1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*59
In 1973, petitioners purchased an old factory building, placed it in service, and sometime thereafter leased it to a manufacturing company. In 1982, they completed and placed in service improvements to the building which cost $ 360,294. Petitioners, on their original 1982 income tax return, did not in any way account for depreciation of the improvements. On an amended 1982 return filed on Sept. 23, 1983, they depreciated the improvements using the accelerated method embodied in the table in
87 T.C. 518">*519 OPINION
The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioners' 1982 income tax in the amount of $ 48,081. The sole issue for decision is whether petitioners are entitled to a credit under
At the time the petition herein was filed, petitioners were husband and wife residing in Winthrop, Massachusetts.
In 1973, petitioners purchased and placed in service an old factory building located in Everett, Massachusetts. They leased this building to the Middlesex Manufacturing Co., of which petitioner-husband is the majority stockholder and petitioners' children are the owners of the remaining outstanding stock. In 1982, petitioners made the improvements to the building which give rise to the present controversy. These improvements cost petitioners $ 360,294. They were completed and placed in service in November of 1982.
Petitioners filed a joint Federal income tax return (the original return) and an amended return for the year 1982. On both returns, they reported on Schedule E "Rents received" from the factory building in the amount of $ 60,000. On Schedule E in their original return they deducted $ 14,066 depreciation from the "Rents received". This $ 14,066 depreciation was shown on Form 4562 "Depreciation and Amortization" 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*64 as relating to four items of "nonrecovery property": the factory building itself, and improvements or additions made to the building in 1977, 1978, and 1979-80. For each of these items of depreciation, 87 T.C. 518">*520 the "Method of figuring depreciation" that was indicated on Form 4562 was the straight line method. The $ 360,294 improvements made in 1982 were not included in the assets depreciated on petitioners' original 1982 return, and they were not otherwise reflected on that return. The parties have stipulated that these 1982 improvements "were neither expensed nor capitalized" on petitioners' original return.
Petitioners filed an amended return for 1982 on September 23, 1983, on which they claimed an additional depreciation deduction in the amount of $ 54,044, attributable to depreciation of the $ 360,294 improvements. On the Form 4562 accompanying the amended return, petitioners listed the improvements in section B "Depreciation of recovery property" as "5-year property" to be depreciated over a "Recovery period" of "5 yrs." 11986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*66 Petitioners identified the "Method of figuring depreciation" used as "ACRS" and the percentage of the cost of the improvements which was depreciated 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*65 as "15%". This 15-percent figure is the applicable percentage shown in the table in
87 T.C. 518">*521 In his notice of deficiency, the Commissioner modified in two ways the petitioners' treatment of the 1982 improvements as shown on their amended return. First, the Commissioner reduced the depreciation deduction attributable to the improvements from the $ 54,044 claimed to $ 7,206. This reduction resulted from his determination that the improvements were correctly depreciated over a "useful life of 15 years instead of [the] 5 years reported on your1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*67 return". The Commissioner, in his determination, did not change petitioners' depreciation method to the straight-line method, but merely lengthened the recovery period over which the appropriate accelerated depreciation method under
1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*68 Second, the Commissioner disallowed the rehabilitation investment credit taken with respect to the improvements "because the improvements do not qualify for the investment credit under
The improvements, and related expenditures, for which petitioners seek a tax credit were made in 1982. As effective for that year,
(B) * * * The term "qualified rehabilitation expenditure" does not include -- (i) * * * Any expenditures with respectto which an election has
Since the election required to be made by
(B)(i) * * * any election under this section shall be made on the taxpayer's return of the tax imposed by this chapter for the taxable year concerned.
* * * *
(C) * * * Any election under this section, once made, may be revoked only with the consent of the Secretary.
Consequently, to qualify for the credit, petitioners must have elected, in accordance with
Nowhere on either their 1982 original or their 1982 amended return, 81986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*74 or on any attachment to those returns, did petitioners in any way indicate that they chose to use the straight line method 9 which would make available to them the rehabilitation credit claimed. Instead, in their original return, they did not report the rehabilitation expenses at all, 10 and in their amended return, they both depreciated their rehabilitation1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*73 expenses using the accelerated method in
To be effective, a taxpayer's election must indicate both an "unequivocal agreement to elect and comply with the 87 T.C. 518">*525 terms of [the elected] section",
Their original return does not reflect the rehabilitation expenses at all; the parties have stipulated that the election was not made on that return. Petitioners' amended return reflects both (1) their use of the accelerated method of depreciation embodied in
Petitioners contend that they "should be allowed" to elect the straight line method of depreciation "on an amended return filed within the statute of limitations". We have found, on the record in this case, that they did not so elect straight line depreciation on their amended return or on any other return. In these circumstances we refuse to address the hypothetical question whether petitioners "should be allowed" to make the required election on an amended return filed after the time for filing a return but before the statute of limitations for the tax year has run. Only if petitioners had made such an election on such a return would we be faced with that question. As it is, petitioners 87 T.C. 518">*526 have made no election under
In
The distressingly complex * * * nature of the provisions * * * presents a formidable obstacle to [their] comprehension * * * without the expenditure of a disproportionate amount of time and effort even by one who is sophisticated in tax matters with many years of experience in the tax field.
Adapting what we said further in
If there should be any lingering doubt on this matter one has only to reread [the provisions in their] * * * entirety * * * and give an honest answer to the question whether [they are] * * * reasonably comprehensible to1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*78 the average lawyer or even to the average tax expert who has not given special attention and extended study to the tax problems [presented by these provisions].
Bearing in mind that the Code is of nationwide application affecting tens of millions of taxpayers, it is difficult to understand why it is so constructed that so many of its provisions can confidently be dealt with by only a comparatively small number of highly skilled or trained persons who have expended a disproportionate amount of time and effort to master the mysteries of the particular intricate provisions under consideration. Surely, there must be a 87 T.C. 518">*527 better way of constructing a fair and workable system of taxation.
1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59">*79
1. If petitioners had elected under
2. If petitioners had instead used the elective straight line method of
3. There is an unexplained $ 2 difference between this $ 48,083 amount which appears from the return and is stipulated to be the amount of the credit used in 1982, and the $ 48,081 amount which the Commissioner claims as a deficiency.↩
4. The Commissioner thus accepted petitioners' option to use an accelerated method, but found that petitioners had applied the wrong accelerated method by using the table in
5. Both were enacted as part of the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, Pub. L. 97-34, 95 Stat. 172, 203, 237.↩
6. The parties both agree that
7. The parties also discuss, on brief, the requirements of
8. We need not decide whether the language of
9. Petitioners' description on their amended return of their "Method of figuring depreciation" as "ACRS" is, by itself, ambiguous. The Accelerated Cost Recovery System includes both an accelerated method of depreciation and an optional straight line method of depreciation for both personal and real property. It was petitioners' depreciation of the improvements by 15 percent of their cost in the first year of recovery that makes it clear that they are using an accelerated method of depreciation. If petitioners were using the straight line method they would have depreciated the improvements by only 10 percent in that year. See note 2
10. Petitioners concede, as indeed they must, that they did not make the election to use the alternative straight line method of depreciation on their original 1982 return.↩
11. Cf. also