Urbanek v. United States

2 Cl. Ct. 574, 52 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5231, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1727
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 3, 1983
DocketNo. 110-79T
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Cl. Ct. 574 (Urbanek v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Urbanek v. United States, 2 Cl. Ct. 574, 52 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5231, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1727 (cc 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

KOZINSKI, Chief Judge.

At issue in this case is whether the taxpayer properly calculated the cost of certain condominium units which he built and sold in Boca Raton, Florida. The taxpayer allocated the entire cost of construction to the units themselves. The government argues that a portion of the cost should be allocated to the surrounding land, which was retained by the taxpayer and leased to the condominium owners. Under the government’s theory, the gain from the sale of the units would be higher than reported.

FACTS1

In 1969, taxpayer, August Urbanek,2 formed a partnership to develop a 5.5 acre tract of land. The project called for the construction of two condominium towers on .9 acre located roughly in the middle of the tract. On the surrounding land, the partnership constructed various amenities such as a parking lot, a putting green, a swimming pool and a marina.

Sales of condominium units followed a pattern which was not uncommon to developments in Florida in the 1970s. Each buyer received fee simple title to his condominium and to a pro rata share of a package consisting of the land on which the towers were located, of a road connecting the towers with the public street and of the amenities. The partnership retained title to the approximately 4.6 acres which surrounded the towers and upon which the amenities were situated. The retained land was leased for 99 years to the Boca Towers Condominium Association, a nonprofit Florida corporation formed by the taxpayer and his partner in 1971.

The association agreed to a yearly net rental of approximately $160,000, with periodic increases geared to the consumer price index. The lease was negotiated between the partnership and the association at a time when the taxpayer and his partner were in control of both. Buyers of condominium units were required to become members of the association and to assume a pro rata share of the ground lease. Each buyer pledged his condominium as security for performance of his obligations under the lease.

At that time, Boca Raton limited the density of residential construction to 50.7 units per acre. This meant that the larger a tract of land a developer had, the more condominium units he could build. Construction did not, however, have to be evenly distributed over the tract. As in this case, the residential units could be concentrated in high-rise towers on a small portion of the land, so long as sufficient total land was dedicated to the project.

Perhaps because of the density ordinance, the value of land was frequently expressed in terms of the number of condominium units it would support. Thus, raw land in the general vicinity of the project was selling for $6,250 to $10,344 per unit in 1970-71, which, multiplied by 50.7 allowable units, amounted to $316,875 to $524,440 per acre.

The partnership sold the condominium units starting in 1972.3 In calculating the gain from the sale of these units, the tax[576]*576payer subtracted from the sales price the cost of the .9 acre of land on which the towers were situated, plus the full cost of erecting the towers and the amenities. The government challenges this method of computation. In the government’s view, the combined sale/lease package offered to prospective buyers enabled the taxpayer to defer some immediate income from the sale by converting sale proceeds into lease payments, thereby diminishing the effects of the progressive income tax. The government proposes to remedy this problem by reallocating some of the cost of construction to the lease, thereby lowering the cost of the units sold and commensurately raising the taxpayer’s gain. The government relies upon Welsh Homes, Inc. v. Commissioner, 279 F.2d 391 (4th Cir.1960), and the reallocation formula adopted in that case (now commonly known as the Welsh Homes formula).

DISCUSSION

A. The Welsh Homes Formula

The taxpayer argues vigorously that marketing of the project as partially a sale and partially a lease served a legitimate business purpose and that both the sale and lease prices were set at market rates. In the taxpayer’s view, this establishes that the lease payments represented only compensation for rental of the land and not deferred income from sale of the units, undercutting any justification for the government to reallocate costs between the two transactions. This argument might be persuasive if taxpayer had in fact established that the separate parts of the project represented separate transactions, each governed by independent market forces. However, the evidence paints a completely different picture: the sale of condominiums and the lease of the ground surrounding them were integral parts of the same transaction, flip sides of the same economic coin.

To reach this conclusion, one need only examine the method employed by the taxpayer in setting the supposedly fair market rental under the ground lease. The taxpayer first set the fair market sales price of the 4.6 acres at $1.6 million. He came up with this figure by calculating that under the density ordinance, 4.6 acres of land could support 223 units; at $6,000 per unit, this amounted to approximately $1.6 million. The taxpayer next took one-tenth of this value, $160,000, as a fair market rental.4

The obvious flaw in the taxpayer’s analysis is that he set the value of the 4.6 acres on the basis of a formula applicable to raw land capable of supporting condominium construction, but which is wholly inapposite to the land which was the subject of the lease. Whatever condominium-supporting capacity the 4.6 acres of land originally had was lost when they were dedicated to the project. The only reason the taxpayer was allowed to put the two towers on the .9 acre of land was that he committed to leave the 4.6 acres undeveloped and thereby complied with the density ordinance.5

Contrary to taxpayer’s assertion, therefore, the $1.6 million valuation of the 4.6 acres (and consequently the $160,000 yearly rental) did not represent the fair market value of the land independent of the development project. Indeed, the evidence establishes that it is impossible to value the 4.6 acres for purposes of sale or rental, except with reference to the project as a whole. This is because no one other than the owners of the condominium units had any possible use for that land.6 By placing the amenities on the 4.6 acres and dedicating the land to the project, the developer [577]*577limited demand for the land entirely to the captive market consisting of those persons who needed access to it for full enjoyment of their property.7

Moreover, individual rental payments under the lease could not be set independent of the sales price for each unit. The cash price for a unit plus the projected rental payments under the lease constituted an economic package which prospective buyers weighed as a whole. A lower sales price would have allowed taxpayer to charge higher rental payments and vice versa.8 At one extreme, the taxpayer might have maximized the sales price by charging no rent at all, because a condominium unencumbered by monthly lease payments can command more than the same unit subject to lease payments.

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2 Cl. Ct. 574, 52 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5231, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urbanek-v-united-states-cc-1983.