Winnick v. Commissioner

21 T.C. 1029, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 250
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1954
DocketDocket Nos. 23478, 23479
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 T.C. 1029 (Winnick 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
Winnick v. Commissioner, 21 T.C. 1029, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 250 (tax 1954).

Opinion

SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION.

Aeundell, Judge:

This proceeding involves deficiencies resulting from the respondent’s determination that the profits from the sales of 50 houses built in 1943 and 1944 were ordinary income and not long-term capital gains as contended by petitioner.

Petitioners appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit and the court set aside our determination and remanded the case to us for additional findings of fact to point up the original intention of the petitioners in building or acquiring the houses here in controversy.

We have received additional evidence directed to the questions propounded by the Court of Appeals. The supplemental findings confirm the conclusion and the result of our prior decision. We are convinced, particularly by the supplemental findings, that the original intention of the petitioners in building and acquiring the 50 houses involved here was to hold them for sale in the ordinary course of business and not for investment.

Petitioners’ case rests largely on the fact that these houses were built pursuant to wartime regulations and restrictions which required them to hold the properties for rental to defense workers. They contend that, in agreeing to abide by these regulations and restrictions, they showed clearly an intent to hold these houses for the investment income provided by rental payments and not for sale purposes.

As we said in our prior opinion, we do not challenge the good faith of petitioners in building these houses with priorities granted to construct rental housing. There is nothing in this record to indicate that petitioners did not comply with the regulations under which the priorities were granted. However, these regulations did not proscribe sales of these houses in all instances. We take judicial notice of the principal regulation here involved, General Order 60-2 of the National Housing Agency, 24 C. F. R., sec. 702.4 (Cum. Supp.). We note, for example, that this regulation permitted sales of these defense housing units to eligible war workers after 4 months’ occupancy.

The regulations do not appear to have inhibited seriously the petitioners in selling the houses. A total of 66 defense housing units on 4 different tracts were built or acquired by petitioners in 1943 and 1944. More than one-half of the 66 were sold before the restrictions imposed by General Order 60-2, supra, were lifted on October 15,1945. Twenty-two of the 50 houses here in issue were sold prior to that date. We think that this concentration of sales indicates an intention to dispose of these houses as rapidly as circumstances would permit and refutes petitioners’ contention that these housing units were being held primarily for investment purposes.

Moreover, our conclusion is strengthened when we look at the overall pattern of petitioners’ business in the years preceding 1943, in the period contemporaneous with the .building of these defense housing units and in the years subsequent to 1945. Prior to the war, petitioners constructed houses only for sale on completion. During the war years, at the same time that they were building, renting, or selling the defense housing units, they built an additional 21 houses for sale on completion. And, in 1946, and subsequent years they continued to build houses primarily for sale on completion. Considering together the sales of defense housing units and the sales of other houses built during these years, petitioners sold 10 houses in 1943, 25 in 1944, 35 in 1945, and 28 in 1946. This pattern is quite consistent with the conclusion that petitioners engaged primarily in the business of constructing houses for sale and not for investment purposes. Finally, in each of the 2 years in controversy, 1945 and 1946, petitioners’ income from sales exceeded by a considerable margin their income from rentals. In 1945, rental income was less than one-half the income from sales; in 1946 rental income was less than one-fourth the income from sales. Cf. Walter R. Crabtree, 20 T. C. 841.

Our prior decision in this case turned on our conclusion that at the time the 50 houses involved were sold, they were held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of petitioners’ business. We said that the intention of the petitioners at the time the houses were built did not unalterably control their tax status at the time of their disposition, and that the crucial criterion was the purpose for which the properties were held at the time they were sold. (See Carl Marks & Co., 12 T. C. 1196.) However, in the light of the additional evidence we have, we conclude that at no time were these houses held for investment purposes. Without participating in the defense housing program and without the aid of the priorities thereby obtained, petitioners’ construction business would have been severely cut back during the war years. In addition to this very practical reason for building these houses, there were financial inducements. Liberal mortgages covering the complete cost of the houses and the land, plus the normal builder’s profit of 10 per cent, were available to petitioners for building these units. Consequently, they were not required to tie up their own capital in this construction. They were also able to receive a modest income from the rental of these houses while restrictions prevented their sale. Meanwhile, the tenants were contributing toward the reduction of the mortgage indebtedness and increasing petitioners’ equity in the houses which would be ultimately realized when the houses were sold.

Having concluded that the 50 houses here in controversy were held at all times primarily for sale in the ordinary course of petitioners’ business, it follows that the gains from their sales were ordinary income taxable under section 22 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code and not entitled to capital gains treatment under section 117 (j). It is unnecessary for us to follow the proceeds of the sales of the 50 houses further because of the foregoing conclusion. From the evidence in the record, it is impossible for us to trace the proceeds with precision. It is apparent, however, that the principal source of the funds which financed the apartment house was a mortgage in the amount of $35,250 granted in July 1946. At the time application for this loan was made, all but one of the houses here involved had been sold. The only expenditure for the construction of the apartment house shown to have been made prior to the date of the application for the loan was the $3,000 for the 3 lots on which the apartment was ultimately built.

Petitioners have raised here a question concerning the appropriate basis for determining the gain from the sales of 21 of the houses3 which were transferred to Albert Winnick when Alwin, Inc., was dissolved on December 15, 1944. Petitioners elected to treat the dissolution under section 112 (b) (7) 4 of the Internal Revenue Code. After an audit of their returns for 1944, petitioners were found to have realized an ordinary dividend in the amount of $5,956.53. The audit occurred in April 1947 after the returns for 1946 had been filed. The deficiency resulting from the determination made in the audit was agreed to and paid by petitioners.

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Related

Winnick v. Commissioner
21 T.C. 1029 (U.S. Tax Court, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
21 T.C. 1029, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winnick-v-commissioner-tax-1954.