M & W Gear Co. v. Commissioner

54 T.C. 385, 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 200
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1970
DocketDocket No. 834-68
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 54 T.C. 385 (M & W Gear Co. 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
M & W Gear Co. v. Commissioner, 54 T.C. 385, 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 200 (tax 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

Issue 1

Section 162(a) (3) of the Internal Kevenue Code of 19548 provides for the deduction of—

(3) rentals or other payments required to be made as a condition to the continued use or possession, for purposes of the trade or business, of property to which the taxpayer has not taken or is not taking title or in which, he has no equity. [Emphasis added.]

The issue confronting us here is whether petitioner’s payments under the purported lease of January 22,1963, are deductible as rental payments within the purview of the above statute. We hold that they are not; petitioner was acquiring an equity in the property and, as a natural consequence thereof, was planning on taking title to the property.

The question of whether purported rental payments are in substance payments of part of the purchase price is one of fact. We put it thusly in Norman Baker Smith, 51 T.C. 429, 438 (1968):

We adhere to our view that the substance of the transaction will be considered and whether an amount paid under the designation of rental payment is a part of the purchase price of the property or is a rental payment, will be determined from the substance of the agreement in accordance with which the payment is made.

In the instant case petitioner agreed to buy and Ben Nation agreed to sell the Blairsville Farm for $358,000. Meiners, the president of petitioner, conferred with his tax adviser and expressed his desire to Ben Nation that the transaction be recast into the form of a lease with an option to purchase, so that petitioner could deduct its payments as rental expense. Ben testified that Meiners advised him that such a change would have no adverse tax effects on him. The first unexecuted option agreement provided that: “all monies received under the terms of said Lease will be applied on the purchase of this property * * The effect of this language is obvious, i.e., purported rental payments are used to reduce the purchase price. This is indicative of the acquisition of an equity in the property by those payments. See, e.g., Rotorite Corporation v. Commissioner, 117 F. 2d 245 (C.A. 7, 1941), reversing 40 B.T.A. 1304 (1939).

However, the documents were amended with the result that the lease, which was executed on January 22,1963, provided that the option, contained therein, was not exercisable until the full term of the lease had run. This provision in conjunction with a low option price had a dual effect. Firstly, it guaranteed the seller five payments of $50,660 plus $173,707.40, on exercise, which in the aggregate totaled the fair market value of the property. And secondly, the low option price meant that petitioner’s so-called rental payments would of necessity be credited towards the full purchase price.

We found as a fact that the fair rental value of the Blairsville Farm was at most $15 per acre. Petitioner paid “rent” of $34 per acre. This disparity indicates that petitioner was purchasing something of value in addition to the mere use of the property. Petitioner was building an equity and such payments, therefore, did not constitute rent. In Chicago Stoker Corporation, 14 T.C. 441, 445 (1950), we said:

If payments are large enough to exceed the depreciation and value of the property and thus give the payor an equity in the property, it is less of a distortion of income to regard the payments as purchase price and allow depreciation on the property than to offset the entire payment against the income of one year. * ⅞ *

Petitioner argues on brief that in arriving at a fair rental value of less than $34 per acre respondent failed to consider the effect of the soil bank which indeed paid Ben Nation $34 per acre. However, the payments made by the soil bank were only on account of 125 acres and there was no offering of evidence to indicate that the soil bank would have been willing to pay $34 per acre on the entire 1,490 acres, or for that matter, on any acreage above 125.

Petitioner argues that the fair market value of the Blairsville Farm was approximately $117 per acre;9 and based on this figure the option price of $173,707.40,10 agreed to, was reasonable. We give petitioner the benefit of the doubt when we find that the fair market value of the Blairsville Farm as of January 1963 was not less than $342,700.11

This disparity between the amount payable upon exercise of the option and the fair market value of the property bolsters our conclusion that the “rental” payments were used to reduce the purchase price; and petitioner was acquiring equity in the property, D. M. Haggard, 24 T.C. 1124 (1955), affd. 241 F.2d 288 (C.A. 9, 1956).

The relationship between the amount of the “rental” payments and the petitioner’s contention as to the fair market value of the property is also instructive. Assuming that the fair market value of the farm was $173,707.40, then an annual rental of $50,660 would be approximately 29 percent of the fair market value. This seems an unreasonably high rent, particularly in view of the fact that 5 years’ rent totally eclipses the purported purchase price. This is another factor indicating that petitioner was acquiring an equity in the property. See Judson Mills, 11 T.C. 25 (1948).

When petitioner’s president, Elmo Meiners, was asked at trial why he preferred to pay some $253,300 in rent over a 5-year period as opposed to purchasing the property outright for approximately $173,707, he stated in essence that he did not want the petitioner to become obligated for such a large cash outlay and that in the event of the failure of petitioner’s experimental work he could have terminated the lease. We note, however, that the lease contained no provision for cancellation without cause. And it appears that petitioner, in effect, guaranteed the payment of “rent” for 5 years.

In conjunction with its argument that the form of the transaction permitted it to maintain a more flexible financial position, petitioner argues that there was no obligation to exercise the purported option. See Norman Baker Smith, supra. We recognize the importance of this absence of obligation, but we do not find the argument controlling here. In the Norman Baker Smith case we noted that exercise required a substantial sum of money; in the instant case petitioner was “obligated” to exercise its option by dint of economics. It has already paid substantial amounts in “rentals,” made costly leasehold improvements which could not be economically removed, and expended in excess of $100,000 for ditching and draining operations.12 If petitioner was to retain the benefits of its expenditures, it behooved it to exercise the “option.”

In Breece Veneer & Panel Co. v. Commissioner, 232 F.2d 319 (C.A. 7, 1956), reversing 22 T.C. 1386 (1954), the court rejected the above economic test as the sole criteria for deciding cases of this genre. We find Breece Veneer to be distinguishable and not persuasive here. In Breece Veneer the rental payments were found to be reasonable.

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M & W Gear Co. v. Commissioner
54 T.C. 385 (U.S. Tax Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 T.C. 385, 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-w-gear-co-v-commissioner-tax-1970.