Gregory G. Boree v. Commissioner of IRS

837 F.3d 1093, 2016 WL 4727997
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 2016
Docket14-15149
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 837 F.3d 1093 (Gregory G. Boree v. Commissioner of IRS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory G. Boree v. Commissioner of IRS, 837 F.3d 1093, 2016 WL 4727997 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

COOGLER, District Judge:

This is an appeal from a decision of the United States Tax Court (the “Tax Court”) sustaining a determination by the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue . Service (“Commissioner”) of deficiencies in the 2007 income tax return of Appellants Gregory and Melanie Boree (“the Bo-rees”). The Tax Court ruled that the Bo-rees were liable for a deficiency of $1,784,242 due to an improper characterization of income from the sale of property as a capital gain rather than as ordinary business income and imposed a 20% penalty for substantial understatement of income tax pursuant to § 6662 of the Internal Revenue Code (the “I.R.C.”). After careful review of the record and briefs of the parties, and having the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the Tax Court on the issue of the Borees’ tax liability but reverse the Tax Court’s imposition of the statutory penalty.

I. BACKGROUND

In November 2002, Gregory Boree (“Mr. Boree”), a former logger, and a partner, Daniel Dukes . (“Dukes”), doing business as Glen Forest, LLC (“Glen Forest”), acquired 1,892 acres of vacant real property formerly owned by International Paper in *1096 Baker County, Florida. Glen Forest bought the property for $965 per acre, for a total of $3.2 million, and borrowed much of the funds needed to purchase it. In December 2002, Glen Forest sold one ten-acre parcel of the property to an individual purchaser.

In January 2003, Glen Forest submitted to the Baker County Planning and Zoning Department a conceptual map of a planned residential development called West Glen Estates, which would consist of more than 100 lots, to be developed and sold in multiple consecutive phases. The following month, the county adopted the proposal and rezoned the West Glen Estates property into ten-acre lots. Glen Forest also petitioned the Baker County Board of Commissioners to exempt West Glen Estates from county platting requirements so that it could continue to sell lots without completing interior roads or submitting plans to the board. During 2003, Glen Forest sold' approximately fifteen lots located around the perimeter of the West Glen Estates property.

On February 18, 2003, Mr. Boree also executed a Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions for West Glen Estates which, among other things, created a homeowners association to maintain roads within the subdivision. The declaration consistently referred to Glen Forest as the “developer” of West Glen Estates and provided Glen Forest the right to elect at least one member of the homeowners association’s board of directors as long as the “[d]eveloper holds for sale in the'ordinary course of business at least five percent (5%) of the acreage in all phases of the property.” The declaration applied to the entire 1,892 acres of the Glen Forest property and did not distinguish between lots with frontage on county roads or other lots.

During the remainder of 2003 and through 2004, Glen Forest engaged in a series of other development activities, including obtaining county approval of the first three phases of development of West Glen Estates, applying for an Environmental Resource Permit, establishing and recording easements in collaboration with the local water and electrical utilities, and constructing Braxton Road, an unpaved road on the property, at a cost of roughly $280,000, However, Glen Forest did not install water lines, sewer lines, electrical lines, gas lines, telephone lines, cable lines, or a storm drainage system. Nor did it pave any roads, perform any grading or landscaping work, or build any structures on the property. Glen Forest did not have a sales office for West Glen Estates or hire a broker to sell lots, but it did place classified advertisements for the subdivision in local papers from time to time. During 2004, Glen Forest sold approximately twenty-six lots.

Beginning in late 2004, the Baker County Board of Commissioners adopted a series of land use restrictions that affected West Glen Estates. In October 2004, the board adopted a temporary one-year moratorium on the development of non-platted subdivisions. In November 2004, it adopted another temporary one-year moratorium on development along certain county roads, including Cowpen Road, which ran adjacent to the West Glen Estates property. In December 2004, the board adopted a third temporary one-year moratorium on the development of any platted subdivisions containing dirt roads. In April 2005, it adopted a requirement that all roads within subdivisions be paved. West Glen Estates was a non-platted subdivision that contained multiple unpaved roads. Mr. Bo-ree testified that complying with the requirement that Glen Forest pave internal roads in West Glen Estates would have cost roughly $7 million.

*1097 The Borees assert that in 2005, Glen Forest sold approximately eight lots. 1 In March 2005, Dukes sold his interest in Glen Forest to Mr. Boree. Then, Melanie Boree (“Mrs. Boree”) succeeded Dukes as the second member of the LLC. Mr. Boree then requested an exception for the “whole parcel” of his property to the April 2005 ordinance requiring that roads in subdivisions be paved, but he was unsuccessful.

After his request was denied, Mr. Boree hired a land-use lawyer to pursue a different strategy. His new strategy included a higher-density development plan for West Glen Estates that would justify having to bear the costs of paving the roads imposed by the county’s requirements. Mr. Boree testified that his intention was to “up-zone” the property to make it more appealing to other developers who might be interested in purchasing the property from him. 1 With his attorney’s help, Mr. Boree prepared and submitted applications in May and June 2005 to rezone the West Glen Estates property to accommodate the denser “Planned Unit Development.” This new Planned Unit Development proposal related to 982 acres of the original West Glen Estates property and included a densely zoned residential area, a 10.8-acre commercial zone, a 44-acre recreational parcel with equestrian amenities, and paved internal roads. However, the preliminary maps did not include any roads leading to the development. In April 2006, the Borees’ attorney appeared on behalf of Mr. Boree before the Baker County Board of Commissioners, where he advised the Northeast Florida Regional Planning Council that Mr. Boree was planning a “large-lot subdivision with associated commercial to serve the neighborhoods” with a 40-acre “equestrian facility and bridle trails throughout the residential subdivision.” The attorney, on behalf of Mr. Bo-ree, requested that the county adopt,a new land use designation of “rural commercial,” never before used in Baker County, for the proposed 10.8 acres of commercial property. The board ultimately adopted the new land use category.

In January 2006, the county adopted a requirement that developers pave certain public roads leading to their subdivisions. Mr. Boree testified that complying with the requirement that Glen Forest • pave connecting county roads would have cost an additional $4.4 million. The Borees assert that they did not sell -any lots in 2006. 2

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Bluebook (online)
837 F.3d 1093, 2016 WL 4727997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-g-boree-v-commissioner-of-irs-ca11-2016.