1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*174
1. Water in a well on petitioner's residential property became temporarily contaminated, so that it could not be used for four months. After the temporary condition disappeared, the use of water from the well for household purposes was resumed.
2. While the well was temporarily out of order, the petitioner had a new well drilled at a cost of $ 1,232. The well was not connected with a pump and was not used but was ready for use at any time upon the installation of a pump.
16 T.C. 1230">*1230 The respondent has determined a deficiency in income tax for 1946 in the amount of $ 384.25. The deficiency results for the most part from the disallowance by the respondent of a deduction in the amount of $ 1,518.40, which represents, chiefly, the cost of drilling an artesian well on residential property owned by the petitioner. The petitioner claims deduction for an alleged casualty loss under
The petitioner filed his return for 1946 with the collector for the district of Massachusetts.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The facts which have been stipulated are found as facts.
During the taxable year 1946, the petitioner resided in Dover, Massachusetts, with his wife and children. He was engaged in the real estate business. The petitioner owned the property where he and his family lived. It was purchased in 1945. The petitioner paid $ 8,000 for the property and expended about $ 5,000 in 1946 for remodeling buildings on1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*176 the property. The value of the property as of January 1, 1946, according to the tax assessment roll of the town of Dover was as follows: Land, $ 350; house and barn, $ 2,500; garage, $ 150; total $ 3,000. On January 1, 1947, the town officials valued the property for tax purposes, as follows: Land, $ 350; house and barn, $ 3,500; garage, $ 150; pump outfit, $ 100; total $ 4,100.
The improvements which were located on the property in 1945, when it was purchased, included an artesian well and two cesspools, both of which were connected to the house in which the petitioner lived. In May of 1946, the petitioner hired a contractor to clean the cesspools. One of the cesspools was located about 58 feet from the 16 T.C. 1230">*1231 well. The contractor pumped out both cesspools, and with the permission of the petitioner, he put some cleaning material, which he called a "solvent," in them. He refused to tell the petitioner what material he put in the cesspools. The contractor did not make any repairs of the cesspools, and he did not do any work on the old well.
The well provided the water supply for petitioner's house. It was a tubular, "driven" well about 100 feet deep. There was no pipe 1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*177 in the well below an eight-inch tube and pipe at the top of the well. Four or five weeks after the cesspools were cleaned, the well water turned a dark brown color, smelled of sewage, and became unfit for consumption. The petitioner sent samples of the well water to a Boston firm of chemists and engineers for analysis to determine the cause of the color and odor of the water in May, June, and July of 1946. The concern gave the petitioner written reports in May, June, and July of the analyses which its chemists made of the samples of the well water. The May report stated,
The petitioner and his family stopped using the water from the old well after the receipt of the report which was made on June 4, 1946, and obtained water for drinking and bathing purposes from a store which was located one-third of a mile away. This water was carried to petitioner's house from about June 4, 1946, until about October 25, 1946. The petitioner expended $ 286.40 for the water and cartage, and for other costs during the above period of about four and one-half months.
In October of 1946 the petitioner sent samples of the water from the old well to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, and it sent a written report of its analysis of the water to the petitioner on October 24, 1946. The report stated that the analysis showed that the1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*179 water was then free from bacteria characteristic of pollution and was 16 T.C. 1230">*1232 safe for drinking. The Department advised the petitioner that if the old well should be continued in use, a water-tight cover should be provided and the ground about it should be graded to divert surface drainage from its vicinity. The petitioner, thereafter, resumed using water from the old well, and he has continuously used the old well as the sole source of water for his house for all purposes since about October 25, 1946, until the present time, a period of about four years.
However, prior to October 25, 1946, the petitioner decided to provide his house with a new source of water, and he engaged an artesian well driller named Harry MacTavish to drill a new well on the side of his house which was opposite to the old well. MacTavish finished the well in October of 1946. He drilled a well 176 feet deep, and charged $ 7 per foot for his work, or a total of $ 1,232, which the petitioner paid in 1946. After the new well was completed, there remained to be done the additional work of connecting a pump to the new well, and of connecting the new well to the plumbing system of the house. The cost of this1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*180 work would have been between four and five hundred dollars. The petitioner decided not to incur the additional expense and, up to the time of the trial of this proceeding, he had not had the new well connected to his house.
The use of the old well was not resumed until after the new well was drilled, but the use was resumed in October of 1946 at about the same time that the drilling of the new well was completed.
At the time of the trial of this proceeding, the petitioner either had decided or had come close to reaching a decision to start using the new well because the "water table" in the area had been going down, and in order to obtain more water from the old well, to meet increased household needs, the installation of a new deep well pump on the old well at a cost of between four and five hundred dollars would be necessary. The petitioner believed that it would be preferable to apply such expenditure of money to the installation of a deep well pump on the new well, and to connect the new well to his house, and thereby to have two well systems for the household water supply. The old well has a shallow well pump. As the "water table" drops lower, if it continues to do so, the1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*181 petitioner will obtain less water from the old well. The need for water has increased in petitioner's household, and the new well can be used to satisfy the need for increased supplies of water.
The petitioner deducted $ 1,518.40 in his income tax return for 1946 as a "casualty loss." The respondent disallowed the deduction.
The petitioner did not sustain a loss of property during 1946.
The new well which was drilled at a cost of $ 1,232 was at all times available for use upon the installation of a pump and other necessary 16 T.C. 1230">*1233 connections. The expenditure of $ 1,232 for the new well does not represent a loss.
OPINION.
The petitioner seeks to invoke the benefit of
1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*182 The statute requires that if there is a casualty, a loss of property must result, and in order to obtain a casualty loss deduction, the taxpayer must establish the amount of the loss sustained. Under sections 29.23 (e)-1 and 29.23 (i)-1 of Regulations 111, a loss must be evidenced by a completed transaction, and the basis for determining a loss under
Assuming, but not deciding, that some event1951 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 174">*183 occurred in 1946 which comes within the meaning of the term "casualty" in
The petitioner's chief contention is that the cost of drilling a new well, $ 1,232, is deductible. This contention is wholly without merit. There was no injury
The balance of the total expenditure, $ 286.40, was the cost of obtaining water during the four months' period when the old well did not provide pure water. This expenditure does not represent a loss in the value of the petitioner's property. It represents only what it cost the petitioner to obtain water while the old well was out of order.
1.
In computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions:
* * * *
(e) Losses by Individuals. -- In the case of an individual, losses sustained during the taxable year and not compensated for by insurance or otherwise --
* * * *
(3) of property not connected with the trade or business, if the loss arises from fires, storms, shipwreck, or other casualty, or from theft. No loss shall be allowed as a deduction under this paragraph if at the time of the filing of the return such loss has been claimed as a deduction for estate tax purposes in the estate tax return.↩