Mitchell v. Comm'r
This text of 2013 T.C. Memo. 204 (Mitchell v. Comm'r) 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.
Opinion
An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
HAINES,
In petitioner's motion petitioner alleges that this Court erred in relying on
In
In 1998 Charles and Ramona Mitchell bought a 105-acre parcel of land from Clyde Sheek in Mancos, Colorado, for $180,000. 3 The parcel was unimproved; i.e., it had no buildings, only partial fencing, no utilities, and no domestic water. Access was from a two-lane gravel road maintained by the county. The Mitchells installed a two-inch water line from the northern boundary of the 105-acre parcel in 2000 with electrical lines added in 2001-02. The Mitchells' son, Blake, and his wife, Melody, built a home on the 105-acre parcel *207 in 2000. Subsequently a 50- by 100-foot shop and a 900-square-foot guesthouse were built on the parcel.
In 2001 Charles purchased an additional 351 acres bordering the south boundary of the 105-acre parcel from Sheek for $683,000. Sheek did not want all cash. He wanted retirement income. Consequently, after a downpayment of $83,000, the balance of $600,000 was to be paid in installments of $60,000 per year plus interest. A promissory note was signed and secured *217 by a deed of trust recorded in the records of Montezuma County, Colorado, in January 2001.
As a result of the two purchases, the Mitchells owned 456 acres of ranchland in the southern portion of the Mancos Valley (Lone Canyon Ranch). Charles and petitioner built their own home at Lone Canyon Ranch in 2001 and 2002.
Charles began having health problems. In December 2002 the Mitchells formed C. L. Mitchell Properties, L.L.L.P., a family limited partnership (partnership). 4 Lone Canyon Ranch was transferred to the partnership, subject to the deed of trust, as were other investments, including a rental property and cash and securities. Although Charles was named the general partner, it soon became *208 evident that he could not carry out his management duties. Consequently, Blake took over the management duties. Charles eventually died of his illness in 2006.
On December 31, 2003, the partnership granted a conservation easement on the south 180 acres of unimproved land to Montezuma Land Conservancy (Conservancy). The parties executed a deed of conservation easement in gross. At the *218 time the easement was granted, the deed of trust securing the debt to Sheek was not subordinated to the conservation easement held by Conservancy.
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An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
HAINES,
In petitioner's motion petitioner alleges that this Court erred in relying on
In
In 1998 Charles and Ramona Mitchell bought a 105-acre parcel of land from Clyde Sheek in Mancos, Colorado, for $180,000. 3 The parcel was unimproved; i.e., it had no buildings, only partial fencing, no utilities, and no domestic water. Access was from a two-lane gravel road maintained by the county. The Mitchells installed a two-inch water line from the northern boundary of the 105-acre parcel in 2000 with electrical lines added in 2001-02. The Mitchells' son, Blake, and his wife, Melody, built a home on the 105-acre parcel *207 in 2000. Subsequently a 50- by 100-foot shop and a 900-square-foot guesthouse were built on the parcel.
In 2001 Charles purchased an additional 351 acres bordering the south boundary of the 105-acre parcel from Sheek for $683,000. Sheek did not want all cash. He wanted retirement income. Consequently, after a downpayment of $83,000, the balance of $600,000 was to be paid in installments of $60,000 per year plus interest. A promissory note was signed and secured *217 by a deed of trust recorded in the records of Montezuma County, Colorado, in January 2001.
As a result of the two purchases, the Mitchells owned 456 acres of ranchland in the southern portion of the Mancos Valley (Lone Canyon Ranch). Charles and petitioner built their own home at Lone Canyon Ranch in 2001 and 2002.
Charles began having health problems. In December 2002 the Mitchells formed C. L. Mitchell Properties, L.L.L.P., a family limited partnership (partnership). 4 Lone Canyon Ranch was transferred to the partnership, subject to the deed of trust, as were other investments, including a rental property and cash and securities. Although Charles was named the general partner, it soon became *208 evident that he could not carry out his management duties. Consequently, Blake took over the management duties. Charles eventually died of his illness in 2006.
On December 31, 2003, the partnership granted a conservation easement on the south 180 acres of unimproved land to Montezuma Land Conservancy (Conservancy). The parties executed a deed of conservation easement in gross. At the *218 time the easement was granted, the deed of trust securing the debt to Sheek was not subordinated to the conservation easement held by Conservancy. From 2003 to 2005 the partnership had the money to pay off the promissory note, which the deed of trust secured, at any time. There were no lawsuits, potential or otherwise; all bills were paid; payments on the promissory note to Sheek were current, and casualty insurance was in place. Two years after the conservation easement was granted, Sheek agreed to subordinate his deed of trust to the conservation easement but received no consideration for the subordination. On December 22, 2005, Sheek signed the Subordination to Deed of Conservation Easement in Gross (subordination agreement).
In 2004 the Mitchells hired William B. Love Appraisals, Inc. (Love), to appraise the conservation easement granted to Conservancy as of December 31, 2003. Love determined that the conservation easement had a market value of *209 $504,000. Love issued an appraisal report for the partnership on February 17, 2004 (Love appraisal). The partnership claimed a $504,000 charitable contribution deduction, which flowed through to its two partners, Charles and petitioner, *219 equally. Charles and petitioner claimed a $504,000 5 charitable contribution deduction on their 2003 joint Federal income tax return dated April 13, 2004 (2003 return). Charles and Petitioner attached Form 8283, Noncash Charitable Contributions, to their 2003 return along with a copy of the Love appraisal.
On February 23, 2010, respondent mailed a notice of deficiency to petitioner disallowing her 2003 charitable contribution deduction. Respondent determined that petitioner had not met the requirements of
*210 In
Motions to reconsider and to vacate are governed by
The decision to grant a motion to reconsider or to vacate lies within the discretion of the Court.
Importantly, an intervening change in the law can warrant the granting of both a motion to reconsider and a motion to vacate.
Petitioner asks us to grant petitioner's motion in the light of the partial vacating of
In petitioner's motion petitioner argues that this Court should follow the approach taken by the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and reconsider its Opinion. Specifically, petitioner argues that the conservation easement deed protected the proceeds to be paid to Conservancy in perpetuity upon termination of the conservation easement *223 and thus under the approach taken in
A taxpayer is generally allowed a deduction for any charitable contribution made during the taxable year.
A "qualified conservation contribution" is a contribution (1) of a "qualified real property interest" (2) to a "qualified organization" (3) which is made "exclusively for conservation purposes."
A contribution is made exclusively for conservation purposes only if it meets the requirements of
*215
[F]or a deduction to be allowed under this section, at the time of the gift the donor must agree that the donation of the perpetual conservation restriction gives rise to a property right, immediately *216 vested in the donee organization, with a fair market value that is at least equal to the proportionate value that the perpetual conservation restriction at the time of the gift bears to the value of the property as a whole at that time. * * * For purposes of this
In
*217 Thus we held that the regulation requires that a subordination agreement be in place at the time of the gift.
Next petitioner argued that we must read the subordination regulation *228 in tandem with the so-remote-as-to-be-negligible standard in
Finally, petitioner argued that she entered into an oral agreement with Sheek with respect to the use of Lone Canyon Ranch and that the oral agreement provided the necessary protection required by
Petitioner also argued that she had satisfied the requirements of the proceeds regulation. However, having found that petitioner failed to meet the requirements of the subordination regulation, we did not need to make a determination on this issue to make our decision.
In 1999 Lorna and Gordon Kaufman, the taxpayers, bought a single-family rowhouse in the South End of Boston subject to local restrictions. In 2003 the taxpayers contributed to a donee organization a facade easement on their single-family rowhouse. At the time of contribution, the property was subject to a mortgage. The mortgagee agreed to subordinate the mortgage to the conservation easement deed in favor of the donee organization; however, the mortgagee retained a "prior claim" to all proceeds of condemnation and to all insurance proceeds resulting from any casualty of the property. The taxpayers claimed a charitable contribution deduction equal to the value they assigned to the facade easement. The Commissioner disallowed the *230 deduction because the taxpayers had failed to meet the requirement of the proceeds regulation that the charity receive a *219 proportionate share of proceeds following judicial extinguishment of the facade easement and a subsequent sale of the property.
In
The taxpayers also argued that
This Court in [i]t is not a question as to the degree of improbability of the changed conditions that would justify judicial extinguishment of the restrictions. Nor is it a question of the probability that, in the case of judicial extinguishment following an unexpected change in conditions, the proceeds of a condemnation or other sale would be adequate to pay both the bank and * * * [the charity]. As we said in
On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in The IRS reads the word "entitled" in the extinguishment regulation to mean "gets the first bite" as against the rest of the world, a view the Tax Court accepted in reading "entitled" to mean "ha[s] an absolute right."
The Commissioner also argued that the taxpayers failed to meet the requirements of
Petitioner argues that the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit's opinion in
*224
Petitioner would draw a general rule with respect to the in-perpetuity requirement from the analysis of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in
We disagree with petitioner's interpretation of
Petitioner further argues that there was a functional subordination of the conservation easement to the Sheek mortgage at the time of the gift to Conservancy because the partnership had sufficient funds to discharge the debt related to the Sheek mortgage at all times before the actual subordination two *238 years later. We reject this argument. There is no functional subordination contemplated in
Petitioner also argues that we held in
*226 As a result of the foregoing, we find that the holding in
Petitioner also argues that Colorado law creates restrictions that protect the conservation easement and thus this Court should reconsider its Opinion in
Petitioner has not presented any newly discovered evidence or cited an intervening change in the law that would warrant granting petitioner's motion.
In reaching our holdings herein, we have considered all arguments made, and, to the extent not mentioned above, we conclude they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
*227 To reflect the foregoing,
Footnotes
*. This opinion supplements our prior Opinion, Mitchell v. Commissioner, 138 T.C. 324 (2012).↩
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, as amended and in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.↩
2. The IRS originally filed a motion for summary judgment with this Court on January 15, 2010. In ruling on the motion for summary judgment in
(Kaufman v. Comm'r , 134 T.C. 182 (2010)Kaufman I ), we disallowed any deductions for the easement contribution but found genuine issues of material fact remaining with regard to the cash contribution deduction and the IRS' imposition of penalties. In a second Opinion after a trial on the reserved issues, this Court on April 4, 2011, in (Kaufman v. Comm'r , 136 T.C. 294 (2011)Kaufman II ),aff'd in part, vacated in part and remanded in part ,687 F.3d 21↩ (1st Cir. 2012) , reaffirmed its ruling on the easement but held that the taxpayers were entitled to deduct their $16,840 cash contribution on their 2004 return (as opposed to their 2003 return) and were liable for only a small penalty for negligence in claiming the deduction for the earlier year.3. Montezuma County assessor's records describe the parcel as 95 acres. The land records describe it as 105 acres. We will use 105 acres for purposes of this opinion.↩
4. The name of the limited partnership was later changed to Lone Canyon Ranch Limited Liability Limited Partnership.↩
5. Because of limitations on itemized deductions claimed on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, only $447,236 of the charitable contribution deduction could be claimed on the 2003 return.↩
6. Respondent in his pretrial memorandum conceded that if a charitable contribution deduction was allowed, the amount of the deduction would be $122,000.↩
7. Under
,Golsen v. Commissioner , 54 T.C. 742, 757 (1970)aff'd ,445 F.2d 985 (10th Cir. 1971) , the Court will follow the clearly established position of a Court of Appeals to which a case is appealable. However, we will give effect to our own views in cases appealable to courts that have not yet decided the issue.Id. This case is appealable to the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit absent stipulation otherwise.See sec. 7482(b)(1)(A)↩ . The Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit has not yet ruled on the issue of whether a taxpayer who failed to subordinate a conservation easement deed at the time of the gift of the conservation easement has met the requirements of the subordination regulation.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2013 T.C. Memo. 204, 106 T.C.M. 215, 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-commr-tax-2013.