Karl F. Simonsen & Christina M. Simonsen v. Commissioner

150 T.C. No. 8
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 14, 2018
Docket29698-14
StatusUnknown

This text of 150 T.C. No. 8 (Karl F. Simonsen & Christina M. Simonsen 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
Karl F. Simonsen & Christina M. Simonsen v. Commissioner, 150 T.C. No. 8 (tax 2018).

Opinion

150 T.C. No. 8

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

KARL F. SIMONSEN AND CHRISTINA M. SIMONSEN, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 29698-14. Filed March 14, 2018.

Ps bought their home with nonrecourse debt. Five years later they moved out and converted their home to a rental property. Not long after, they completed a short sale of the rental property, and the bank discharged the debt. Ps claimed that the short sale and consequent debt forgiveness were two separate transactions, so they reported a substantial deductible loss and excludable cancellation-of- indebtedness (COI) income. R determined that it was one sale or exchange, there was no COI income, and there was no loss. R also determined that Ps were liable for a penalty under I.R.C. sec. 6662(a).

Held: The short sale and debt forgiveness were part of one sale or exchange, and the amount realized included the discharged nonrecourse debt. There was no COI income.

Held, further, the amount realized was greater than Ps’ loss basis in the property under sec. 1.165-9(b)(2), Income Tax Regs., but less than Ps’ gain basis in the property under that regulation. When -2-

property is sold for an amount between those bases, there is neither a gain nor a loss on the sale.

Held, further, Ps are not liable for a penalty under I.R.C. sec. 6662(a).

Karl F. Simonsen and Christina M. Simonsen, pro se.

Michael S. Hensley, for respondent.

HOLMES, Judge: Karl and Christina Simonsen bought a home in northern

California in 2005. They got caught in the great recession that began in 2008--

their home’s value sank, and they moved to southern California. They rented out

their home for a little while. But, stuck with a mortgage debt much greater than

the value of the home and unable to keep up with their loan payments, they

negotiated a short sale.1 The Simonsens believe the sale and consequent debt

forgiveness are two separate transactions that resulted in both a substantial

deductible loss and excludable cancellation-of-indebtedness (COI) income. The

Commissioner says it’s all one transaction and the discharged debt is included in

1 In a short sale of real property, “the borrower sells the home to a third party for an amount that falls short of the outstanding loan balance; the lender agrees to release its lien on the property to facilitate the sale; and the borrower agrees to give all the proceeds to the lender.” Coker v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., 364 P.3d 176, 177 (Cal. 2016). -3-

the amount realized on the sale. If the Commissioner is right, the short sale didn’t

generate a deductible loss and there is no COI income to exclude from the

Simonsens’ income. He determined that the Simonsens had a deficiency in tax of

just under $70,000 and an accuracy-related penalty of almost $14,000.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Back in the halcyon days of 2005--before most of us could’ve guessed that

easy credit might lead to a global economic crisis--the Simonsens bought a

townhouse in San Jose, California for just under $695,000. They put twenty

percent down and borrowed the rest from Wells Fargo Bank. In exchange for this

purchase-money loan, the Simonsens signed an “Initial Interest Adjustable Rate

Note,” and their promise to pay was secured by a deed of trust. The parties agree

that the loan was nonrecourse debt.

The Simonsens bought their new home in July 2005. Over the next few

years they made improvements, which presumably increased their adjusted basis.2

Then the recession hit and, after living in the townhouse for five years, the

Simonsens moved south in September 2010.

2 We explain adjusted basis in more detail later; it’s pretty much what property owners paid for a property plus what they later spent to improve it, minus any depreciation. -4-

They also decided to rent out the townhouse. They found tenants that same

month, and their townhouse was converted from their personal residence to a

rental property. On their 2011 tax return the Simonsens reported that the

townhouse had a fair market value of just over $590,000 at conversion and that

more than $11,000 in depreciation was allowed or allowable. Since then, the

Simonsens have conceded that there was either a transcription error or a

TurboTax-computation error on their 2011 return. Christina credibly testified that

they intended to report $565,000 as the fair market value at conversion,

determined by adjusting comparables in “the 490-ish amount” by a premium of

“15 to 20 percent” because their townhouse faced a park instead of a train station

or another townhouse. The Simonsens didn’t get an appraisal at the time they

converted their house into a rental, but later stipulated with the Commissioner that

its fair market value at that time was only $495,000.

This brings us to the short sale. By late 2011 the market had not rebounded,

and the Simonsens negotiated a sale with Wells Fargo and a third-party buyer in

November 2011 that yielded only $363,000. All the proceeds went to Wells Fargo

to pay down the loan and cover approximately $26,000 in closing costs.

Wells Fargo forgave the remaining loan balance. In January 2012 the bank

sent the Simonsens a Form 1099-C, Cancellation of Debt, showing that the bank -5-

canceled the Simonsens’ remaining $219,2703 debt on November 21, 2011. The

Simonsens also received a Form 1099-S, Proceeds from Real Estate Transactions,

from First American Title Company, which reported the proceeds of $363,000 and

a closing date of November 18, 2011. To the untrained eye, the tax consequences

seemed rather plain: a sale for $363,000 and COI income of $219,270. That is

precisely what the Simonsens thought when they prepared their 2011 tax return.

With their information returns in hand--namely, the Form 1099-C and the

Form 1099-S--the Simonsens prepared and timely filed their 2011 tax return.

Christina is not trained in tax law--she is a lawyer but had the misfortune of not

taking even Intro Tax in law school. She had, however, prepared her family’s tax

returns on TurboTax since 2002. The 2011 tax return proved to be a “little tricky”

for her, though. She had to use a CD-ROM version of TurboTax instead of the

usual online version because she needed a special form--Form 982, Reduction of

Tax Attributes Due to Discharge of Indebtedness (and Section 1082 Basis

Adjustment)--to properly report the COI income. She credibly explained at trial

3 The parties agree that the amount of cancelled debt reported by Wells Fargo ($219,270) was the total loan balance ($555,960) plus the costs of sale ($26,310), minus the sale price ($363,000). We think it might be more accurate to reduce the sale proceeds by the amount of the closing costs, but this quibble affects neither the bottom line nor our analysis. -6-

that, just like the online version of TurboTax, the CD-ROM version takes you

“through that sort of interview style, [and] it kind of fills out the return for you.”

The TurboTax interview wasn’t the extent of Christina’s compliance efforts.

Unaware of relevant caselaw,4 the Simonsens followed the apparent form of the

transaction to complete their return, i.e., a sale for $363,000 and COI income of

$219,270. They thought the sale resulted in a loss of $216,495, calculated as the

difference between the sale price, $363,000, and their converted adjusted basis

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