Shea Homes, Inc. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner

834 F.3d 1061, 2016 WL 4446115
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 2016
Docket14-72161, 14-72162, 14-72163
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 834 F.3d 1061 (Shea Homes, Inc. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shea Homes, Inc. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner, 834 F.3d 1061, 2016 WL 4446115 (9th Cir. 2016).

Opinions

Concurrence by Judge RAWLINSON

OPINION

FERNANDEZ, Circuit Judge:

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“Commissioner”) appeals the decisions of the United States Tax Court in these consolidated cases that Shea Homes, Inc. and Subsidiaries (“SHI”) did not have any deficiencies for the tax years under consideration and that Shea Homes, LP (“SHLP”) and Vistancia, LLC (“Vistancia”) had no adjustments to partnership items for their tax years which were under consideration.1 Hereafter, SHI, SHLP and Vistancia are collectively referred to as “the Taxpayers.” 2 The decisions flowed from the Tax Court’s determination3 that the Taxpayers had used an accounting method4 that clearly reflected their income during the tax years under consideration. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The Tax Court found that the Taxpayers are builders and developers of planned communities “ranging in size from 100 homes to more than 1,000 homes in Colorado, California, and Arizona.” Shea Homes, 142 T.C. at 64. It further determined that:

[The Taxpayers] pride themselves on providing their customers with more than just the “bricks and sticks” of a home and emphasize the features and lifestyle of the community to potential buyers. For example, at the Reunion at Parkside community they advertised using the themes “live well, work well, play well” and “the pursuit of happiness”.
[The Taxpayers] purchased land in various stages from completely raw to finished lots in developed communities. Their business involved the analysis and acquisition of land for development and the construction and marketing of homes and the design and/or construction of developments and homes on the land they acquired. The costs incurred in their home construction business included, by partial example: (1) acquisition of land; (2) financing; (3) municipal and other regulatory approvals of entitlements; (4) construction of infrastructure; (5) construction of amenities; (6) construction of homes; (7) marketing; (8) bonding; (9) site supervision and over[1064]*1064head; and (10) taxes. Their primary-source of revenue from the home development business was from the sale of houses.

Id. at 65. Because of the magnitude of those undertakings, the process tends to extend across more than one tax year. See 26 U.S.C. § 460(f)(1); 26 C.F.R. §§ 1.460-l(b)(5)-(6), 1.460-3(a).

Although the Internal Revenue Code generally requires that a taxpayer report income in “the taxable year in which [it was] received,” 26 U.S.C. § 451(a), it also provides special rules for reporting taxable income from long-term contracts, id. § 460. “A long-term contract generally is any contract for the ... construction of property if the contract is not completed within the contracting year....” 26 C.F.R. § 1.460 — 1(b)(1); see also 26 U.S.C. § 460(f)(1). Typically, taxable income from long-term contracts must “be determined under the percentage of completion method” of accounting. 26 U.S.C. § 460(a). But home construction contracts are exempt from that requirement. Id. § 460(e)(1)(A); 26 C.F.R. § 1.460-3(b)(l). Instead, the regulations prescribe several acceptable methods of accounting for home construction contracts (and other contracts exempt from the percentage-of-completion method of accounting), one of which is the completed-contract method (“CCM”) of accounting. 26 C.F.R. § 1.460-4(c)(l); see also id. (a).5

The parties agree that the contracts at issue here are long-term home construction contracts. See 26 U.S.C. § 460(e)(1)(A), (6)(A). The Taxpayers applied the CCM to report income from their' home construction projects. “[A] taxpayer using the CCM to account for a long-term contract must take into account in the contract’s completion year, as defined in § 1.460 — 1(b)(6), the gross contract price and all allocable contract costs incurred by the completion year.” 26 C.F.R. § 1.460-4(d)(1). “The completion year is the taxable year in which a taxpayer completes a contract as described” by the applicable regulation. Id. § 1.460 — 1(b)(6). That regulation, in turn, provides that:

A taxpayer’s contract is completed upon the earlier of—
(A) Use of the subject matter of the contract by the customer for its intended purpose (other than for testing) and at least 95 percent of the total allocable contract costs attributable to the subject matter have been incurred by the taxpayer; or
(B) Final completion and acceptance of the subject matter of the contract.

Id. § 1.460 — 1(c)(3) (i) .6 The date of contract completion should be “determined without regard to whether one or more secondary items have been used or finally completed and accepted.” Id. § 1.460 — 1(c)(3)(ii).

During the tax years at issue here, the Taxpayers reported their income using the CCM. They applied the 95 percent test to determine the year of contract completion and, hence, the year in which they recognized income from their long-term home construction contracts. The Taxpayers took the position that the subject matter of their home construction contracts included the development in which the home was [1065]*1065situated. For each tax year, the Taxpayers would calculate, on a development-by-development basis, whether they had incurred at least 95 percent of the budgeted costs of the development, including the costs of the houses and the common improvements and amenities.

If the incurred costs were equal to or greater than 95% of the budgeted costs, then [the Taxpayers] reported income for that tax year from homes that had closed in escrow up to that date. If the incurred costs did not exceed 95%, then [the Taxpayers] deferred any income from homes that closed in escrow that year.

Shea Homes, 142 T.C. at 76.7

In 2009, the Commissioner issued a notice of deficiency to SHI for the tax years 2004-2005, and notices of final partnership administrative adjustments to SHLP for 2003-2006 and to Vistancia for 2004-2005.

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Bluebook (online)
834 F.3d 1061, 2016 WL 4446115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shea-homes-inc-subsidiaries-v-commissioner-ca9-2016.