Professional Equities v. Commissioner

89 T.C. No. 15, 89 T.C. 165, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 105
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1987
DocketDocket No. 42558-84
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 89 T.C. No. 15 (Professional Equities 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
Professional Equities v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. No. 15, 89 T.C. 165, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 105 (tax 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

Raum, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioner’s fiscal 1981 income tax in the amount of $28,540. At issue is the proper amount of gain to be recognized in petitioner’s 1981 tax year on its installment sales of land in which “wraparound mortgages” are taken as part of the payment price.

The parties agree that the governing statutory provisions are in section 453(c) of the Code. That section provides that the income recognized in any taxable year is “that proportion of the payments received in that year which the gross profit (realized or to be realized when payment is completed) bears to the total contract price”. In determining the proper proportion, there is no dispute between the parties as to the computation of the numerator of the relevant fraction, i.e., “gross profit”, which is simply the sales price minus the seller’s basis and costs of sale. In controversy, however, is the computation of the denominator, “the total contract price”, in the circumstances of this case, involving the taxpayer’s wraparound sales. Petitioner argues that the total contract price here is simply the sales price or selling price used in computing the gross profit in the numerator. On the other hand, the Government contends that the total contract price is the sides price minus the amount of petitioner’s outstanding mortgage liabilities. Petitioner’s position is consistent with judicial decision and regulations of long standing, but the Government relies on temporary regulations promulgated after enactment of legislation in 1980 known as the Installment Sales Revision Act of 1980. Both parties agree that if these new regulations are valid, the Government is entitled to prevail. The pivotal issue therefore is whether these new provisions in the temporary regulations are to be sustained.

Professional Equities, Inc. (petitioner or Professional Equities), is a corporation organized under the laws of California. Its principal office is located in Laguna Hills, California. It uses the accrual method of accounting, and keeps its books and records and files its Federal income tax returns on the basis of an August 31 fiscal year. Petitioner timely filed a U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return for its fiscal year ended August 31, 1981, with the office of the Internal Revenue Service at Fresno, California.

Professional Equities’ business consists of buying undeveloped parcels of land and reselling such parcels to purchasers. A wraparound mortgage, hereinafter explained, is created on the resale of the land.

When petitioner buys land, it either assumes an existing mortgage1 encumbering the land, or gives the seller a purchase money note and enters into a deed of trust agreement securing the note. In some instances, petitioner uses both of these methods to finance the purchase price. In the context of the later resale of the land, these obligations petitioner has placed on the land in purchasing it, are referred to as “underlying” or “wrapped” indebtedness.

Generally, petitioner resells the land using conditional sales contracts in which the buyer gives petitioner, as seller, a “wraparound” mortgage in addition to a downpayment of approximately 10 percent of the selling price.2 The wraparound mortgage given petitioner by the purchaser is a new mortgage,3 the principal amount of which includes the unpaid balance of the wrapped or underlying indebtedness previously placed on the land at its purchase by petitioner. The buyer does not assume or take the property subject to the underlying indebtedness. Instead, petitioner is hable for and makes the payments on the wrapped indebtedness while the purchaser is hable for and makes payments to petitioner on the wraparound indebtedness, i.e., the installment obligation. After petitioner has resold the land to a purchaser, it services the underlying mortgage on the parcel with the payments received from the purchaser. Petitioner’s obhgation to its creditors to make the payments on the underlying mortgage is not dependent, however, on whether petitioner receives timely payment from the purchaser. In addition, petitioner is not required to service the underlying obligation from the payments received from the purchaser.

In the sales at issue, the wraparound indebtedness is payable to petitioner in monthly installments over a period of 10 to 15 years and bears a rate of interest which is higher than that on the underlying mortgage. At the time of resale by petitioner, the underlying mortgages on the land do not exceed petitioner’s basis in the land.

Under the contracts of sale, legal title to the land is not deeded to the purchaser until the purchaser has paid petitioner the entire balance of the selling price together with interest. Petitioner’s “Standard Agreement of Sale” describes this condition on the transfer of title as follows: “When Buyer has fully performed this Agreement in accordance with its terms * * * Seller will then execute and deliver to Buyer a deed which will convey good and sufficient title to said realty”.

The parties have submitted to the Court documents used by petitioner in a “typical” land purchase and sales transaction. These exhibits support the foregoing stipulated description of the transactions entered into by petitioner. They show first that in the contract of sale, petitioner agreed to “keep encumbrances of record current, so long as Buyer [of the particular parcels involved] is not in default”. They further reveal that petitioner received, on the sale of land, installment obligations from which its obligation on the underlying mortgage could readily be discharged. On the sale of the “typical” parcels, petitioner received a right to monthly payments of $320, $300, $209.89, and $209.89, totaling $1,039.78 a month, or $12,477.36 a year. Petitioner’s continuing obligation on the underlying mortgages amounted to only approximately $3,500 a year for the first 6 years after it purchased the land and approximately $4,200 a year thereafter.4 The payments received on the installment sales were greater than the payments petitioner owed on the underlying mortgages both because the principal amount of the $104,000 obligation due petitioner (the so-called wraparound mortgage) was larger than that of the $44,080 underlying mortgages, and because the interest rate on the obligation due petitioner (8% percent) was higher than that on the underlying mortgages (7 and 8 percent).

The deficiency in income tax stems from the Commissioner’s determination that petitioner has, on its 1981 return, incorrectly computed the proportion of the payments received on installment sales in that year to be recognized as gain. All such payments were made in 1981 on sales that occurred in 1981.

It is stipulated that petitioner was entitled to report its income under section 453 in the year before us. Section 453 allows gain on an installment sale to be reported on a deferred basis. It permits “the spreading of the income tax over the period during which payments of the sales price are received” and thus “alleviates possible liquidity problems which might arise from the bunching of gain in the year of sale when a portion of the selling price has not actually been received”. H. Rept. 96-1042, at 5 (1980); S. Rept. 96-1000, at 7 (1980), 1980-2 C.B. 494, 497. See Commissioner v.

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Professional Equities v. Commissioner
89 T.C. No. 15 (U.S. Tax Court, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 T.C. No. 15, 89 T.C. 165, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/professional-equities-v-commissioner-tax-1987.