Hall v. Gill

670 N.E.2d 503, 108 Ohio App. 3d 196
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 1995
DocketNo. C-950032.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 670 N.E.2d 503 (Hall v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Gill, 670 N.E.2d 503, 108 Ohio App. 3d 196 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The plaintiffs-appellants, Ernest L. and Bette Hall, appeal from the trial court’s order granting partial summary judgment in favor of the defendants-appellants, Linda Tracy Gill, individually, and Aronowitz, Chaiken & Hardesty (“AC & H”), an Ohio partnership, and its partners individually, on claims for professional negligence and breach of contract. The claims arise as a result of tax advice given to the Halls by Gill, an unnamed partner of AC & H, regarding the consequences of the sale of the Halls’ Tennessee home for federal income tax purposes.

*198 The Halls assign two errors: (1) the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to Gill and AC & H on the particular tax issue of whether the Halls’ Tennessee home was their principal residence for the purposes of Section 1034, Title 26, U.S.Code, and (2) the trial court erred by failing to find Gill and AC & H negligent based upon the tax advice that was given. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court.

I

The Halls purchased their Tennessee home in August 1976 for approximately $65,000 after Ernest Hall accepted a position as Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Tennessee. In 1983 Ernest Hall accepted a professorship at the University of Cincinnati, and he, his wife, and his children moved to Cincinnati. For the first year in Cincinnati they leased a home. In 1984, however, they purchased their current home in Cincinnati.

The Halls placed their Tennessee home on the market in 1983 and eventually leased it on a month-to-month tenancy when they could not find a buyer. Occasionally, Ernest Hall would stay at the home when he returned to Tennessee to perform consulting work for the Oakridge National Laboratory. In January 1988 the Tennessee home finally sold for approximately $130,000. In March 1989 the Halls asked Gill how they should handle the capital gain on the sale of the Tennessee house. Ernest Hall testified in his deposition that he specifically inquired whether it was necessary to purchase a new home in order to defer paying tax on the capital gain from the sale of the Tennessee home. According to Hall, he and his wife were prepared to buy a new home had it been necessary and, in fact, began talking to realtors about selling their current Cincinnati home and looking at homes to buy closer to their church.

On March 15, 1989, Gill sent the Halls a packet of documents under her signature. Included in the documents was an in-firm memorandum concerning the Halls’ desire to defer the gain on the sale of the Tennessee home. In that memorandum the Halls’ situation was analyzed under Section 1034, Title 26, U.S.Code, as interpreted by the case of Clapham v. Commr. (1975), 63 T.C. 505, 1975 WL 3146. The analysis was limited to the specific issue of whether the delay attendant to the sale of the Tennessee home deprived it of rollover treatment. The memorandum did not address the related issue of whether the Halls had satisfied the requirement of Section 1034 that the new residence be purchased within twenty-four months of the sale of the old residence. The memorandum concluded that the Tennessee residence could qualify for the Section 1034 rollover provision, although noting that “each case [involving a delay *199 due to market contingency] is judged on the ‘facts and circumstances’ surrounding the transaction.” 1

The package of documents also included a 1988 Form 2119 prepared to claim a postponement of the gain from the sale of the Halls’ Tennessee home as well as what Gill described in her letter as a “footnote for your 1988 return to report the sale of your residence in Tennessee.” The first sentence of the footnote stated that “[t]he gain from the sale of the taxpayers’ residence (Tennessee) is properly excludable under Code Section 1034 since the delay in the sale was due to market exigencies.” The final sentence stated: “In accordance with Clapham v. Comr 63 TC 505, the taxpayers have rolled over a portion of their gain and properly reduced their basis in their current Ohio residence.”

According to the Halls, they interpreted the package of documents Gill sent to them to mean that they could properly roll over the gain on the sale of their Tennessee home based upon the 1984 purchase of their current Cincinnati home. Consequently, the Halls did not purchase a new home. The Halls then prepared their own 1988 federal income tax return and, based upon the documents sent to them by Gill, deferred the gain on the sale of their Tennessee residence under Section 1034.

In May 1990 the Halls were notified by the Internal Revenue Service that their 1988 return was being audited. The IRS subsequently disallowed the deferral and assessed additional taxes and interest amounting to approximately $20,000. The Halls appealed the decision. The result of the Halls’ appeal was an IRS decision which affirmed the district director. The IRS decision disallowed the deferral of gain not on the basis that the Tennessee home was no longer the Halls’ principal residence, but because they had not met the replacement deadline — in other words because the Halls’ current home, having been purchased in 1984, was not purchased within two years of the 1988 sale of their Tennessee home. The IRS decision stated:

*200 “After discussion of these court cases [demonstrating a strict approach in enforcing the replacement deadline] the taxpayer accepted the principle that the statutory replacement period of 24 months would have required him to purchase a new residence in the Cincinnati area between January 27,1986 and January 29, 1990. Accordingly, the purchase of the Cincinnati residence in September of 1984 would not qualify for the deferral of gain under Internal Revenue Code Section 1034. Since the Hall’s [sic] did not meet the statutory replacement period it was unnecessary to determine whether the residence had been converted to rental property as in the Clapham case.”

According to the deposition testimony of Ernest Hall, Gill accompanied his wife and him to the appeals hearing and admitted that she had made a mistake by not correctly considering the twenty-four-month replacement deadline.

In order to pay the IRS assessment, the Halls unsuccessfully attempted to borrow money on their current home. Finally, in order to obtain the necessary funds, the Halls dipped into Ernest Hall’s teachers’ retirement fund, incurring additional penalties and interest amounting to $15,399.

The Halls filed suit against Gill and AC & H, alleging that they were damaged by (1) the incorrect advice that Gill had given them, which led to an IRS audit and assessment of penalties and interest, and (2) Gill’s failure to advise them that had they purchased a new home within two years of the sale of their Tennessee residence they could have properly deferred the gain on the sale under Section 1034.

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Bluebook (online)
670 N.E.2d 503, 108 Ohio App. 3d 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-gill-ohioctapp-1995.