the shopping center’s two buildings and from petitioners’ residence to the sewage unit.

The total cost for the sewage disposal system was $17,497.75, of which $10,225.54 represented the actual cost of the unit and all its components; $1,700 represented the fee paid to the engineering firm; and $5,572.21 represented the amount paid to the contractor for the installation of the system.

Petitioners did not charge their tenants for the sewage services and there were no meters to register the amount of sewage flowing from the separate businesses.

On their 1968 joint income tax return petitioners claimed a qualified investment of $19,384.76, based on the total cost of the sewage disposal system and the cost of an incinerator ($1,887.01) also purchased by them during 1968. Petitioners have conceded that the incinerator is not entitled to the investment credit and this expenditure is no longer in controversy.

Section 48(a) (1) defines “section 38 property” as follows:

(a) Section 38 Property.—
(1) In general. — Except as provided in this subsection, the term “section 38 property” means—
(A) tangible personal property, or
(B) other tangible property (not including a building and its structural components) but only ii such property — ■
(i) is used as an integral part of manufacturing, production, or extraction, or of furnishing transportation, communications, electrical energy, gas, water, or sewage disposal services, or
(ii) constitutes a research or storage facility used in connection with any of the activities referred to in clause (i), or
(C) elevator's and escalators, but only if—
(i) the construction, reconstruction, or erection of the elevator or escalator is completed by the taxpayer after June 30,1963, or
(ii) the elevator or escalator is acquired after June 30, 1963, and the original use of such elevator or escalator commences with the taxpayer and commences after such date.

Such term includes only property with respect to which depreciation (or amortization in lieu of depreciation) is allowable and having a useful life (determined as of the time such property is placed in service) of 4 years or more.

The sole issue presented for our determination is whether the sewage disposal system is “tangible personal property.” Petitioners do not contend that the system qualifies as “other tangible property” under section 48(a) (1) (B) and we find as a matter of law that the system does not so qualify. See Frank J. Evans, 48 T.C. 704 (1967), affirmed per curiam 413 F. 2d 1047 (C.A. 9, 1969).

Tangible personal property is defined in section 1.48-1 (c), Income Tax Regs., as follows:

For purposes of this section, the term “tangible personal property” means any tangible property except land and improvements thereto, such as buildings or other inherently permanent structures (including items which are structural components of such buildings or structures). Thus, buildings, swimming pools, paved parking areas, wharves and docks, bridges, and fences are not tangible personal property. Tangible personal property includes all property (other than structural components) which is contained in or attached to a building.

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Bluebook (online)
61 T.C. No. 35, 61 T.C. 328, 1973 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everhart-v-commissioner-tax-1973.