Van Alen v. Comm'r

2013 T.C. Memo. 235, 106 T.C.M. 427, 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 240
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 21, 2013
DocketDocket Nos. 22328-09, 4075-10
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2013 T.C. Memo. 235 (Van Alen 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
Van Alen v. Comm'r, 2013 T.C. Memo. 235, 106 T.C.M. 427, 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 240 (tax 2013).

Opinion

BRETT VAN ALEN AND KIMBERLEE VAN ALEN, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent;
BRANDON D. TOMLINSON AND SHANA C. TOMLINSON, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Van Alen v. Comm'r
Docket Nos. 22328-09, 4075-10 1
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 2013-235; 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 240; 106 T.C.M. (CCH) 427;
October 21, 2013, Filed
*240

Decisions will be entered for respondent.

Jared R. Callister, for petitioners.
Nathan H. Hall, for respondent.
HOLMES, Judge.

HOLMES
*236 MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: Shana Tomlinson and Brett Van Alen are siblings who inherited part of a family ranch from their father. Their interest was in a trust, and their stepmother valued that interest at less than $100,000 when she prepared her late husband's estate-tax return. That value was low because the Code gives a break to those who inherit a ranch and promise to keep it in agricultural use. Years later, the trust sold a conservation easement on the ranch for more than $900,000. The sale created a capital gain that passed through to the siblings, and the dispute here is over the proper basis to report for that sale. Shana and Brett argue that through no fault of their own the estate greatly understated the value of their interest in the ranch, which greatly understated their basis, which greatly inflated their taxable capital gains. The Commissioner says this doesn't matter, and that the tax break they got then by using a very low value on their father's estate-tax return has to be matched now by a hefty capital-gains *241 tax burden.

FINDINGS OF FACTI. The Family Ranch

Near the turn of the twentieth century, Joseph "Pop" Preuschoff left Europe for Madera County, California—just north of Fresno—and established a 2345-acre cattle ranch that became known as the Preuschoff Ranch. It was on this ranch *237 that Pop raised his daughter, Mary Van Alen. Although Mary moved away for a short time after getting married and starting a family, she divorced and returned home to the ranch with her small children. One of those children was Joseph Van Alen. Joseph later inherited a 13/16th interest in the ranch (the Ranch Interest).

Joseph married three times. After his first marriage with four children ended in divorce, Joseph wed Virginia Latimer, a woman twenty years his junior. Within four years, they had two children—Shana and Brett. The siblings were still quite young when Virginia and Joseph divorced, and afterwards they lived with their mom, though they did stay with their dad on the ranch every other weekend as well as half of every summer. Joseph eventually wed again. Shana and Brett, however, didn't get along with this new wife, Bonnie Van Alen. Shana described Bonnie as a "very dominant person" with whom she "had *242 a tumultuous relationship." Despite these difficulties, the siblings loved their time on the ranch. Brett remembered helping his dad with the daily chores—kicking hay out of the backs of trucks and shoveling manure. And, after Joseph's death, Shana moved to the ranch where she tends some cows and works as a stay-at-home mom to her three children. Brett—though he does not live on the ranch—grew up to be a *238 cowboy in the vaquero tradition, riding horses and four-wheelers to tend cattle for other ranchers.

II. The Will, Probate, and Estate Tax Return

Joseph died in May 1994, when Shana was 18 and Brett was only 14. Almost ten years before his death—after his separation from Virginia but before his marriage to Bonnie—Joseph had written his will. It gave $25,000 gifts to his first wife and each of his four children from that marriage, but directed that the remainder of the estate—including his Ranch Interest—would go to a testamentary trust (the Trust) for the benefit of Shana and Brett in equal shares. The will contained no estate-tax apportionment clause. 2*243

Bonnie, as the estate's executor, hired attorney Denslow Green to administer Joseph's estate. Since California probate law requires that a county "probate referee" appraise a decedent's real property subject to probate, seeCal. Prob. Code sec. 13200(c) (West 1991 & Supp. 2013), Green met in November *239 1994 with Richard Grey, a deputy probate referee. 3*244 This was a complicated chore—the ranch alone had nine different tax parcel numbers, and the estate held other real estate apart from the ranch. Grey set to work, and valued the Ranch Interest at $1.963 million. When he was done, he gave his field notes to the probate referee. 4

About nine months later, Bonnie (as executor) and Green (as preparer) filed a Form 706, United States Estate (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Return, for the Estate of Joseph Van Alen. 5*245 But that return gave the Ranch Interest a much lower value than Grey's field notes did.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 T.C. Memo. 235, 106 T.C.M. 427, 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-alen-v-commr-tax-2013.