Ohana v. Comm'r

2014 T.C. Memo. 83, 107 T.C.M. 1437, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 84
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 8, 2014
DocketDocket Nos. 16014-11, 25896-11
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2014 T.C. Memo. 83 (Ohana 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.

Bluebook
Ohana v. Comm'r, 2014 T.C. Memo. 83, 107 T.C.M. 1437, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 84 (tax 2014).

Opinion

ISSACHAR OHANA AND RACHEL OHANA, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Ohana v. Comm'r
Docket Nos. 16014-11, 25896-11
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 2014-83; 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 84; 107 T.C.M. (CCH) 1437;
May 8, 2014, Filed

Decisions will be entered under Rule 155.

*84 Martin Aaron Shainbaum and Bryant W.H. Smith, for petitioners.
Jon D. Feldhammer, Thomas R. Thomas, Patricia A. Donahue, and Trent D. Usitalo, for respondent.
HOLMES, Judge.

HOLMES
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: Issachar and Rachel Ohana moved from Israel to Northern California in 2003. Soon after, they bought two houses and from 2007 through 2009 poured money into them. They claim deductions for the cost of these improvements, and argue that they were in the trade or business of real-*84 estate development, without ever having bought or sold any real estate during the years before us. They did own the two properties, and they certainly improved them, and for part of that time even rented them out. But did their activities amount to a trade or business? If so, what were their deductible expenses? Or is the Commissioner correct that their activity was only home improvement?

FINDINGS OF FACT

Ohana 1 grew up in Israel and became a very educated man. He earned his bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering and computer science. He also obtained an MBA with a focus in marketing. And since at least 1994, he's worked for CEVA, Inc.—a firm that develops and licenses digital-signal*85 processor patents to computer-chip manufacturers. Ohana tempered his high-tech endeavors with old-fashioned real-estate investments in Israel, where he owned and rented two properties.

But it was CEVA that was the focus of Ohana's attention. After he'd worked there for ten years, the company was sufficiently impressed that it offered him a senior-executive position anywhere in the world—and Ohana chose the United States. Two years later he became executive vice president of CEVA *85 Global. His new position required constant travel and long and irregular hours. Those hours are irregular because part of his job is to attend meetings all over the world—often in exotic places like Hawaii or Morocco—for weeks at a time. Sometimes Ohana even had a chance to work out of Israel, which gave him an opportunity to visit family. His compensation, however, depended not on the number of hours worked, but on whether his team met certain quotas. And quotas they met: Ohana earned nearly $350,000 in both 2007 and 2008, and more than $550,000 even during the*86 worst of the recession in 2009.

Ohana argues that despite his work for CEVA he was also able to find the time to run a real-estate business. Exactly how much time he spent on his real-estate activity between 2007 and 2009 is fuzzy though, since the only records Ohana kept were reconstructed logs that he pieced together from his Gmail account years later. At trial he referred to it as a "puzzle to put together." He said that he planned to make money by flipping houses—i.e., buying a house with the intent to fix it up and then sell it at a profit. Successfully flipping houses depends on several steps' being executed gracefully, from choosing where to buy (ideally in a neighborhood that attracts deep-pocketed customers) to choosing the right people to do the renovations to keeping transaction costs low. But if something goes wrong, such as trying to flip after a market crash, the flip can flop and the *86 flipper can be stuck with a piece of real estate. Ohana, however, claimed he had an "exit strategy:" He would move into the house and live there until the market was more favorable and then he'd try again to sell the property.

The Ohanas bought their first home in 2005 in Saratoga, California,*87 a town on the edge of Silicon Valley. They bought the Saratoga home in their own names and personally held title to it. In 2006 Ohana sold one of his properties in Israel to fund his next acquisition, a house on Cowper Street in Palo Alto. Gregg Ann Herrern, a real estate agent, brokered the deal. Ohana intended from the get-go to tear down the Cowper Street home and build a new one, but at first he made only enough repairs to make the property livable. He quickly rented it out and left Herrern to manage the property, arrange for any necessary maintenance, and collect rent each month. Later on, when Ohana tried to evict his Cowper Street tenants, he emailed Herrern: "I told them from day one that I am going to build my house on this property."2 In fact, that same day, he drafted an email for Herrern to deliver to the tenants saying the property "was purchased 2 years ago in order to build a new residence for my family." *87 In 2007 Ohana began meeting with an architect and developing plans that included not only rebuilding the Cowper Street home, but also building a separate cottage unit that would function as a guest house and rental property. The Cowper Cottage was eventually given its*88 own address and rented out. But on the record deed documenting the purchase, Ohana checked a box on the form that he intended to eventually make the Cowper Street home his primary residence. He also emailed the chief building official of the City of Palo Alto that he had bought the property "to build my future home in Palo Alto."

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2014 T.C. Memo. 83, 107 T.C.M. 1437, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohana-v-commr-tax-2014.