Stark v. Commissioner

86 T.C. No. 17, 86 T.C. 243, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 149
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1986
DocketDocket No. 10409-84
StatusPublished
Cited by121 cases

This text of 86 T.C. No. 17 (Stark 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
Stark v. Commissioner, 86 T.C. No. 17, 86 T.C. 243, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 149 (tax 1986).

Opinion

COHEN, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency of $97,372.10 in petitioner’s Federal income tax for 1975. Petitioner claimed an overpayment in an amended petition. The issues for decision Eire as follows: (1) Whether petitioner is entitled to a chEiritable contribution deduction with respect to certain real property in which she retained a mineral interest, and (2) if so, the proper amount of the charitable contribution deduction resulting from a bargain sede of certain real property.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulation of facts and attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.

Petitioner resided in OrEinge, Texas, at the time she filed her petition. She filed a Federal income teix return and eui amended Federal income tax return for 1975 with the Internal Revenue Service Center in Austin, Texas.

For many years, petitioner owned a 3,358 acre tract of lEind in East Texas that the U.S. Forest Service (the Forest Service) wished to acquire for use as a public recreation area. In late 1972 and early 1973, the Forest Service purchased approximately 2,280 acres of such tract from petitioner. Because petitioner wanted the Forest Service to have the entire tract for public recreation use, she offered to sell the Forest Service the remaining land, which the parties erroneously believed to be 1,000 acres. The Land and Water Conservation Act of 1965 precluded the Forest Service from purchasing the additioned land from petitioner, however, because the land was located outside the existing Nationed Forest boundary. Moreover, petitioner did not wish to donate such land or exchEinge it for land owned by the Forest Service. The parties therefore decided to use a third party to purchase petitioner’s land and make Ein exchange with the Forest Service.

The Forest Service proposed that Harris R. Fender (Fender), a person with whom petitioner had no prior business or other dealings, act as such third party. By letter dated April 12, 1972, petitioner agreed with the Forest Service to hold the 1,000 acre tract available for sale to Fender for use by him in the exchange with the Forest Service. In the letter petitioner stated:

I understand the exchange procedure will require considerable time to allow the Forest Service and Mr. Fender to work out all details of the transaction. * * *
I will hold the 1,000 acres available for a reasonable time, but not beyond the first day of June 1973, for sale to Mr. Fender to be used by him in the proposed exchange with the Forest Service, but if the sale has not been completed on or before June 1, 1973, any obligation I may have to sell the property shall, at my election, terminate.
* * Jfc * % sfc
It is understood that I have absolutely no connection with the proposed exchange other than the sale of the 1,000 acres for a previously specified consideration and my wish that the Forest Service have the additional 1,000 acres to be used as a part of its proposed recreation area.

The “previously specified consideration” referred to in the letter was $1,200,000.

Although Fender and the Forest Service did not complete negotiations by June 1, 1973, petitioner continued to give oral and written extensions of the agreement to hold the land available for the proposed transaction. Fender and the Forest Service ultimately agreed upon the terms of the exchange in 1975, and Forest Service officials in Washington, D.C., approved the transaction. Prior to that time, certain land brokers told petitioner that they could sell the land for more than $1,200,000; but petitioner refused to consider any other potential buyers while the Forest Service continued preparation for its acquisition.

A survey of the land prior to consummation of the transaction revealed that the tract contained 1,079 acres. Because petitioner and Fender had agreed upon a sale of only 1,000 acres, the Forest Service requested that petitioner donate to it the excess contained in the tract. The parties ultimately agreed that petitioner would donate 77.28 acres to the Forest Service and that Fender would purchase 1,001.72 acres from petitioner for simultaneous exchange with the Forest Service. On October 16, 1975, petitioner conveyed 77.28 acres to the Forest Service (i.e., to the United States of America) for no consideration and conveyed 1,001.72 acres to Fender for $1,200,000.

Petitioner would not have sold the land to Fender had Fender not been obligated to reconvey the land to the Forest Service for use as a public recreation area. Petitioner had no knowledge of the location, size, description, fair market value, or other characteristics of the land to be conveyed to Fender by the Forest Service in the exchange.

Petitioner’s family had a long-standing business practice of never conveying mineral interests together with the conveyance of surface real estate interests. Based on this policy, petitioner retained, in the deeds of conveyance to the Forest Service and to Fender, the interest in all minerals in the land and the right to enter the land to prospect for, mine, and remove such minerals for 25 years. The reservation in the deeds was subject to the following restrictions:

(1) Whoever undertakes to exercise the reserved rights shall give prior written notice to the Forest Service and shall submit satisfactory evidence of authority to exercise such rights. Only so much of the surface of the lands shall be occupied, used or disturbed as is necessary in bona fide prospecting for, drilling, mining (including the milling or concentration of ores), and removal of the reserved minerals, oil, gas or other inorganic substances.
(2)(i) None of the lands in which minerals are reserved shall be so used, occupied or disturbed as to preclude their full use for authorized programs of the Forest Service until the record owner of the reserved rights, or the successors, assigns or lessees thereof, shall have applied for and received a permit authorizing such use, occupancy or disturbance of those specifically described parts of the lands as may reasonably be necessary to exercise of the reserved rights.
(ii) Said permit shall be issued upon agreement as to conditions necessary to protect the interest of the United States including such conditions deemed necessary to provide for the safety of the public and other users of the land, and upon initial payment of the annual fee, which shall be at the rate of $2.00 per acre or fraction of acre included in the permit.
(iii) The permit shall also provide that the record owner of the reserved right or the successors, assigns or lessees thereof, will repair or replace any improvements damaged or destroyed by the mining operations and restore the land to a condition safe and reasonably serviceable for authorized programs of the Forest Service, and shall provide for a bond in sufficient amount as determined necessary by the Forest Service to guarantee such repair, replacement or restoration.

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Bluebook (online)
86 T.C. No. 17, 86 T.C. 243, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stark-v-commissioner-tax-1986.