Marion J. Wells v. Commissioner

2018 T.C. Memo. 11
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 2018
Docket13889-14
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2018 T.C. Memo. 11 (Marion J. Wells 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
Marion J. Wells v. Commissioner, 2018 T.C. Memo. 11 (tax 2018).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2018-11

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

MARION J. WELLS, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 13889-14. Filed January 31, 2018.

Steven R. Anderson, Briana J. Fehringer, and Brian F. Huebsch, for

petitioner.

Miles B. Fuller, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

PARIS, Judge: By notice of deficiency issued pursuant to section 6212(a),1

respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner’s Federal income tax of $66,178

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as amended, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. -2-

[*2] and $9,802 for 2010 and 2011, respectively. In the notice of deficiency

respondent also determined that petitioner is liable for a section 6662 accuracy-

related penalty of $13,235.60 for 2010.

The issues for decision are: (1) whether petitioner may immediately deduct

expenditures under section 162 totaling $199,031 and $47,630 for 2010 and 2011,

respectively, and (2) whether petitioner is liable for an accuracy-related penalty

under section 6662(a) for 2010.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Petitioner was a highway project engineer for the Colorado Department of

Transportation until she retired in 1996. She owns and lives on a 265-acre

property in Garfield County, Colorado. Petitioner has lived on the property

continuously since 1983. Before that she had lived on the property intermittently

since 1965 (her father owned the property before petitioner).

Petitioner cultivates approximately 700 white French hybrid rind grapevines

on three patches of open land at the northern end of the property. In better years

the vines produced up to four tons of grapes, which petitioner would sell to a local

winery. More recently petitioner has harvested only 600 to 1,200 pounds of

grapes per year because adverse weather conditions (and bears, apparently) have

caused damage to her harvest. As her harvest has dwindled, petitioner has taken to -3-

[*3] crushing her grapes for juice, which she sells in gallon jugs to local buyers.

Petitioner also leases a portion of the southern part of the property for horse and

cattle grazing, although droughty weather conditions during parts of the year have

limited the number of animals she is able to graze on the land. Petitioner reported

$305 and $255 of gross income from farming for 2010 and 2011, respectively, on

Schedules F, Profit or Loss From Farming, attached to her returns for 2010 and

2011. Petitioner reported total farming expenses of $208,265 and $54,734 for

2010 and 2011, respectively.

There is a spring in the southern part of petitioner’s property. In 1965

petitioner’s father installed an underground pipe to carry water from the spring to

other areas of petitioner’s property (spring line). The spring line runs downhill

from south to north for about 3,800 feet and supplies, among other things, the

grazing pasture and an irrigation system in the fields where petitioner grows

grapes. The spring line was originally constructed of 2-inch black polyethylene

pipe (black pipe), but at least 1,800 feet of the spring line was replaced in 2010

with 2-inch blue pure-core pipe (blue pipe). Sections of black pipe are connected

with joints that fit together and are then secured with a hose clamp. Sections of

blue pipe are connected with compression fittings and can withstand higher

pressures. Blue pipe is more expensive, higher quality pipe. -4-

[*4] Various roads, both public and private, traverse and border the property.

See infra appendix Exhs. 17-P, 23-R. One of the private roads runs from

petitioner’s father’s house in the north to above the spring in the south (access

road). Another private road runs from the county road in the east to the access

road (Kuiper Road). Additionally, the “Stubbs Pad”, an oil or gas site, sits to the

south of petitioner’s southern property line on a neighboring property (and above

the spring in terms of elevation).2

2010 Expenditures

In 2010 petitioner hired Robert Schwartz to perform work on her property.

Petitioner paid Mr. Schwartz $198,207 for labor, equipment, and materials costs

relating to various projects in 2010. The projects included: work on, or relating

to, petitioner’s private roads; work on the spring line; digging holes for new grape

vines; spreading manure; and construction of a storage yard. Mr. Schwartz

provided petitioner invoices listing the work completed and the costs.

2 Over the course of several years petitioner made a variety of complaints to the operator of the Stubbs pad, to the Energy Advisory Board, and to the Colorado Oil and Gas Commission alleging, among other things, that the operator of the Stubbs pad site was not properly handling runoff from the site. The records of these three entities, however, contain no mention of a 2010 flood of water from the Stubbs pad. Petitioner alleges that a 2010 flood occasioned many of the 2010 expenditures described below. -5-

[*5] Also in 2010 petitioner hired Mead Fencing to reset fences that had to be

removed to complete work on the spring line and the storage yard. Petitioner paid

$824.30 for the fencing work.

Petitioner timely filed her 2010 Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax

Return, reporting adjusted gross income of $1,282,990 and total tax of $316,689.

In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that none of the 2010

expenditures discussed above are deductible under section 162. Respondent

allowed an increase in a depreciation deduction and section 179 expense of $9,952

for 2010.

2011 Expenditures

In 2007 a wildfire burned approximately 26 acres of the property (burn

area). Before the fire, petitioner used a small part of that land for grazing. In 2011

petitioner determined--after consulting a friend who had experience restoring

burned land--that the fire had rendered the land hydrophobic, i.e., the heat of the

fire had decreased or destroyed the land’s capacity to absorb water. Petitioner

hired Mr. Schwartz to remove burned tree stumps and boulders and turn the soil so

that the entire 26-acre area could be used for forage. Petitioner paid Mr. Schwartz

$47,630 to rehabilitate the burn area in 2011. Mr. Schwartz again provided

petitioner invoices listing the work completed and the costs. -6-

[*6] Petitioner timely filed her 2011 Form 1040, reporting adjusted gross income

of $1,000,078 and total tax of $261,326. In the notice of deficiency, respondent

determined that the 2011 expenditures discussed above must be capitalized rather

than deducted immediately. Respondent allowed an increase in a depreciation

deduction and section 179 expense of $21,289 for 2011.

Petitioner, who is a resident of Colorado, filed a timely petition contesting

the notice of deficiency.

OPINION

The Commissioner’s determinations in a notice of deficiency are generally

presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving by a

preponderance of the evidence that those determinations are erroneous. Rule

142(a); Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111, 115 (1933).3

I. Capital Expenditures v. Current Deductions

Section 162 permits taxpayers to currently deduct the costs of ordinary and

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